Seminoe Mountains

 

Name: Seminoe Mountains

 

County: Carbon

 

Authority Name: 

 

GNIS Entry

 

Longitude:  1064931W

Latitude: 420904N

 

Legal Description:

 

Elevation: 7421/2262

(ft/m)

 

Feature Type: Range

 

Origin of Name: 

Far to the north may be seen the Seminoe Mountains, named for Seminoe Lajeunesse, a French trapper and trader. It is said that Lajeunesse's real name was Basil and that the name Seminoe was corrupted from a French nickname, "Cimineau," although some reports have it that Seminoe was the name given to him by his Snake squaw. Lajeunesse established a trading post on the Overland Trail above Devils Gate. Early in the sixties, with two men and fifteen pack animals loaded with goods, he started out to trade with the Sioux. On the way the party was attacked by Indians in Bates Hole, southwest of Casper, and Lajeunesse was killed. Lajeunesse was a successful hunter and trapper, and the old settlers who remember him say that the mountains were called Seminoe to perpetuate the name of one of the bravest and truest pioneers of Wyoming. He accompanied Fremont on the first expedition into Wyoming, and was one of those chosen to make the ascent of Fremont Peak. He is reported to have accompanied United States troops as a scout on a number of expeditions. His uncle, Gabriel Lajeunesse, was, so tradition says, the hero of Longfellow's "Evangeline." It is interesting to note that some recent maps show these mountains as the Seminole Mountains, the compilers of the maps evidently assuming that they were named for the Seminole Indians and that the "l" had been omitted by mistake from the maps on which they were shown as Seminoe.

Source: Guidebook of the Western United States  

 

Other Names: Bennett Mountains, Freezeout Mountains, Seminole Mountains

 

Alternative Spellings:

 

History:

Mountains, lying between Sand Creek Gap and North Platte River, Carbon County, Wyo.

Source: Decisions, 1890-1932 

 

Northwest-southeast trending range of mountains about 17 miles long and 2 to 5 miles wide, just north of Seminoe Reservoir and about 8 miles east-southeast of the Ferris Mountains and 28 miles northeast of Rawlins.

Source: Decisions, 1963

 

Stories:

 

Maps:

1:24000 Quadrangle: Seminoe Dam NE

 

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More Information:

 

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