Behind the Scenes at Our National Parks
What Really Happens
By Jeff Gedgaud, published Nov 07, 2005
Published Content: 545 Total Views: 1,149,504 Favorited By: 13 CPs
The Maltese Cross cabin is the cabin that Teddy Roosevelt resided in when he was a rancher in the Badlands of North Dakota. He was there in the late 1880's and many of his attitudes and ideas of nature and conservation came from his being in the area those years. He purchased land there after his wife and mother died, and then tried his hand at ranching for a few years. He spent more time with the men of the area and wrote notes, sayings and thoughts of his new found friends and neighbors. He wrote these ideas and sayings while sitting at the desk in the corner of the cabin that was outfitted a bit differently than most of the ranchers cabins of the Dakotas. He used things in his cabin like windows and lights for reading when most of the other ranchers were more interested in sleep by the time the sun set. He had windows put in the cabin for better lighting, he used a china cabinet as a book shelf and had a rocking chair, an unusual piece of furniture for a ranch cabin.
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Did You Know?
Volunteers contribute millions of hours of work every year to help out in our national parks, forests and monuments.
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