Thursday, January 31, 2013

Donald Lewis Cammack, 93, Passed Away Sunday, January 27, 2013,


Donald Lewis Cammack, 93, longtime Arco resident and businessman, passed away Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013, at the Lost Rivers Hospital.
Funeral services are  under the direction of Anderson Family Funeral Home in Arco.


Died Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013 Donald Lewis Cammack, publisher of The Arco Advertiser, was born July 17, 1919, in Karinen, Harding County, South Dakota, the son of Harry Lewis Cammack and Mary Ellen Dake Cammack. He had one sister, Marjorie, and two brothers, Richard and Vernon, who all preceded him in death.
Donald moved with his family to Stevens Point, Wisconsin, when he was very young. He attended school in Stevens Point, except for one year, which he spent in Bowman, North Dakota. He graduated from Stevens Point High School in 1936.
Don moved back to the Harding County, South Dakota, area after graduation, where he lived with his aunt and uncle, John and Katherine Booth on their ranch south of Buffalo. He later was hired by Mr. G. G. Glendenning as a Linotype operator in the Buffalo Times-Herald in Buffalo. He worked there learning the trade until he bought the newspaper in 1945. He later sold the Times-Herald and moved to Arco, Idaho, in 1971.
Donald was united in marriage to LeElla Alice Russell on February 6, 1940, in Buffalo, South Dakota. He and LeElla started their life together in a one-room house (which Don called a shack) in Buffalo. They later moved to the little house to the north edge of Buffalo, and there they started their family. To this union were born nine children. As the family grew, so did the house. The family consisted of Ellen, Donna, Katherine, Charles, Margie, Donald Paul, Thomas, Geri and Nina.
Donald was preceded in death by his parents and siblings; his wife, LeElla; and a granddaughter, Jodi Lynne LaRose.
He is survived by his children, Ellen Sheeler of Vale, South Dakota, Donna Murray of Arco, Idaho, Katherine (L. W. "Sonny") Wickham of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, Charles (Joy Dell) Cammack of Arco, Margie Elwood of Cornish, Utah, Donald Paul (Vonda) Cammack of Moriarty, New Mexico, Thomas (Tina) Cammack of Arco, Geri Cammack of Arco and Nina (Matt) Crane of Caldwell, Idaho. He is also survived by 19 grandchildren and 38 great-grandchildren. Also surviving him is his double cousin, Eunice Fox of Buffalo, South Dakota. She is the last of the Cammack/Dake families.
Services will be held Saturday, February 2, at the Butte Middle School Auditorium in Arco, with burial to follow in Hillcrest Cemetery in Arco. There will be a rosary and prayer service at 6:30 p.m. Friday, followed by viewing at Anderson Family Funeral Home.
Donald will be remembered as a tireless community supporter, no matter where he lived. He had been a member of the Rotary Club, Lions Club (Charter Member), Knights of Columbus and Chamber of Commerce. He was a pioneering proponent of oil production in the Harding County, South Dakota, oil field, and had a sizeable string of uranium claims in the same area.
He was a respected editorialist in South Dakota politics, and served as a ghost writer for more than one South Dakota politician. Many of his editorials were published in the Congressional Record. Don also wrote numerous articles for the South Dakota state tourism commission. He was an inveterate rockhound, almost never returning home without several rocks, and not always small ones.
He was also a great storyteller, and although some of his stories, like fine wine, grew better with age, so did the teller, and both were very enjoyable.
He will be missed.
Family Tribute
Published in Post Register on January 30, 2013

Blast from the Past - Clark Law Offices Robbed Mackay Miner March 7 1928


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Snowing Today in Mackay Idaho - January 29 2013

Highway 93 looking north from Mackay Idaho Main Street. January 29 2013 10 AM
Taken from Highway 93 at Mackay Idaho Main Street with Monkey Madness Video, Ireland Bank, and US Bank - January 29 2013 10 AM

Blast from the Past and Remembering - Al West Obituary


            Alvin West and Mamie Fox West. Al was born 6 November 1872 in Centerville, Idaho He died 30 July 1954 at Mackay, Idaho at the age of 81 years.

Alvin “Al” West and Mamie Fox West were married 7 July 1897 in Challis, Idaho
Mamie was born 5 November 1877 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She died 17 January 1965 in the Jerome Rest Home, Idaho at the age of 87 years.
Both Al and Mamie are buried in Mt. McCaleb Cemetery in Mackay, Idaho.

They had 2 daughters: Laura Lucille West Ivie born 17 Nov 1897 at Challis, Idaho. She married Lee Ivie in 1918. They had one son, Lester Ivie in 1919. Laura died December 26 Dec 1920 from complications of childbirth 9 months after the birth of Lester Ivie in Mackay, Idaho.

Jean Lucille West born 28 February 1919 at Dickey, Idaho and died 12 February 1920 of pneumonia. Both daughters are buried at Mt. McCaleb Cemetery in Mackay, Idaho.

Mamie Fox West born 11 May 1877 to George and Margaret Fox. Margaret came over to marry a man and he died. She, then, married George Fox. They settled in Pennsylvania. Their first son died of diphtheria and is buried in Pennsylvania. They may have had children before they came west. George Fox was a Mason. Together Margaret Fox and George Fox had 9 children:
1      Son died of diphtheria
2      Margaret “Maggie” Fox Nickerson (Nancy and Trudy Nickerson’s grandmother) Maggie married Frank D. Nickerson whose mother was Jessie McClure. Frank and Maggie Nickerson had two daughters, Trudy and Nancy Nickerson
3      Mamie Fox West
4      Arthur Fox
5      Lena Fox (Grandmother of Dene Milwarot ?)
6      Amelia Fox Brenchley (died in 1901 or 1902)
7      Frank Fox
8      Dora Fox Phillips
9      Ida Fox Wyatt born in 1891 and died in November 1993 at 102 years of age

Al West, 81, life time resident of Idaho and Custer County Pioneer, passed away Friday near the Rural Electric Association (REA) building just blocks from his home at 504 Elm in Mackay with a heart attack. He was watching workers put up the slab roof on the REA building. His sudden passing came as a shock to his family and friends as he had maintained unusual health and vigor for a man of his age.

He was born 6 November 1872 at Centerville, Idaho in the Boise Basin, the son of William W. West and Nannie Sampson West. In 1879 he came to Custer County with his father. His father was the first man to drive a team and wagon into the rough Bonanza Camp which was then in the throes of a big mining strike. In the fall of 1884, the senior Mr. William W. West moved his family to Challis, Idaho and it was here that Al received his early education and grew to young manhood.
Al was united in marriage to Mamie Fox in Challis on 7 July 1897. 

They lived in Challis during the first year of their marriage. Here, daughter, Laura Lucille West was born. Al ran a pack train to the Mountain King Mine at Sea Foam. The second year after his marriage, he leased a ranch below Challis and in April 1899 they moved to a ranch at Dickey, Idaho (Bascom’s place). This place got its name from J.P. Dickey, who established the first Post Office in the Thousand Spring Valley, north of Mackay, Idaho.

The land around the Post Office, when Mr. and Mrs. West first moved was a typical sage brush scene. They took charge of the Stage Station for the Anderson Brothers of Montana and kept the station for 20 years, until that mode of transportation became obsolete. They also held a financial interest in the Custer Stage Company for eight years. The Mackay, Challis, and Clayton stage along with Ike Hardman and Louis Hansen. Hansen lived where Reed Nielson place and ran a car dealership.

In the meantime, Mr. and Mrs. Al West carried on the work of development of the ranch which changed the sage brush into green meadows and made their ranch one of the most prosperous in the valley.

Mamie Fox West cooked for many passengers and stage drivers and tender through those years. And in the fall, large herds of cattle were driven to Mackay from Challis and the Pahsimeroi via Dickey for an overnight stop. The men and cattle were fed supper and breakfast. The cattle either fed on pasture or were fed hay.

In 1939, the West’s moved from their Dickey ranch into Mackay in the stone house on the corner of College and Elm. They spent the winters in San Francisco, California with Cassie and Texas. They lived for one year in the Carr residence before buying the home on the Elm Street and College Ave. Besides retaining ownership of the ranch, Mr. Al West was an agent for the Texaco Company.

The greatest tragedy in their lives was the death of their two daughters. Jean Lucille was born 28 February 1919 and died 12 February 1920 of pneumonia. Laura Lucille West Ivie died 26 December 1920. They passed away within 10 months of each other. Jean passed away at the age of eleven months, fifteen days and Laura, who was married to Lee Ivie and the mother of one son, Lester Ivie – died at the age of 22 years from the effects of Lester’s childbirth.
FROM the Bunnie (Ines) Smith Collection




Saturday, January 26, 2013

Mackay Main Street From College - January 26 2013

Mackay Main Street From College - January 26 2013 10:15 AM

Blast from the Past - Lost River Electric History - Ruralite May 1984



Lost River Electric Substation Bar Road, Mackay Idaho Aug 20 2012

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Gas Prices Move Up in Mackay, Idaho - January 24 2013

Gas prices at Sammy's today, January 24 2013, $326.9.

Highway 93 and Elm with the back of Monkey Madness Video store on left. January 24 2013.

Blast from the Past - Mackay Miner Mid Summer Edition 1908 Page 1 of 9

Transcription:

THE MACKAY MINER  A NEWSPAPER FOR ALL CENTRAL IDAHO
MID SUMMER EDITION 1908
Special Industrial Edition, Issued by the Lost River Development Company of Mackay Idaho

1908 Bird's-Eye View of Mackay, Showing Lost River Range Of Mountains In The Distance

This is busy, bustling, go-ahead Mackay, the business center of Vast, Rich, Active Central Idaho, as it appears today. It is the home of a population of happy, industrious people who are as up-to-date as any city between the oceans. The varied resources of the large district tributary insure a continuation of happiness, thrift and progress. It is soon to be electrically lighted; it has the purest water in its water system in the West. Its banks, stores and business institutions are of a high order and its homes are models of neatness and comfort. It is growing with a steadiness born of a substantial, industrial environment. The climate is the equal of any and its mountain breezes bear healing on their wings. The supply point of an empire, the clearing house of a district made rich through mining, metal refineries, farming, stock raising and the kindred industries. This is Mackay of today. What will it be when the mining and smelting and milling industries are fully developed, when the immense irrigation projects reclaiming every acre of tillable land in its valleys are carried out, when the merchantable timber is made use of, when the cattle, horse and sheep industries are developed to the fullest capacity of the grassy hills, even the blindest can see – a city of ten thousand inhabitants.

The town is beautifully situated in a well watered valley, with jagged, lofty mountain peaks piercing the heavens on either side. School and churches are maintained that are the peer of any in the “Gem of the Mountains” state. The citizenship is of a high order – a western town whose chief characteristics are energy, fair play and kindliness.

Opportunity, as surely as the gold-filled mountains await the beckon of the miner; as surely as the arid land thirsts for the redeeming stream of the irrigator; as surely as the grass covered hills call forth to the flocks and herds, has been the summons that has peopled with enterprising, hardy pioneers the hills and valleys of Central Idaho. A great inland nation of many resources, independent of yet drawing continually upon the outside world for men to wrest its riches from its bosom, it has advanced with wonderful strides during the six years that have passed. The miner has beckoned and gold pours into his lap; the irrigator has turned the melted snow upon the deserts and they blossom and bear fruit; the stockman has herded his cattle and sheep upon its hills and has waxed prosperous, Central Idaho has come into its own.

Since the beginning, American has had its “boundless west.” The prairies were settled by the first comers. Others, undaunted by dangers and hardships pushed on across the great mountain ranges to the Pacific coast, there to establish an empire of wealth and culture. Cities sprang up and sky-scrapers replaced the Indian’s tepee. Prosperity dawned for the whole country and with added vigor and determination, the sons and daughters of pioneers left the beaten trails to follow the prospector and trapper into the richer districts. To Central Idaho, to Lost River and the Salmon River and to Mackay came these people, and the homes and treasures that they sought have been theirs.

A great trio – a trinity of natural wealth – has made this section possible. Mining combines with farming, and farming with stock-raising, to bring success. The three industries rely jointly upon one another and therein has lain the advantage. Mining has been made profitable and easy by the close proximity of a food supple base for men and horses. In turn, the farms have prospered because of this ready market offered by the mining camps. The theorem and its converse hold true in the same manner with regard to the stock ranches. The magic touch of King Midas transforms all.

Mackay is the heart of this natural treasure-trove with its energetic, busy souls. Half a decade ago there were no more than half of five thousand residents; a decade ago less than half of twenty-five hundred. The district has been peopled by steady, earnest home seekers of good stock and its future is more brilliant than its present and immediate past. Railroad extension, mine development and a new reservoir and canal project that will bring under cultivation thousand of acres of land, make this assured.

Millions have been expended in bringing to the surface the gold and silver, as well as the lead and copper of Center  Idaho, and millions in profits have justrified the investments of the sanguine operators. There are today a number of mines and smelters in operation in the district and all are fulfilling the expectation of the owners. Back in the ore-bearing hills, lie more of the precious metals and new claims with startling prospects still thrill the people.

In the early days, when the lone prospector looked down upon the valley stretching southeast and northwest from what is now Mackay, a great waste of sage and sand greeted his eye. In the center ran a shining flood of melted snow and spring water, coursing turbulently along its bed and dropping some miles below into the pits of the lower desert. This river was named Lost River and for many years it was truly “lost” as far as concerned man.

But today, “Lost” River is a misnomer. Instead of lost , it branches out in numberless canals and ditches to irrigate and bring to life hundreds of acres of the parched land that had been awaiting this process. The sand and brush gave way to waving fields of hay and grain. Roses bloom instead of cacti and the wealth of the earth is extracted as surely as by the miner’s hand. Every drop of water that is diverted from the main stream serves its separate purpose and the prosperous farms are the visible result.

Farming is carried on by irrigation, a system which insures a good crop each and every year.

The future of farming by irrigation offers wonderful possibilities and opportunities. Three miles above Mackay, a mammoth dam is now in course of construction; a gigantic mass of masonry that will back up water enough to bring under cultivation all the land in the Lost Rier valley – a project that in itself insures a population of many thousands more people.

Tributary to the Lost River valley are numerous other valleys, just as fertile, just as prosperous, with just as brilliant a future. There is the Little Lost river valley, the Pahsimari, the Salmon river and leading into these there are smaller valleys that furnish farm land for scores of land tillers and cattle and sheep men. While the land along the Salmon river is not abundant yet there is enough to maintain several health little towns, but what the Salmon river country tributary to Mackay lacks in land it makes up for in the precious metals that have ever lured the American westward.

Covering the hillsides that surround the valleys of this empire is an abundance of timber for fuel and for building and fencing purposes. The farmer makes good use of this commodity, which is his for the trouble of cutting and hauling, thus the fuel is a cheap article, as is also fence building. Several lumber mills are operated in the district and their product finds a ready market, the mines making a great demand upon this feature of our commercial life.

Good roads are a country’s best investment and here, where the commerce of the country is transacted largely over it public thoroughfares, they are one of the important factors. The road of Central Idaho are a great advertisement. There is but one railroad, tapping the district, which terminates at Mackay, leaving an enormous tonnage to be handled by freight teams over the wagon roads. To a man in the prairie states where railroads traverse the country every ten miles, where every spring and fall the farm product is delayed in marketing by reason of mud, Central Idaho would be a dream of paradise. Here roads are built at a small cost and maintained at a trivial expense. When it is considered that in the neighborhood of five hundred head of horses are engaged in hauling freight from Mackay to interior points it follows that the roads must be in good shape.

“Cattle on a thousand hill.” This is the situation in Central Idaho. Unlimited feed has attracted called and sheep men with thousands of head of stock and the ready markets have caused them to maintain their flocks and herds in this section. The cattle industry is one of the greatest in this district, as it is elsewhere, and in the days to come, when irrigation has converted all the desert into farm land, the raising of stock will still be a profitable adjunct to the farmer on account of the grass covered hills that surround him.

WATER SUPPLY

Situated in a beautiful canyon at the foot of White Knob mountain, about six miles from Mackay, is a beautiful, clear, cool, crystal spring; secluded from all other streams, making it impossible for the water to become polluted, or come in contact with anything impure. This spring is called “White Knob Spring” and is about two thousand feet above the town of Mackay.

Without going further, the reader would know what enterprising people would do with such a spring as this. But not to leave it open for conjecture, will say that this water is sent speeding down the mountain side through a powerful steel pipe to furnish water to our city. A complete water system is installed, having fire plugs on every corner of town with sufficient water power to hurl the water over the highest building, and furnish an abundance of water for sprinkling lawns and household use. There is a common saying that if you get one drink of this water, you will live and die in Mackay.

A VERITABLE SANITORIUM

A prominent practicing physician of Custer county is authority for the statement that the death rate in the county during the past three years, the period of his residence therein, is less than ten person per thousand per year, in other words, just one-half the death rate in other parts of the United States. Such fatal diseases as diphtheria, tuberculosis and scarlet fever, seen so abundantly elsewhere through the country, are never encountered in this county. The doctor attributes this exceedingly healthful condition to the pure mountain water, the bracing and enervating air, the abundance of nature’s provender – fish and game of all descriptions – and the unremitting vigilance of the county health authorizes in protecting the community from infectious and contagious diseases.

The statement has oft been truly made that there are more aged persons resident in Central Idaho, to the square inch than in any other community in the world. Coming to the country when youths, they are reluctant to leave the healthiest place in existence and consequently are with us yet – old, yet as active as athletes – devout worshippers at the shrine of Hygeia and Panacea, situated in the broad and fertile valleys of our county.

This fountain of health flows free for all; the productive fields await you; the never-ending mountains gorged to gluttony with precious metals are calling upon you for relief; the fish and game in overabundance are pleading for a prominent place on your table. Are you willing to pass up the boundless gifts of Nature so free to you all?

OUR PARK

When Mackay was first laid out, the promoters of the town were farseeing men and to add to the beauty of the coming Copper City of the West, they placed in the center a park. This park has been sown to lawn grass, and rowed out in different directions with all varieties of trees, and will soon make a shay nook where all desiring recreation after their day’s work is over will find a lovely spot to while away the time among the trees in the center of our beautiful village.

Along with other harmonious things, this makes our town better.

SUMMING IT UP

With large tracts of farming and grazing land uncultivated, with a list of taxable property annually lengthened with giant strides, with increasing revenue and deceasing taxation, with railroad building, with good schools and churches and little crime, with stock ranges of luxurious vegetation, with an admirable climate favorable to health, with a fertile soil rich in fruitful products and with a vast mineral wealth in gold, silver, copper, lead, iron and the precious metals – Custer county is blessed with natural gifts and advantages that will prove tis brief though vigorous existence to have been but a puny part of its progressive career.

Custer county embraces in irregular outline about 5000 square miles, and it is as large as the state of Connecticut, and larger than Delaware and Rhode Island together. You cannot find a more inviting place for investment.

“THE NEW WESTERNER”

The new westerner is as proud of the plains as were the pioneers; as valiant in their defense; as eager in their eulogy – but he exaggerates less and qualifies more. The west is being pictured as it is, and in dealing thus in candor and frankness its children are establishing their fortunes on surer foundations.

1908 Mackay City Council Frank M Leland, Charles F. Baker, C.V. Hansen, Dr. Francis H. Poole, and William T Brennan