DEVIL'S TOWER, WYOMING
Potential as Market for Elephants- None really they might
find grazing around base of the tower and to the south but would never survive winter or even fall.
Date of My Visit: 8/14/15
Geology--Devil’s Tower is a
truly surprising feature shooting out of a near flat basin off US 90 in
Wyoming.
The Tower and some nearby structures called the Little Missouri Buttes may
The Tower and some nearby structures called the Little Missouri Buttes may
be the remains of the throat of a volcano or they may be intrusive upwelling’s of igneous rock that never broke thru the thick layers of sedimentary rock to the surface.
867 feet tall from its base and 1,267 feet above the river. Its diameter at the base is 1,000 feet and its ill regular top is 1.5 sq. acres.
History- The tower, and the entire area, is
important in several Native American tribes’ religious traditions. Anthropologists record that at different
times the Lakota, Cheyenne, and other tribes spent winters in the rich
Belle Fourche Valley, while holding prayer and healing ceremonies at what they
called the Bear Tower or Bear Lodge.
The Kiowa tell the legend of eight children, seven sisters and a brother, who were playing on the river bank. The brother suddenly transformed into a bear and chased his sisters. They scrambled on a large rock and begin to cry for help. The rock grew and stretched into the sky until they were out of reach of the now gigantic bear. He left his claw marks on the sides of the tower and pushed it a little off center. The seven sisters were taken away into the sky were they became the Pleiades.
The striking vertical ‘bear scratches’ are called columnar joints by geologists and are formed by the cooling and contraction of the rock once heated to near liquid. A boulder field, eroded from the tower by weather, lies around the base.
The modern name Devil’s Tower was given it in 1875 by Col. Richard Dodge who led a military/scientific expedition to survey the Black Hills and possibly confirm reports of gold. His journals say he was told by Native Americans that the tower was a dangerous place were evil spirits were found. It has been suggested that bear god was translated as bad god. Many Native Americans feel naming their sacred place Devil’s anything suggests a connection between Satanism and their traditional religious practices.
I wonder if his choice of the name Devil’s Tower was simply the result of Europeans calling unusual geographic features the Devil’s this and the Devil’s that. In my 1949 Encyclopedia there are five places called the Devil’s this or that on one page.
A request for a name change back to Bear Lodge is being considered by the U.S. Board of Geographic Names (See the e-mail reproduced at the bottom.)

The first recorded ascent to the top of Devil’s Tower was on July 4th 1893 by two locals William Rogers and Willard Ripley who had installed a wooden ladder for the first 350 feet. They raised a U.S. Flag and then sold pieces of it at their Lemonade stand. An annual 4th of July picnic and fireworks display became an important social event linking the many remote ranches and small towns.
Today about 3000 rock climbers come to challenge the tower every year. It is necessary to register with the ranger service. Climbing may be canceled for weather or out of respect for Native American ceremonies.
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With Permission of Lakota County Times |
In 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed Devil’s Tower the first national monument using the Antiquities Act. This bill passed in 1906 allows the president to, by proclamation, create national monuments from public lands to protect significant natural, cultural or scientific features. It is one of the few things a president can do without any oversight.
My Visit- I was going west from Rapid City, South Dakota to Cody, Wyoming the day I visited so I left I-90 at Sundance, Wyoming. Yes the site of Robert Redford’s famous film festival and the town the Sundance Kid took his alias from. WY 14 takes one within sight of tower and then loops back to I-90 so I rejoined it at Moorcroft, a center of the coal and oil industry in the area. People coming from the east can just reverse my route.
One approaches the tower by a paved road that circles the base of the tower after purchasing a ticket.

I saw no one equipped for rock climbing, but the posted signs say that one need not register unless one climbs above the boulder field. I saw several people climbing like these folks with only rubber sandals, flip flops we call them.
I took the short one and a half trail around the base of the tower getting a view of its vertical cracks from several angles.
The further I got from the crowded parking lot and campground I saw more and more medicine bags and ribbons, religious items hung in the forest. The paths have numerous reminders to stay on them and avoid disturbing these sacred activities.
The ranger station has nothing special in the way of souvenirs or books.

When leaving you get a good look at the red sandstone cliffs that surround the base and a prairie dog city.
It is forbidden to feed the little animals or enter the actual field. As you can see from these pictures they have learned to beg, but I recommend staying on the graveled overlook, history is full of people being injured stepping in prairie dog holes and they are sometimes occupied by rattlesnakes.