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In
1836 William Craig, Philip Thompson, and Previtt Sinclair
built a fort at Brown's Hole, where Vermillion Creek merges
with the Green River. Brown's Hole was a favorite wintering
place for mountain men and Indians because of the mild
winters and abundant forage and game animals. After news
of the fall of the Alamo and the death of Davy Crockett
reached the mountains, the owners named their fort after
that fallen hero. However, the mountain men usually referred
to the place as "Fort Misery" because of the deplorable
condition of the place. Described as a "hollow square,"
the fort was built of logs and had a dirt roof and dirt
floor which quickly turned into a quagmire in foul weather.
It was termed by one contemporary as "the meanest fort
in the West," yet, for a short time Fort Davy Crockett
became the social center of the Rocky Mountains. Business
at the fort included trading with Indians and free trappers,
while other hunters and trappers were hired at the fort.
Also, it was a place for travelers headed west to obtain
supplies.
Fort
Davy Crockett went out of business in the late summer
of 1840. After the 1839 rendezvous, many of the trappers
went to the fort to winter. Demoralized over the prospects
of poor trapping, and destitute with even poorer prices,
Philip Thompson and some of free trappers turned to horse
stealing. After a visit to Fort Hall, Thompson and a group
of eleven others stole over thirty horses from friendly
Shoshone Indians. When the thieves arrived at the fort,
Thompson's partners and the other mountain men were outraged.
The miscreants fled southward with the stolen horses.
Joe Meeks, William Craig, Robert Newell, Kit Carson, and
twenty-five others led by Joseph Walker pursued and caught
up with the thieves at the junction of the Duchesne and
Green rivers. After a short battle, the horses were recovered
and the thieves fled the country. The partnership broke
up over this incident and the post was abandoned. Never
well built, upon abandonment the fort quickly fell to
ruin. When Captain John C. Frémont, heading west
on his 1844 trip to California, camped at the site of
the fort he recorded that little was left standing.
John
D. Barton
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