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FOLK COLLECTION 21
The Grouse Creek (Utah) Cultural Survey Collection
Introduction
| Date of Items: | July-August 1985 |
| Processed by: | Originally processed by Barbara Lloyd and revised by Randy
Williams |
| Inventory Prepared by: | Barbara Lloyd, 1989, and revised by Randy Williams, July 2004 |
| Register Prepared by: | Randy Williams, July 2004 |
| Linear Feet: | 9 |
Historical Note
The Grouse Creek Cultural Survey is a joint project of the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, the Folk
Arts Program of the Utah Arts Council, National Park Service, the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Utah State
University, and the Western Folklife Center. The survey was conducted in the Grouse Creek region of Utah primarily in July
1985. The project was a pioneering attempt at interdisciplinary research by historic preservationists and preservation-minded
folklorists for the joint purpose of cultural preservation and was intended to be a prototype for other cultural surveys.
As Grouse Creek fieldworker Carol Edison states: The Grouse Creek Cultural Survey was an attempt to field-test a methodology dubbed the "Integrated
Cultural Survey" aimed at identifying, evaluating and eventually protecting both tangible and intangible cultural resources. . . .
[T]he Grouse Creek project provided a concrete experience with the sometimes nebulous concept of 'cultural conservation.'"
Tom Carter, a folklorist working for the Utah State Historical Society Preservation Office, spearheaded the project, and
together with Carl Fleischhauer, from the American Folklife Center, co-authored The Grouse Creek Cultural Survey:
Integrating Folklife and Historic Preservation Field Work, which was the final product of the Grouse Creek Cultural
Survey project. Working along with Carter and Fleischhauer were other professionals representing other organizations and
fields of interest: Carol Edison, Director of the Folk Arts Program of the Utah Arts Council, and Hal Cannon, Director of
the Western Folklife Center, conducted taped interviews and shot photographic images. Debbie Randall and Roger Roper, employed by
the Utah State Historical Society Preservation Office, contributed additional photographic images. This six-person team was
responsible for the fieldwork. It should be noted that a decade earlier, Verna Richardson, a resident of Grouse Creek, had
conducted a number of taped oral interviews that were housed at the Utah State Historical Society Library. These
interviews in part gave impetus to the idea of choosing Grouse Creek for a cultural survey. The original interviews are
still housed at the State Historical Society, but copies of the interview transcripts are included with the original
fieldwork materials gathered during the Grouse Creek Cultural Survey.
Most of the fieldwork was conducted from 2 July to early August 1985. The fieldworkers set up households in
two locations and stayed in Grouse Creek at various times during that period. Thomas Carter, the project
coordinator, acted as a full time fieldworker and was present for three weeks; Hal Cannon was present for three weeks; Carol
Edison was present the first and third weeks; Carl Fleischhauer was present the first week; Debbie Randall was present for
three weeks; and Roger Roper was present the second and third weeks. During October 8-10, 1988, Tom Carter and Carl
Fleischhauer again visited the area and presented the published results of the survey to the people of Grouse Creek.
Along with the publication of The Grouse Creek Cultural Survey, other products resulted from this project. Debbie Randall
produced a final report on architecture; fieldworkers Tom Carter, Hal Cannon, and Carol Edison delivered
papers on their findings in Grouse Creek at the 1986 American Folklore Society meetings in Baltimore, Maryland.
Carl Fleischhauer helped with the introduction and initial description of the collection on its arrival at the Fife
Folklore Archives in October 1988 during his one-and-a-half-day visit to the Archives. The inventory to the Paradise
Valley, Nevada, Folklife Project Collection, written by Carol Stern, proved invaluable as an aid for creating this
inventory [register].
ProvenanceThe Grouse Creek Cultural Survey is the result of the combined efforts of
a number of cooperating organizations, but the responsibility for archival governance of the collected fieldwork
materials rests with the Fife Folklore Archives, Special Collections and Archives, Utah State University Libraries,
Logan, Utah.
The nature of the material requires careful citation whenever photographic images, recordings, manuscripts or transcriptions are
reproduced. Any bibliographic entry, footnote, photo caption, or sound recording headnote should include the
names of the informants, the names of the photographer or sound recordist and his or her organization ( e.g., Carol
Edison, Folk Arts Program of the Utah Arts Council), the date and place of the documentation, the accession numbers,
and the title of the project. The credit line must also mention that the original materials are housed in the
Fife Folklore Archives, Special Collections and Archives, Utah State University Libraries.
Scope and Content
The materials in this collection cover a wide-range of topics including special attention to architecture, foodways,
community activities, religious activity and local history. Note: In fieldnotes and in the register LDS and Mormon
refer to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. For an overview of the project, researchers are directed to
the publication The Grouse Creek Cultural Survey by Carter and Fleischhauer. All written and recorded
materials are housed in acid-free archival boxes and folders in the Fife Folklore Archives, Special Collections and
Archives, USU Libraries.
The collection was originally processed by Barbara [Walker] Lloyd. The collection register was revised and the
collection was moved from a filing cabinet to archival boxes and archival folders and the collection register
was encoded by Randy Williams in June 2004. In an effort to give complete information, the old folder numbers
(001) from the original collection guide (which may be found on previously published information about the
GCCS) is included in parenthesis at the end of a folder breakdown. In the original register, folder numbers did
not start over with each new series/box, therefore the new and old folder numbers will not match after the
folder 4. There are more folders in the new register.
The bulk of the project includes approximately 232 pages of fieldnotes; 41 reel-to-reel tapes, one digital tape, and 30
cassette tapes of audio materials, plus accompanying log sheets; 73 rolls of black and white photographic images (including contact
sheets and negatives) and 131 sheets of color slides plus accompanying log sheets; 95 architectural site reports; 824 pages
of copies of the transcriptions of twenty-one interviews conducted prior to the cultural survey; four sets of maps/drawings;
and some miscellaneous materials. The original materials are housed in the Fife Folklore Archives, Special Collections and
Archives, USU Libraries and copies of the original holdings are housed in the American Folklife Center in the Library of
Congress, and portions at the Utah Folk Arts Council and at the Utah State Historical Society.
A general description of the materials in the survey is provided in this inventory, but more in depth description of the
materials will be found in the collection’s 250-plus pages of logs. The media holdings of the Grouse Creek Cultural Survey
were assigned project identification letters and numbers in the field. Letter codes were used to identify the type of media
and the fieldworker responsible as follows:
-
- Media:
- A = Cassette Tapes
- B = Black & White Images
- C = Color Images
- F = Fieldnotes
- R = Reel-to-reel Tapes
- Fieldworkers:
- CE = Carol Edison
- CF = Carl Fleischhauer
- DR = Debbie Randall
- HC = Hal Cannon
- RR = Roger Roper
- TC = Tom Carter
Some materials contain a GCCS reference which stands for Grouse Creek Cultural Survey. Numbers generally represent a
sequential ordering. Thus, a reference number such as FHC850702 stands for fieldnotes
by Hal Cannon for 2 July 1985; CTC001.1 stands for a color photographic image, by Tom Carter, sheet number one, image one; the number
RHC026 stands for reel-to-reel tape recording, by Hal Cannon, tape number 26; BCE25495.1 is a black & white
photographic image, by Carol Edison, sheet number 25495, image one. NOTE: Black and white negatives and corresponding
sheet numbers are identified by a five digit number. All references are in alphabetical and numerical order within each
media category. Dates on documentation forms are written with the year first followed by the month and day;
thus 850702 would translate as July 2, 1985. For convenience in the register, the dates are written: day, month,
year (2 July 1985).
The Grouse Creek Cultural Survey is divided into 9 series:
I.   ADMINISTRATION: Items pertaining to the planning and administration of the GCCS.
II.   PUBLICITY AND EPHEMERA: Publicity about the project and newspaper clippings about Grouse Creek.
III.   FIELDNOTES: The fieldnotes record a fieldworker’s activities, observations, and
impressions during the course of the fieldwork. These notes are arranged alphabetically by the fieldworker’s surname
and date.
IV.   SOUND RECORDINGS AND LOGS: Reel-to-reel, cassette, and digital recordings and accompanying logs created by
fieldworkers. The reel-to-reel tapes are in two formats (A) 7 1/2 ips/half track stereo and (B) 7 1/2 ips/full track
mono. The format for each tape is noted in the tape log section with either (A) or (B). As well, the cassette tapes
are in two formats (C) 60 minute mono and (D) 90 minute mono. The format for each tape is noted in the tape log section
with either (C) or (D).
V.   IMAGES AND LOGS: Color images (including slides, color transparencies, and reference fiche) and reference
logs and black and white images (including negatives and contact sheets) and logs. Color images are grouped
first by photographer within the group for color (C), and then ordered sequentially with sheet numbers (beginning
with one for each fieldworker), and individual slide number. Black and white images are group first by photographer
with in the group for black and white (B), and then ordered with a sheet number created for this project, and
individual negative numbers. Duplicate slides are noted in the log and housed at the end of the box housing
the original image(s).
VI.   ARCHITECTURAL SITE REPORTS: The architectural site reports contain the Architectural Field Survey
forms, which include technical data and (for almost all sites) drawings. Also, for some sites photocopies of
historical information regarding to the site or the homeowner (such as brief life histories and obituaries)
is included and is noted in the register. Each site is numbered; Sites 1-63 are in Grouse Creek,
OGC Sites 1-32 are outside Grouse Creek. Note: There is either no site 1 or information on site 1 is missing.
VII.   UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY DOCUMENTS: This section contains 824 pages of transcription from the
Grouse Creek Oral History Project conducted by the Utah State Historical Society from 1973 to 1978. Most of these
twenty-one interviews were conducted by Verna Kimber Richardson, a native of Grouse Creek.
The original transcriptions and fieldwork are housed at the Utah State Historical Society. The
copies in this collection are arranged alphabetically by informants' surname. Also contained in this section are a
few photocopies from the Utah State Historical Society regarding architectural structures in Grouse Creek.
VIII.   MAPS AND DRAWINGS: There are four sets of maps/drawings included with the collection:
Set 1–Grouse Creek Project Area Maps; Set 2–USGS Overview Map; Set 3–Utah State Historical Society Maps; and Set 4–Drawing
of Grouse Creek Rodeo Grounds. Note: The only copies of the maps and drawings are with the Grouse Creek Collection housed
at USU's Special Collections and Archives.
IX. FINAL PRODUCTS: Final products from the Grouse Creek Survey to date include The Grouse Creek Cultural
Survey: Integrating Folklife and Historic Preservation Field Research by Thomas Carter and Carl Fleischhauer,
published by the American Folklife Center, a final report on architecture, various papers which were delivered at the
October 1986 meetings of the American Folklore Society.
To access the collection a patron must have the following information: collection number, series number, sub-series
number, if applicable, box number and folder number (or image number).
Digitization
The images, and metadata of the images, in this collection were digitized and are hosted on Utah State University Digital Library. You can access the digitized images at Grouse Creek Cultural Survey: Mormon Buckaroo Territory, 1985. In the near future this site will host the sound recordings from the GCCS.
Inventory
SERIES I:   ADMINISTRATION
SERIES II:   PUBLICITY AND EPHEMERA
SERIES III:   FIELDNOTES
- SERIES IV. SOUND RECORDINGS AND LOGS
Sub-series A:   Reel-to-Reel Tapes and Logs
Sub-series B:   Digital Tape and Logs
Sub-series C:   Audio Cassette Tapes and Logs
- SERIES V:   PHOTOGRAPHIC IMAGES AND LOGS
Sub-series A:   Color Images and Logs
Sub-series B:   Black and White Images and Logs
SERIES VI:   ARCHITECTURAL SURVEY DATA
SERIES VII:   UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY DOCUMENTS: GROUSE CREEK ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
SERIES VIII:   MAPS AND DRAWINGS
SERIES IX:   FINAL PRODUCTS
Register
SERIES I:   ADMINISTRATION
- BOX 1:
- Folder 1:   Collection Inventory/Register (2 items) (Folder 001)
- Item 1:   Original Collection Inventory, Summer 1989
- Item 2:   Register, August 2004
- Folder 2:   GCCS Proposal and Contract (8 items) (Folder 002)
- Item 1:   Notes from meeting at the American Folklife Center regarding the Grouse Creek Project, 27 May 1985
- Item 2:   Memo from Thomas Carter, Project Coordinator: Grouse Creek Architecture and Folklife Survey, 5 April 1985
- Item 3:   Memo from Thomas Carter: Project Proposal and Preliminary Budget, 25 April 1985
- Item 4:   Memo from Thomas Carter: Grouse Creek Cultural Survey: Statement of Purpose, 19 May 1985
- Item 5:   Draft letter to potential GCCS fieldworkers, including budget, 3 June 1985
- Item 6:   Memo from Alan Jabbour, Director, American Folklife Center: Publication of report of GCCS, 15 April 1987
- Item 7:   Carl Fleischhauer travel report to New Mexico: background to GCCS, 2 September 1985
- Item 8:   Carl Fleischhauer informal notes: "Thoughts on folklife Study in historic preservation surveys," 28 March 1985
- Folder 3:   Work Plan and Support Information (4 items) (Folder 003)
- Item 1:   GCCS Work Plan, 25 June 1985, 2 copies
- Item 2:   Carl Fleischhauer "Notes on Media Documentation Pinelands Folklife Project, 12 September 1983
- Item 3:   Women's Folkife Survey
- Item 4:   Grouse Creek key concepts or significant themes, defined by Tom Carter
- Folder 4:   Official Correspondence (14 items) (Folder 004)
- Folder 5:   Carl Fleischhauer Correspondence with Informants (9 items) (Folder 008)
- Item 1:   Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Tanner, 10 July 1985
- Item 2:   Archie and Rhea Toyn, 10 July 1985
- Item 3:   Archie and Rhea Toyn, courtesy photos, 9 September 1985
- Item 4:   Hal Bongiovi, Gordon Stanford, Harland Jewett (Gamble Ranch), courtesy photos, 9 September 1985
- Item 5:   Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Tanner, courtesy photos, 9 September 1985
- Item 6:   Marge Thompson, courtesy photos, 9 September 1985
- Item 7:   Douglas and Kathleen Tanner, 13 October 1988
- Item 8:   Bishop Henson, 13 October 1988
- Item 9:   Archie and Rhea Toyn, 13 October 1988
- Folder 6:   American Folklife Center Grouse Creek Cultural Survey publication order form (1 item)
- Folder 7:   Inventory to the Paradise Valley, Nevada Folklife Project Collection (used as guide for this inventory) (1 item)
SERIES II:   PUBLICITY AND EPHEMERA
- BOX 1
- Folder 1:   GCCS publicity (2 items) (Folder 005)
- Folder 2:   News clippings on Grouse Creek (2 items) (Folder 007)
- Folder 3:   Cutaway drawing of a dirt roof, by Trav Winn, used in publication page 31.
SERIES III:   FIELDNOTES
- BOX 1:
- Folder 1:   Cannon, Hal GCCS Fieldnotes (21 items) (Folder 009)
- Item 1:   2 July 1985:   Arrive in Grouse Creek
- Item 2:   3 July 1985:   Frost Ranch; Doug Tanner's; Archie Toyn house
- Item 3:   4 July 1985:   Co-op, Doug Wakefield; Milton Oman; Doug Tanner's place
- Item 4:   5 July 1985:   Verna Richardson; Max Tanner home, interview with Max and brother
- Item 5:   6 July 1985:   4th of July breakfast, rodeo, and dance
- Item 6:   7 July 1985:   GC LDS Priesthood Meeting, Sunday School, and Sacrament Meeting; Sunday dinner with Doug Tanner family
- Item 7:   8 July 1985:   Moulton, Idaho; Murtaugh, Idaho; Burley, Idaho; herding cattle from Emigrant Canyon to Moulton
- Item 8:   9 July 1985:   Carol Warburton (Grace Warburton), Aetna; Carl Oman; Harold Oman
- Item 9:   10 July 1985:   Future Homemakers of America (Salt Palace), SLC, Utah; candid interview with Amy Tanner
- Item 10:   11 July 1985:   Max Tanner interview at his old ranch where Doug and Kathleen Tanner live
- Item 11:   16 July 1985:   Milt Oman, Steve Kimber, Merwin Tanner; Wallace Betteridge, Raida Kimber, George W. Betteridge
- Item 12:   17 July 1985:   Jack Kimber, Kimber Ranch; Wallace Betteridge, Betteridge house in Montello
- Item 13:   18 July 1985:   Milt Oman, horse breaking; Lyman Kimber interview
- Item 14:   25 July 1985:   Wallace adn Sally Betteridge interview, hondo braiding
- Item 15:   26 July 1985:   Oren and Opal Kimber interview
- Item 16:   28 July 1985:   GC Ward LDS Sacrament meeting; Archie and Rhea Toyn, Toyn home, rodeo talk
- Item 17:   29 July 1985:   Emily Kimber; Winfred Kimber family, Archive and Rhea Toyn, Family Home Evening BBQ and campfire singing
- Item 18:   30 July 1985:   Rhea Toyn, Toyn home; Merlin Tanner, Tanner home
- Item 19:   31 July 1985:   Opal Kimber, Oren Kimber home; Doug Tanner and family, Max Tanner ranch
- Item 20:   1 August 1985:   Grouse Creek Orchestra, Raida Kimber, Archie Toyn, and Lyman Kimber, Raida Kimber home
- Item 21:   19 August 1985:   Phone interview with Max Tanner on cowboy gear used in Grouse Creek
- Folder 2: Carter, Thomas GCCS Fieldnotes   (5 items) (Folder 010)
- Item 1:   2 July 1985:   Travel from Salt Lake City, arrive and get set up in Grouse Creek
- Item 2:   3 July 1985:   Winfred Kimber interview at ranch site, Verna Kimber Richardson interview (daughter of Winfred); Kathleen Tanner
- Item 3:   4 July 1985:   Verna Kimber Richardson, Edward Frost House; Winfred Kimber
- Item 4:   5 July 1985:   Jeff Thomas; Warren Kimber; Edward Frost ranch
- Item 5:   6 July 1985:   4th of July expected activity and assignments
- Folder 3: Edison, Carol GCCS Fieldnotes   (10 items) (Folder 011)
- Item 1:   2 July 1985:   Travel and arrival; Louis Tanner; photographing outbuildings
- Item 2:   3 July 1985:   Winfred Kimber interview Frost Ranch/Grant Kimber Ranch; Kathleen (Kathy) Tanner interview about foodways;
- Ella Tanner interview about foodways and LDS Relief Society, etc.
- Item 3:   4 July 1985:   Measuring old Frost homestead; Kathleen Tanner for lunch, beet jelly; Max and Melissa Tanner discussion
- about NV and UT ranchers; Verna (Kimber) and Val Richardson; practice for calf roping
- Item 4:   5 July 1985:   Kathleen Tanner; Frost Ranch (Grant Kimber property), rodeo grounds; decorating the "Sagebrush and Kids" float
- Item 5:   6 July 1985:   4th of July breakfast; parade; patriotic program; children's dance; "dinner"; ball games, races and fish pond; rodeo;
- dance; Brian and JoLene (K. Hill) Thompson wedding reception
- Item 6:   7 July 1985:   Fern Kimber; Marge Thompson; Doug Tanner; LDS Relief Society, Sunday School and Sacrament Meeting
- Item 7:   16 July 1985:   Fern Kimber; Grouse Creek Cemetery
- Item 8:   17 July 1985:   Ella Tanner, foodways; Doug and Kathleen Tanner, "Mormon Sunday Dinner"; Kenna and Brent Tanner handwork;
- measuring Warburton dirt-roof cabin; Milt Oman breaking a horse
- Item 9:   18 July 1985:   Kathleen Tanner, foodways, raising children; Ella Tanner, canning raspberries; Fern Kimber; Melissa Tanner;
- Milt Oman, breaking a colt; Velma Smith and Susan Wyrick
- Item 10:   19 July 1985:   Betty Kimber; Marge and Hugh Thompson; stone quarry
- Folder 4:   Fleischhauer, Carl GCCS Fieldnotes (6 items) (Folder 012)
- Item 1:   2 July 1985:   Travel to Grouse Creek; Steven Kimber picking up and stacking hay bales; Louis Tanner discussion about
- regarding geography, land use, cattle management
- Item 2:   3 July 1985:   Winfred Kimber, Frost Ranch; Grant Kimber; Kathleen Kimber, foodways; Archie and Rhea
- Toyn; commemorative poetry
- Item 3:   4 July 1985:   Doug and Kathleen Tanner; Doug Wakefield
- Item 4:   5 July 1985:   Warren Kimber at his ranch; Kathleen Tanner; Jeff and Bill Thomas at Thomas Ranch; haying, hunting, irrigation
- Item 5:   6 July 1985:   Independence Day parade, patriotic program, clog dancing, games, rodeo; dance, Apocalypse dance band
- Severe family; wedding reception
- Item 6:   7 July 1985:   LDS Church services: sacrament, church building and decoration; Junction Valley dairy
- Folder 5:   Fleischhauer, Carl Library of Congress GCCS Travel Report (1 item)
- Folder 6:   Fleischhauer, Carl GCCS Travel Report (1 item)
- Folder 7:   Randall, Debbie GCCS Fieldnotes (15 item) (Folder 013)
- Item 1:   3 July 1985:   Winfred Kimber interview; lunch at Doug and Kathy Tanner's home; Ella Tanner interview
- Item 2:   4 July 1985:   Amy Tanner; Gwen Kimber McWilliams; set survey boundaries; measurement of Frost Ranch; survey maps, begin survey
- Item 3:   5 July 1985:   Document Frost Ranch; informal interviews with Louis Tanner, Herbert Tanner, Rhea and Archie Toyn
- Item 4:   6 July 1985:   4th of July Celebration activities: breakfast, parade, program, children's dance, lunch, rodeo, dance;
- wedding reception; breakfast and lunch sponsored by Oakley Valley Arts Council (Sarah Bedke, Kent Severe)
- Item 5:   7 July 1985:   Survey photographing; informal interview with Louis Tanner; LDS Relief Society, Sunday School and Sacrament Meeting;
- lunch at Doug and Kathy Tanner's home
- Item 6:   8 July 1985:   Map sites 11-59; survey with R. Roper; Richard Kimber; Fern Kimber; Kathy Tanner; Bobbie and Brian Blanthorn; Verl Smith
- Item 7:   9 July 1985:   Photographing and evaluating sites 12-51; Kenna Tanner; Kathy Tanner
- Item 8:   10 July 1985:   Finished survey of GC proper and most of the area outside of town; talked with Jack Kimber, Quentin Kimber,
- Irma Warburton, and Aleta Kimber
- Item 9:   11 July 1985:   Finished encoding sites; began intensive study of houses; Jeff and Tom Thomas; Kathy Tanner
- Item 10:   12 July 1985:   Measurement of A. Raymond Tanner house (site 7), and Moroni Tanner Cabin (site 7A), A. N. Tanner House (site 6);
- informal interview with Louis Tanner about site 7
- Item 11:   16 July 1985:   Measure sites 58, 41, 4, 21, 14; informal interview with Raida Kimber
- Item 12:   17 July 1985:   Measured Charles Toyn ranch (site 58), Co-op (site 26), chicken coop (site 15), stable (site 16), Richins House (site 19),
- Fletcher House (site OGC 28), Etna School (site OGC 25), Kimball dwellings (site OGC 9); informal interview with Winfred
- Kimber; interview with Archie Toyn
- Item 13:   18 July 1985:   Interview with Winfred Kimber about sites in GC while driving through town; finished measurements of Richins House
- (site 19); measurement of Frank LeRoy Frost house (site 53), Rytting Ranch complex (site 63), Blanthorn animal shelter/barn
- (site 49), William Shaw House (site 50); began measurement of rodeo grounds
- Item 14:   19 July 1985:   Finished measuring rodeo grounds (site 20); checked construction of Hadfield house (site 45); measured Blanthorn
- stone animal shelter/stable (site 49), Rytting barn (site 63B); goodbyes; drive back to Salt Lake City with Amy Tanner
- Item 15:   8 August 1985:   Wrap up visit to GC to measure buildings and photograph miscellaneous sites; Angie Tanner; Susan Wyrick at cemetery
- Folder 8:   Roper, Roger GCCS Fieldnotes (9 items) (014)
- Item 1:   8 July 1985:   Worked with Debbie Randall to map sites in Grouse Creek
- Item 2:   9 July 1985:   With Debbie Randall photograph sites in Grouse Creek though site 52; Kenna Tanner
- Item 3:   10 July 1985:   With D. Randall finished survey of GC; Emily Kimber; Oren Kimber (site 56); Jack Kimber (site 18); Chris Warburton (site 20)
- Item 4:   11 July 1985:   Finished mapping sites outside of GC proper: Thomas Ranch in Etna; John Hadfield house; rattlesnakes; Rhea Toyn
- Item 5:   12 July 1985:   Measured Allen N. Tanner House and stone granary, Raymond Tanner House, Moroni Tanner House; Louis Tanner
- Item 6:   16 July 1985:   Working lunch at Doug and Kathy Tanner's home; Fern Kimber; Raida Betteridge Kimber; Brian Blanthorn
- Item 7:   17 July 1985:   Measured site plan drawing of Toyn Ranch; Co-op Store; Winfred Kimber; Ella Betteridge Kimber
-
- Item 8:   18 July 1985:   With D. Randall, interview Winfred Kimber about sites in GC while driving through town; Measuring sites 20, 49, 50, 63
- Item 9:   19 July 1985:   Finish measuring rodeo grounds; measure Rytting ranch barn interior
SERIES IV:   SOUND RECORDINGS AND LOGS
-
- SUB-SERIES A:   Reel-to-Reel Tapes and Logs (4 boxes)
- BOX 1:   Reel-to-Reel Tape Logs
- Folder 1:   Carol Edison Reel-to-Reel Tape Logs (7 items) (Folder 015)
- Item 1:   RCE001: (B):   Interview with Ella Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 3 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- biographical information; foodways; ranch life; marriage; sewing   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Microphone handling noises, and voice gets muffled at 15:00. Tape runs out in mid-question.]   Total duration: 00:32:17
- Item 2:   RCE002: (B):   Interview with Ella Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 3 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- youth activities; school; old-time dances; child rearing; family reunions; local stores; ranching   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Tape begins in mid-sentence. Occassional microphone handling noises. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:41
- Item 3:   RCE003: (B):   Interview with Ella Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 3 July 1985 (pt. 3):
- traditional crafts; quilting; Ella's songbooks; Sunday dinner; old church; wedding receptions   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Tape begins with ambience and whispers are heard for first 00:20 before first question is asked. Cuckoo clock at 08:00.]   Total duration: 00:27:06
- Item 4:   RCE004: (B):   Interview with Ella Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 17 July 1985 (pt. 4):
- placement and uses of rooms in house over years; fires in town; home births; changes in ranching   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Tape runs out in midquestion. Occassional microphone handling noises.]   Total duration: 00:32:55
- Item 5:   RCE005: (B):   Interview with Ella Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 17 July 1985 (pt. 5):
- canning pickles, chili sauce and other relishes; pie making; foodways and activities when children were at home   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Occassional microphone handling noises. Tape begins with several test recordings, while clock can be heard ticking. Interview begins at 00:25. Tape runs out in mid-sentence at end.]   Total duration: 00:32:22
- Item 6:   RCE006: (B):   Interview with Kenna Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 17 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- ranching; foodways; quilting; modifications in house   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Tape has rumble at beginning and 04:45 (possibly thunder). Occasional traffic noises from outside. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:18
- Item 7:   RCE007: (B):   Interview with Kenna Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 17 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- rodeoing; roundup; canning and food storage; changes over time; community cooperation; Co-op store and livestock association   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is far off microphone and low in level. Occasional microphone, occasional distortion.]   Total duration: 00:31:11
- Folder 2:   Hal Cannon Reel-to-Reel Tape Logs (30 items) (Folder 016)
- Item 1:   RHC001: (A):   Interview with Archive and Rhea Toyn at their home in Grouse Creek, 3 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- Grouse Creek Orchestra: Ivan Kimber (tenor), Rada Kimber (piano), Grant Kimber (sax), Archive Toyn (sax), Lyman Kimber (guitar, banjo, drum, fiddle)   [2 track recording, 2 separate microphones. Speakers are somewhat off microphone. Severe microphone handling noise and rumble on right channel. Tape play-wound onto original reel. A tape recording of music playing is underneath the interview, and the speakers refer to and discuss the music. Recorder was stopped/started around 18:30. At 26:00 one of the interviewees sings and plays ukulele. Microphone handling nosie is heard. Tape runs out in mid-song.]   Total duration: 00:32:21
- Item 2:   RHC002: (A):   Interview with Archie and Rhea Toyn at their home in Grouse Creek, 3 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- continued from RHC001 on Grouse Creek Orchestra, with Archie performing   [2 track recording, 2 separate microphones. Singer on right channel. Occasional severe microphone handling noise and rumble on right channel. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:15
- Item 3:   RHC003: (A):   Interview with Archie and Rhea Toyn at their home in Grouse Creek, 3 July 1985 (pt. 3):
- old church; family reunions; community events; poetry   [2 track recording, 2 separate microphones. Occasional severe microphone handling noise and rumble on right channel. Top and tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:20
- Item 4:   RHC004: (B):   Interview with Milton Oman at his home in Grouse Creek, 4 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- Yost; ranching; rodeo   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is off microphone and fairly quiet. Recorder is starting at around 00:04, and the levels are quite low until around 00:46. Some thumps and low-frequency rumbles throughout. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:22
- Item 5:   RHC005: (B):   Interview with Milton Oman at his home in Grouse Creek, 4 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- Mormonism; dances; Burley and Rupert; ranch calendar   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Interviewer is off microphone and fairly quiet. Top cut off. Reel begins with a click/buzz.]   Total duration: 00:14:09
- Item 6:   RHC006: (A):   Interview with Doug Tanner at the Max Tanner Ranch in Grouse Creek, 4 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- ranching; buckaroo clothing   [Reel to reel 1/4" 1/2 track stereo (box says "tip to tip-Sennheiser 802"). Top cut off. Left and right channels seem to be out of phase until a large click happens at 02:05, when the channels become in-phase. High frequency ringing pitch occurs in places (tape box mentions wind chimes). Tape play-wound onto original reel. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:22
- Item 7:   RHC007: (A):   Interview with Doug Tanner at the Max Tanner Ranch in Grouse Creek, 4 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- ranching; LDS Church ranch; Mormonism; civil and religious law; old and new church building (C. Fleischhauer also interviewing)   [Reel to reel 1/4" 1/2 track stereo. High-frequency ringing pitch occurs in places (tape on box mentions wind chimes). Tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:15
- Item 8:   RHC008: (A):   Interview with Doug Tanner at the Max Tanner Ranch in Grouse Creek, 4 July 1985 (pt. 3):
- Oakley Stake; school and school entertainment; grasshoppers; Mormonism; pride in family name (C. Fleischhauer also interviewing)   [Reel to reel 1/4" 1/2 track stereo. High-frequency ringing pitch occurs in places (tape on box mentions wind chimes). Top cut off, and starts thin and distorted for a few seconds. Some noises from movement on sofa, bumping microphone. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:29:10
- Item 9:   RHC009: (A):   Interview with brothers Max, Merlin, & Monte Tanner at Max Tanner's home in Grouse Creek, 5 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- family history; ranching; Brezeeze Ranch; Indians; Utah Construction; outlaw stories: Sid Paskett and Diamond Field Jack   [Substantial amounts of rumble (microphone handling?) and occasional traffic passing by. Children playing and other voices and activity in background. The interviewees are hard to hear over the background noises at times. Interviewer is quite soft. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:33:03
- Item 10:   RHC010: (A):   Interview with brothers Max and Merlin Tanner at Max Tanner's home in Grouse Creek, 5 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- more outlaw stories: Bolly Miller; Mormon Cowboy; Cotton Thomas Basin naming; mining   [Substantial amounts of rumble (microphone handling?) and occasional traffic passing by. Children playing and other voices and activity in background. The interviewees are hard to hear over the background noises at times. Interviewer is quite soft. Tape play-wound onto original reel. The tape starts with some ambience and microphone rumble before the interview begins. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:33:03
- Item 11:   RHC011: (B):   Interview with Harold Oman in Grouse Creek, 9 July 1985:
- history; ranching; Yost; Park Valley; dances; Glen Bates Orchestra   [Full-track mono tape digitized on 1/2 track stereo playback machine. Tape play-wound onto original reel. Thunder in background, followed by rain on the roof at aroudn 13:00. Rain drowns out voices at times.]   Total duration: 00:25:20
- Item 12:   RHC012: (B):   Interview with Max Tanner on drive up Thomas Ranch in Nevada (Tom Carter also interviewing) 11 July 1985:
- childhood activity; changes in roads, fauna; ranching; fencing (NOTE: too much disturbance in 4wd drive, so after this reel-to-reel tape, switched to cassette tape, see ATC004-008)   [Top cut off, level very low, and the levels change dramatically as the recordist sets levels. Recorded in a vehicle. Substantial amounts of rumble. Tape stops briefly in mid sentence at times (perhaps the reels were bumped during the recording). Microphone is overloaded by wind/handling noises at times. Level drops dramatically at 15:50 for a few seconds. Tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:40
- Item 13:   RHC013: (monaural):   No Log: Duplicate of historic recording: Grouse Creek Orchestra (pt. 1):
- [Muddy recording. Dub from another recording. Tape machine can be heard stopping/starting in between songs. Tape ends abruptly after last song. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:30:53
- Item 14:   RHC014: (monaural):   No Log: Duplicate of historic recording: Grouse Creek Orchestra (pt. 2):
- [Muddy recording. Dub from another recording. Tape machine can be heard stopping/starting in between songs. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:31:34
- Item 15:   RHC015: (monaural):   No Log: Duplicate of historic recording: Grouse Creek Orchestra (pt. 3):
- [Muddy recording. Dub from another recording. Tape begins abruptly and levels are varied at beginning. Tape machine can be heard stopping/starting in between songs. Tape runs out in mid-song (tail cut off). Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:31:41
- Item 16:   RHC016: (monaural):   No Log: Duplicate of historic recording: Grouse Creek Orchestra (pt. 4):
- [Muddy recording. Dub from another recording. Tape begins abruptly.Tape machine can be heard stopping/starting in between songs.Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:31:09
- Item 17:   RHC017: (A):   Interview with Thelma & Wallace Betteridge, Raida Kimber, & George Betteridge at Raida Kimber's home (pt. 1):
- in Grouse Creek, 16 July 1985: Reunion of Betteridge siblings Wallace (79 yrs), George (82 yrs) and Raida (72 yrs); history of childhood and family   [Channels are out of phase on tape. Levels shift at beginning of reel. Some low machine noise in background. Occasional low-frequency rumbles. Top and tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:23
- Item 18:   RHC018: (A): Interview with Thelma & Wallace Betteridge, Raida Kimber, & George Betteridge at Raida Kimber's home (pt. 2):
- in Grouse Creek, 16 July 1985: rodeo; religion; stories about Indian Jack and Jim; dances; family home  [Channels are out of phase on tape. Levels shift at beginning of reel. Some low machine noise in background. Occasional low-frequency rumbles. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:40
- Item 19:   RHC019: (B):   Interview with Jack Kimber at his ranch in south Grouse Creek, 17 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- family history; ranching; Utah Construction; Grouse Creek Livestock Association; change in ranching   [Birds in background. Tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:24
- Item 20:   RHC020: (B):   Interview with Jack Kimber at his ranch in south Grouse Creek, 17 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- ranch machinery; injury trading; women on the ranch   [Birds in background. Wind chimes at times. Tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:33:04
- Item 21:   RHC021: (B):   Interview with Lyman Kimber at his home Grouse Creek, 18 July 1985:
- tape inaudible, no summary   [Very low levels, basically inaudible. Pushed gain as far as poissible. Tape play-wound on original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:14
- Item 22:   RHC022: (B):   Interview with Wallace Betteridge at his home in Montello, Nevada 25 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- ranching roping terminology: hard and fast, hoolihan, hondo; depression; ranch stories   [Occasional rumbles (microphone handling noises?). Odd noise at 01:20 (insect against microphone?). Insects, birds, and occasional loud traffic. Top and tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:24
- Item 23:   RHC023: (B):   Interview with Wallace Betteridge at his home in Montello, Nevada 25 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- cowboy gear; Montello   [Some thumps and rumbles, microphone handling noises. Loud door slam at 12:34. Top and tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:32:19
- Item 24:   RHC024: (B):   Interview with Oren "Dutch" Kimber at his in Grouse Creek, 26 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- ranching   [Level starts low and is raised. Recording was stopped/restarted at 02:40. Some microphone noises. Top and tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:33:02
- Item 25:   RHC025: (B):   Interview with Oren "Dutch" Kimber at his in Grouse Creek, 26 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- ranching; hunting; sheep herding and sheep herders: Basque and French; story of Indian Jim   [Microphone handling noises at 21:30. Woman speaker is far off-microphone and soft. Tail cut off. Tape play-wound onto original reel.]   Total duration: 00:33:03
- Item 26:   RHC026: (B):   Winfred Kimber Family Home Evening, Grouse Creek, 29 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- No log   [Tail cut off. Pops and crackles on tape. Strange loud noises near beginning (~01:24).]   Total duration: 00:32:21
- Item 27:   RHC027: (B):   Winfred Kimber Family Home Evening, Grouse Creek, 29 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- No log   [Top and tail cut off. Pops, little clicks and crackles on tape.]   Total duration: 00:19:31
- Item 28:   RHC028:   Interview with Merlin Tanner, Grouse Creek, 30 July 1985 (pt 1):
- No log   [Top and tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:38
- Item 29:   RHC029:   Interview with Merlin Tanner, Grouse Creek, 30 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- No log   [Overload on tape. Tail is cut off and slightly faded out on tape.]   Total duration: 00:32:24
- Item 30:   RHC030:   Interview with Merlin Tanner, Grouse Creek, 30 July 1985 (pt. 3):
- No log   [Tail is cut off.]   Total duration: 00:14:13
- Folder 3:   Tom Carter Reel-to-Reel Tape Logs (3 items) (Folder 017)
- Item 1:   RTC001: (B):   Interview with Winfred Kimber and Edward Frost at Frost Ranch, 3 July 1985 (C. Fleischhauer at interview) (pt. 1):
- tour of Frost Ranch; outbuildings and corrals; hay derricks; ranching practices: summer and winter range
  [Lots of rumbling noises, probably from bumping against the microphone. Top and tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:08
- Item 2:   RTC002: (B):   Interview with Winfred Kimber and Edward Frost at Frost Ranch, 3 July 1985 (C. Fleischhauer at interview) (pt. 2):
- Dirt roof houses; fences; sleds and farmsteads; new Frost house; cowboy gear; dugouts and root cellars; irrigation   [Hum at beginning of tape. Lots of noise from bumping against the microphone. Tail cut off and slightly faded out on tape (last few seconds are very low level).]   Total duration: 00:32:36
- Item 3:   RTC003: (B):   Interview with Winfred Kimber (87 yrs) at his home in Grouse Creek, 9 July 1985:
- life history; history of Grouse Creek; East Grouse Creek Irrigation Company; crags; foodways; cooking; round-ups; night entertainment on round-ups   [Lots of noise from bumping against the microphone. End cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:34
- Folder 4:   Hal Cannon Reel-to-Reel Tape Logs (duplicated from digital Tape) (3 items) (Folder 018)
- Item 1:   DHC001-1: (A):   Independence Day program (stage performances), recorded at GC School, 6 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- no log (duplicated from digital tape: DHC001)   [Many level changes on tape. Tail fades out on tape.]  Total duration: 00:31:31
- Item 2:   DHC002-2: (A):   Independence Day program (stage performances), recorded at GC School, 6 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- no log (duplicated from digital tape: DHC001)   [Some fluttering at times. Some overload on tape. Tail cut off.]   Total duration: 00:32:50
- Item 3:   DHC003-3: (A):   Independence Day program (stage performances), recorded at GC School, 6 July 1985 (pt. 3):
- no log (duplicated from digital tape: DHC001)   [Top cut off. Loud pops around 6:35 and 6:37 on tape (something being plugged in).]   Total duration: 00:10:34
- BOX 2:   Reel-to-Reel Tapes:   GCCS RCE001 through RCE007, GCCS RHC001 through RHC007
- BOX 3:   Reel-to-Reel Tapes:   GCCS RHC008 through RHC021
- BOX 4:   Reel-to-Reel Tapes:   GCCS RHC022 through RHC030, GCCS RTC001 through RTC003, GCCS DHC001-1 through DHC001-03
SUB-SERIES B:   Digital Tape and Log (2 boxes)
- BOX 1:   Digital Tape Log
- Folder 1:   Hal Cannon Digital Tape Log (1 item)
- Item 1:   DHC001: Independence Day program (stage performances), recorded at Grouse Creek School, Grouse Creek, 6 July 1985:
- no log
- BOX 2- :   Digital Tape: GCCS DHC001 (duplicated onto three reel-to-reel tapes: DHC001-1, DHC002-2, DTC003-3, in Series IV, Sub-series A, Box 4)
SUB-SERIES C:   Audio Cassette Tapes and Logs (2 boxes)
- BOX 1:   Audio Cassette Tape Log
- Folder 1:   Carol Edison Cassette Tape Logs (6 items) (Folder 019)
- Item 1:   ACE001 (side A): (D):   Interview with Kathleen Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 18 July 1985:
- discussion about gender-specific chores; remodeling of the Max Tanner ranch house; learning to cook and clean; women in the corral; teaching kids to work on ranch; position as bishop's wife; community togetherness in crisis; difficulty of sending kids away to school   [Hum on tape. Overload from breathing into the microphone. 20 second droupout at about 13:34. Some little zipper sounds on tape. Little pops and crackles. Overload on tape, often from breathing into microphone. Tail cut off.]   Side A Duration: 00:47:39
- Item 2:   ACE001 (side B): (D):   Interview with Fern Kimber at her home in Grouse Creek, 18 July 1985:
- foodways in both Randolph, where she was raised, and in Grouse Creek; raising, preserving and storing food. [Material doesn't begin until about 10 minutes into tape. Mono, left channel only. Strange static at many places on tape. Overload from breathing into the microphone. Tail cut off.]   Side B Duration: 00:35:48
- Item 3:   ACE002: (D):   Interview with Melissa Tanner at her home in Grouse Creek, 18 July 1985:
- old ranch house and new house in town; foodways; chili sauce and other canning; desserts; ranching; quilting; horses.   [Mono, left channel only. Lots of bumping into the microphone on side A. Some overload on tape (especially during last few minutes of side A). Often difficult to hear interviewer. Tail of side A and top and tail of side B cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:35:13
- Item 4:   ACE003 (side A): (D):   Interview with Betty Kimber at her home in Grouse Creek, 19 July 1985:
- foodways in Malta, Idaho and Grouse Creek; chili sauce; venison; family reunions; isolation; community cooperation; significant local sites.   [Loud hum on tape. Mono, left channel only. Occasional overload on tape. Tail cut off.]   Side A Duration: 0:47:38
- Item 5:   ACE003 (side B): (D):   Interview with Marge Thompson at her home in Grouse Creek, 19 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- gender roles while growing up: "corral talk"; foodways: chili sauce, desserts, canning.   [Mono, left channel only. Squeaking noise and strange distortion at the beginning. Some overload on tape. Loud hum on tape.]   Side A Duration: 0:47:37
- Item 6:   ACE004: (D):   Interview with Marge Thompson at her home in Grouse Creek, 19 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- wedding dances; writing and reciting poetry and readings; recitation of several original poems; 50th wedding anniversaries; use of school house and church over years.   [Mono, left channel only on tape. Overload on tape. Very loud hum on tape, sometimes difficult to hear voices. Top cut off.]   Total Duration: 00:44:30
Folder 2: Hal Cannon Cassette Tape Log (1 item) (Folder 020)
- Item 1:   AHC001: (C):   Interview with Doug Tanner driving from Grouse Creek to Cotton Thomas Basin to herd cows, 19 July 1985:
- ranching: herding cows; BLM: leasing land; changes to community over years; hunting; recreation: rodeo; pedigree of a cowboy [Mono, right channel only. Top and tail cut off.]   Total Duration: 00:30:36
Folder 3: Tom Carter Cassette Tape Log (15 items) (Folder 021)
- Item 1:   ATC001: (C):   Interview with Verna Kimber Richardson, Winfred Kimber, Val Richardson at Winfred Kimber home in GC,
- 2 July 1985: conversation about early LDS church associations and traditions (Carol Edison also interviewing)(Transcript of interview with Winfred Kimber at his home on 9 July 1984, regarding Mr. Kimber's life and history of Grouse Creek also included, however tape could not be found)   [Right channel only, mono. Wind noise on tape. All tops and tails cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:02:53
- Item 2:   ATC002: (C): side A   Interview with Marge and Hugh Thompson, 9 July 1985 (pt.1):
- religion (LDS); family celebrations; baseball; poetry   [Mono, right channel only. Background talking on tape. Top and tail cut off.]   Total Duration: 00:29:11
- Item 3:   ATC003: (C):   Interview with Marge and Hugh Thompson, 9 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- no log provided, this is the first part of the interview, second part on cassette tape ATC002 side A   [Mono, left channel only. Some overload on tape. Top of side A and tail of side B cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:03:51
- Item 4:   ATC004: (C):   Interview with Max Tanner on trip to "West Mountain," 11 July 1985 (Hal Cannon also interviewing) (pt. 1):
- country to the Nevada side of Grouse Creek (where Max's range was and where the Tanner's have traditionally kept their cows); local places and events; Grouse Creek life and history (Cassette tapes ATC: 004-008 are continuation of interview started on reel-to reel tape RHC-012.)   [Some overload on tape. Tops and tails cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:01:40
- Item 5:   ATC005: (C):   Interview with Max Tanner on trip to "West Mountain," 11 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- life and history of the area; local place names and customs   [Mono, right channel only. Tops and tails cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:03:52
- Item 6:   ACE006: (C):   Interview with Max Tanner on trip to "West Mountain," 11 July 1985 (pt. 3):
- deer hunting; branding; weather; Gamble Ranch; mining; wild horses; place names  [Mono, right channel only. Tops and tails cut off except side B tail.]   Total Duration: 01:03:42
- Item 7:   ATC007: (C):   Interview with Max Tanner on trip to "West Mountain," 11 July 1985 (pt. 4) :
- mustangs; foreigners; guns; water; livestock; corrals; Utah Construction camp   [Extremely right heavy. Little pops/clicks on tape. Sounds like they are driving. Top and tail of side A cut off, tail of side B cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:03:36
- Item 8:   ACE008: (C):   Interview with Max Tanner on trip to "West Mountain," 11 July 1985 (pt. 5):
- Nevada cowboys; relationship between GC and ranches like the Gamble, Trout Creek; law of the range; Mormon and non-Mormon tension; cowboys and Mormons; cowboy code; stockman and rancher; local places; music and songs; land division; Valison Tanner (Max's grandfather); school   [Top and tail of side A cut off. Mono, right channel only.]   Total Duration: 00:59:35
- Item 9:   ATC009: (C):   Interview with Oren Kimber and Opel Kimber on drive to "East Mountain," above GC, 18 July 1985 (pt. 1):
- local places and history; South Ingham Canyon and Pine Creek (where Kimber's ranched)   [The first 7 minutes of side A is mono, right channel only. The remainder of the tape is mono, left channel only. Some pops, clicks, and crackles on tape. 15 seconds dropout at 4:40 on Side A. Tail of side B cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:04:06
- Item 10:   ATC010: (C):   Interview with Oren Kimber and Opal Kimber on drive to "East Mountain," above GC, 18 July 1985 (pt. 2):
- girl on the range; women's life on the range; Indians; younger Grouse Creek residents ride but don't cowboy; distinctions between Mormons and cowboys; repping; shortage of women in GC; logging in Pine Creek Canyon; deer hunting and Deer Hunter's Ball; LDS Bishop more than a church leader; foodways   [Tops and tails cut off. Mono, left channel only. Pops, clicks on tape. Some little dropouts on tape. 7 second dropout at 3:21 on side A.]   Total Duration: 01:02:46
- Item 11:   ATC011: (C):   Interview with Oren Kimber and Opal Kimber on drive to "East Mountain," above GC, 18 July 1985 (pt.3):
- sage tea; injuries to cowboys; weather; "rodeers" and round-ups; branding; fences: stockade, pole, buck; farming; house plans   [This tape had trouble rewinding. Overload on tape. Muffled sound. Lots of rumbling/wind noise on tape. Some pops and little dropouts on tape. Mono, left channel only. Tail cut off.]   Total Duration: 00:31:51
- Item 12:   ATC012: (C):   Interview with Doug Tanner, 28 January 1986:
- cowboy tradition; seasonal activities; gear   [Extremely low levels on tape (especially beginning of side A). Tops and tails cuts off.]   Total Duration: 01:03:57
- Item 13:   ATC013: (C):   Interview with Max Tanner, 1 January 1986:
- transportation; fencing; hired man; irrigation; grazing; codes of range; haying; skills; gear; horses and corrals   [Snap, cracke, pops on tape. Machine hum on tape. Tops and tails cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:03:08
- Item 14:   ATC014: (C):   Interview with Oren Kimber at his home in Grouse Creek, 30 January 1986:
- irrigation techniques   [Lots of little pops, clicks, crackles on tape. Top and tail of both sides cut off.]   Total Duration: 00:41:48
- Item 15:   ATC015: (D):  Meeting with project fieldworkers, 15 July 1985:
- no log provided   [Overload on tape. Top and tail of both sides cut off.]   Total Duration: 01:34:28
- BOX 2:   Cassette Tapes: GCCS ACE001 through ACE004, GCCS AHC001; GCCS ATC001 through ATC012
- BOX 3:   Cassette Tapes: GCCS ATC013 through ATC015
SERIES V:   IMAGES AND LOGS
-
- SUB-SERIES A:   Color Images (Transparencies: slides and 2 1/4 negatives) and Logs (9 boxes)
- BOX 1:   Color Transparency Logs
- Folder 1:   Carol Edison Color Transparency Logs, July 1985, 23 sheets original images, 1 sheet duplicate images (Folder 022)
- CCE001:   Various views of Grouse Creek
- Slides 1-5   Views of Grouse Creek from hill south of town, panning from left to right
- Slide 6:   northeastwardly view of town from hill behind homes with school on left
- Slides 7-10:   eastward view from hill behind, homes form left to right
- Slide 11:   southward view from hill behind homes, from left to right
- Slide 12:   southward view from the hill behind homes toward Paskett cabin and the LDS Ward Ranch
- Slide 13:   view of the Dugway from the south
- Slides 14-16:   view from rodeo grounds southward
- Slides 17-18:   view northward from Hattie Tanner's place
- Slides 19-20:   view eastward from Hattie Tanner's to rodeo grounds
- CCE002:   Stone quarry; hay fields; house and hay derrick in Etna
- Slides 1-4:   road northward from town toward quarry
- Slides 5-10:   views of quarry
- Slide 11:   view from quarry southward toward ward ranch
- Slides 12-14:   hay fields on east side of highway north of town
- Slides 15-17:   hay fields in Etna
- Slide 18:   hay derrick in Etna
- Slides 19-20:   old stone Warburton house in Etna
- CE003:   Co-op; school; LDS Ward Ranch; Alan & Louis Tanner corrals
- Slides 1-3:   Grouse Creek Co-op store
- Slides 4-5:   rock salt piled behind the store
- Slide 6:   Grouse Creek School
- Slide 7:   closeup of stonework on the school
- Slide 8:   Simplot (corporation) ranch sign
- Slides 9-11:   fields of the Grouse Creek Ward ranch adjacent the quarry road
- Slide 12:   ward ranch fence
- Slide 13: ward ranch field
- Slides 14-15: ward ranch corral
- Slides 16-17: ward ranch horseshoeing equipment
- Slides 18-20:   Alan and Louis Tanner town corrals
- CCE004:   Paskett cabin; Alan and Louis Tanner corrals; A. N. Tanner house
- Slides 1-4:   exterior of old Paskett cabin
- Slide 5:   interior of old Paskett cabin
- Slides 6-13:   Alan and Louis Tanner corrals north of town
- Slides 14-17:   exterior of A.N. Tanner house
- Slides 18-20:   interior of A.N. Tanner house
- CCE005:   Grouse Creek Cemetery
- Slide 1:   benches in cemetery, originally used in church and later used in cemetery for Memorial Day programs
- Slide 2:   view from northwest corner toward center of cemetery
- Slides 3-4:   graves along the western boundary
- Slides 5-8:   scraped, mounded earth graves
- Slide 9:   grave with cement curb
- Slide 10: yardscape type ornamentation in new section
- Slide 11-15:   graves found in northwest section and identified as "Indian" graves
- Slide 16:   imported marble headstone and footstone with bases of locally quarried stone
- Slide 17:   custom epitaph on imported stone: G. Catlin grave
- Slide 18:   imported stone: B.D. Catlin grave
- Slide 19:   G. Catlin sone, wooden cross and Mormon military marker
- Slide 20:   closeup of Mormon military marker, made in 20 century with Angel Gabriel to commemorate 19th century service
- CCE006:   Grouse Creek Cemetery
- Slides 1-2:   hand carved, imported head and footstones with Mormon temple on headstone
- Slide 3:   hand caved, imported headstone with Mormon temple: L. Richins grave
- Slides 4-5:   W. and S. Betteridge graves marked with petrified wood
- Slides 6-8:   sandblasted, double gravestone with LDS temple: E. & D. Tanner (pre-need for wife), names of children on backside
- Slides 9-10:   sandblasted, double gravestone: A. & E. Kimber (pre-need for wife), names of children on backside
- Slides 11-12:   sandblasted, double gravestone with LDS Temple: V. & H. Tanner (pre-need for husband), names of children on back
- Slides 13-14:   gravestone carved with pneumatic tools: G. & C. & L. Ballingham (polygamist), names of children on backside
- Slide 15:   sandblasted, double gravestone with covered wagon: M. & A. Richins (pre-need for wife)
- Slide 16:   sandblasted, double gravestone with LDS Temple: M. & D Toyn
- Slide 17:   sandblasted, double gravestone with book of life: O. & W. Kimber
- Slide 18:   sandblasted gravestone with deer: E. Harris
- Slide 19:   sandblasted gravestone with riderless horse: G. Roberts
- Slide 20:   gravestone: SLIDE MISSING
- CCE007:   Old Frost homestead
- Slide 1:   entrance to old Frost Ranch
- Slides 2-3:   handmade gate
- Slides 4-6:   closeup of gate construction
- Slide 7:   gate viewed from interior of corral
- Slides 8-12:   loading chute
- Slides 13-14:   view eastward toward creek from Frost lane
- Slide 15:   dry, west irrigation ditch inside Frost place
- Slide 16-20:   south side of cabin from back to front
- CCE008:   Old Frost cabin
- Slides 1-2:   animal shelter on south end of cabin
- Slide 3:   interior of animal shelter
- Slides 4-5:   closeup of ax work on interior log walls of shelter
- Slide 6:   front view of cabin's living quarters
- Slide 7:   closeup of doorway and roof
- Slide 8:   front view of cabin's living quarters
- Slide 9:   notching on the northeast corner
- Slide 10:   closeup of the north side
- Slides 11-12:   View of the north side
- Slide 13:   closeup of the cellar at northwest corner
- Slide 14:   closeup of stonework on cellar exterior
- Slide 15:   dirt roof over cellar at northwest corner
- Slides 16-17:   view of northwest corner of cabin along fence line
- Slide 18:   view from cabin northeastward along fence line
- Slides 19-20:   backside (westside) of cabin
- CCE009:   Old Frost homestead; root cellar; post office
- Slides 1:   cattle at old Frost cabin
- Slide 2:   log granary along north fence of homestead
- Slide 3:   closeup of notching on granary
- Slide 4:   holding pen and barn
- Slide 5:   closeup of barn roof
- Slide 6:   closeup of notching on barn
- Slide 7-9:   roof construction, northeast corner of barn
- Slide 10:   closeup outbuilding roof: SLIDE MISSING
- Slide 11:   Kenna & Melvin Tanner root cellar and silos
- Slide 12:   closeup of Grouse Creek Post Office sign
- Slides 13-20:   miscellaneous structures in Grouse Creek: SLIDES MISSING
- CCE010:   Ella & Delbert Tanner home; Ella Tanner canning raspberries; Ella & Delbert Tanner family reunion (copy photos)
- Slide 1:   Ella Tanner with canned fruit
- Slides 2-3:   Ella Tanner canning raspberries in her kitchen
- Slide 4:   exterior of Tanner home
- Slide 5:   living room at E. Tanner home
- Slide 6:   kitchen at Tanner home
- Slide 7:   view down into root cellar
- Slide 8-9:   canned raspberries cooling
- Slide 10:   funnel used to fill jars for cold-pack canning
- Slide 11:   raspberries from Brigham City area waiting to be canned
- Slides 12-13:   (left to right) bread and butter pickles, chili sauce, dill pickles, mustard pickles, sweet pickle relish
- Slide 14:   home canned crab apples (left) and raspberries (right)
- Slide 15:   duplicate photo of Ella Tanner and family at last family reunion (Ella Tanner collection)
- Slide 16:   duplicate photo of barbeque at Tanner family reunion (Ella Tanner collection)
- Slide 17:   duplicate photo of foot race at Tanner family reunion (Ella Tanner collection)
- Slide 18:   duplicate photo of Grouse Creek Orchestra (Ella Tanner collection)
- Slides 19-20:   duplicate photo of Grouse Creek Band (Ella Tanner collection): SLIDES MISSING
- CCE011:   Melissa Tanner; Kenna & Brent Tanner; women's handiwork
- Slides 1-2:   Melissa Tanner with her crocheted afghans
- Slide 3:   closeup of crocheted afghan
- Slide 4:   crocheted afghan on tricot bedspread
- Slide 5:   quilted tricot queen-sized bedspread
- Slides 6-7:   closeups of tricot bedspread, center panel
- Slide 8:   quilted tricot queen-sized bedspread
- Slide 9:   closeup of quilted rose in center panel of bedspread
- Slide 10:   back (light blue) and front (dark blue) of quilted tricot
- Slide 11:   Kenna tanner
- Slide 12:   Kenna & Brent Tanner (son) with pieced quilt top, lone star design
- Slide 13:   closeup of pieced lone star quilt top
- Slide 14:   Kenna & Brent Tanner (son) with crocheted afghan
- Slides 15-16 :   Kenna Tanner's twin-sized tied camp quilt, with closeup
- Slides 17-18 :   pieced log cabin design quilted bedspread, with closeup
- Slide 19-20:   pieced butterfly design quilt, with closeup
- CCE012:   Milt Oman breaking a horse in the roadside corral near rodeo grounds
- Slides 1-12:   walking the horse so he gets used to the saddle
- Slides 13-20:   mounting, riding the sometimes bucking horse
- CCE013:   Max & Melissa Tanner; Kathleen, Toni & Tami Tanner; working on 4th of July float
- Slides 1-3:   sign on Co-op door advertising July 4th celebration
- Slides 4-5:   cutting grass along parade route
- Slides 6-7:   preparation of rodeo grounds
- Slides 8-9:   out-of-town visitors watch float construction by current residents at Max & Melissa tanners' home
- Slides 10:   Kathleen & Toni Tanner work on the float
- Slides 11:   Max Tanner's sister-in-law(?) & Tami Tanner work on the float
- Slides 12:   Tami Tanner poses near sagebrush and flag decorations
- Slides 13-17:   local riders herd in stock for rodeo
- Slides 18-20:   local riders try out the newly prepared grounds
- CCE014:   Ella Tanner; Herbert Tanner; Winfred Tanner; 4th of July community breakfast and parade
- Slides 1-2:   flags flying on the U.S. Post Office
- Slide 3:   sleeping bags of out-of-town visitors who camped out
- Slide 4:   cars of visitors staying with Max & Melissa Tanner
- Slide 5:   Burley (Idaho) Arts Council peels potatoes for breakfast
- Slide 6:   folklorist Tom Carter prepares to photograph serving line
- Slide 7:   cooks prepare and serve pancakes and sausage
- Slide 8:   young girl in breakfast line
- Slide 9:   breakfast takes place on schoolyard lawn
- Slide 10:   young buckaroo enjoys breakfast
- Slides 11-12:   women and men visit with each other during event
- Slides 13-14:   teenaged riders lead parade with U.S. and Utah flags
- Slide 15:   children ride decorated bikes in the parade
- Slides 16-17:   trucks and three wheelers pull trailers with kids
- Slide 18:   4-H Club float features sheep
- Slide 19:   truck carries Grouse Creek seniors: Ella Tanner, Herbert Tanner & Winfred Kimber; proclaims "G.C.'s Best"
- Slide 20:   float with sagebrush and flags made by K. Tanner and kids
- CCE015:   Doug Tanner; Archie Toyn; Kathleen, Tami & Thomas Tanner; 4th of July parade and variety show
- Slide 1:   Kathleen Tanner float carrying kids and sign "Our Best Crop"
- Slide 2:   kids on horseback in parade
- Slide 3:   community gathers after parade at school
- Slide 4:   equestrian flagbearers after parade
- Slide 5:   Bishop Doug Tanner welcomes audience to variety show
- Slide 6:   folklorists Tom Carter and Hal Cannon play (upon special request) in the variety show
- Slides 7-8:   performance, both on and off stage, by cloggers from Salt Lake City
- Slide 9:   vocal solo by Archie Toyn
- Slide 10:   musical trio of local boys
- Slides 11-12:   audience watching performance
- Slide 13:   Doug & Kathleen Tanner and children
- Slide 14:   audience member videotapes variety show
- Slide 15:   Thomas & Tami Tanner with unidentified friends
- Slide 16:   Thomas Tanner
- Slides 17-18:   special presentation of flowers to those who'd lost family members to war
- Slides 19-20:   vocal number by Grouse Creek School children
- CCE016:   Rodeo sign up; children's dance; noon meal; games on school lawn
- Slide 1:   children's dance, with king and queen of the dance
- Slides 2-4:   children's dance: bunny hop
- Slides 5-7:   visiting and relaxing on the lawn
- Slides 8-10:   family and friends share noon meal on the lawn
- Slides 11-13:   buckaroos signing up to participate in rodeo
- Slides 14, 15:   concession (fish pond) for children
- Slides 16, 17:   softball and riding horses after meal
- Slides 18-20:   softball game: SLIDES MISSING
- CCE017:   4th of July rodeo
- Slide 1:   rodeo flagbearer
- Slides 2-10:   team roping
- Slides 11-14:   bull riding
- Slides 15-18:   bronc riding
- Slides 19-20:   calf roping
- (Duplicate Slides: 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 16, 17, 20)
- CCE018:   4th of July rodeo
- Slides 1-5:   calf roping
- Slides 6-14:   rodeo spectators lined up along fence
- Slide 15:   older spectators watching rodeo from across the highway in front of Hattie Tanner's home while visiting
- Slide 16:   teenaged girls on horseback
- Slides 17-18:   older spectators visiting
- Slide 19-20:   highway from the rodeo
- CCE019:   wedding reception for Brian & JoLene (K. Hill) Thompson, son of Marge & Hugh Thompson, held at LDS Church, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-5:   wedding line
- Slides 6-7:   brother of the bride videotaping reception
- Slides 8-10:   wedding quilt made by Marge Thompson
- Slide 11:   wedding cake
- Slides 12-13:   refreshment table
- Slides 14-15:   young girls with aprons serving refreshments
- Slides 16-20:   women in kitchen preparing refreshments and cleaning up afterwards
- CCE020:   Doug Tanner Ranch (old Max Tanner ranch); interior decoration
- Slides 1-5:   westward view of approach to Doug Tanner ranch
- Slides 6-9:   cut and welded metal ranch gate, made by CA welder
- Slide 10:   ranch house and stock truck
- Slide 11:   view of hay fields from kitchen sink
- Slides 12-13:   Doug Tanner's stock truck
- Slides 14-16:   bunkhouse with detail of corner notching and brands
- Slide 17:   interior of living rom with Doug's chair
- Slides 18:   display on living room wall of the Ogden LDS Temple, a child's handprint, and Mormon prophet: Spencer W. Kimball
- Slide 19:   counted cross stitch plaque with poem
- Slide 20:   photos of family members
- CCE021:   Kathleen Tanner and children preparing noon meals (two occasions)
- Slide 1:   Kathleen Tanner at kitchen sink
- Slides 2-3:   Kathleen Tanner cutting roast beef and pork for serving
- Slide 4:   Angie (l) and Kathleen Tanner with dough for donuts
- Slide 5:   Kathleen Tanner serving mashed potatoes with donuts in front
- Slide 6:   Kathleen Tanner putting mashed potatoes in bowl
- Slide 7:   Kathleen Tanner at sink, Angie at stove and Amy Tanner cutting salad
- Slide 8:   Amy Tanner using mixer
- Slide 9:   Angie Tanner at stove; Amy Tanner cutting salad
- Slide 10:   Kathleen Tanner instructing Amy Tanner while Angie Tanner works behind them
- Slide 11:   Angie Tanner at stove; Amy Tanner at counter
- Slide 12:   Angie Tanner stirring and heating something
- Slide 13:   Amy Tanner preparing salad
- Slide 14:   (l to r) Kathleen, Terry, Angie, Tami and Toni Tanner
- Slides 15-16:   Terry Tanner (l) and Angie Tanner shredding cheese for tacos
- Slide 17:   (l to r) Kathleen, Terry and Tami Tanner
- Slides 18-19:   table: mashed potatoes, gravy, roast beef & pork, pickled beets, chili sauce, beet jelly, butter, green beans & coleslaw
- Slide 20:   Angie Tanner holding the baby, Trisha Tanner
- CCE022:   Doug & Kathleen Tanner children; Max Tanner and brother; Winfred Kimber; Marge & Hugh Thompson
- Slides 1-2:   Tami Tanner
- Slides 3-4:   Trisha (baby) and Toni Tanner
- Slides 5-9:   Thomas Tanner
- Slides 10:   Angie Tanner
- Slide 11:   Max Tanner with granddaughter, Trisha Tanner (daughter of Doug & Kathleen Tanner)
- Slides 12-13:   Max Tanner
- Slide 14:   Max Tanner and his brother from Brigham City, UT
- Slide 15:   Max Tanner's brother
- Slides 16-17:   Winfred Kimber
- Slides 18-19:   Marge & Hugh Thompson at their dining room table
- Slide 20:   display of religious books & family photos in Thompson living room
- CCE023:   Interviewing W. Kimber & M. Tanner; documenting Independence Day; Fieldworkers; Frost homestead
- Slide 1:   (l to r) (?), Verna Kimber, Debbie Randall, Winfred Kimber at old Frost homestead
- Slide 2:   (l to r) Winfred Kimber, Carl Fleischhauer, Tom carter, at Frost homestead
- Slides 3-5 :   Tom Carter interviewing Winfred Kimber at Frost homestead
- Slides 6-9:   Debbie Randall & Tom Carter measuring cabin at old Frost homestead
- Slide 10:   Tom Carter drawing old Frost cabin
- Slides 11-12:   Tom Carter & Debbie Randall measuring fence surrounding Frost place
- Slide 13:   Tom Carter photographing details of cabin construction
- Slides 14-17 :   Hal Cannon interviewing Max Tanner and his brother
- Slide 18:   Debbie Randall interviewing community & visitors on Independence Day celebration
- Slide 19:   (l to r) Carl Fleischhauer, Tom Carter & Hal Cannon in front of school at the Independence Day picnic
- Slide 20:   Hal Cannon with camera equipment
- Folder 2:   Carl Fleischhauer Color Transparency Logs, July 1985 & August 1988, 26 sheets original images, 1 sheet duplicate images (Folder 023)
- CCF001:   Fieldwork equipment; scenic views; Steven Kimber haying, 2 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   at the Utah Folk Arts Program office: fieldwork equipment from DC: tape recorders, cameras, computer, supplies
- Slides 4-6:   at the north end of the Grouse Creek Valley, view south with cattle in foreground
- Slides 7-8:   Steve Kimber haying in the field east of the house toward the creek
- Slides 9-10:   Tom Carter and Steve Kimber
- Slides 11-14:   picking up hay bales with the bale wagon, some with old Frost place in background
- Slides 15-16:   dropping the stack of bales on the west side of the former Frost outbuilding
- Slide 17:   the alignment string (old baling twine) nailed to the ground, used by Steve Kimber to back the bale wagon in place
- Slides 18-19:   old sled, piled high with used baling twine
- CCF002:   Louis Tanner; old Frost place; fieldwork headquarters house, 2, 3 July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Louis Tanner and friend load an Angus bull to move
- Slides 3-5:   Louis Tanner
- Slides 6-8:   Louis Tanner & Tom Carter
- Slides 9-13:   looking down into the head of the valley from the road to the north (evening light)
- Slides 14-16:   same site as slides 9-13, with telephoto lense, view toward the west
- Slides 17-20:   (next morning, 3 July 1985) fieldwork headquarters house, railroad tie outbuilding behind the barn
- CCF003: Fieldwork headquarters house; Old Frost place; Co-op store, 3 July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   fieldwork headquarters house from the front, Tom Carter's vehicle
- Slides 3-8:   looking west, down the hill at the old Frost place
- Slides 9-10:   looking north from the old Frost place
- Slides 11-17:   inside and outside shots of community Co-op store, including poster for Fourth of July celebration on door
- CCF004: Rhea & Archie Toyn; post office, 3, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   Recording session at the Toyn's home: Rhea & Archie Toyn, Hal cannon
- Slides 4-5:   Rhea's deceased mother's shoe (she had polio), displayed on a shelf in the living room (set near window for photos)
- Slides 6-8:   Rhea & Archie Toyn
- Slides 9-12:   (Next morning: 4 July 1985): views by early morning light (moon still visible) from headquarters house
- Slides 13-14:   post office
- Slides 15-18:   Posters on P.O. door, including one for fourth of July celebrations
- CCF005: Co-op store; stone barn; townscape, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-4:   Townscapes
- Slides 5-6:   townscapes with corrals and animal pens
- Slides 7-8:   Co-op store
- Slides 9-15:   stone barn
- CCF006:   Frost house; Doug Tanner ranch, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-15:   The old log house at the old Frost place, with dirt roof
- Slide 16:   Tom Carter, Kathleen Tanner & Carol Edison in the kitchen after dinner at the Doug and Kathleen Tanner home
- Slides 17-18:   Doug and Kathleen Tanner daughters eating dinner (after adults), Kathleen Tanner and Tom Carter in background
- CCF007:   Doug Tanner ranch, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-4:   looking at the Tanner ranchstead and house from hill to the east
- Slides 5-10:   view of southwest of house, looking down on the house, yard, ranch
- Slides 11-12:   from same spot, looking toward valley
- Slides 13-18:   Doug Tanner interviewed by Hal Cannon, with Nagra tape recorder in foreground
- Slides 19-20:   Doug Tanner
- CCF008:   Doug & Kathleen Tanner family; Fletcher house, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   portrait of Doug Tanner family
- Slides 4-19:   Fletcher house, including inside and outside images
- CCF009:   Tanner National Registry house, 4 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   Tanner house on the national registry
- Slides 4-5:   scene of valley
- Slides 6-10:   Tanner National Register house
- Slides 11-15:   Mormon hay stacker or hay derrick, located on main road outside town
- Slides 16-17:   fieldwork team on 4th of July picnic (l to r) H. Cannon, T. Carter, C. Edison, D. Randall, C. Fleischhauer
- CCF010:   Warren Kimber haying & irrigating; Doug Tanner family, 5 July 1985
- Slides 1-8:   Warren Kimber and son haying
- Slides 9-13:   water in irrigation ditch
- Slides 14-15:   dinner table set at Doug & Kathleen Tanner's home: roast beef and pork
- CCF011:   Foodways at the Doug and Kathleen Tanner home; Jeff Thomas ranch, 5 July 1985
- Slides 1-10:   Kathleen and daughters making donuts
- Slides 11-13:   Toni frosting walnut squares
- Slides 14-18:   Jeff Thomas irrigating garden (Tom Carter in slide 16)
- Slides 19-20:   hot spring on the Thomas place, 100 degree temperature
- CCF012:   Rock corral; Fletcher house, 5 July 1985
- Slides 1-7:   Jeff Thomas with Tom Carter at the rock corral, used for hunting and dressing deer
- Slides 8-9:   granite outbuilding at the Thomas place
- Slides 10-11:   relatively new irrigation system at the Fletcher house
- Slides 12-15:   Tom Carter at the fieldwork headquarters logging a tape on the Kaypro computer
- Slide 16:   Carl Fleischhauer's sleeping area in the corner of the office
- CCF013:   Independence Day Celebration on 6 July 1985
- Slide 1:   members of the Oakley, ID Arts council, peel potatoes for the lunch while breakfast is served
- Slides 2-3:   Brice Bedke
- Slides 4-5:   kids on three-wheelers dive down the road in front of the school
- Slides 6-7:   the Grouse Creek School building
- Slides 8-12:   4th of July breakfast hosted by the Oakley, Idaho Arts Council
- Slides 13-14:   people eating at school tables outside
- Slides 15-16:   man with T-shirt: "My wife--yes; my dog--maybe; my gun--never"
- Slides 17-18:   Debbie Randall (in red shirt) conducts interviews
- Slides 19-20:   people eating breakfast at school tables outside
- CCF014:   Patriotic program at the Independence Day Celebration on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Boy Scout color guard
- Slides 3-4:   audience sings National Anthem
- Slides 5-6:   man singing
- Slides 7-10:   Tom Cater and Hal Cannon perform
- Slides 11-17:   cloggers
- Slides 18-19:   school chorus led by teacher
- CCF015:   Patriotic program & activities at the 4th of July Celebration on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   ceremony for veterans
- Slides 4-5:   line for lunch, served by Oakley Idaho Arts Council
- Slides 6-9:   children's dance
- Slide 10:   three girls
- Slides 11-12:   Nevada buckaroos from Gamble Ranch: (l to r) Hal Bongiovi, Gordon Stanford, Harland Jewett
- Slides 13-14:   eating lunch and socializing
- Slides 15-16:   kids' bikes decorated for parade, with hand-painted flag
- Slides 17-18:   C. Fleischhauer visiting with local man
- CCF016:   Independence Day Celebration on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   signing up for rodeo
- Slides 3-6:   kids races
- Slides 6-9:   children's dance
- Slides 7-11:   Betty Tanner (dark hair with glasses) run fishpond
- Slides 12-16:   baseball game in playing fields south of school
- Slide 13:   Meredith Morgan from Orem, UT
- Slide 14:   Terri Tanner from North Ogden, UT
- Slide 15:   at first base, pitcher Corey Anderson slides in as John Anderson catches the ball (from Bountiful, UT)
- CCF017:   Independence Day Rodeo on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   racing flags around the arena
- Slides 4-7:   grand entry
- Slides 8-20:   images shot from judge/announcer stand; the emcee is Merlin Tanner
- Slides 8-11:   getting mounted on a saddle bronc
- Slide 12:   cow riding
- Slide 13:   saddle bronc comes out of the chute
- Slides 14-17:   team roping
- Slides 18-20:   looking over Merlin Tanner's shoulder at saddle bronc riding
- (Duplicate Slides: 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18)
- CCF018:   Independence Day Rodeo on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   rigging up
- Slides 3-5:   folks sitting on fence watching rodeo
- Slide 6:   man and boy in parking area north of arena
- Slide 7:   family in parking area north of arena
- Slide 8:   parking area; boy on the left is Tommy Tanner; man with camera is Hal Cannon
- Slide 9:   man walking dog in area south of corrals
- Slides 10-11:   food counter
- Slide 12:   kids on three-wheelers watch rodeo
- Slide 13:   calf roping: rider is Doug Tanner
- Slide 14:   men at gate
- Slides 15-18:   cow riding
- Slides 19-20:   crowd along the north fence
- CCF019:   Brian & JoLene (K. Hill) Thompson wedding reception, 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-7:   Brian and JoLene (K. Hill) Thompson greet guests in receiving line at LDS Church; cake in slides 6-7
- Slides 8-9:   wide shot of room, guests eat refreshments at tables
- Slides 10-14:   close-up of Brian and JoLene (K. Hill) Thompson in the receiving line
- Slide 15:   video documentation of event
- Slide 16:   parents at of the bride and groom
- Slides 17-19:   exterior of church
- Slide 20:   bride and groom
- CCF020:   Independence Day Celebration Dance, 6 July 1985; LDS Church building, 7 July 1985
- Slides 1-6:   dancing
- Slide 7:   band: Craig Adams and Apocalypse
- Slides 8-9:   dancing
- Slides 10-20:   LDS Church building, some with people on way to Sunday meetings on 7 July 1985
- CCF021:   Views of Grouse Creek; Old Frost place; Co-op, 2-3 July 1985 (2 1/4" transparencies: negatives)
- Slides 1-4:   view of Grouse Creek area valley
- Slides 5-6:   looking west, down the hill, at the old Frost place
- Slides 7-9:   north view of valley
- Slides 10-12:   interior of Co-op store
- CCF022:   Co-op; Post Office; views of Grouse Creek, 3-4 July 1985 (2 1/4" transparencies: negatives)
- Slides 1-2:   exterior of Co-op store at noon
- Slides 3-5:   post office
- Slides 6-8:   view of town taken from the rodeo arena
- Slides 9-10:   view of town
- Slides 11-12:   exterior of Co-op store in morning light
- CCF023:   Scenic views. Old Frost ranch, 4 July 1985 (2 1/4" transparencies: negatives)
- Slides 1-2:   old log house at the Frost ranch
- Slides 2-5:   Tanner house on the National Register
- Slides 6-7:   northwest scene looking west across the valley
- CCF024:   Delivering the Grouse Creek Collection to the USU Fife Folklore Archives; sorting cattle in the fall, 7-8 October 1988
- Slides 1-3:   delivering the Grouse Creek Collection to the USU Fife Folklore Archives
- Slides 4-5:   Hugh Thompson and horse
- Slides 6-20:   sorting cattle in the fall (image 12: Doug Tanner, image 18, 19 Max Tanner)
- CCF025:   Sorting cattle after roundup in the fall with Max, Doug and Tom Tanner, 8 October 1988
- Slides 1-5:   Doug and Max Tanner rive a group of their cattle a mile north of lot
- Slides 6-8:   arriving field, cattle enter through gate adjacent to the cattle guard (image 2 of Tom Tanner and friend)
- Slides 9-13:   Max Tanner and his gear
- Slides 14-17:   conversation after move; Angie brought soft drinks and candy bars
- Slides 18-19:   Jay Tanner's new house
- Slide 20:   sign announcing talk by Tom Carter and Carl Fleischhauer on Grouse Creek Cultural Survey
- CCF026:   Sorting cattle; Doug Tanner Ranch, 8-9 October 1988
- Slides 1-4:   Angie Tanner with reata
- Slide 5:   Angie on horseback
- Slides 6-7:   Jay Tanner and Doug Tanner moving animals back at the lot (Tom Cater in image 6)
- Slide 8:   Jay Tanner
- Slides 9-10:   Tom & Angie Tanner and friend loading horses on truck
- Slide 11:   house and grounds of the Secrist sheep operation
- Slide 12:   looking east past the Secrist
- Slides 13-14:   ranch ro the northeast
- Slides 15-17:   horses in Doug Tanner's field next to the house
- Slides 19-20:   interior of Doug and Kathleen Tanner's remodeled house
- Folder 3:   Debbie Randall Color Transparency Logs, July 1985, 31 sheets original images, 1 sheet duplicate images (Folder 024)
- CDR001:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 2: J. R. Simplot Co., frame barn
- Slide 2:   Site 2A: metal silo
- Slide 3:   Site 2B: frame granary
- Slide 4:   Site 2C: corrals
- Slide 5:   Site 3: William Paskett house (Simplot is current owner)
- Slide 6:   Site 3A: mobile home
- Slides 7-9:   Site 4: Annie Mecham house
- Slide 10:   Site 4: Annie Mecham house, rear view
- Slide 11:   Site 4: Annie Mecham house, interior moldings
- Slide 12:   Site 5: Louis Tanner trailer
- Slides 13-14:   Site 6: Allen Newman Tanner house
- Slide 15:   Site 6: Allen Newman Tanner house, rear view
- Slide 16:   Site 7: Allen Newman Tanner house, interior
- Slide 17:   Site 6: Allen Newman Tanner house, central passage
- Slide 18:   Site 6: Allen Newman Tanner house and stone granary
- Slides 19-20:   Site 6A: stone granary
- CDR002:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 6A: Allen Newman Tanner stone granary
- Slide 2:   Site 6A: stone granary, lintel over window
- Slides 3-6:   Site 7: Allen Raymond Tanner house: SLIDE 4 MISSING
- Slide 7:   Site 7: Allen Raymond, interior view from front to back door
- Slide 8:   Site 7B, C, D: root cellar and two outhouses
- Slide 9:   Site 7C: tie outhouse
- Slide 10:   Site 7D: frame outhouse
- Slide 11:   Site 7B: C-root cellar and tie house
- Slide 12:   Site 7B: root cellar
- Slide 13:   Site 7, 7B: Allen Raymond Tanner house, rear view and root cellar
- Slide 14:   Site 7B: root cellar, interior view
- Slide 15:   Site 7B: root cellar, remains of dirt roof
- Slide 16:   Site 7A: view of Moroni Tanner cabin and animal shelter
- Slides 17-18:   Site 7A: Moroni Tanner cabin
- Slide 19:   Site 7A: Moroni Tanner cabin, rear view
- Slide 20:   Site 7A: Moroni Tanner cabin, interior
- CDR003:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Site 7A: Moroni Tanner Cabin, interior
- Slides 3-4:   Site 7A: Moroni Tanner Cabin, underside
- Slides 5-6:   Site 7A: Moroni Tanner Cabin, view of logs showing numbers scratched into logs used in the construction of house
- Slide 7:   Site 7J: Moroni Tanner log animal shelters
- Slide 8:   Site 7: Tanner outbuildings, outbuildings associated with site 6 & 7
- Slide 9:   Site 7E: log cabin
- Slide 10:   Site 7F: log pig pen
- Slide 11:   Site 7G: log chicken coop
- Slide 12:   Site 7H2: log and slab open animal shelter
- Slide 13:   Site 7H1: log and frame machine shed
- Slides 14-15:   Site 7H3: log and slab open animal shelter
- Slides 16-17:   Site 7I: corrals
- Slide 18:   Site 8: Herbert Tanner house
- Slide 19:   Site 8A: mobile home
- CDR004:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 9: Box Elder Road Department, frame garage
- Slide 2:   Site 9A: frame garage
- Slide 3:   Site 9B: sided office
- Slide 4:   Site 9C: frame outhouse
- Slide 5:   Site 10: George & Amanda Paskett house (currently Rhea & Archie Toyn house)
- Slide 6:   Site 10A: tie wash house
- Slide 7:   Site 10B: sided square cabin moved from near site 15
- Slide 8:   Site 10C: log outbuilding moved from homestead on hill to the north
- Slide 9:   Site 10D: plywood outhouse
- Slide 10:   Site 10E: new log house
- Slide 11:   Site 10F: metal storage shed
- Slide 12:   Site 10G: new log storage shed
- Slide 13:   Site 10H: new log garage
- Slide 14:   Site 10I: chicken coop
- Slide 15:   Site 11: mobile home
- Slide 16:   Site 11A: log outbuildings
- Slide 17:   Site 12: sided pyramid cottage (currently Marge Thompson's house)
- Slide 18:   Site 12A: board and batten garage
- Slide 19:   Site 12B: tie garage
- Slide 20:   Site 13: BLM Grouse Creek Field Station: complex out of period buildings
- CDR005:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   Site 14: Phillip Paskett house
- Slide 4:   Site 14: Phillip Paskett house, rear view
- Slide 5:   Site 14: Phillip Paskett house, interior wall showing
- Slide 6:   Site 14: Phillip Paskett house, view of roof construction from the interior
- Slide 7:   Site 14A: log barn
- Slide 8:   Site 14B: log animal shelter
- Slide 9:   Site 14C: tie shed
- Slide 10:   Site 14D: log and slab animal shelter
- Slide 11:   Site 14E: root cellar
- Slide 12:   Site 15: Parley Paskett house
- Slide 13:   Site 15: Parley Paskett house, rear view
- Slide 14:   Site 15A: aluminum sided storage shed
- Slide 15-18:   Site 15B: log chicken coop
- CDR006:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 16: tie cabin from Lucin
- Slide 2:   Site 16A: tie garage
- Slide 3:   Site 16B: log barn with attached log animal shelter
- Slide 4:   Site 16C: frame outhouse
- Slide 5:   Site 17: Grouse Creek Post Office, from mining town east of Lucin
- Slide 6:   Site 18: William Charles Kimber house
- Slide 7:   Site 18A: frame garage
- Slide 8:   Site 18B: frame pyramid shed
- Slide 9:   Site 18C: log shed
- Slide 10:   Site 18D: log, frame and tie sheds
- Slide 11:   Site 18E: four frame sheds
- Slides 12-14:   Site 19: Albert F. Richins house
- Slide 15:   Site 19: Albert F. Richins house, rear view
- Slide 16:   Site 19: Albert F. Richins house, main entrance
- Slide 17:   Site 19: Albert F. Richins house, window
- Slide 18:   Site 19: Albert F. Richins house, view from main
- Slide 19:   Site 19: Albert F. Richins house, interior door between living room and parlor
- Slide 20:   Site 19: tie and frame garage
- CDR007:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 19B: sided chicken coop
- Slide 2:   Site 19C: frame outhouse
- Slide 3:   Site 19D: tie shed
- Slides 4-5:   Site 20: rodeo grounds
- Slide 6:   Site 21: stone tithing granary
- Slide 7:   Site 22: Amanda Tanner house (currently Winfred Kimber house)
- Slide 8:   Site 22A: frame garage
- Slide 9:   Site 22B: metal garage
- Slide 10:   Site 22C: tie cabin from Lucin
- Slide 11:   Site 22D: board and batten shed
- Slide 12:   Site 22E: frame outhouse
- Slide 13:   Site 23: Joseph S. Barlow house (currently Milt Oman house)
- Slide 14:   Site 23A: tie garage
- Slides 15-16:   Site 23B: frame garage
- Slide 17:   Site 23D: tie shed
- Slide 18:   Site 24: Lawrence C. Kimber house
- Slide 19:   Site 24A: tie garage
- Slide 20:   Site 24B: frame outhouse
- CDR008:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 24C: Lawrence C. Kimber tie shed
- Slide 2:   Site 24D: log and frame shed
- Slide 3:   Site 25: Doug Wakefield mobile home
- Slide 4:   Site 25A: mobile home
- Slides 5-6:   Site 25B: Milas Wakefield house
- Slide 7:   Site 25B: Milas Wakefield house, rear view
- Slide 8:   Site 25C: log animal shelter
- Slide 9:   Site 25D: log outbuilding
- Slide 10:   Site 25E: frame outhouse
- Slide 11:   Site 26: Milas Wakefield Store (currently Grouse Creek Co-op)
- Slide 12:   Site 26A: tie garage
- Slide 13:   Site 26B: metal silo
- Slide 14:   Site 27: Max Melissa Tanner house
- Slide 15:   Site 27A: frame shed
- Slide 16:   Site 28: Almie Richins house
- Slide 17:   Site 28A: mobile home
- Slide 18:   Site 28B: frame outbuilding
- Slide 19:   Site 28C: frame garage
- Slide 20:   Site 28D: board and batten shed
- CDR009:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 28E: root cellar
- Slide 2:   Site 28F: metal and frame sheds
- Slide 3:   Site 28G: tie shed
- Slide 4:   Site 29: William C. Betteridge house
- Slide 5:   Site 29A: metal sided storage building moved from school
- Slide 6:   Site 29B: E-metal silos and root cellar
- Slide 7:   Site 29C: inside out frame granary
- Slide 8:   Site 29D: log and frame shed complex
- Slide 9:   Site 30: Grouse Creek School
- Slide 10:   Site 30A: stone carriage house
- Slide 11:   Site 31: Grouse Creek LDS Ward (church) house
- Slide 12:   Site 32: deteriorated tie house
- Slide 13:   Site 32A: frame outhouse
- Slides 14-15:   Site 33: Thomas Toyn house
- Slide 16:   Site 33A: Thomas Toyn house, rear addition
- Slide 17:   Site 33A: log outbuildings
- Slide 18:   Site 33B: ruins of stone barn
- Slides 19-20:   Site 34: Albert J. Ballingham house
- CDR010:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 34: frame garage
- Slide 2:   Site 34B: root cellar
- Slide 3:   Site 34C: frame shed
- Slides 4-5:   Site 34D: log cabin
- Slide 6:   Site 34E: frame outhouse
- Slide 7:   Site 35: Arthur R. Richins house (currently Steven Kimber house)
- Slide 8:   Site 35A: root cellar
- Slide 9:   Site 35B: frame outhouse
- Slide 10:   Site 35C: tie sheds
- Slide 11:   Site 35D: tie sheds
- Slide 12:   Site 35E: log animal shelters
- Slide 13:   Site 36: altered tie garage
- Slide 14:   Site 36B: frame outhouse
- Slide 15:   Site 36B: tie barn
- Slide 16:   Site 36C: tie chicken coop
- Slide 17:   Site 36D: root cellar
- Slide 18:   Site 36E: frame shed
- Slide 19:   Site 36E: board and batten shed
- Slide 20:   Site 36G: frame shed
- CDR011:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 37: William J. Cook house (currently Raida Kimber house)
- Slide 2:   Site 37A: frame shed from Lucin
- Slide 3:   Site 37B: frame shed
- Slide 4:   Site 37C: tie shed
- Slide 5:   Site 37D: tie shed
- Slide 6:   Site 37E: frame tack shed
- Slide 7:   Site 38: Joseph B. Lee house
- Slide 8:   Site 38A: mobile home
- Slide 9:   Site 38B: plywood outhouse
- Slide 10:   Site 38C: frame chicken coop
- Slide 11:   Site 38D: log barn
- Slide 12:   Site 39: ruin of frame house
- Slide 13:   Site 39A: ruin of root cellar
- Slide 14:   Site 40: Charles Kimber house
- Slide 15:   Site 40: Charles Kimber house, rear view
- Slide 16:   Site 40A: ruin of frame house
- Slide 17:   Site 40B: frame outhouse
- Slide 18:   Site 40C: log outbuildings
- Slide 19:   Site 40D: log outbuildings
- Slide 20:   Site 40E: H-board and batten barn adn chicken coop
- CDR012:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 40F: Charles Kimber complex: tie animal shelter
- Slide 2:   Site 40G: frame garage
- Slide 3:   Site 40I: metal silo
- Slide 4:   Site 40J: Ogden State Bank frame storage shed
- Slides 5-6:   Site 41: James Cook house, southwest corner
- Slides 7-8:   Site 41: James Cook house, northeast corner
- Slide 9:   Site 41: James Cook house, southeast corner
- Slide 10:   Site 41: James Cook house, north facade
- Slide 11:   Site 41: James Cook house, cellar entrance
- Slide 12:   Site 41: James Cook house, parlor door
- Slide 13:   Site 41: board and batten storage shed
- Slide 14:   Site 41B: board and batten outhouse
- Slide 15:   Site 41C: board and batten chicken coop
- Slide 16:   Site 41D: log and tie animal shelter
- Slide 17:   Site 42: Hugh Roberts house
- Slide 18:   Site 42A: log cabin moved from site 49
- Slide 19:   Site 42B: frame house
- Slide 20:   Site 42C: deteriorated tie outbuilding
- CDR013:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 42D: Hugh Roberts complex: deteriorated tie animal shelter
- Slide 2:   Site 44: Grouse Creek Cemetery
- Slide 3:   Site 44: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, west facade
- Slide 4:   Site 44: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, south facade
- Slide 5:   Site 44A: tie shed
- Slide 6:   Site 44B: tie barn
- Slides 7-8:   Site 45: John Hadfield, Sr., house
- Slide 9:   Site 45: John Hadfield, Sr., house, rear view
- Slide 10:   Site 45: John Hadfield, Sr., house, entrance
- Slide 11:   Site 45: John Hadfield, Sr., house, front window
- Slide 12:   Site 45: John Hadfield, Sr., house, interior
- Slide 13:   Site 45A: slab animal shelter and corral
- Slide 14:   Site 46: ruins of Phillip Paskett/Lorenzo Richins house
- Slide 15:   Site 46A: log outbuildings
- Slide 16:   Site 46B: slab animal shelter
- Slide 17:   Site 46C: remains of demolished log outbuildings
- Slide 18:   Site 47: Frank Dale house (currently Brian Blanthorn house)
- Slide 19:   Site 47A: tie garage
- Slide 20:   Site 47B: frame shed
- CDR014:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 47C: Frank Dale complex: frame shed
- Slide 2:   Site 47D: tie barn
- Slide 3:   Site 47E: metal silo
- Slide 4:   Site 47F: tie and frame animal shelter
- Slide 5:   Site 48: mobile home
- Slide 6:   Site 48A: Charles Kimber store/E.C. Betteridge house
- Slide 7:   Site 48B: William C. Betteridge house, southwest corner
- Slide 8:   Site 48B: William C. Betteridge house, northeast corner
- Slide 9:   Site 48C: board and batten outhouse
- Slide 10:   Site 48D: metal shelter
- Slide 11:   Site 48E: log barn
- Slide 12:   Site 48F: log animal shelter
- Slide 13:   Site 48G: tie outbuilding
- Slides 14-15:   Site 49: George A. Blanthorn stone animal shelter
- Slide 16:   Site 49A: stone foundation
- Slide 17:   Site 49B: hay derrick
- Slide 18:   Site 50: William Shaw house, west facade
- Slide 19:   Site 50: William Shaw house, southeast facade
- Slide 20:   Site 50A: log and slab animal shelter
- CDR015:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 50B: William Shaw complex: ruin of log animal
- Slide 2:   Site 51A: Dave Douglas house
- Slide 3:   Site 51A: metal garage
- Slide 4:   Site 51B: frame outhouse
- Slide 5:   Site 51C: frame guest house
- Slide 6:   Site 52: Edward Frost house
- Slide 7:   Site 52A: frame outhouse
- Slide 8:   Site 52B: frame garage
- Slide 9:   Site 52C: wood shed
- Slide 10:   Site 52D: root cellar
- Slides 11-12:   Site 52E: log, frame, tie sheds
- Slide 13:   Site 52F: log barn with frame addition
- Slide 14:   Site 52G: frame animal shelter
- Slide 15:   Site 52H: log bunk house
- Slide 16:   Site 52I: log granary
- Slide 17:   Site 52J: original Edward Frost log house
- CDR016:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 53: Frank LeRoy Frost house
- Slide 2:   Site 53A: root cellar
- Slide 3:   Site 53B: frame outhouse
- Slide 4:   Site 53C: log chicken coop
- Slide 5:   Site 54: Charles William Kimber, Jr., tie granary
- Slide 6:   Site 54A: hay derrick
- Slide 7:   Site 55: Elmer Kimber house (currently Emily Kimber house)
- Slide 8:   Site 55A: tie shed
- Slide 9:   Site 55B: tie and frame shed
- Slide 10:   Site 55C: tie granary
- Slide 11:   Site 55D: metal silo
- Slide 12:   Site 55E: log chicken coop
- Slide 13:   Site 55F: slab animal shelter
- Slide 14:   Site 55G: tie barn
- Slide 15:   Site 56: William Ballingham house (currently Oren and Opal Kimber house)
- Slide 16:   Site 56A: frame outhouse
- Slide 17:   Site 56B: tie and log equipment shed
- Slide 18:   Site 56C: log outbuildings with log animal shelter
- Slide 19:   Site 56D: Charles Kimber cabin (currently log animal shelter)
- Slide 20:   Site 56E: tie shed
- CDR017:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 56F: William Ballingham Complex: log barn
- Slide 2:   Site 57: Godfrey Ballingham house (currently Lyman Kimber house)
- Slide 3:   Site 58: entrance gate of Charles and Ellen Toyn property
- Slide 4:   Site 58: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, northwest corner
- Slide 5:   Site 58: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, southwest corner
- Slide 6:   Site 58: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, southeast corner
- Slide 7:   Site 58: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, connection between east porch section and house
- Slide 8:   Site 58: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, kitchen
- Slide 9:   Site 58: Charles and Ellen Toyn house, skinned coyote hung on north vestibule
- Slide 10:   Site 58A: frame outhouse
- Slide 11:   Site 58B: pump house
- Slides 12-13:   Site 58C: tie wash house
- Slides 14-16:   Site 58D: log granary
- Slides 17-19:   Site 58E: log chicken coop
- Slide 20:   Site 58F: log barn
- CDR018:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Site 58F: Charles and Ellen Toyn complex: log barn
- Slides 3-4:   Site 58F: notching on log barn, southeast corner
- Slides 5-6:   Site 58F: interior of barn
- Slide 7:   Site 58: loading ramp
- Slide 8:   Site 59: Randy Kimber mobile home
- Slide 9:   Site 59A: John Hadfield, Jr., house
- Slide 10:   Site 59B: frame garage
- Slide 11:   Site 59C: log barn
- Slide 12:   Site 59D: log barn
- Slide 13:   Site 59E: log barn
- Slide 14:   Site 60: Archie and Rhea Toyn house
- Slide 15:   Site 60A: sided guest house
- Slide 16:   Site 60B: metal garage
- Slide 17:   Site 60C: frame blacksmith shop moved from site 58
- Slide 18:   Site 60D: metal silo
- Slide 19:   Site 60E: tie and frame outbuildings
- Slide 20:   Site 60F: tie and frame sheds
- CDR019:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 60G: Archie and Rhea Toyn complex; board and batten and tie shed
- Slide 2:   Site 60H: tie barn
- Slide 3:   Site 61: William and Grace Jorgenson Hadfield house
- Slide 4:   Site 61A: mobile home
- Slide 5:   Site 61B: frame garage
- Slide 6:   Site 61C: tie chicken coop
- Slide 7:   Site 61D: tie granary
- Slide 8:   Site 61E: metal barn
- Slide 9:   Site 61F: tie animal shelter
- Slide 10:   Site 61G: tie barn
- Slide 11:   Site 61H: inside out frame granary
- Slide 12:   Site 62: Jeff Kimber mobile home
- Slide 13:   Site 62A: William Morgan cabin
- Slide 14:   Site 62B: tie cabin
- Slide 15:   Site 62C: frame outhouse
- Slide 16:   Site 62D: log stable
- Slide 17:   Site 62E: tie cabin
- Slides 18-19:   Site 63: Ross Rytting ranch
- Slide 20:   Site 63: Ross Rytting corral
- CDR020:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 63: Ross Rytting ranch: corral
- Slides 2-4:   Site 63: Ross Rytting cabin
- Slides 5-6:   Site 63: Ross Rytting cabin, rear view
- Slides 7-8 :   Site 63A: log chicken coop and corral
- Slide 9:   Site 63A: southeast corner of log chicken coop showing door for chickens to enter
- Slides 10-12:   Site 63B: log barn
- Slides 13-14:   Site 63C: sheep camp
- Slide 15:   Site 63C: sheep camp and Rytting cabin
- Slide 16:   Site 63: Ross Rytting corral
- Slides 17-18:   Site 63: Ross Rytting corral chute
- Slides 19-20:   Site 63: Ross Rytting corral
- (Duplicate slide: 14)
- CDR021:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site 63: Ross Rytting complex: corral
- Slide 2:   Site 63: Ross Rytting complex: beef hook
- Slide 3:   Site 63: 63: Ross Rytting complex: gate
- Slide 4-5:   Site OGC 1: Cotton Thomas cabin
- Slide 6:   Site OGC 1A: log cabin
- Slide 7:   Site OGC 1B: deteriorated log outbuilding
- Slide 8:   Site OGC 8: Sam Kimball house
- Slide 9:   Site OGC 8A: concrete and log sunken granary
- Slide 10:   Site OGC 9: Sam Kimball house
- Slide 11:   Site OGC 9A: Debbie Randall evaluating log cabin
- Slide 12:   Site OGC9A: log cabin
- Slide 13:   Site OGC 9B: deteriorated log barn
- Slide 14:   Site OGC 15: frame school (?)
- Slide 15:   Site OGC 17: concrete phone booth
- Slide 16:   Site OGC 18: historical marker for Charles, Sr., and Caroline Kimber, 1877-1891
- Slide 17:   Site OGC 18: William Charles Kimber house
- Slide 18:   Site OGC 18A: root cellar
- Slide 19:   Site OGC 18B: mobile home
- Slide 20:   Site OGC 18C: frame house
- CDR022:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site OGC 18D: tie shed
- Slide 2:   Site OGC 18E: tie garage and attached board and batten shed
- Slide 3:   Site OGC 18F: log and tie chicken coop
- Slide 4:   Site OGC 18G: tie chicken coop
- Slides 5-6:   Site OGC 18H: board and batten granary
- Slide 7:   Site OGC 18I: log milk cow shed/animal shelter
- Slide 8:   Site OGC 18J: log and tie winter sheep shed
- Slide 9:   Site OGC 18K: deteriorated log ice house
- Slide 10:   Site OGC 18L: hay derrick
- Slide 11:   Site OGC 18M: log and tie lamb shed
- Slide 12:   Site OGC 18N: tie lamb shed
- Slide 13:   Site OGC 20: Reese Warburton house, east facade
- Slide 14:   Site OGC 20: Reese Warburton house, west facade
- Slide 15:   Site OGC 20A: Tanner log cabin
- Slide 16:   Site OGC 20B: metal silo
- Slide 17:   Site OGC 20C: board and batten outhouse
- Slide 18:   Site OGC 20D: hay derrick
- Slide 19:   Site OGC 20E: metal barn
- Slide 20 :  Site OGC 20F: frame railroad cabin from Lucin
- CDR023:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site OGC 20G: Warburton complex: frame school from Lucin
- Slide 2:   Site OGC 20H: log outbuilding
- Slide 3:   Site OGC 20I: deteriorated log outbuilding
- Slide 4:   Site OGC 20: log and stone animal shelter
- Slide 5:   Site OGC 20K: windmill
- Slide 6:   Site OGC 20L: log animal shelter
- Slide 7:   Site OGC 20M: log outbuilding
- Slide 8:   Site OGC 20N: log barn
- Slide 9:   Site OGC 20O: log and stone animal shelter
- Slide 10:   Site OGC 20O: log and stone animal shelter, rear view
- Slide 11:   Site OGC 20P: metal shed
- Slide 12:   Site OGC 20Q: board and batten shed from Lucin
- Slide 13:   Site OGC 20R: board and batten shed from Lucin
- Slide 14:   Site OGC 20S: Dwight Warburton house
- Slide 15:   Site OGC 20T: board and batten shed from Lucin
- Slide 16:   Site OGC 20U: tie shed
- Slide 17:   Site OGC 20V: sided singled cell house
- Slide 18:   Site OGC 20W: Ross Warburton house
- Slide 19:   Site OGC 20Y: tie garage
- Slide 20:   Site OGC 20Z: log animal shelter
- CDR024:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site OGC 20Z: Warburton complex: frame railroad cabin from Lucin
- Slide 2:   Site OGC 20-1: Warburton complex: frame railroad cabin from Lucin
- Slide 3:   Site OGC 21: Hart Ranch house
- Slide 4:   Site OGC 21A: frame outhouse
- Slides 5-6 :   Site 22: Warburton house
- Slide 7:   Site OGC 24: Gary Secrist house and outhouse
- Slide 8:   Site OGC 24B: frame shed
- Slide 9:   Site OGC 24C: tie shed
- Slide 10:   Site OGC 25, 25A: Etna School and carriage house
- Slide 11:   Site OGC 25: Etna School
- Slide 12:   Site OGC 25A: Etna School carriage house
- Slide 13:   Site OGC 26: Lucas ranch, log cabin
- Slide 14:   Site OGC 26A: log animal shelter
- Slide 15:   Site OGC 26B: log outbuildings
- Slide 16:   Site OGC 26C: deteriorated log cabin
- Slide 17:   Site OGC 26D: corral
- Slide 18:   Site OGC 26E: root cellar
- Slide 19:   Site OGC 27B: Thomas ranch complex: stone storage building
- Slide 20:   Site OGC 27E: log barn
- CDR025:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, July 1985
- Slide 1:   Site OGC 27F: Thomas ranch complex: log granary
- Slide 2:   Site OGC 28: Seth Fletcher ranch
- Slide 3:   Site OGC 28A: ruins of stone barn
- Slide 4:   Site OGC 28B: log outbuildings
- Slide 5:   Site OGC 28D: log outbuilding/cabin
- Slide 6:   Site OGC 28E: hay derrick
- Slide 7:   Site OGC 28F: stone and log animal shelter
- Slide 8:   Site OGC 28G: metal silos
- Slide 9:   Site OGC 29: frame double cell house
- Slide 10:   Site OGC 29A: log cabin
- Slide 11:   Site OGC 29B: corral
- Slide 12:   Site OGC 29C: tie outbuilding
- Slide 13:   Site OGC 29D: hay derrick
- Slide 14:   Site OGC 30: stone dam
- CDR026:   Independence Day celebration, including breakfast, parade, and lunch held, on 6 August 1985
- Slide 1:   breakfast at the celebration, photo includes Amy Tanner, Merlin Tanner, Jay Tanner, Carl Fleischhauer, Hal Cannon
- Slide 2:   breakfast, photo includes Cheryl Carter, Kenna Tanner, Merlin Tanner, Carol Edison, Carl Fleischhauer
- Slide 3:   parade: Marcia Oman is the adult in the picture
- Slides 4-6:   parade
- Slides 7-8:   4-H club float: Angie Tanner holding middle lamb and Toni Tanner holding lamb at the end of the float
- Slides 9-10:   parade
- Slide 11:   senior citizen's float: seated (l to r) Ella Tanner, Herbert Tanner, and Winfred Kimber
- Slides 12-13:   parade
- Slide 14:   riders and horses in parade, including Miranda Blanthorn and Brandon Blanthorn
- Slides 15-19:   after the parade
- Slide 20:   lunch at the celebration
- CDR027:   Independence Day celebration, including lunch and rodeo, held on 6 August 1985
- Slides 1-4:   lunch
- Slides 5-7:   rodeo participants signing up for the rodeo activities with Milt Oman
- Slide 8:   group of men chatting after lunch (Merlin Tanner, Barney McWilliams, and Jay Tanner)
- Slides 9-10:   rodeo grounds during the celebration
- Slide 11:   spectators at the rodeo, woman is Fern Kimber
- Slides 12-13:   spectators at the rodeo
- Slide 14:   horses and trailers during the rodeo
- Slides 15-18:   entrance of participants at the beginning of the rodeo
- Slides 19-20:   presentation of the colors at the beginning of the rodeo, rider on the right is Angie Tanner
- CDR028:   Independence Day celebration rodeo held on 6 August 1985
- Slide 1:   presentation of the colors at the rodeo, Angie Tanner on right
- Slides 2-10:   bronc riding
- Slides 11-20:   steer riding
- (Duplicate slide: 11)
- CDR029:   Independence Day celebration rodeo held on 6 August 1985
- Slides 1-3:   steer riding
- Slides 4-14:   team roping
- Slides 15-20:   calf roping
- CDR030:   Independence Day celebration rodeo held on 6 August 1985
- Slides 1-5:   calf roping
- Slides 6-14:   barrel racing
- Slide 15:   Jay and Tom Tanner before Tom's calf ride
- Slide 16:   Tom Tanner during his calf ride
- Slide 17:   Tom Tanner after his calf ride
- Slides 18-20:   children riding calves
- (Duplicate slide: 18)
- CDR031:   Grouse Creek Cultural Survey Sites, 7 August 1985
- Slides 1-3:   children riding calves
- Slide 4:   Doug Tanner on horseback
- Slide 5:   riders at rodeo
- Folder 4:   Hal Cannon Color Transparency Logs, July 1985, June 1986, 19 sheets original images, 1 sheet duplicate images (Folder 025)
- CHC001:   Winfred Kimber; Frost farmstead, 2 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   portraits of Winfred Kimber at Frost farmstead
- Slides 4-7:   fieldwork entourage follow Winfred Kimber around farm with recorders and cameras
- Slides 8-10:   views of north Grouse Creek from hillside above Frost farmstead
- Slide 11:   custom painted stock truck at Frost farm
- Slide 12:   gate into farmyard
- Slide 13:   view into root cellar at cupboard stored below
- Slide 14:   view from Grouse Creek pass into Junction Valley
- Slides 15-17:   Tom Carter photographing
- Slides 18-20:   unidentified man fixes tire at side of Grouse Creek Co-op
- CHC002:   Independence Day celebration activities held on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   children's foot races after program
- Slide 4:   guests visit and eat breakfast on lawn of school
- Slides 5-7:   contestants sign up and pay entry fee for rodeo
- Slide 8:   men talk at breakfast
- Slides 9-10:   family riding down Grouse Creek main street to rodeo
- Slides 11-13:   men behind the scenes at the rodeo
- Slide 14:   hand painted sign at entrance to rodeo
- Slides 15-19:   rodeo events
- Slides 20:   boy helped off grounds after calf ride
- CHC003:   Independence Day celebration rodeo held on 6 July 1985
- Slides 1-6:   people watch rodeo
- Slides 7-9:   line of cowboy boots on rail as cowboys sit behind grand stand to watch rodeo
- Slides 10-11:   more preparation for rodeo events
- Slide 12:   view from street of rodeo events
- Slides 13-18:   youngster getting in chute for calf riding event
- CHC004:   Herding cattle from Emigrant pass to Moulton; errands at Simplot shop in Murtaugh, 8 July 1985
- Slides 1-5:   Milt Oman and Barney McWilliams moving cattle
- Slides 6-11:   loading horses in truck after cattle are moved
- Slides 12-20:   Milt Oman with truck to be fixes at shop in Murtaugh
- Slide 19:   delivery truck used by Milt's sister Anne's catering business in Burley
- CHC005:   Wallace Betteridge rawhide braiding, Montello, NV, 25 July 1985
- Slides 1-8:   wide angle shot of Wallace Betteridge working with hondo
- Slides 9-13:   closeup of hondo
- Slides 14-15:   Wallace Betteridge braiding
- Slides 16:   bit and bridle inherited by Wallace Betteridge with homemade silver work
- Slides 17:   braided hondo ready to be tied onto rope
- Slides 18:   bit and bridle inherited by Wallace Betteridge with homemade silver work
- Slides 19:   homemade spurs belonging to Wallace Betteridge
- Slides 20:   portrait of Wallace Betteridge
- (Duplicate slides: 2, 11)
- CHC006:   Wallace Betteridge; reunion of Betteridge brothers adn sisters, 16, 17 July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Wallace Betteridge holding roll of split rawhide
- Slide 3:   Wallace Betteridge holding old rawhide rope he made
- Slide 4:   left bosal made by Wallace Betteridge's father, right bosal made by WB
- Slides 5-6:   bosals made recently to order by Wallace Betteridge
- Slides 7-8:   (l to r) Sally Betteridge, Wallace Betteridge, Raida Kimber and George Betteridge
- Slide 9:   Jack Kimber stands in front of garden, South Grouse Creek
- Slides 10-14:   Merlin Tanner, Milt Oman and Steve Kimber talk in the field by bailer
- Slides 15-16:   scenes around Grouse Creek
- Slide 17:   house rented from Allen Tanner for mens fieldwork headquarters
- Slides 18-20:   cabin and meadows about south Grouse Creek
- CHC007:   Moving cattle from Association ground to leased ground, July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Thomas Tanner
- Slide 3:   Max Tanner on horseback
- Slide 4:   Max, Doug, and Thomas Tanner dismounting for lunch while moving cattle
- Slides 5-6:   Max Tanner on horseback
- Slides 7-8:   Max, Doug, and Thomas Tanner moving year old calves from Association to leased ground
- Slide 9:   calves crossing fence into leased ground
- Slide 10:   Tom Carter? with Thomas Tanner during cattle move in Cotton Thomas Basin, Utah.
- Slide 11:   Doug Tanner moving calves
- Slides 12-13:   Max, Doug, and Thomas Tanner moving calves
- Slides 14:   Max Tanner mounting horse
- Slides 15-17:   Max and Doug Tanner on a hill silhouetted by an impending storm
- Slide 18:   Max Tanner riding in Cotton Thomas Basin, Utah.
- Slide 19:   Doug Tanner helping his son Thomas Tanner off horse in Cotton Thomas Basin, Utah.
- Slide 20:   Doug Tanner mounting horse in Cotton Thomas Basin, Utah.
- (Duplicate slides: 5, 16)
- CHC008:   Max Tanner ranch; Cotton Thomas Basin, July 1985
- Slides 1-3:   Doug Tanner and his new tractor, children playing on old bailer
- Slides 4-6:   Doug Tanner drags bailer out, tests cut hay for moisture and bails
- Slides 7-8:   old brands and scythe at Tanner ranch (now he uses electric branding irons)
- Slide 9:   silhouette of ridge above Doug Tanner ranch
- Slides 10-12:   unloading horses from trailer at Cotton Thomas Basin
- Slides 13-14:   portrait of Max, Doug and Thomas Tanner
- CHC009:   Old photos from Thea Toyn, Opal Kimber, and Raida Kimber, duplicated July 1985
- Slide 1:   Grouse Creek Band (R. Toyn collection)
- Slides 2-3:   Betteridge haying crew: UC Ranch (R. Tanner collection)
- Slide 4:   Grouse Creek LDS Church (R. Toyn collection)
- Slide 5:   Grouse Creek School (R. Toyn collection)
- Slide 6:   Grouse Creek Jack and wife (R. Toyn collection)
- Slide 7:   feeding cows in winter off hay sled: Betteridge farmstead (R. Kimber collection)
- Slide 8:   stacking hay at UC ranch (R. Tanner collection)
- Slide 9:   Raida Kimber's father milking cow (R. Tanner collection)
- Slide 10:   haystack, derrick , and crew: UC ranch
- Slide 11-13:   pages from R. Toyn's scrapbook
- Slide 14:   page from R. Kimber scrapbook, showing tents where hay crew lived at UC ranch
- Slide 15:   crew at UC ranch (R. Kimber collection)
- Slides 16-17:   Oren Kimber as young buckaroo (O. Kimber collection)
- Slides 18-19:   copy of Oren Kimber with horse (O. Kimber collection)
- Slide 20:   Raida Kimber's father horseback
- CHC010:   Winfred Kimber's field, 25 July 1985
- Slide 1:   preparations for family home evening at Winfred Kimber's Red Top
- Slide 2:   Archie Toyn waiting for dinner
- Slide 3:   rocks above in canyon
- Slides 4-5:   preparation of dutch oven potatoes, grilled hamburgers and corn
- Slide 6:   Back of unidentified man in Winfred Kimber's field in Grouse Creek, Utah.
- Slide 7:   Scenic picture probably of Winfred Kimber's field in Grouse Creek, Utah.
- Slide 8:   Unidentified boy preparing for a family home evening at Winfred Kimber's Red Top in Grouse Creek, Utah.
- Slides 9-15:   preparation of dutch oven potatoes, grilled hamburgers and corn
- Slides 16-18:   Grouse Creek Orchestra at Raida Kimber's: piano: Raida, Saxophone: Archie Toyn; guitar/banjo: Lyman Kimber
- Slides 19-20:   (l to r) Lyman Kimber, Raida Kimber, Archie Toyn, Rhea Toyn
- CHC011:   Grouse Creek, July 1985
- Slides 1-2:   Richins house from back in rainbow
- Slide 3:   unidentified house, fence and trees
- Slides 4-5:   irrigation systems in south Grouse Creek
- Slide 6:   road in Grouse Creek, Utah
- Slides 7-16:   Milt Omen breaking cold at Grouse creek rodeo grounds
- Slides 17-20:   various views of the Grouse Creek rodeo grounds
- CHC012:   Nelson Ranch, Junction, July 1985
- Slides 1-9:   Mr. Nelson shoeing a horse at Nelson ranch
- Slide 10-13:   Simper Ranch, examine old way station and Indian battle ground
- Slides 14-15:   drive up canyon to west of ranch
- Slides 16-20:   aspen cabin in meadow above Nelson ranch
- (Duplicate slides: 4, 8, 9)
- CHC013:   Warburton ranch, July 1985
- Slide 1:   willow fence in front of ranch house
- Slide 2:   cabin on grounds
- Slides 3-4:   detail of hand forged hinge on gate
- Slide 5:   outbuilding
- Slide 6:   school house moved from rail line to ranch
- Slide 7:   willow fence
- Slide 8:   ranch house
- Slide 9:   log livestock shed
- Slide 10:   log shed
- Slide 11:   corral
- Slide 12:   interior of original ranch cabin
- Slide 13:   sheep camp
- Slide 14:   exterior, original log house
- Slide 15:   log outbuilding
- Slide 16:   sheep camp
- Slide 17:   Allen Tanner's mare and foal
- CHC014:   Herding cattle, 8 July 1985
- Slides 1-6:   gathering cattle at Emigrant Canyon prior to herding them to Moulton, ID
- Slides 7-10:   ruins of Emigrant Trail Station
- Slide 11:   log school at Moulton, ID
- Slides 12-16:   detail of school, area around school, writing on wall by alumni
- Slides 17-19:   Basque sheepherder cairns above Nelson ranch, west of Junction
- CHC015:   Grouse Creek; Aetna July 1985
- Slide 1-2:   people leaving LDS Church after services at Grouse Creek church
- Slide 3: &nb
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