Transcription Note: Paragraph breaks are at the point of the original Road Rider transcript as are punctuation and spelling of words.
At Ogden, Utah, where I arrived after traveling 925 miles, I had 10 new spokes
to put in to replace those that were snapped by pounding over railroad ties. As
I had ridden 400 miles with a stick for a bar, I got also a new handlebar and I
put on a new belt rim and one new tire, shipping my extra tire and oil and
other stuff on to Omaha. This was on May 28, and I left Ogden on the 29th at
6:10 a.m. S.C. Higgins, who had been my
host overnight, rode out of the city with me on his motor bicycle for three or
four miles in order that I might not take the wrong road. He is a genuine
enthusiast, although well past 40 years of age, I should judge, and he took the
liveliest sort of interest in my trip and the success of my undertaking. Mr.
Higgins is a machinist, and several years ago he made a motor bicycle for
himself. Now he rides an Indian.
It may be said that I splashed out of Ogden. That is the way it comes to me as
I now recall it. It had rained for three weeks before I arrived there. The
roads in all directions were muddy and the streams swollen. I was now entering
the Rockies, and almost as soon as I got out of Ogden I began to encounter
mountain streams, which I had to wade across. They were composed largely of
melted snow water and were icy cold. At the first one I stopped, removed my
foot gearing, took off my leggings, rolled up my trousers, and splashed across
barefooted, and, except that the water was too cold, I rather enjoyed it. After
going a mile I came to another stream and repeated the undressing performance.
I did not enjoy it so much this time. Then the streams began to come along two
or three to the mile, and I quit the undressing part and waded across with my
shoes and all on. Sometimes the water was knee deep and a couple of times my
motor got more cooling than it wanted and I had a job starting it again. In the
forenoon of that day I waded more than a dozen of these mountain streams. It is
a well watered country this, and it abounds in orchards and farming lands
cultivated by Mormon industry. The streams I crossed were racing toward the
Weber River as it ran through the Weber Canyon, which extends 140 miles
southeast to Granger.
I am following the wagon road now, and 12 miles out of Ogden I enter the Weber
Canyon. Turning to the left, I find myself walled-in by the grand granite walls
of the canyon that tower upward to the clouds, and I come abruptly upon Devil's
Gate, where the waters of the river fall from a great height and thrash around
a sharp bend that has been obstructed for ages by a helter-skelter fall of
great blocks of stone from above. It is a seething cauldron of water that
rushes with insane, frothing fury around or over the obstructions, and one is
impressed with the idea that the name is an apt one. A little further on I
passed the Devil's Slide, another place well named, where the rocks rise in two
perpendicular walls, hardly five yards apart, from the floor of the canyon to
the mountain summit. It looks as if the stone had been sawed away by man, so
sheer are the sides. But these are only a couple of the many wonderful and
grandly picturesque phenomena of nature that I encounter from here on for many
miles. It is a beautiful country, and the scenes shift from wild and rugged
natural grandeurs in the narrow parts of the canyon to pastoral loveliness in
the places where the mountain pass broadens and the small but fertile and
splendidly kept farms of Mormon settlers are found here and there where the
sides slopes to the river. As I go on toward Echo City, 40 miles from Ogden, I
get out of the narrow part of the canyon and tilled land becomes more common.
Every one from 50 miles around was bound for Echo City or Evanston on that day,
May 29, to see President Roosevelt, whose train stopped in passing long enough
for him to make a speech at all the towns of any size- For this reason there
was an unusual amount of travel on the roads, and I was repeatedly forced so
far over to the side that I had to dismount to escape an upset. The farmers
seemed to think I had no right on the road when they wanted to use it, and
several swore as they called to me to get out of the way. One man abused me
roundly, and told me I ought to get off the road altogether with my damned
"bisickle." I did an indiscreet thing in answering him in kind, and
he pulled up his team with the intention of getting off and horsewhipping me or
to get a steady position to take a pot shot at me with a revolver. I don't know which - I didn't stop to learn.
I let out my motor and quickly got around a bend in the road out of sight, and
kept going, so that he did not see me again. I felt that tempers are too uncertain
in that part of the country to risk a row with a native. I was alone in the
land of the Mormons, and they are famed for the way they stick to one
of their clan.
I reached Echo City, a railroad settlement of about 200 persons,
and, after eating, pushed right on toward Evanston. East of Echo City the
canyon narrows again, and here it is known as Echo Gorge. I had my fill of it,
and the echoes of my ride through it lasted for days. The roads were in
frightful condition owing to three rainy weeks.
In many places it was harder traveling on them than over my friends the
railroad ties. In the 80 miles that I rode it is 76 by railroad - between Ogden
and Evanston on this day of grace my insides were shaken together like a
barrelful of eggs rolling down a mountainside.
My shaking-up was received in going uphill, though, for I found by
consulting my guide that I had climbed 2,400 feet that day. The elevation at
Ogden being 4,301 feet and at Evanston 6,759 feet. At night my back felt as if
some good husky man with a club had used it on me heavily. The new belt rim
that I had put on in the morning got shot full of holes that day by being
punched against sharp rocks at the roadside. It is a strenuous country, and
must have been plenty pleasing to the President. I had little chance to revel
in the magnificent scenery, but I knew about the Pulpit Rock from which Brigham Young delivered a Sunday
sermon during the pilgrimage of the Mormons to their settlement at Salt Lake
City, and I had a glance at it as I rode away from Echo City. Sixteen miles
east from my luncheon stop I passed the towering sandstone bluffs, with
turreted tops naturally formed, that are known as Castle Rocks, and lend their
name to a railroad station of the Union Pacific there. If any one got off there,
though, you would surely have a spell of wondering what they were going to do,
for there is no village of any sort. The day was nice enough so far as
temperature was concerned, but the story of what had been in the recent past
was told to me just before I got into Evanston by the sight of thousands of
sheep carcasses strewn on the hillsides and even right along the sides of the
road. They had been killed by snow and hailstorms, only a few days before.
It was 8:35 p.m. when I reached Evanston in Wyoming, just across the State line
from Utah, and, although this is a town of something over 2,000 persons, with
half a dozen hotels, the place was crowded with visitors. Every cowboy,
ranchman, farmer and miner for many miles around had been there to hear the President
speak in the afternoon, and at night food was at famine prices and sleeping
accommodations simply not to be had. I was not wanted anywhere and I felt the
slight in the difference between welcome given to the President and to me
keenly. After trying at a couple of hotels and boarding houses I made
up my mind that I would have to sit it out. Chairs however, were at a premium,
and I stood and watched a poker game at the hotel until midnight, and then
strolled over to the railroad station where I found a chair, and in that I
bunked, sore as a stone bruise until morning, leaving the town at 6:20 o'clock.
After riding about six miles that day I bumped into a rut and the stem of my
handlebars snapped, but there was about an inch of the stem left, and I hammered
it down with my wrench into the head tube and managed to make it do. This
repair lasted to Chicago. I took to the railroad leaving Evanston, as there has
been a new section built there, cutting off some distance and leading through a
newly completed tunnel at Altamont, 13 miles from Evanston. It was early
morning when I reached the tunnel. It is a mile and a half long. A train passed
me and through the tunnel just before I got to it. It takes half an hour for
the smoke to get out of the tunnel after a train passes through. I sat down to
wait at the station and got to talking to an operator. He calmly informed me
that several other trains would be along before long, and that it would not be
safe for me to go through the tunnel for hours. Such luck! The only thing for
me to do was to follow the trail over the summit through which the tunnel runs.
This I did, walking and pushing my bicycle and stopping every few minutes to
"breathe" myself. I ascended 300 feet in less than half a mile. I
rode down on the other side using both hand brake and the coaster brake. I
forsook the railroad after this and followed the road through Spring Valley and
Carter to Granger, riding past the famed buttes, or table mountains of the Bad
Lands. Bad they are, too. Even the road was marshy and muddy with clayey,
sticky mud that just hugged my tires and coaxed them to stay with it. I was
going down-grade now from Altamont to Granger. It is a great country at Carter,
where altitude is 6,507 feet, it is a wonderful sight to see the buttes with
seashells on their sides marking the high water mark of a prehistoric flood.
Only it is a pity the water would not dry up entirely and give a bicycle a
chance. I covered 85 miles on this day and it was one more like the three
preceding days. An idea of climbing can be gained by stating that at Evanston
the elevation is 6,759 feet, at Altamont 7,395 feet, and at Granger 6,279 feet.
There were more round stones the size of baseballs on that piece of trail over
the Altamont summit than ever I saw before in my life. At times they all seemed
to be rolling around in an effort to get under my tires. If ever I travel
through Nevada. Utah and Wyoming again on a bicycle it will be with a railroad
track attachment. The telegraph operators at the lonely stations in the deserts
have them to travel on back and forth from their homes to their offices.
Putting the flanged guide wheels of the attachment on one rail the wheels of
the bicycle are kept strictly in place on the opposite rail, and splendid time
can be made. With such an attachment and a motor bicycle one could follow the
railroad and make 150 miles a day, rain, snow or sunshine.
Leaving Granger, which is a division town of about 200 people and has one
hotel, at 6:30 o'clock in the morning, I found the road to Marston terribly
rocky, and I returned to my old love, the crossties, after going half the
distance, or about six miles. At Marston I found the old stage road to Green
River, and many portions of this are gravelly and fine.
Green River is quite a place with a population of about 1,500, but I did not
stop there. I pushed on past the famous castellated rocks to Rock Springs, 45
miles from Granger, and, arriving there at 11:45, I stopped for dinner. You
always eat dinner in the middle of the day in this part of our glorious
country, and if you get up with the sun and bump on a motorcycle over the
hallways of the Rocky Mountains, you are ready for dinner at 12 o'clock sharp,
and before. At Rock Springs the country begins to look upward again, the
elevation there being 6,260 feet, 200 feet more than at Green River. From Rock
Springs on, except for one drop of 500 feet from Creston to Rawlins and Fort
Steele, there is a steady rise to the summit, about half way between Laramie
and Cheyenne. There the elevation is a cool 8,590 feet.
Rock Springs, where I had dinner, is in the district of the Union Pacific
Company's coal mines. It is memorable for labor troubles and murders of
Chinamen. I had the ends of my driving belt sewed at Rock Springs, and set out
again past Point of Rocks, 25 miles east to Bitter Creek. East of Point of
Rocks the road Is fairly level, but it is of alkali sand, and when I went over
it, it was so badly cut up that in some places I had to walk.
Bitter Creek might well be called Bitter Disappointment. I do not mean the
stream of water that the road follows, but the station of the same name. It is
one of those places which well-illustrates what I have said about the folly of
taking the map as a guide in this country. About one-third of the "places"
on the map are mere groups of section houses, while a third of the remainder
are just sidetracking places, with the switch that the train hands shift
themselves, and a signboard. Bitter Creek belongs to the former class. The
"hotel" there is an old boxcar. Yet, if you take a standard atlas you
will find the name of Bitter Creek printed in big letters among a lot of other
"places" in smaller type. The big type, which leads you to think it
must be quite a place, means only that the railroad stops there. The
"places" in smaller type are mere sidetracking points. The boxcar is
fitted-up as a restaurant and reminds one faintly of the all-night hasheries on
wheels that are found in the streets of big cities. The boxcar restaurant at
Bitter Creek, however, has none of the gaudiness of the coffee wagons. Still, I
got a very good meal there. When I cast about for a place to sleep it was
different, but I finally found a bed in a section house. This experience was
one of the inevitable ones of transcontinental touring. It was 7:15 o'clock
when I reached Bitter Creek Station and it is 69 miles from there to Rawlins,
the first place where I could have obtained good accommodations.
After having breakfast in the boxcar restaurant, I left Bitter Creek for
Rawlins. In this stretch, about 20 miles from Bitter Creek, I crossed my third
desert, the Red Desert of Wyoming. It takes its name from the soil of
calcareous clay that is fiery red, and the only products of which are rocks and
sagebrush, and they will grow anywhere. There is a Red Desert Station on the
map, but there is nothing there but a telegraph office, and the same is true of
Wamsutter and Creston, the succeeding names on the map. I took a snapshot of
the road in the desert near Bitter Creek and wrote on the film: "Who
wouldn't leave home for this?" East of Red Desert the road improved
considerably, and from Wamsutter to Creston it was really fine.
It was along this fine stretch, just before reaching Creston, that I came to
the Great Divide and took a picture of the signpost, which marks the ridgeline
of the great American watershed. Standing there and facing the north, all the
streams on your left flow to the west and all those on the right side flow
toward the east, the waters of the former eventually finding their way to the
Pacific, and the latter to the Mississippi River. This is the backbone of the continent and it
is duly impressive to stand there and gaze at the official sign. It does not
mark the exact middle of the continent though, as some have mistakenly thought.
It is about 1,100 miles east of San Francisco. I had rather expected to find
the continental divide, if I did come across it, on the summit of a mountain,
in a very rough piece of country, but it is in a broad pass of the Rockies,
that seems more like a plain than a mountain, although a commanding view is
obtainable from there. To the north are the Green, Febris and Seminole chains of
mountains, and further, in the northwest is the Wind River range, and beyond
that again the Shoshone range, while to the south are the Sierra Madres, all
escalloping the horizon with their rugged peaks, here green, there shrouded in
a purplish veil, and far away showing only a hazy gray of outline. One realizes
that he is in the Rockies positively enough.
From Creston to Rawlins there is nearly 30 miles of downgrade, and, as it is a
fairly good highway of gravel, I made lively time over it. After leaving
Creston there come Cherokee and Daly's ranch before you get to Rawlins, and it
was between these places, both mere railroad points, that I got the picture of
the abandoned prairie schooner that was printed in Motorcycle Magazine. Rawlins, where I stopped only for gasoline,
is a town of some size, having more than 2,000 population. From there the country becomes rolling again,
and after passing Fort Fred Steele, I began to ascend once more. It is a great
sheep ranch
country all through here now from Rawlins. At Fort Steele there is nothing left
but the ruins of abandoned houses. I now follow the old immigrant trail that
winds across the River Platte, and am fast approaching the Laramie Plains, over
which my route lies to the
Laramie Mountains. Beyond Fort Steele I enter White Horse Canyon, which got its
name, so the story goes, from an Englishman, one of the sort known in the West
as "remittance men," who drank too much "Old Scratch," and,
mounted on a white horse, rode over the precipice and landed on the rocks 200
feet below.
At 6:10 p.m. I reached Walcott, a "jerkwater" settlement, composed of
two saloons, a store and a railroad station. It is made important, though, by
the fact that two stage lines come in there. The hotels at places of the sort
are generally clean, and they are kept more-or-less peaceable by the policy of
reserving an out-building for the slumbers of the "drunks," so I
concluded to tarry. I found some interest in automobiles here, and, after
inspecting my machine, the natives fell to discussing the feasibility of
running automobiles on the stage lines, instead of the old Concord coaches, drawn
by six horses, that are now used. One of the stage drivers said that if anyone
would build an automobile that would carry 12 or 14 persons and run through
sand six inches deep. He would pay from $3,000 to $5,000 for it. I told him to
wait awhile. After supper I mended my broken spokes with telegraph wire, and
entertained quite a group of spectators, who watched the job with open
curiosity. I find a variable reception in this country to my statement that I
have journeyed from San Francisco, and am bound for New York. A great many do
not believe me, and smile as if amused by an impromptu yarn. There is another
class, though, that of the old settlers, the real mountaineers who have had
adventures of all sorts in the mountains and the wilderness. These men are
surprised at nothing, and they rather nettle me by accepting me and my motor
bicycle and my statement with utmost stolidity as if the feat was commonplace.
For awhile I thought that this class, too, were unbelievers, but later
I learned that as a rule they are the only ones who do believe me, because they
are men who believe anything possible in the way of overland journeying.
From Walcott, which I left at 6:30 a.m., it is uphill traveling eastward all
the way to Laramie. I passed through the mining town of Hanna, peopled mostly
by Finns and Negroes, and past the railroad stations of Edson, Dana, Allen and
Medicine Bow. At the place last named I
ripped out some more spokes, and after fixing up the damage temporarily, I took
to the railroad and followed it, in preference to the road, into Laramie. This
was the first place that I really felt enthusiastic from the time I left the
coast. Laramie is a big, fine place of nearly 10,000 and is in the greenest
country I had seen since I left Sacramento. That is how it struck me, and I
felt glad to be there. It seemed as if it was a place where someone lived and
where folks could live. It is a fertile country all around there, given over
largely to sheep and cattle ranching, and has a natural, civilized look that I
did not find anywhere in Nevada, and only in little touches in Utah between big
stretches of wilderness. I saw some of the finest baldface, big-horn cattle
there that the country produces. This is where Bill Nye appeared on
the horizon of humor, I believe, when he was "sticking" tape for the
Laramie Boomerang. I recalled this and could understand that a man might be a
humorist living in such a place. I could not revel in the delights of Laramie
as I would have liked, for I had troubles of my own to attend to. It was 7:05
p.m. when I got there, and I hunted up the bicycle shop of Elmer Lovejoy. He
furnished me with five new spokes and placed his shop at my disposal, for I
preferred from the first to do all the repairing to the motorcycle myself.
Up in the air was the program from Laramie - almost straight up it seemed to me
at times, so steep was the road. They told me in the town that by leaving the
railroad and taking the road over the ridge I would save 20 miles. Maybe I did.
I went over the "ridge" anyway. I climbed steadily for 8 miles, and
when I reached the summit I was at the highest point I touched in my entire
trip, and higher up than I ever was in my life before. The altitude at the top
is 8,590 feet. Going up I followed a narrow trail full of stones and sharp
twists around boulders and the best guide I had to keep from going wrong was
the hoof-prints of the presidential party that had gone over the
summit the day before. It would have been easy to have lost the trail had it
not been for the hoof-prints, but I followed them and knew that I was right,
for the President's party had a guide. At the summit is a flagstaff, put there
by a survey party I believe, and someone in the Presidential party had hoisted
a handkerchief on it the day before, so I took a snapshot of it. Then, before I left I rested myself by
putting this inscription on the
pole: "G.A. Wyman, June 4, 1903, 11:30a.m. - First motorcyclist to cross
the Rockies, going from San Francisco to New York."
While I was on this summit, it clouded up and began to thunder ominously. I had
no more than started on the descent than it began to rain in torrents. The
water just dropped from the clouds as if they were great lakes with the bottoms
dropping out. In one minute I looked as if I had been fished out of a river.
There was no place to seek shelter. either(sic), not even a small tree, for the
mountaintop is "bald," so I had to keep going. After running down
about three miles my belt would not take hold and I had to get off and walk. So
long as I was on the ridge where the ground was all rocks it was not so bad,
but when I began to get down to the lower-lying land my trouble settled upon me
in earnest. Down at the bottom I struck gumbo mud, and it stuck me. Gumbo is
the mud they use in plastering the crevices of log louses. It has the
consistency of stale mucilage and when dry is as hard as flint. It sticks
better than most friends and puts mucilage to shame. When you step in it on a
grassy spot and lift your foot the grass comes up by the roots. My wheel stood alone in the gumbo whenever I
wanted to rest, and that was pretty often. Every time I shoved the bicycle
ahead a length I had to clean the mud off the wheels before they would turn
over again. I kept this up until finally I reached a place where I could not
move the bicycle another foot. It sunk into the gluey muck so that I could not
shove it either forward or backward. I found that it had taken me two hours to
travel half a mile, and I could not see New York looming in front of me with
any particular prominence. In fact, I could not see a sign of any settlement or
human habitation anywhere, and I was in a quandary what to do. I had set out to
travel to the Atlantic coast with my motor bicycle, and thus far I had done so,
though I had done some walking, I did not like to part with the machine right
there, for in the long run, the walking would be worse than the riding. I
finally left the bicycle sticking bolt upright in its bed of gumbo mud and set
out to find a place where someone lived. This move led me to a pleasant
experience, the hospitality of the Wyoming ranchers.
After walking two miles I came to a ranch house, and I was lucky to find it for
there is not another house within seven miles. The young man I met there
immediately hooked up a team of horses and went back with me and pulled the
wheel out of the mudhole. When I got to the house my rescuer, who was R.C.
Schrader, of Islaly(sic) Station, Wyoming lent me a hose, and with the aid of a
stream of water and a stick, I got the machine fairly clean after an hour of
hard work. Mr. Schrader was a hearty host. I had eaten nothing since an early
breakfast, and it was then 5 p.m. He made me stop and eat, and then, as I
insisted on pushing along, he showed me the way to the railroad track. I was
glad to see the ties again. It was about 20 miles to Cheyenne, and I walked
most of the way, arriving there at 10:30 p.m. About an hour after I left the
Schrader farm it began to rain and kept it up till I was within two miles of
Cheyenne. When I reached there I was a sight for men and dogs. I was mud and
tatter from head to feet. A colony of tramps would have been justified in
repudiating me, for my face had been washed in streaks and the mud remaining on
it was arranged as fantastically as the war paint of an Indian buck. My shirt
is splashed with mud, too, and I miss my vest because I could remove it and
make a better front in the town, I have missed that waistcoat all the
afternoon, for there was snow mingled with the rain and I was cold: but I took
off he vest, a light, fancy affair, some time before reaching Laramie and threw
it away because I took a notion it was a hoodoo.
With my coat torn in several places and one sleeve of it hanging by a thread,
my leggings hanging in shreds, no waistcoat on, dripping wet and splashed with
mud all over, I checked my bicycle at the baggage room of the railroad station
and set out to find a room in Cheyenne. "All full" was the word I got
at the first hotel, and at the next it was the same.
After I had tried three and been refused, I was satisfied that it was my
appearance that was the reason. To make the matter worse, I
discovered that my big ".38" revolver had worn a hole in my pocket
and was sticking through so that it showed plainly between the torn part of my
coat. I must have looked like a "bad man" from the wilds that night,
and, realizing this, I made it a point to tell my story In explanation, after I
had been refused accommodations at the hotels. After visiting a couple of
boarding houses and being turned away I finally found a woman who kept
furnished rooms, who eyed me suspiciously and said she had no room, but would
fix me up a cot. She listened to my story and finally fixed me up a nice room,
and I stayed there two nights. The next morning I washed and pinned up my rags
as best I could and went out to replenish my wardrobe. I must indeed have been
a tough-looking specimen the night before, because the first place I went into
in the morning, a furnishing store, the dog growled at me savagely and disputed
my entrance until called off by his owner. It rained hard all day, and I
remained in Cheyenne. while there I weighed myself and found that I was 12
pounds under my normal weight, the scales tipping at 141 pounds. I spent most
of the day cleaning and fixing my wheel. Again, I aimed a hose on it, and after
that I had to use a scraper and brushes before I could get down to work with a
rag. I worked in the bicycle shop of G.D Pratt while there, and he extended me
every courtesy.
It was raining a little when I left Cheyenne, and the roads
were too heavy to ride. I took to the railroad again, and the railroad ties
were not much better than the road. For 43 miles I had to pedal.
If you ever went for a ride on a tandem and took your best girl, or some other
fellow's best girl, and she was a heavyweight, and about 30 miles from home she
gave out and you had to do all the pushing to get home, you have a slight idea
how I felt pushing the motor over the railroad ties. I got to Egbert at 12:45
and had dinner at the section house there. It is downhill all the way now. I
have turned my back upon the Rockies and their grandeur and am nearing the
great prairie lands. I can see Elk Mountain, which, with its snow-capped peak
is a landmark for hundreds of miles around and in spite of the troubles I have
had in the rocky country, I feel somewhat regretful at leaving it. I do not
know what troubles the prairies hold for me, and I shall miss the inspiration
of the mountain air, the gorgeous view, and the coyotes and the glimpses of
antelope that I caught a couple of times back near
Laramie. One new sight I do have is that of prairie dogs, and as they sit
beside their holes and yelp at me I take several pot shots at them. They dodge
into their burrows so quickly that you cannot tell whether you hit them or not:
even when shot through the head or heart these creatures dodge into their holes
to die. It began to rain when I had gone a mile and a half from the station
house, and, remembering my last experience with the rain and the gumbo mud, I
turned back and waited at the telegraph operating room until the middle of the
afternoon, when the rain slackened. I got to Pine Bluffs on the state line
between Wyoming and Nebraska, at 4:40 p.m. To furnish an idea of how rapidly I
have come down it may be mentioned that at Pine Bluffs the elevation is 5,038
feet, and this is only 90 miles from the summit, where the elevation is 8,590
feet, a drop of 3,500 feet in less than 100 miles.
During my first few miles of travel in the state of Nebraska I was nearly
killed by a freight train. l was riding alongside the track, close to the outer
rail, where the dirt over the ties is level, and a strong wind was blowing in
my face, so that I did not hear the rumble of the train. Suddenly I heard the
loud shriek of the whistle right in my ears. I looked back and the train was
not more than 10 yards away. I just had time to shoot down the embankment,
which, luckily, was only about four feet high at that place when the train ran
past me. As it was, the engineer had whistled "down brakes" and was
scared himself. It is fortunate that I was not riding between the tracks at the
time, or I would have surely had to sacrifice my bicycle to escape with my
life. If it had been a fast passenger train and got that close to me, it would
have hit me before I got out of the way. This was worse than the mountains, for
nothing that happened there came so near to causing heart failure. I got to
Kimball, 65 miles from Cheyenne at 6:50 p.m. They told me there that the roads
are good when it is not raining. I had to take their word for it, and conclude
that I still carry some sort of a hoodoo with me, in spite of having shed my
fancy waistcoat, for when I get into a region of good roads it rains and spoils
them, and when it doesn't rain I am in a district where the roads are never
good.
On Sunday morning, June 7, I left Kimball, Nebraska, and made the biggest day's
run that I scored west of the Mississippi. It is a fine, grain-growing country
that I rode through from Kimball, which is a prosperous town. For the first 12
miles the country was rolling and the
roads sandy. After that I found good hard roads all the way to Sidney, 35 miles
from Kimball, and I made it in just three hours, reaching Sidney at 10:15. When
I rode into the place, which is a division town, I passed as tough a bunch of
citizens as I met all through the West. They were young fellows loafing on a
corner, and they tossed all manner of taunting comment at me, as if inviting
trouble. I kept on my way without replying, which was wise, but not easy to do.
After getting some gasoline, I left at 10:30, and had no trouble making
Chappell at 12:15, where I had dinner. I started again at 1:07 p.m., and
quickly found that the good road was at an end. It became so bad, in fact, that
I took to the railroad and rode the ties most of the way into Ogallala, 114
miles from Kimball. Of this distance I made the first 65 miles in five hours,
and had I had as good going in the afternoon as I had in the morning, I would
have made 140 miles. It began to rain shortly before I got to Ogallala, and I
had to pedal over the last 15 miles. Of the 114 miles I made this day, 46 were
ridden in the State of Colorado, for the railroad and road both put in a bend
from Chappell southward to get to the South Platte River at Julesburg, Colorado
and then the road follows the river valley back again into Nebraska; so that 46
miles was all of Colorado I saw. I found one good stretch of road five miles
long in the 46 and this was a relief from the railroad ties so I blessed it and
took a snapshot of it for a Colorado souvenir. Ogallala is only a "little
jerkwater station," as they say in this country, but it was nightfall when
I reached there, and it was raining hard, so I put up there for the night.
It is now the time of the heavy rains, cloudbursts and freshets that devastated
so much of the Western country during the month of June. It is my luck to be
right in the particular great basin where the waters flow most copiously. At
Ogallala, Nebraska, I was told that there had been nothing but rain there for
the last two weeks. The roads were in terrible condition, I know, when I left
there at 6:45 o'clock, on the morning of June 8. After 10 miles of heavy going
through the mud, I struck sand, and then took to the railroad track once more.
After going six miles over the ties it began to rain so hard that I had to get
off and walk three miles to the station at Paxton. There I waited for three
hours until it stopped raining, and set out again at 12:30 o'clock. From there
it is just 31 miles to North Platte, and as the sun had come out, I returned to
the road. I found it good in places and sandy in spots. There was one stretch,
two miles long, so sandy that I had to walk it. It was like being back again in
the deserts. I got gasoline at North Platte and pushed on 16 miles to Maxwell,
which made 70 miles for the day's travel.
Maxwell is a little bit of a place, and I had to take accommodation in a room
that had three beds in it. A couple of surveyors were in one of the other beds,
and at midnight, a commercial traveler was ushered in and given the third bed.
I was fortunate in having a bed to myself at all the small places, for
"doubling up" is quite the common thing where accommodations are
limited. One more cyclometer was sacrificed on the ride from Ogallala to
Maxwell, snapped off when I had a fall on the road. I do not mention falls, as
a rule, as it would make the story one long monotony of falling off and getting
on again. Ruts, sand, sticks, stones and mud, all threw me dozens of times. Somewhere in
Emerson I remember a passage about the strenuous soul who is indomitable and
"the more falls he gets moves faster on." I would like to see me try
that across the Rockies. I didn't move faster after my falls. The stones out
that way are hard.
I left Maxwell at 7:15 a.m. on June 9, and followed the wagon road for the first
eight miles. Then it got so sandy that I took to the railroad. I remained on
the tracks for 12 miles, and then tried the road again. After an hour on it,
the mud began to be so thick that riding was impossible, and I then returned to
the railroad and stuck to it until I reached Lexington, where I had dinner.
When I emerged from the dining room it was raining so hard that it would have
been folly to have attempted to ride. My batteries required attention, and by
chance I met J.S. Bancroft, who has the most complete bicycle and automobile
repairing station that I saw between Cheyenne and Omaha. Mr. Bancroft stopped
when he saw me at work on the batteries and invited me to his store. He is a
motor bicycle rider, using a 2 1/2-horsepower Columbia. I lost an afternoon in
Lexington, but it stopped raining at 5 p.m., and I went over to the railroad
and made a run of 20 miles in an hour and a half to Elm Creek, where I had
supper. I was anxious to make all the mileage I could, so after supper I
started again, and by 8:20 p.m. I had ridden 16 miles more and was at Kearney,
where I put up for the night. I had a fall and broke my ammeter in this last
stretch. I had the same experience with my watch back in Nevada. A note in my
diary, made at Kearney reads:
"There are some of the greatest pace followers of their size in the world
in this region. A bunch tacked on to me back at Ogallala, and for two days I
have been unable to shake them. It looks as if they will stay with me all the
way into New York. The natives call them gnats. They bite like hornets."
The roads were still impassible going out of Kearney, and I followed the
railroad tracks to Grand Island, and even then I had to walk over several short
stretches where it was sandy, and every half mile I had to dismount for the
crossing of the wagon road, the highway being in such vile condition that its
dirt was piled upon the tracks so that I could not ride through it. In the
11 miles between Grand Island and Chapman, where I stopped for dinner, I broke
six spokes. I rode, with the rear wheel thus weakened, over the ties 10 miles
to Central City, where I stopped for repairs. I left Central City at 4:45, and
rode 44 miles to Columbus, arriving there at 8:25 p.m. This made 108 miles for
the day and I felt satisfied. On this day again I narrowly escaped being lifted
from the roadbed by an engine pilot. It was a fast mail train this time. I was
riding along outside the rail, where the space between the rail and edge of the
embankment was only six inches, and I could not look around without danger of
banging into the rail or slipping over the edge. I did not hear the train until the whistle
sounded, when the engine was within 100 feet of me. I just went down that embankment
as if I had been pushed.
I left Columbus, Nebraska at 7:40 a.m. My start was later than usual, because I
had to wait to get gasoline. They do not keep it in the stores there, but a
wagon goes around in the morning to the various houses and supplies what they
want for the day. I had to take to the railroad once more from the outset.
After going 28 miles over the ties I noticed that the roads looked better, and
I rode on them for the rest of the day, stopping at Fremont for dinner and
arriving at Omaha at 5:30 p.m.
At Omaha I feel that my self-imposed task was as good as accommodated. The
roughest and most trying part of the country has been crossed, and I have
traveled more than 2,000 miles of the total distance. I have reached the great
waters of the Missouri; the promised
land of the East, where I hope to find good roads, lies ahead of me. My
anticipations of what lies before me are bright.
Return to the George A. Wyman Memorial Project page.
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