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Found, lost, found again

December 27, 2013
Story by Mike Weland
Photos and history by Gary Regehr

Gary Regehr has spent a lifetime in the woods. As owner of Regehr logging, he's seen and worked places most of us can only dream about. And over the years, he came across signs of history, signs of the toil our forbears endured to carve a living of the abundant natural resources of this once forbidding place.

Now, the young loggers do much of the hard day-to-day work for him, leaving Gary with time to go back and chronicle those rare, hidden places he happened upon over the course of decades. Old mines, chipped out of hard stone with nothing but picks, shovels and sweat, old cabins long dilapidated that sheltered the hearty souls who lived miles from nowhere, reliant upon none but themselves.

This is a story Gary recently posted on the Facebook site Bonners Ferry Back When, one of several he's posted, but this one is a story unto itself, showing that stamina and perseverance aren't traits of men lost to history, but traits that still abide.

"I’ll tell you a short story on how we first found it," Regehr wrote. "And when I finally found it again. About 25 years ago Dave Wattenbarger and myself were hiking on Dodge Peak and stumbled across this steam donkey saw mill. Didn’t have GPS or cell phones back then and soon forgot about it. So when I started looking for mines and interesting places I’d been over the years, I forgot where it was."

He spent the past four or five years looking for it, off and on, then followed an old flume road until he finally spotted it. It wasn't he said, where'd he'd remembered it.

"There’s an old homestead at the bottom of Dodge Creek near where the flume flattens out on the valley floor near what we now call McArthur Lake," he wrote. "As I started up the flume road I spotted one old broken cable hanging in a tree. I’m guessing as the donkey pulled itself up the trail, it got hung up and broke the cable. Cable looked a lot different in the old days.

"As I continued up the trail I saw where the water flume failed in a couple of places and made some pretty serious washouts. I came to an old wooden bridge where the flume left the trail and in a little draw I found the only wooden remnants of the flume in the 2.5 mile of flume.

"When I spotted the steam donkey I looked around for their camp. I believe it was just above the donkey. I found a bucket, crosscut saw, scoop shovel and pan."

After finally rediscovering the old historical treasure, he realized, belatedly, that about six years ago, while logging for JD Lumber up on the north side of Dodge Creek, their landing was a mere 100 yards from the old sawmill, and no one knew it.

Gary wasn't content to just get pictures of the old donkey mill, he wanted to know its history, so he took shots of all the identifying marks he could find and turned them over to Jerry Garten, Idaho Department of Lands, who did all the research and write up from what he found online.

Russell & Co. Steam Engine No. 11075

Russell & Co. built steam engine No. 11075 in 1902 in Massillon , Ohio. Steam Engine No. 11075 was 15.5 feet long and had a 22 foot smoke stack. The cylinder had a 12 inch diameter and it was equipped with one 60 inch belt wheel and a 26 inch fly wheel that was attached to a winch.

Between 1902 and the 1920s this engine was moved to Boundary County, Idaho, along with a Russell & Co. saw mill.

The sawmill was built on a 26 foot frame and had two four-foot circular saws mounted one above the other, which allowed it to cut up to four foot diameter logs.

In the early 1900s, Steam engine No. 11075 started the journey from the old county road where it crosses Dodge Creek (Lanes Canyon) to the present location. The road, built for the steam engine up into the head waters of Dodge Creek, is approximately 2.5 miles long.

The steam engine pulled itself, the saw mill and any extra parts and equipment.

At the present location the engine and mill were set up and the lumber produced was used to build a flume back down Dodge Creek and over to the Great Northern railroad track next to the outlet of present day MacArthur Lake.

The area logged extended from 500 feet below the saw mill to 1.5 miles above the saw mill and on both sides of the creek.

In 1929 a forest fire burned the entire Dodge Creek drainage, the steam engine and the saw mill.

The fire consumed all the remaining timber and destroyed the saw mill, which leaves us to speculate on several things:

   * The species of trees that they were cutting (the only burned stumps left were cedar).

   * The location of the camp.

   * The method of moving logs to the mill (horses, tractor).

   * Did the flume extend beyond the saw mill?
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