
THE STORY OF DEADMAN'S BAR1
By FRITIOF FRYXELL
Jackson Hole, widely reputed to have been the favored
retreat and rendezvous of cattle thieves, outlaws, and "bad men" in the
early days, has long enjoyed the glamour which goes with a dark and
sinful past, and this reputation has by no means been lost sight of by
those who have been active in advertising the assets of this fascinating
region. But when the dispassionate historian critically investigates the
basis for this reputation he is surprised to find so little evidence
wherewith to justify it, or to indicate that pioneer times in Jackson
Hole were much different from those in other nearby frontier
communities; and he is forced to conclude that the notoriety of Jackson
Hole, like the rumor of Mark Twain's death, has been slightly
exaggerated. Doubtless the geographic features of the valley have
encouraged the popular belief, for from the standpoint of isolation and
inaccessibility Jackson Hole might well have been a paradise for the
fugitive and lawless.
But, in fairness to the old idea, which one is
reluctant to abandon, it must be conceded that among the authentic
narratives, that have come down to us from pioneer times, there are 1 or
2 which hold their own with the choicest that wild west fiction has
dared to offer, and these bolster up to some extent the rather faltering
case for Jackson Hole's former exceptional badness. Such a narrative is
the story of Deadman's Bar.
There are few residents of the Jackson Hole country
who have not heard of the Deadman's Bar affair, a triple killing which
took place in the summer of 1886 along the Snake River and which gave
this section of the river the name of Deadman's Bar. It is the most grim
narrative and the most celebrated in the pioneer history of the valley,
and its details are sufficiently bloody to satisfy the most sanguinary
tourist, thirsty for western thrills.
EMILE WOLFF'S NARRATIVE
When Colonel Ericsson, Mr. Owen, and the writer
visited Emile Wolff on August 9, 1928, we found him stricken with the
infirmities of old age and confined to what proved to be his deathbed.
Nevertheless his senses were alert and his memory concerning the period
in question keen and accurate. The account he gave checked in detail
with one he had given Colonel Ericsson a year earlier, and his
recollection of names and dates agreed in most cases with evidence
obtained later from other sources. In his enfeebled condition, however,
Wolff was so weakened by the telling of his story that the interview had
perforce to be cut short and certain questions left unanswered. A few
questions Wolff declined to answer with the statement that there were
features of the affair he would like to forget if he could, and there
were others he had never told anyone and never would. What he had told
other men, he said, he would tell us.
Concerning himself Mr. Wolff stated that he was 76
years old and a German by blood and birth, having been born in 1854 in
Luxembourg. He received an education along medical lines in the old
country. When still a very young man, only 16, he emigrated to America,
where he served for some years in the United States Army in the Far
West, part of the time as a volunteer doctor. His first visit to the
Jackson Hole region was in 1872 when he came to Teton Basin (Pierre's
Hole) for a brief period. In 1878 while serving under Lieutenant Hall,
he came into Jackson Hole, his detachment being sent to carry food to
Lieutenant Doane's outfit, which had lost its supplies in the Snake
River while engaged in a geological survey of the Jackson Hole
area2.
In 1886, Wolff stated, he came to the region to stay,
settling first in Teton Basin. It was in this year that the Deadman's
Bar incident took place. The account of this affair which follows is
pieced together from the facts given by Wolff; no information gained
from other sources has been introduced, and there have been no changes
made in the story other than the rearrangement of its details into
historical order. The account as set forth has been verified by both
Colonel Ericsson and Mr. Owen, who were present at its telling.
In the spring of 1886 four strangers came into
Jackson Hole to take up placer mining along Snake River, whose gravels
were reputed to be rich in gold. The new outfit had been organized in
Montana, and originally had consisted of three partners, Henry Welter,
(T. H.) Tiggerman, and (August) Kellenberger"the Germans" as
they came to be called. Henry Welter, who had previously been a brewer
in Montana, proved to be an old friend and schoolmate of Emil Wolff's
from Luxembourg. Tiggerman was a gigantic fellow who had served on the
King's Guard in Germany, he seemed to be something of a leader in the
project, claimingapparently on insecure groundsthat he knew
where placer gold was to be obtained. August Kellenberger, also a brewer
by trade, was a small man who had two fingers missing from his right
hand. The trio of prospective miners had added a fourth man to the
outfit, one John Tonnar by name, also a German, under promise of grub
and a split in the cleanup.
The miners located near the center of Jackson Hole on
the north bank of the Snake River where that river flows west for a
short distance. They erected no cabins, according to Wolff, but lived in
tents pitched in a clearing among the trees on the bar, within a few
hundred yards or so of the river. Occasional visits to the few ranchers
then in this portion of the Territory brought them a
few acquaintances. Once they ran out of grub and
crossed Teton Pass to Wolff's place to get supplies. Wolff recalled that
they paid for their purchases with a $20 gold piece. They wanted a saw,
and Wolff directed them to a neighbor who had one; this they borrowed,
leaving $10 as security.
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Deadman's Bar, at lower left, marks the location of
"the German's" camp, where they lived in tents pitched in a clearing
among the trees. Photo by Leigh Ortenburger.
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On the occasion of this visit they spoke of building
a raft to use in crossing the Snake at their workings, and Wolff tried
to dissuade them from the project, assuring them that they did not
appreciate how dangerous the Snake could be when on the rise; but they
laughed off his warnings with the statement that they had built and
handled rafts before, and knew their business.
Wolff learned little, until later, concerning the
mutual relations of the 4 men on the bar, nor concerning what success, if
any, they had in finding gold.
Late that summer when haying time was at hand in
Teton Basin, Wolff was surprised to see a man approaching his cabin on
foot. "Seeing any man, and especially one afoot, was a rare sight in
those days," commented Wolff. It proved to be the miner, Tonnar, and he
asked to be given work. Curious as to what was up between Tonnar and his
partners, Wolff quizzed him but received only the rather unsatisfactory
statement that Tonnar had left the 3 miners while they were making plans
to raft the Snake in order to fetch a supply of meat for the camp.
With hay ready for cutting, Wolff was glad to hire
Tonnar for work in the fields. For a month the two men slept together,
and during this time Wolff noticed that Tonnar invariably wore his gun
or had it within reach, but while he suspected
that all was not right he made no further
investigation. Wolff retained a mental picture of Tonnar as being a
small, dark-complexioned man of rather untrustworthy appearance and
manner.
Once Tonnar instructed Wolff to investigate a certain
hiding place in the cabin, and he would find some valuables which he
asked him to take care of. Wolff did so and claims that he found a
silver watch and a purse containing $28.
Then one day late in August a sheriff and posse came
to the cabin and asked Wolff if he could furnish information concerning
the whereabouts of the miner, Jack Tonnar (at the time Tonnar was
absent, working in the fields.) Briefly the posse explained that
Tonnar's 3 partners had been found dead, that Tonnar was believed guilty
of their murder, and that the posse was commissioned to take him.
Horrified to think that for a month he had sheltered and slept with such
a desperate character, Wolff could only reply, "My God! Grab him while
you can!" Tonnar was found on a haystack and captured before he could
bring his gun into play.
From the posse Wolff learned that a party boating
from Yellowstone Park down the Lewis and Snake Rivers, under the
leadership of one Frye (Free), had stopped at the workings of the miners
but had found them unoccupied. Just below the encampment, at the foot of
a bluff where the Snake had cut into a gravel bank, they had come upon 3
bodies lying in the edge of the water, weighted down with stones. They
had reported the gruesome find, and the arrest of Tonnar on Wolff's
place resulted.
Wolff, Dr. W. A. Hocker (a surgeon from Evanston),
and a couple of Wolff's neighbors from Teton Basin hurried to the scene
of the killings, a place which has ever since been known as Deadman's
Bar. They readily identified the bodies, Tiggerman by his size, and
Kellenberger from the absence of two fingers on his right hand. They
found that Kellenberger had been shot twice in the back, that Welter had
an axe cut in the head, and that Tiggerman's head was crushed,
presumably also with an axe. Wolff gave it as their conclusion that the
3 men must have been killed while asleep; and that their bodies had been
hauled up onto the "rim" and rolled down the gravel bluff into the
river, where they had lodged in shallow water and subsequently been
covered with rocks. Probably the water had fallen, more fully exposing
the bodies so that they had been discovered by Frye's men.
Wolff and Hocker removed the heads of Welter and
Tiggerman and cleaned the skulls, preserving them as evidence. Wolff
denied that they buried the bodies, but claimed that they threw them
back in the edge of the water and covered them again with rocks.
Tonnar pleaded not guilty and was taken to Evanston,
the county seat of Unita County (which then embraced the westernmost
strip of Wyoming Territory), and here he was tried the following spring
before Judge Samuel Corn. Wolff was called to testify at the trial,
mentioning, among other things, the incident of the watch and the purse,
both of which he was positive Tonnar had stolen from his murdered
partners.
To the general surprise of Wolff, Judge Corn, and
others present at the trial, Tonnar was acquited by the jury, despite
the certainty of his guilt. What subsequently became of him is not
clear. Wolff was questioned on this point, and at first declined to
speak, later, however, expressing the belief that Tonnar probably went
back to the old country for fear that friends of Welter, Tiggerman and
Kellenberger might take the law into their own hands since the jury had
failed to convict him.
Concerning the question of motive for the killing,
Wolff stated that he knew Tonnar and the 3 men quarreled. The original
partners planned to turn Tonnar loose when his services were no longer
needed in sluice digging, etc., minus his share in the cleanup. To
discourage his persisting with their outfit they had beaten him up badly
a few days prior to the murders; but instead of leaving Tonnar had
stayed at camp, nursing his bruises and plans for revenge, finally
carrying out the latter to the consumation already described.
Wolff did not believe that robbery was a factor of much importance in
instigating the crime.
* * * * * * *
From parties who heard the trial it appears that there
were no eye witnesses to the tragedy, save the defendant. Therefore the
prosecution was compelled to rely solely on circumstantial evidence. The
theory of the attorneys for the defendant was that the 3 deceased
persons were prospectors, without funds, and that they represented to
the defendant that they had discovered a valuable mining claim and
induced him to put up considerable money to grubstake and furnish
necessary funds to work the claim; that soon after these men were on
their way to the Jackson Hole Country they began to pick quarrels with
the defendant; that on the day of the shooting one of the prospectors
remained in camp with the defendant, and the other 2 went away to do
some prospecting; that the one who remained in camp picked a quarrel
with the defendant and the defendant was compelled to kill him in
self-defense. It was recalled that after the verdict was rendered the
defendant got out of town in a hurry, taking the first freight train;
that Attorney Blake was the principal trial attorney for the defendant,
and that he afterwards stated he never got a cent for saving the neck of
the defendant, who had promised to send him some money as soon as he
could earn it, and that he had never heard from him.
Note:
Dr. Fryxell and Colonel Ericsson, immediately
following their interview with Mr. Wolff on August 9, 1928, investigated
the site of "Deadman's Bar." They found unmistakable traces of the
diggings, the camp, and the road constructed 42 years before by the 4
prospectors.
Dr. Fryxell's study of the site cleared up any
uncertainty as to the exact location of this historic spot, which was
placed on the north side of the Snake In the SW1/4 of Sec. 23, T44N,
R115W.
The sluice ditch of the miners, though overgrown with
brush and partially filled with gravel, was easily located. It tapped a
beaver dam located just above the bar, and followed along the base of
the terrace, discharging into the Snake about a half-mile from its
source.
Numerous prospect pits were found on the bar. Some of
them appeared more recent than those dug by Tonnar and the other
"Germans," thus were probably the work of later prospectors.
Dr. Fryxell states: "All of the workings (1928) now
observable speak graphically of the expenditure of much hard labor from
which returns were never forthcoming."
This statement is significant, and is borne out by an
old sign, crudely lettered, which was reportedly found later in the
vicinity:
Payin gold will never be found here
No matter how many men tries
There's some enough to begile one
Like Tanglefoot paper does flies
1 Reprinted from Annals of Wyoming. Volume 5, Number
4, June 1929, with permission from the author and Miss Lola M. Homsher,
Director of Archives and Historical Department, state of Wyoming.
2 There is a discrepancy here, since Doane's report
of his expedition indicates that Lieutenant Hall and Doane met some
distance down the Snake River from Jackson Hole in 1877.
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