Antelope Springs: Difference between revisions
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Susan Coon is buried at Antelope Springs. | Susan Coon is buried at Antelope Springs. | ||
There is quite a bit of confusion about the naming of the springs | There is quite a bit of confusion about the naming of the springs.<ref name=Helfrich/> | ||
A 1931 USGS Lovelock 1:250,000 map shows Willow Springs in that area, with other unnamed springs nearby. [[Cedar Springs]] might be another name for Willow Springs. | |||
A 1971 Majuba Mountains 1:24,000 map shows Big Antelope Springs with graves marked. | |||
A 1981 [[Scossa]] 1:24,000 shows Antelope Springs and Little Antelope Springs to the west of Big Antelope Springs and Willow Springs, though Willow Springs seems to be the name of the creek. | |||
=References= | =References= |
Revision as of 20:16, 26 December 2022
Antelope Springs is a spring located in the Antelope Range.
Antelope Springs was probably named in 1846 when William G. Parker killed an antelope there when he and Levi Scott were looking for a route from the Humboldt River to Rabbit Hole Spring.[1]
Antelope Springs was the first major spring that emigrants would encounter after leaving Lassen Meadows on the Applegate-Lassen Trail.
Susan Coon is buried at Antelope Springs.
There is quite a bit of confusion about the naming of the springs.[1]
A 1931 USGS Lovelock 1:250,000 map shows Willow Springs in that area, with other unnamed springs nearby. Cedar Springs might be another name for Willow Springs.
A 1971 Majuba Mountains 1:24,000 map shows Big Antelope Springs with graves marked.
A 1981 Scossa 1:24,000 shows Antelope Springs and Little Antelope Springs to the west of Big Antelope Springs and Willow Springs, though Willow Springs seems to be the name of the creek.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Applegate Trail," Helfrich, Devere, Klamath Historical Society, 1971, p. 22.
External links
- Antelope (forgottennevada.org)