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'Walden of the West' Faces Development Threat

Teddy Roosevelt's North Dakota ranch near potential gravel pit

By Liam Carnahan,  Newser Staff

Posted Aug 7, 2012 5:19 PM CDT

(Newser) – If you've ever wanted to see Teddy Roosevelt's beautiful North Dakota ranch, you'd better get a move on. The Elkhorn Ranch was the ex-prez's place of solitude, earning it the title "Walden Pond of the West." But developers are hoping to build a noisy gravel mine and accompanying big bridge nearby, which environmentalists and historians say will corrupt the peaceful plot, reports NPR. Supporters of the mine would likely protest any effort by the Obama administration to protect the land.

The ranch in the beautiful Badlands was "a place of extreme solitude and historical sanctity, a place where Theodore Roosevelt generated his ideas for his crusade to save wild and special places in the United States," says historian Douglas Brinkley (despite the fact that Roosevelt first came to the area to shoot one of the region's last buffalo.) Not much remains of the original ranch, and developers say the mine would be out of sight and earshot of the site. Studies to determine whether that's true have yet to be completed. There are other ways to honor the 26th president, however.

This June 3, 2012, photo provided by the National Park Service shows the site where Theodore Roosevelt's ranch house once stood.
This June 3, 2012, photo provided by the National Park Service shows the site where Theodore Roosevelt's ranch house once stood.   (AP Photo/National Park Service, Valerie J. Naylor)
This May 4 photo provided by the National Park Service shows the Elkhorn Ranch site in the badlands of North Dakota.
This May 4 photo provided by the National Park Service shows the Elkhorn Ranch site in the badlands of North Dakota.   (AP Photo/National Park Service, Valerie J. Naylor)
Theodore Roosevelt campaigns for president in 1912.
Theodore Roosevelt campaigns for president in 1912.   (AP Photo/Brown Brothers)
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COMMENTS
Showing 3 of 8 comments
finkster
Aug 7, 2012 7:08 PM CDT
Developers won't be satisfied until everything is concrete and nature is wiped from the face of the earth. 
JoeQ
Aug 7, 2012 6:02 PM CDT
Walled-in Pond.
Observer
Aug 7, 2012 5:49 PM CDT
Is there really anything beautiful in North Dakota? Really?
 

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