 
The Trading Post and Art Gallery at Cow Springs, Arizona Return to Their Sandstone Origins
After witnessing the disappearance of Black  Mesa Mine,
 I wondered what else might be fading away within sacred Navajo  and 
Hopi lands. Thirty miles south of Black Mesa, for almost a century, Cow Springs Trading  Post
 survived and prospered. The documented history of Cow Springs is  
spotty, at best. Most references to the place are in footnotes or old  
field-notes. Around 1970, when the last Cow Springs Trading Post closed,
 the  place began its  slow-motion disappearance.
In
 1983, U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 27 stated, “The unusual light 
gray  Entrada Sandstone in the area was named Cow Springs  Sandstone by 
Harshbarger and others in 1951. They described it as, “a  
cross-stratified bleached sandstone that lies between the Entrada 
Sandstone and  Dakota Formation”. It is entirely older than the Morrison
 Formation and the  Romana Sandstone, found elsewhere in the Colorado Plateau.”
The Cow Springs sandstone occupies a considerable interval in the  Jurassic Stratigraphic Period. The Jurassic period existed long before the  Tertiary Stratigraphic Period,
 when most of earth’s coal deposits appeared.  At more than 150 million 
years in age, Cow Springs occupies an ancient place in  geologic history.
The earliest historical mention of Cow Springs involves the Spaniard, Vizcarra, during his 1823 campaign. In an obvious reference to the nearby  Elephant's Feet pillars, Vizcarra and his compatriots named Cow Springs  Wash "El Arroyo de los Pilares".
 For almost one hundred fifty years after Vizcarra's  visit, Cow Springs
 disappeared from historical consciousness. Decades later,  perhaps in 
the early twentieth century, someone again documented the existence  of 
the place. “East of the sandhills, bordering Red Valley  runs Cow Springs Canyon and Wash. Up this canyon from the springs, George McAdams  set up a summer and fall  trading camp 1882”.
During a brief period when Indian trader J. L. Hubbell Jr. owned it in the  1930s,
 Joe Isaac managed the Cow Springs Trading Post. Son of  Joe Isaac, 
Lawrence Isaac Sr., ran the coalmine at Cow Springs from the 1930s  
until the 1950s. According to  Geological Survey Professional Paper, Volume 521,
 the mine operated on  coal-rich Black Mesa, seven miles east of Cow 
Springs. By the 1970s, coal  extraction attributed to the old  Peabody Western Coal Company would come to dominate the economies of both the  Navajo and the Hopi tribes.
1930s,
 Joe Isaac managed the Cow Springs Trading Post. Son of  Joe Isaac, 
Lawrence Isaac Sr., ran the coalmine at Cow Springs from the 1930s  
until the 1950s. According to  Geological Survey Professional Paper, Volume 521,
 the mine operated on  coal-rich Black Mesa, seven miles east of Cow 
Springs. By the 1970s, coal  extraction attributed to the old  Peabody Western Coal Company would come to dominate the economies of both the  Navajo and the Hopi tribes.
In 1889, David, George, William, Charles, and Edward Babbitt established the  Babbitt Brothers Trading Company
 in Flagstaff, Arizona. Later, they owned a  series of trading posts and
 other businesses in the northern part of the state.  Babbitt's 
Wholesale, Inc. and the Babbitt family have been distributors of  
Pendleton blankets and accessories across the Southwest for more than 
one  hundred twenty years. Some of the best-known Babbitt posts were 
located at Tuba  City, Willow Springs, Canyon Diablo, Cedar Ridge, 
Tolchaco, Indian Wells and the  ancient town of  Oraibi.
Notably absent from that list is the Cow Springs Trading Post, first operated by  the Babbitt's in 1895. “So by the time I became involved in our trading   operations,
 it was already becoming a dying part of our family’s business. From  
the time I started in the business, we had five trading posts. Today, 
1999, we  are down to only two—Tuba City and Red Lake. We closed down 
Cedar Ridge Trading  Post, we closed down Cow Springs Trading Post” - 
Jim Babbitt,  Babbitt Brothers Trading Co. oral history.
operations,
 it was already becoming a dying part of our family’s business. From  
the time I started in the business, we had five trading posts. Today, 
1999, we  are down to only two—Tuba City and Red Lake. We closed down 
Cedar Ridge Trading  Post, we closed down Cow Springs Trading Post” - 
Jim Babbitt,  Babbitt Brothers Trading Co. oral history.
On August 14, 1938, there were recorded  bird sightings at “Cow Springs Lake”,
  which was not far from a similar sighting at Red Lake (now Tonalea, 
elevation  5010) in Coconino County, Arizona. Red Lake was another old 
trading post site,  just south of the Elephant's Feet pillars on U.S. 
Highway 160. At that site today, there  is a general store, which 
provides Pepsi and hay bales to local residents.  Today, there is no 
flowing water at Cow Springs, nor is there much of a lake at Red Lake. 
Only a seasonal pond, which stands south of the highway at Tonalea,  
hints at Red Lake's historical status as a year-around lake. With the 
long-term drying  of the local climate, Red Lake disappears into a dusty
 plain. Now,  Cow Springs Lake faces the  prospect of a similar fate.
At the crossroads of Begashibito (Béégashi Bito'), or Cow Springs, and the old road to Shonto, is the possible location for "Luke Smith's store". Even in the early
 days, traders  looked to create catchy names for their trading posts. 
Begashibito plus Shonto  morphed into the new Navajo word. In a larger 
version of the circa  1929 image (above right) on this page, 
“Begashonto” appears on the sign in front of the store.
In the early 1960s, highway engineers realigned old Arizona 264. The new U.S.  Highway 160
 bypassed the tiny hamlet of Cow Springs, thus forcing relocation  of 
the old Cow Springs Trading Post. Even with its prominent new location 
on a  busier highway, the trading post did not survive for long. Today, a
 pole-sign,  some graffiti  covered walls and a stone-topped chimney are
 all that remain. With its business  lifespan cut short, there are no 
published pictures of the Highway 160  Cow Springs Trading Post while in
 operation.
With its  imposing pole sign declaring “Standard Oil Products”, the ruin helps break the monotony along that stretch of highway. In
 2009, I stopped at the Cow Springs Trading Post. Until they changed 
corporate colors  in the 1960s, the old Standard Oil Company of 
California utilized white  lettering on a brown background for signage 
on their west coast service  stations. After decades exposed to sun, 
rain and wind, large portions of brown  and white paint now fly away. 
Like the stratification record for the Cow  Springs Sandstone, layers of
 paint intermingle as they erode through paint and primer. Completing a cycle, in 2013 the original words “Cow” and “Post”  reasserted themselves at either end of the sign.
 
In the 1960s, improved highways and reliable automobiles meant that   motorists
 had greater range and options. With its unusual name and remote  
location, tourists often bypassed places like Cow Canyon Trading Post. 
They  might, however be attracted to an iconic brand name, like 
“Standard Oil  Products”, thus stopping there for fuel and provisions. 
Even today, the size,  height and immensity of the Cow Springs sign 
create an imposing sight. Only the  height of its steel poles has 
prevented untold repainting with graffiti art.
motorists
 had greater range and options. With its unusual name and remote  
location, tourists often bypassed places like Cow Canyon Trading Post. 
They  might, however be attracted to an iconic brand name, like 
“Standard Oil  Products”, thus stopping there for fuel and provisions. 
Even today, the size,  height and immensity of the Cow Springs sign 
create an imposing sight. Only the  height of its steel poles has 
prevented untold repainting with graffiti art.
At various times over the years, I have stopped to investigate the  
ruins of Cow Springs Trading Post. By the time I first stopped in 2007, 
there  was no roof and various partition walls were missing. There were 
no signs of  a fire, so someone may have removed 
and repurposed the roof beams elsewhere. Also absent was almost any form
 of scrap lumber. Known for its cold winter nights, local residents  may have collected and burned any scraps of wood remaining at Cow Springs.
Despite the derelict nature of the building, a spray  painted 
combination of angst-ridden poetry and high art filled  various panels. 
With each subsequent visit, more holes appeared in the walls.  
Successively, additional hits of graffiti obscured or defaced many of 
the  more artistic panels. Additional sections of block wall tumbled, 
some with their  artwork still intact. In one case, wall art became 
floor art.
In order to topple walls or make new holes, ad hoc wrecking crews 
employed sledgehammers. With less space to express new poetry and art,  
the hope and pride expressed in the early artwork later turned taciturn 
and reticent.  Visionary sights
  of a Navajo warrior and  a Golden Eagle disappeared under gang-style 
monikers and random bursts of paint.  In a stroke of spontaneous irony, a
 spray-paint cartoonist used several of the  holes to elucidate facial 
features in his characters. Dystopian anger at the  human condition ran 
through several muddled poems.
Just when artistic expression at Cow Springs reached an all-time low, a 
new  artist with a new medium arrived on the scene. Almost overnight, he
 covered  several walls with his wheat-paste photo murals. Hailing from 
Inscription House,  elsewhere on the Navajo Reservation, that artist 
goes by the name of  Jetsonorama.
 He selects photos from his collection, enlarges them at a print  shop, 
and then cuts them out on his kitchen floor. Utilizing wheat paste - a  
mixture of Bluebird flour (favored by Navajo
 grandmas), sugar and water - he  attaches them, pane by pane, to places
 like the Cow Springs Trading Post. His photo murals echo life on the 
land, almost as fleeting in the wind and weather as  the moments 
captured in the photos themselves.
Although not a Native American, Jetsonorama is the only permanent 
physician at  an Indian Health Service's clinic. In his blog and 
elsewhere  Jetsonorama said,
  “I’m trying to present especially positive images of the Navajo on the
  reservation - to inject an element of beauty, an element of surprise 
and an  element, hopefully, of pride." From the first moment I saw 
Jetsonorama’s Cow Springs work, it inspired me.  His  photo murals can 
be vibrant on one visit and completely gone on the next. In July  2013, 
when I last visited Cow Springs, not a trace of Jetsonorama’s original 
work had survived.
Although I have no problem visiting the ruins of Cow Springs Trading 
Post during  the day, I would not stop at night. Apparently, a few 
latter-day graffiti artists  still frequent  the place, along with the 
ad hoc wrecking crews. Recent poetic evidence tells  me that Cow Springs
 is now a hangout for the “down and out” or disaffected. Once, Cow  
Springs supported vibrant trade. Later, it supported highway art. With 
one wall after  another now falling to ruin, soon the site shall support
 nothing more than spirits  and pre-ancestral memories.
 
By James McGillis at 03:47 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link

No comments:
Post a Comment