The Old Red Lake Trading Post Begins Its Second Century - Along "The Rainbow Trail"
In the first chapter of author Zane Grey’s  “The  Rainbow Trail”, he opens his 1915 novel at  Red Lake, Arizona.
 “Shefford halted his tired horse and gazed with slowly  realizing eyes.
 A league-long slope of sage rolled and billowed down to Red  Lake, a 
dry red basin, denuded and glistening, a hollow in the desert, a lonely 
 and desolate door to the vast, wild, and broken upland beyond. Red Lake
 would be  his Rubicon. Either he must enter the unknown to seek, to 
strive, to find, or to  turn back and fail and never know and be always 
haunted.”
 One hundred years ago, Red Lake, now called Tonalea
 (Navajo  for “gathering place of waters”) held great foreboding for the
 drifter named  Shefford. Zane Grey, a master of mood, went on to 
describe the  Red Lake Trading Post.
 “Suddenly, Shefford became aware of a house looming  out of the 
barrenness of the slope. It dominated that long white incline. Grim,  
lonely, forbidding, how strangely it harmonized with its surroundings! 
The  structure was octagon-shaped, built of uncut stone, and resembled a
 fort.”
One hundred years ago, Red Lake, now called Tonalea
 (Navajo  for “gathering place of waters”) held great foreboding for the
 drifter named  Shefford. Zane Grey, a master of mood, went on to 
describe the  Red Lake Trading Post.
 “Suddenly, Shefford became aware of a house looming  out of the 
barrenness of the slope. It dominated that long white incline. Grim,  
lonely, forbidding, how strangely it harmonized with its surroundings! 
The  structure was octagon-shaped, built of uncut stone, and resembled a
 fort.”
Grey went on, “As he approached on horseback, no living thing appeared 
in the  limit of Shefford’s vision. He gazed shudderingly at the 
unwelcoming habitation,  at the dark, eyelike windows, at the sweep of 
the barren slope merging into the  vast red valley, at the bold, bleak 
bluffs. Could anyone live here?”
In
 the book, Shefford soon meets Presbrey, the fictional trader who owns 
and  runs the Red Lake Trading Post. Almost inadvertently, Shefford 
saves a young  Navajo woman from an attack by a missionary who is 
visiting the store. From there,  Shefford and the Indian woman travel 
separately toward Kayenta.
 Grey’s  description of Kayenta indicates that it was then another 
trading post  consisting of two buildings and a corral. To discover what
 happened next, along "The Rainbow Trail", one must read the novel.
In October 2013, as I approached Tonalea from the north, along U.S. 
Highway 160,  I knew none of Grey’s story. Although I had often seen the
 dark and foreboding  structure described by Zane Grey, I had no idea 
that its history stretched back  more than one hundred years. I saw it 
as a somewhat forlorn convenience store,  frequented by local Navajo 
residents and by tourists intrepid enough to enter  the dark structure. 
Having never stopped there before, I resolved that day to do  so.
The
 reason for my stop was to photograph the elusive Red Lake, which 
supposedly lay  downhill from the old trading post and general store. 
While researching an  earlier story about Cow Springs, a few miles north, I had found a Google satellite image of Red Lake.
  With its copyright date of 2013, I assumed that the map accurately 
depicted Red  Lake, which appeared to be nothing more than a dry meadow 
to the east of the old  trading post.
To my surprise that October day, I saw a shimmering pool of water at the
 bottom  of the hill. A century earlier, Zane Grey described it thus: 
“In the center of  the basin lay a small pool shining brightly in the 
sunset glow. Small objects  moved around it, so small that Shefford 
thought he saw several dogs led by a  child. But it was the distance 
that deceived him. There was a man down there  watering his horses. 
Shefford went on with his horse to the pool.”
The
 only difference in my visit to Red Lake was the time of day and the 
passage  of one hundred years. As before, the shallow pool, rimmed by a 
wide swath of wet  sand shone in reflected light. With my travel trailer
 in tow, a trip to the far  pool was out of the question. Although 
Indian Route 21 took off from the highway  on the south side of the 
building, I knew that turn-around spots were rare on  such routes. 
Instead, I contented myself with a few telephoto images of the  
far-flung, shimmering pool. After taking pictures of the lake, I had a 
decision  to make. Should I enter the dark and foreboding building or 
travel on to  Flagstaff, where I planned to spend the night? With the 
sun sinking low and no  fellow visitors in sight, I decided to travel 
on.
As
 I swung my rig around the back of the building, I hoped to find an exit
  there. Although the way was not easy, there was an exit loop around 
the back.  Before departing, I marveled at the huge water tank ensconced
 behind the  building. It featured a Navajo language inscription and a 
Navajo maiden, with  water flowing from her basket. Seeing the huge 
supply tank, I realized that  Tonalea and the old Red Lake Trading Post 
were to this day a “place where the  waters gathered”.
After taking a deep breath, I drove down a rock-strewn slope, with my 
travel  trailer bumping slowly along behind. Turning back on to Indian 
Route 21, I  spotted some street art on the door of an old metal garage.
 Although I could not  discern what deity or devil the artwork 
represented, the panels that held the  painting seemed to reflect each 
other from left to right. Upon further study, I  realized that my 
impression of a mirror image was incorrect. Some details on the  left 
side of the painting were different on the right.
As
 I departed Red Lake, heading south on U.S. Highway 160, I let out a 
sigh of  relief. As I drove, I wondered who now ran the general store at
 Tonalea and  what the place was like inside. Again, I turn to Zane Grey
 for his first  impression of the trading post interior. “Shefford had 
difficulty finding the  foot of the stairway. He climbed to enter a 
large loft, lighted by two lamps.  The huge loft was in the shape of a 
half-octagon. A door opened upon the valley  side, and here, too, there 
were windows. How attractive the place was in  comparison with the 
impressions gained from the outside!”
Since I did not go inside the ancient building that day, I cannot describe it  here. On my next trip along the “The  Rainbow Trail”,
 I will stop at the Red Lake general store and see for  myself. 
Meanwhile, wouldn't it be nice for the State of Arizona to honor a 
business that has operated continuously there for more than a century?
   
By James McGillis at 04:04 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link
