DICKIE MAUSOLEUM
Hot Springs County, Wyoming
N 43 59.493 W 108 46.241
Elevation: 6592'
(There are four people buried here.)
Dave and James Dickie were born on the Islander Bute off
the coast of Scotland. They tried New Zealand. Disillusioned with
the conditions there, Dave came to San Francisco in 1884. He then took a
job in the Rock Springs, WY area herding sheep for John Lobar. Bringing
along a finely bred Scottish collie dog, James joined his brother. They
eventually ended up on Enos Creek, then Gooseberry Creek in Hot Springs
County. Other relatives came over. More history is contained in Hot
Springs: A Wyoming County History by Dorothy Buchanan Milek.
Dave Dickie died of cancer. Some of the
dividends from his holdings, given to relatives, were to be devoted toward
completion of a mausoleum which David had started high on a hill, overlooking
his ranch. Dave was buried there, and he also prepared a crypt for his
brother James, but James, who died in 1936, requested burial among the pioneers
at the Monument Hill Cemetery, in Thermopolis.
To reach the mausoleum, drive on US Hwy 20 West from the
center of Thermopolis 33.6 miles to the junction of Hwy 20 and Hwy 431.
Proceed another 4 miles to the LU Ranch Road, and turn on that dirt road to the
left, or south. Cross Gooseberry Creek after 1.6 miles on the dirt. You
will be monitored by Black-billed Magpies and 20 head of deer in the pastures on
your left. Ring-necked Pheasants will scurry away from your vehicle into
the shrubs. Watch closely as Northern Harriers (Marsh Hawks) glide very
low over the pastures. The LU Ranch area is on your left, encircled by old
cedar posts and wire fencing. At the ranch home site there is a nice black
angus cattle feeding operation going on. The sign says: Gooseberry
Creek, Grass Creek, or Enos Creek. Continue straight along the upper
Gooseberry Road. This is 3 miles from the last mark. Cross
Gooseberry Creek the 2nd time after 1 more mile. You are now 43.2 miles
from downtown Thermopolis.
Leave the main road
and turn to the left on a grassy trail. You are on private
property, ask permission before proceding!
It is 1.5 miles to the top of the
small mountain. You can walk or drive, depending on your equipment.
Follow this rutted, dirt trail between rocky hillsides and cedar brush, and wind
up a small canyon. You will need 4 wheel drive, low gear at this
point. There is one spot in the trail, about half way up the canyon where
large rocks have fallen on the road. There is room for passage with only 5-6
inches of clearance on either side of your vehicle. After the steep
canyon, with deer watching you struggle up the "road" you get to an
open grassy hill. Go on up the mountain, and near the top you will see the mausoleum on your
left. If you are squeamish about driving on such a road, or do not have a 4 wheel drive, it is a nice
hike up the mountain. If driving, you can park at the foot of the concrete
steps leading up to the crypt.
There
are 29 steps to the mausoleum, which sits on the absolute tip of the small
mountain. The building, built of granite blocks, is ten feet square and
about 12 feet high, is set on a large concrete pad. On the east side,
there are two large stone planters in front and metal doors which are
locked. There is a stained glass window on the West. Above the
doors, 19 Dickie 29, is engraved in the stone. Inside you can read:
David
Dickie 1861--1935
Robert
Dickie 1880--1967
Leaving the
building, you can hike down one side of the hill for a hundred feet or so, and
there is another crypt sitting on a concrete block. It is also granite,
with the following engraved on the front side, facing east:
Joe
Garcia Died March 27 1972
Just a few feet
to the south of this single crypt, is a headstone which says:
Nancy
Bain Buckles
1935--1990
Nancy
Bain Buckles
September 29,
1935 October 5, 1990
"Anthropologist
by osmosis. Raised at Dickie, Wyoming and died in Pueblo, Colorado.
A special wife, sister, mother, friend, and scholar. Lived and
worked in Wyoming, North and South Dakota, Michigan, Kansas, Colorado, Republic
of Sudan, and Mexico."
Her grave is guarded by a
pair of Clark's Nutcrackers. In the distance, to the west you can see the silhouette
of Soapy Dale Peak, under the rise of the mountains beyond. The beauty of
this spot is hard to describe. You can see about sixty miles to the east
and west and you are surrounded by mountains and steep hillsides to the valley
below. This is a plot worth visiting!
West of the mausoleum
there is a cluster of sandstone boulders about twenty feet high. On the
East face of one of the boulders there is an engraving: David Dickie G. O.
M.
note:
the Worland Grit lists:
David Dickie died 5 Jan,
1935 at Chicago, Illinois, buried at Thermopolis, Wyoming. James Dickie's
death on Monday, 20 Jan, 1936, buried at Dickie Ranch at Gooseberry, WY.
The burial places listed in the newspaper are wrong.
To
see photos of these graves, click on Mausoleum Photos on this page.