• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Menu
Community Library Logo
Search
  • Search the CATALOG for books and more
  • Search the CALENDAR for programs and events
  • Search the WEBSITE for general information
  • I Want To
    • Use My Library Account
    • Get a Library Card
    • Reserve a Room
    • Find Books and More
    • Renew or Place a Hold
    • Request an Item
    • Digital Collections
    • Computers and Printing
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Visit
  • Use the Library
    • Books, eBooks, and More
    • Children’s and Young Adult Library
    • Research and Learn
    • Center for Regional History
    • Reserve a Room
    • Library Policies
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Programs
    • Calendar of Events
    • Adult Summer Reads
    • Event Archive
    • 2025 Community Speaker Series
    • Library Book Club
    • Hemingway Distinguished Lecture
    • Sun Valley Early Literacy Summit
    • To Taste Life Twice 2025 Seminar
  • Wood River Museum
    • Wood River Museum Current Exhibits
    • Online Collections Database
    • Exhibition History
    • Museum History
  • Hemingway
    • Hemingway House and Preserve
    • Writer-in-Residence Program
    • Ernest Hemingway Seminar
    • Hemingway House Online Collection
  • Our Story
    • Staff and Board of Trustees
    • Library Blog
    • Newsletters and Reports
    • Employment & Volunteer Opportunities
Give and Support
  • The Community Library
  • Gold Mine Stores
  • Center for Regional History
    • Wood River Museum of History + Culture
    • Regional History Reading Room
    • Historic Photographs
The Community Library Association
  • The Community Library
  • Gold Mine Stores
  • Center for Regional History
  • Get a library card
  • I want to
    I Want To
    • Use My Library Account
    • Reserve a Room
    • Find Books and More
    More
    • Renew or Place a Hold
    • Request an Item
    • Use Our Digital Collections
    • Use a Computer/Print/Scan
    • Ask a Librarian
Community Library Logo
  • I Want To
    • Use My Library Account
    • Get a Library Card
    • Reserve a Room
    • Find Books and More
    • Renew or Place a Hold
    • Request an Item
    • Digital Collections
    • Computers and Printing
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Visit
  • Use the Library
    • Books, eBooks, and More
    • Children’s and Young Adult Library
    • Research and Learn
    • Center for Regional History
    • Reserve a Room
    • Library Policies
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Programs
    • Calendar of Events
    • Adult Summer Reads
    • Event Archive
    • 2025 Community Speaker Series
    • Library Book Club
    • Hemingway Distinguished Lecture
    • Sun Valley Early Literacy Summit
    • To Taste Life Twice 2025 Seminar
  • Wood River Museum
    • Wood River Museum Current Exhibits
    • Online Collections Database
    • Exhibition History
    • Museum History
  • Hemingway
    • Hemingway House and Preserve
    • Writer-in-Residence Program
    • Ernest Hemingway Seminar
    • Hemingway House Online Collection
  • Our Story
    • Staff and Board of Trustees
    • Library Blog
    • Newsletters and Reports
    • Employment & Volunteer Opportunities
Search
  • Search the CATALOG for books and more
  • Search the CALENDAR for programs and events
  • Search the WEBSITE for general information
Give & Support

Local Author Ryan Blacketter Reading: Down in the River

July 6, 2021 by kmerwin

Ryan BlacketterDown in the River synopsis: After the death of his sixteen-year-old twin sister, Lyle Rettew moves from the mountains of Idaho to Eugene, Oregon. His religious, well-intentioned older brother has forbidden any mention of her name. but Lyle, fighting to keep his memory of her alive, has quit taking the lithium that numbs his mind and openly rebels against his mother and brother for the first time. Taking his mourning out of the house, he embarks upon a fraught pilgrimage that is at once heartbreaking and macabre. Dark though it may be, Lyle’s fevered journey along the margins of youth culture is ultimately driven by fierce love and a deep, instinctive need to find a liturgy for loss and grief.

Ryan Blacketter is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, a recipient of a literary grant from Oregon Regional Arts and a prison teaching grant from Idaho Humanities Council. He attended Sewanee as a Tennessee Williams Scholar. His stories are published in Antioch Review, Image, Crab Orchard Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, and elsewhere.

Film Screening: Connecting with Owls

July 6, 2021 by kmerwin

Filmed entirely in Idaho by filmmaker and avid birder Kathleen Cameron, this film documents the beauty of owls in their natural habitats.
Owl species featured in this film are: Barn, Long-eared, Short-eared, Great Horned, Great Gray, Boreal, Northern Saw-whet, Burrowing, Flammulated, Western Screech, Northern Pygmy, and Northern Hawk Owl,  with cameo appearances by: Snowy and Barred Owl.

Viewers of all ages and levels of interest in bird watching will enjoy this film and will be energized to learn more about owls and to utilize the clues provided to find and observe them. 

A Q&A session with Kathleen will follow the film.

Don and Gretchen Fraser: The Ski Community’s Gold Standard

July 6, 2021 by kmerwin

Living as examples of the Olympic athletic ideal beyond competition, Olympic Skiing Gold Medalist, Gretchen, and husband, Olympic skier, Don, demonstrated not only excellence in the sport of skiing, but a lifelong commitment to community.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is a recently restored original painting of Gretchen Fraser on Bald Mountain by Dwight Shepler. Also included from our expansive Fraser Collection will be Olympic memorabilia, ski uniforms, trophies, medals, and pieces from the early years of Washington State ski racing.

Detail of Dwight Shepler Painting.

Learn more about Gretchen’s Gold, America’s first gold medal in Olympic skiing!!

Gretchen Fraser’s gold medal.
Bib worn by Gretchen Fraser.

Living as examples of the Olympic athletic ideal beyond competition, Olympic Skiing Gold Medalist, Gretchen, and husband, Olympic skier, Don, demonstrated not only excellence in the sport of skiing, but a lifelong commitment to community.

The centerpiece of our exhibition will be a recently restored original painting of Gretchen Fraser on Bald Mountain. Also included from our expansive Fraser Collection will be Olympic memorabilia, ski uniforms, trophies, medals, and pieces from the early years of Washington State ski racing.

Learn more about Gretchen’s Gold,
America’s first gold medal in Olympic skiing!!

Firelines: The Story of Wildland Fires in the American West

July 6, 2021 by kmerwin

The Community Library’s Sun Valley Museum of History’s exhibition, Firelines: The Story of Wildland Fires in the American West, is open through October 7, 2017. Firelines offers an overview of wildland firefighting history in the West and remembrances of the local wildland fires. The Library’s Regional History Department developed this new exhibit. There is a timeline from 1865 to the present which creates a firefighting perspective. The exhibit continues on to discuss the most recent fires in the Wood River Valley, the 2007 Castle Rock and the 2013 Beaver Creek fires and how they impacted the community.

Firelines exhibits wildland firefighters essential tools, photographs of the Castle Rock and Beaver Creek fires, and a video display of “Firestories,” interviews with Wood River Valley residents about their personal memories of these two fires. In addition, the exhibit features regional maps showing the location and growth of fires in Idaho. Firelines is a collaboration with the Environmental Resource Center.

 

History panels
Nomex shirt and pants with chainsaw chaps
Shovel, Pulaski, water pump pack
Field equipment and local fire panels
Chainsaw and drip torch

See Also

“Locals relate fire stories in new museum exhibition.” June 14, 2017, article in the Idaho Mountain Express.

“Learn about wildfire history in Ketchum.” June 16, 2017, article in the Times-News.

“Visit Man’s Complicated Relationships with Fire.” June 17, 2017, article from Eye on Sun Valley.

Blog posts from The Community Library at the time of the Beaver Creek fire.

Railroad Ties: Tracking the History of Sun Valley

July 6, 2021 by kmerwin

The exhibit celebrates the arrival of the railroad into Ketchum, Idaho, in 1884. Railroad Ties: Tracking the History of Sun Valley, opened July 10, 2014. The economic, social, and cultural impacts of the railroad shaped the Wood River Valley. As you travel chronologically through the exhibit, from the time span of early peoples to the to the Sun Valley resort, you see how the railroad is the thread that connects the history. The railroad theme shows how Sun Valley’s unique history began from the building of the Oregon Short Line during the silver mining boom years.

This exhibit was made possible by the generous support of the Wattis Dumke Foundation and the Idaho State Historical Society.

 

 

 

Prehistory

Gauntlets

 

Beaded bag
Arrowheads
Mining
Mining case
Assay case
Operational model railroad
Sun Valley artifacts

Sun Valley Resort advertising

The Beginning of Ski Troops: U.S. Army 10th Mountain Division

July 6, 2021 by kmerwin

Forming the 10th Mountain Division

The 10th Mountain Division of the United States Army began on November 15, 1941, with the activation of the 87th Infantry Mountain Regiment. The War Department desired defensive measures against possible invasion over the U.S. northern border so they prioritized training soldiers for combat in mountain conditions. During the War of 1812, enemy soldiers invaded the United States through the Champlain Valley in New York and Vermont. From this experience, the US military leadership desired trained soldiers who could defend the Green Mountains of Vermont and the Adirondacks of New York from potential German invasion during World War II.

Exhibition items

One of the most influential figures in the creation of a mountain force was Charles Minot “Minnie” Dole. Dole, the head of the National Ski Association saw the potential for skiers and mountaineers to contribute to national defense. He lobbied hard for training troops in mountain combat, and eventually he and other expert skiers served as advisors to the Army. Thanks in large part to Dole and his efforts, the Army created the 10th Mountain Division, which became known as “Minnie’s troops.” The first regiment of ski troops, the 87th Mountain Infantry, was formed at Fort Lewis the following November. Army units in all parts of the country sent their crack skiers to the new regiment.

Jacket and rope

 

Recruitment and Training

As part of Dole’s involvement, the National Ski Association was the only civilian organization approved for Army recruitment. Relying on three letters of recommendation per applicant, they recruited skiers, mountaineers, and outdoorsmen from across the country. They wanted people who had some of the skills needed to be part of a mountain division and the willingness to train in tough mountain conditions. The idea of being a soldier on skis carried quite a bit of glamour for recruitment, resulting in  a high number of college-educated men. Some who could have been officers in the Army chose instead to be privates in the 10th Mountain Division. Publicity films used for recruitment showed ski troops in their white uniforms on beautiful slopes.

Backpack

Despite the recruitment of men with prior experience, the 10th Mountain Division required additional training. Soldiers needed to be trained in downhill and cross country skiing and climbing, as well as basic training in weapons and combat. Training for rough conditions was essential. Most of this training took place at Camp Hale in Colorado, at an elevation of 9,000 feet above sea level. The high altitude was brutal for many soldiers, especially while carrying 90 pounds of gear.

Parka and skis

 

Veterans in the Post-War Ski Industry

The 10th Mountain Division was one of the best trained divisions in the Army with the most elite skills, training for a total of three years before entering the war. The division was the last to be deployed to action. Fighting in the North Apennine Mountains in Italy in 1945, they obtained decisive victories. Of the 14,000 men who fought, 992 were killed and 4,154 were wounded. Their contribution was brief, but meaningful.

Pair of skis

After the war, a number of these well-trained veterans came back to the United States and developed the ski industry. Veterans developed the ski resorts at Vail, Sugarbush Valley in Vermont, and Crystal Mountain in Washington. Some of the veterans entered the ski or sports technology industry. In Sun Valley, one of the early head’s of the Ski School was Freidl Pfeifer. The post-war manager of Bald Mountain was Nelson Bennett for many years before he went on to manage White Pass ski resort. 10th Mountain’s Bill Bowerman was another who went to be an entrepreneur. In 1964, he and a former Oregon runner named Phil Knight started a little company called Blue Ribbon Sports, which would later become a little company called Nike. Veteran Fritz Benedict, a ski racer who served in Italy, was a Frank Lloyd Wright protege, When he returned to civilian life, he designed the master plans and other design work for several Colorado ski resorts, including Breckenridge, Vail, Snowmass, Winter Park, and Steamboat. His best-known contribution to ski culture came to fruition in the early 1980s: The idea for a an American hut system in the Colorado mountains-the 10 huts linked by ski trails, known as the 10th Mountain Division Huts.

Display case items

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 289
  • Page 290
  • Page 291
  • Page 292
  • Page 293
  • Page 294
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Comlib

Support the Library

The Community Library’s free resources and services reflect the generosity of community members like you!
Donate
Gold Mine Stores
Volunteer

The Community Library

Location

415 Spruce Ave. North
PO Box 2168
Ketchum, ID 83340

Hours

Sunday
closed
Monday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Tuesday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Wednesday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Thursday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Friday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Saturday
10:00am - 6:00pm

Contact

208.726.3493
info@comlib.org

About us

  • Our Story
  • Staff and Board
  • Give & Support
  • Volunteer

Site Map

  • Home
  • Visit The Community Library Association
  • Events
  • Events and Programs
  • Use the Library
  • Catalog
Got a question? Ask Us

THE COMMUNITY LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

  • The Community Library
  • The Jeanne Rodger Lane Center for Regional History
  • The Gold Mine Stores

MAILING ADDRESS

PO Box 2168
Ketchum, ID 83340
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
2025 © The Community Library Association, Inc. All Rights Reserved | The Community Library is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt nonprofit organization | Federal Tax ID 82-0290944