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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grant_Village
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Grant Village

Coordinates: 44°23′25″N 110°33′22″W / 44.39028°N 110.55611°W / 44.39028; -110.55611
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grant Village
Grant Village campground center
Grant Village campground center
Map
Coordinates: 44°23′25″N 110°33′22″W / 44.39028°N 110.55611°W / 44.39028; -110.55611
CountryUnited States
StateWyoming
CountyTeton
National ParkYellowstone National Park
Founded byNational Park Service
Elevation7,825 ft (2,385 m)
 • Summer (DST)Mountain Standard Time (PCT)

Grant Village is a developed area of Yellowstone National Park, offering lodging, camping and other visitor services. It is located on the southwest side of Yellowstone Lake, about 2 miles (3.2 km) south of West Thumb Geyser Basin. Grant Village was developed by the National Park Service and concessioners under the Mission 66 program, in an effort to relocate land-consuming visitor services and accommodations away from the park's major attractions and sensitive features. Grant Village was planned to allow the removal of development encroaching on the thermal basin at West Thumb. Originally named "Thumb Bay," the development was first proposed in 1955 by Park Service director Conrad L. Wirth to accommodate 2500 visitors with restaurants, gas stations, concessions and a marina.[2]

Grant Village lodging in 1987

By 1960 there was a divergence of opinion on the project's design: the primary concessioner, the Yellowstone Park Company, wanted a compact layout, while the Park Service's Western Office of Design desired a dispersed arrangement. Financial difficulties left the Yellowstone Park Company unable to exert much influence. Construction of the first phase of Grant Village, named after President Ulysses S. Grant, was completed in June 1963, comprising a campground, picnic area and boat ramp. A marina was completed by 1965,[3] with construction of motel-style lodging, service facilities and restaurants continuing into the 1980s. The development remained smaller than originally intended; in 1981 Secretary of the Interior James G. Watt responded to pressure from the park gateway town of West Yellowstone, Montana, cutting the project's scope.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Grant Village". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. ^ Culpin, Mary Shivers (2003). "Chapter 12: Mission 66: A Concessioner's Obituary 1956-1966". For the Benefit and Enjoyment of the People: A History of Concession Development in Yellowstone National Park 1872-1966 (PDF). p. 106. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  3. ^ Culpin, p. 113
  4. ^ Carr, Ethan (2007). Mission 66: Modernism and the National Park Dilemma. University of Massachusetts Press. p. 365. ISBN 978-1-55849-587-6.