November 21: Devils Tower & Spearfish Canyon . . .
Read MoreRoute 585 took us south to the town of Four Corners, Wyoming and the intersection with US Route 85 - the Can Am Highway. Once in Four Corners, we turned left and found ourselves at the South Dakota border about 9 miles later.
The Can Am Highway is a 1,975-mile stretch of pavement that connects Mexico, (the border at El Paso, Texas), with the town of La Ronge, Saskatchewan, Canada via the US states of Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota, and North Dakota. Our time on the Can Am Highway would be short, (around 25 northbound miles from Four Corners, Wyoming to Cheyenne Crossing, South Dakota), but beautiful, (through the Black Hills National Forest).The Can Am Highway winds its way through the Black Hills National Forest and at some point, finds itself running next to Spearfish Creek, the body of water that created Spearfish Canyon. The photos above and below show what the next couple of hours would look like with the prevailing pattern being Drive, stop and take pictures, repeat. We first stopped in between Intake Gulch and Raddick Gulch, which translates to the middle-of-nowhere in the Black Hills National Forest.
We followed the Can Am Highway north until we reached the town of Cheyenne Crossing, South Dakota. A left turn at the Cheyenne Crossing Store near Icebox Gulch put us on US Route 14A - the Spearfish Canyon Scenic Byway. We made it a few miles and stopped again at a very nice looking covered and gated bridge over Spearfish Creek near the town of Elmore, South Dakota.
The photo above looks back on the Spearfish Falls parking area. The building with the green roof is the Latchstring Restaurant.
Nobody paid much attention to Spearfish Canyon until gold was discovered here in 1876. That brought mining operations to the area along with logging and sawmills. The railroad arrived in 1893. The area was designated a Forest Reserve in 1897 and a National Forest in 1905. With that designation came tourists. The Latchstring Restaurant of today began life as the Glendoris Lodge which opened in 1906. In 1919, it was renamed the Latchstring Inn. The original building was replaced in 1989 with the current building seen in the photo.