Teddy Roosevelt Visits Early Sandpoint
by Bob Gunter
I asked Dale
Selle of Sandpoint to tell me a story and here, in his own
words, is the story he told me. I am sure you will find it
interesting and humorous.
Family tradition of the Hawkins
family who came to Sandpoint, Idaho, in 1881/1882
and who settled on "Hawkins Point" at
Sunnyside on the north shore of Lake Pend Oreille in
1885, maintained that William E. Hawkins'
half-brother, Winfield Scott Monhart ("Uncle
Scott") who came to Sandpoint in 1884, once
"slept in the same bed with Theodore 'Teddy'
Roosevelt" in Sandpoint in 1888. There is
enough documentation to support the claim that this
traditional story is indeed based on facts. From all
of the evidence, it appears that the Hawkins family
story sprang from true events which went something
like this:
In
August, 1888, twenty-nine year old author and
civil servant, Theodore Roosevelt, left his
home in New York to take a break from writing
a history entitled "The Winning of the
West." Roosevelt traveled west to his
"Elkhorn" ranch in Dakota Territory
(just north of the town of Medora, North
Dakota) to check on things there. Then, bound
for a caribou hunting trip in the Selkirk
Mountains, he and some friends rode a Northern
Pacific train to Idaho Territory.

Winfield
Scott Monhart Circa 1911.
Click photo to enlarge
He arrived at the village of
Kootenai on the north side of Lake Pend d'Oreille in
the last week of August, 1888. The village of
Kootenai was then located on "Mud Slough"
(which was later called Boyer Slough) a mile east of
the present town. Kootenai was the starting point of
the "Wild Horse Trail" which went north to
the gold fields of British Columbia and Fort Steele.
Teddy Roosevelt and his companions planned to hire
guides to take them up Pack River on the Wild Horse
Trail and over the divide to the Kootenai River.
They would float down the Kootenai River in a small
boat to Kootenai Lake where they would camp and hunt
caribou.

Winfield
Scott Monhart Circa 1921. Winfield
Scott Monhart ("Uncle Scott") who came to
Sandpoint in 1884, once "slept in the same bed with
Theodore 'Teddy' Roosevelt" in Sandpoint in 1888.
Click photo to enlarge
Since
the hunters had to lay over until they could
line up horses and experienced packers,
Roosevelt and his friends decided to trek the
four miles into what is now Sandpoint, Idaho,
but what was then the village of Pend
d'Oreille (although it was referred to as
"Sandy Point" or "The
Point"). This "town" consisted
of a cluster of wooden buildings along both
sides of the Northern Pacific railroad track
(on the East Side of Sand Creek). More than
half of the places were saloons and gambling
houses.
There was a restaurant
and a lodging house which was loosely referred to
as a hotel. The men went to this hotel and saloon
owned by George and Delia Holton. The other men
secured rooms in the hotel immediately, but
apparently Teddy Roosevelt did not. After dinner
the men undoubtedly did some drinking, and, when it
finally came time to go to bed, there was not a
single bed left for Roosevelt.
Scott
Monhart, who worked as a packer on the Wild
Horse Trail himself, had a shack across the
street (and tracks) from the hotel, where he
stayed when he was in town. When he was out
of town on a pack trip, he left the key to
his shack with Delia Holton and he told her
that she could rent his bed out, if she ever
needed to, when her beds were full and he
was away. Scott was out of town that night
and had been gone for some time, so Mrs.
Holton rented Scott Monhart's shack to Teddy
Roosevelt.

President
Teddy Roosevelts Train
Arrives in Sandpoint Idaho. This is a
pretty busy day at the train station in Sandpoint. It
wasn't usually this busy at the Northern Pacific depot
unless President Teddy Roosevelt was coming to town.
This was photo was taken before 1914.
Click to enlarge photo
About midnight,
twenty-eight
year old Scott Monhart, who had been drinking
himself, came home to his shack. Mrs. Holton was
already in bed, so instead of bothering her for
his key, Scott crawled through a window and
started to get into his bed only to discover
that someone was already in it. No one knows for
sure what kind of argument ensued or what sleeping
arrangements were finally made, but apparently the
two men worked something out. According to Teddy
Roosevelt's later accounts, Roosevelt ended up
with the bed rather than, as the Hawkins story
claimed, sharing the bed with Monhart.
All photographs have been used with permission of the Bonner County Museum.
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