The picture is of the old trestle that used to go from Sunnyside to Trestle Creek just a few miles from Sandpoint, Idaho. In the picture there is seen a horse that seemed to be heading toward disaster. Did the train stop in time or was the horse destined to be swept over the side of the trestle into the cold water of Lake Pend Oreille?
Below is the true story of "Baldy" thanks to Dale Selle who shared a copy of the story with me. Helen Ashley Hawkins wrote the story on July 28, 1935 and here it is in her own words:
"One of the Hawkins traditions was called 'The Horse Picture.' Will Hawkins took it with a Kodak (1900) and sent it to Spokane later to have it enlarged. It was a glass plate (negative) and was improperly packed at the studio so it was broken into a hundred pieces on the return trip. The enlargement then was the only copy extant. It has always been a bone of contention as to who is eventually to get the picture."
"Baldy" was the subject of the picture.
About thirty years ago (1905) there was a Northern Pacific railroad trestle across the south of Pack River near Hope. This old trestle was a mile and a quarter long and has long since been abandoned and fallen into decay.
One day a band of horses at the East End were feeding but had wandered onto the track. The horses were surprised by a double-header freight going west. All of the horses save one ran down a trail leading from the track to safety. Baldy ran onto the trestle. He kept ahead of the train for the whole distance of a mile and a quarter to the other end walking the ties in danger of stepping thru at every step.
The engineers of the two engines ran slowly enough to give the horse time to keep ahead, tooting the peculiar 'cattle on the track' whistle every few moments. Will Hawkins and Scott Monhart heard the whistles and ran down to see what was the trouble. Going back for his Kodak, Will took a picture of the horse and train as they neared the west end. After nearly two hours they reached solid ground, the horse lathered with sweat but unharmed."
"Baldy" and the other horses belonged to Evrel Eagan who lived near the mouth of Trestle Creek. Will Hawkins was William Edward Hawkins and Helen Ashley Hawkins was Mrs. William Edward "Will" Hawkins."
All photographs have been used with permission of the Bonner County Museum.
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