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A RIVER ADVENTURE STORY


What currents run through camp fire river stories?

Backtail Side Canyon. Around the river campfire, no story is told the same twice. Courtesy of the photographer, David Edwards.
Backtail Side Canyon. Around the river campfire, no story is told the same twice. Courtesy of the photographer, David Edwards.


One example is the fireside tale of Glen and Bessie Hyde, a young couple from Idaho who vanished on their honeymoon voyage down the Colorado. The Hydes were last seen piloting their cumbersome scow through the heart of a gorge on November 18, 1928. Their boat was found a month later near the end of Grand Canyon, fully loaded but with no clue about the coupleís fate.
In the late 1940s, Grand Canyon locals portrayed Glen as a headstrong brute who had forced his reluctant bride into a fatal voyageóa version of the tale that became popular along the river.



Glen and Bessie Hyde’s scow on the river. Mile 165, Grand Canyon. Probably taken November 27, 1928. It was the final photograph taken by the Hydes and was found in the camera recovered in their boat.
Glen and Bessie Hydeís scow on the river. Mile 165, Grand Canyon. Probably taken November 27, 1928. It was the final photograph taken by the Hydes and was found in the camera recovered in their boat.


Since humans first saw the Colorado River, they have told tales about it ó from the Hopi legend of Tiyo, who floated through Grand Canyon in a cottonwood log in search of rain, to modern day tales of whitewater adventure. Like the river itself, stories change through time.


"We of the night will know many things of which you sleepers will never dream."

From writings of Bessie Hyde


Glen and Bessie Hyde about to begin their Colorado River boat trip, November 17, 1928. Photograph by Emery Kolb. Courtesy of Cline Library Special Collection and Archives, Northern Arizona University.
Glen and Bessie Hyde about to begin their Colorado River boat trip, November 17, 1928. Photograph by Emery Kolb. Courtesy of Cline Library Special Collection and Archives, Northern Arizona University.


Then, in 1971, an elderly woman on a commercial river trip claimed to be Bessie Hyde, saying she killed her fiendish husband and threw him in the river. Five years later a skeleton rumored to be Glen Hyde was found near the rim of the Grand Canyon, causing further speculation.

In 1985 a woman told of her father, Glen Hyde, who had barely survived a 1928 Colorado River trip.

When the famous river runner Georgie White died, articles in her home suggested she might well have been Bessie.

Where does truth end and fantasy begin? A mysterious haze still surrounds the tale as it meanders through the folklore of the Colorado.

This camp fire story version by Brad Dimock, river boatman and author of Sunk Without a Sound: The Tragic Colorado River Honeymoon of Glen and Bessie Hyde, Flagstaff: Fretwater Press, 2001.


"But even if the story is not true,
it ought to be."


Wallace Stegner,
Beyond the Hundredth Meridian, 1953


 

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