Almon Harris Thompson

Thompson was part of the Hundred Days Men enlistment program near the end of the American Civil War.[4][9] In the 1870 census,[10] Thompson was listed as living in Normal, Illinois, with his wife Ellen, mother Mary, as well as Emma and John Powell.In 1867, Thompson's brother-in-law, John Wesley Powell, organized an expedition to the Rocky Mountains to collect specimens for the Illinois State Natural History Society.Along with other members of the survey, he left Kanab, Utah, on May 30, 1872, to identify a passage to the mouth of the Dirty Devil River, where the Second Expedition crew had stored a boat.[12] Ellen Powell Thompson accompanied her husband on some of his surveying activities, including trips into the mountains and boating the rapids of southern Utah.Ultimately, Thompson constructed maps of Utah, Wyoming, Arizona, and Nevada based on field work from the Powell expeditions.The April 25, 1878 Winfield (KS) Courier reported that Thompson was exploring locations to start a sheep business in Kansas.[19] Thompson was part of a tight-knit community of explorers, scientists and businessmen in Washington, D.C., interested in forming a geographic society.[23] In a report submitted July 1, 1893, Thompson described work conducted in all of the western states and the establishment of new field offices in California, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.He stated that "a geographic name should be short, euphonic, pronounced as spelled, and have a meaning or express some sentiment to help fix it in the memory".[4] Frederick Dellenbaugh, author of The Romance of the Colorado River and a fellow member of the Second Expedition, stated that "to his (Thompson's) foresight, rare good judgment, ability to think out a plan to the last minute detail, fine nerve and absolute lack of any kind of foolishness, together with a wide knowledge and intelligence, this expedition, and indeed the scientific work so admirably carried on by the United States Survey of the Rocky Mountain region and the Geological Survey for three decades in the Far West, largely own success".
Stoddard, New HampshireUnited StatestopographergeologistexplorereducatorCivil WarveteranJohn Wesley Powelloriginal expeditionColorado RiversArizonageographerU.S. Geological SurveyWestern United StatesNational Geographic SocietyStoddardNew HampshireWorcesterMassachusettsWheaton CollegeIllinoisEllen Louella (Nellie) PowellWheaton, IllinoisUnited States ArmyHennepin, Illinoislieutenant139th Illinois Volunteer Infantry RegimentHundred Days MenAmerican Civil WarPeoria, IllinoisLacon, IllinoisBloomington, IllinoisNormal, IllinoisRocky Mountainsentomologistfirst expeditionColorado RiverFort BridgerSalt Lake CityGreen River, WyomingGreen River, UtahLees FerryKanab, UtahDirty Devil RiverParia RiverAquarius PlateauBoulder MountainWaterpocket FoldHenry MountainsEscalante RiverMount EllenEllen Powell ThompsonWyomingNevadaAurora, IllinoisKansasWashington, D.C.New MexicoirrigationGreen RiverUnion Pacific RailroadWhite RiverCaliforniaColoradoOregonWashingtonArlington National CemeteryCapitol Reef National ParkMarkagunt PlateauEscalanteGarfield County, UtahKaibabMormonGrand CanyonSierra NevadaSangre de Cristo MountainsSanta FeUnited States Geological SurveyNational GeographicDellenbaugh, FrederickHerbert E., GregoryPowell, John WesleyInternet ArchiveLibriVox