Skip to main content

Wallace Family records

 Collection
Identifier: MG 494

Scope and Contents

The material was collected and preserved by Barbara "Babs" Johnson (Wallace), granddaughter of Merl and Jean Wallace. The material was originally saved in two large blue binders and comprises of original Wallace family documents. There are legal documents (including a marriage certificate), photos, maps, and clippings, but the bulk of the content is correspondence from Merl to Jean, covering much of the time that Merl Wallace lived on Cabin Creek and Big Creek. Envelopes if present are inlcuded after each letter. Letters from Jean to Merl were not included and presumed to have been lost. Also included is a short autobiography written by Jean later in life.

The original order of the contents was preserved, and the series numbers denote the original binders.

Dates

  • Creation: 1926 - 1959

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Biographical / Historical

From the 1920s, Merl R. Wallace operated the United States Forest Service Cabin Creek ranger station, 6 miles upstream of Taylor Ranch, now the Taylor Wilderness Research Station, located in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness. Merl married Jeannette (Jean) Orr in May 1927 and shortly after Merl and Jean developed the Flying W cattle ranch in nearby Big Creek Idaho. While living there, they had a son named William Borah (Bill) Wallace. The Wallaces eventually left the area and divorced. Jean raised Bill in Boise and Merl moved to Alaska and remarried. Bill Wallace attended the University of Idaho, graduating with a degree in Forestry in 1951, going on to deliver mail along Big Creek by horseback in 1952.

In 2005, Taylor Ranch managers Jim and Holly Akenson met Bill Wallace and his wife Mary Acker at a College of Natural Resources alumni event and invited them to visit Taylor Ranch. It was Bill's first time on Big Creek in 30 years. They flew in and were taken up on a pack trip to Cabin Creek and saw the old cabin where Bill was born. As this new relationship developed, Bill Wallace and Mary Acker decided to donate money to the Unviersity of Idaho to renovate Taylor's historic Lewis Cabin, constructed by homesteader Dave Lewis between 1911 and 1921, and who had been a friend of Bill's mother, Jean.

Unfortunately, neither Bill nor Mary lived to see the cabin renovation completed in summer 2008. However, Bill's daughter Barbara, flew out to Taylor to see the completion of her father's work. It was about this time that Barbara entrusted her family's historical material to the Taylor Ranch.

Extent

0.50 Cubic Feet

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Barbara Johnson (Wallace) donated the collection to the Taylor Ranch Wilderness Station in 2009. Amie-June Brumble, station manager at Taylor Wilderness Research Station deposited the binders at Special Collections in 2011 for preservation and safe keeping (MA 2011-03).

Related Materials

Related materials may be found in Manuscript Group 190 David (Cougar Dave) Lewis Papers.

Title
Guide to the Wallace Family records
Author
Finding aid created by Amy Thompson
Date
2020
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
Finding aid written in English

Repository Details

Part of the University of Idaho Library, Special Collections and Archives Repository