Historical Glade Guard Station receives face-lift

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Historical Glade Guard Station receives face-lift

Ex-smokejumpers restore structures; public will have chance to stay at site
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
Doug Wamsley, Steve Vittum and Dave Ferguson reshingle the roof of the newly restored barn at the Glade Guard Station on Thursday. Wamsley and Vittum are retired smokejumpers and members of the National Smokejumper Association, which provided volunteer labor for the project. Ferguson is a volunteer with the organization. The group also built a new corral at the site.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
The newly restored outhouse at the Glade Guard Station was originally built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
Dave Ferguson, a volunteer associate with the National Smokejumper Association, helps nail new shingles on the recently renovated barn at the Glade Guard Station.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
A flag donated by the Veterans of Foreign Wars waves in the breeze outside the newly refurbished Glade Guard Station on Thursday. The station is being renovated as a recreation rental.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
A sign posted on the newly renovated Glade Guard Station reminds visitors to “Help Preserve Your American Heritage.”

Historical Glade Guard Station receives face-lift

Journal/Kimberly Benedict
Doug Wamsley, Steve Vittum and Dave Ferguson reshingle the roof of the newly restored barn at the Glade Guard Station on Thursday. Wamsley and Vittum are retired smokejumpers and members of the National Smokejumper Association, which provided volunteer labor for the project. Ferguson is a volunteer with the organization. The group also built a new corral at the site.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
The newly restored outhouse at the Glade Guard Station was originally built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
Dave Ferguson, a volunteer associate with the National Smokejumper Association, helps nail new shingles on the recently renovated barn at the Glade Guard Station.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
A flag donated by the Veterans of Foreign Wars waves in the breeze outside the newly refurbished Glade Guard Station on Thursday. The station is being renovated as a recreation rental.
Journal/Kimberly Benedict
A sign posted on the newly renovated Glade Guard Station reminds visitors to “Help Preserve Your American Heritage.”
Stations have history in forest

When the Glade Guard Station was built in the early 1900s, the ranger assigned to the location was sent to the isolated area with his family, a horse and wagon and $400 to build a home. The log cabin that resulted from the ranger’s work stood for a decade before it was replaced by the 600-square-foot home that now stands at the site.
Across the United States and Southwest Colorado, other guard stations stand as quiet testaments to the innovative and hard work of rangers on the front lines of forest protection and preservation at the turn of the century.
“The guard stations were outposts for the forest service,” said Julie Coleman, heritage team leader for the San Juan Public Lands Office. “It was a pretty solitary existence.”
U.S. Forest Service rangers assigned to guard stations had the unenviable job of protecting the forest from overuse in the days before a well-regulated permitting system, as well as regulating disputes between multiple users.
“The two main functions of the rangers were to watch over cattle grazing and watch over logging and timber sites,” Coleman said. “They were to make sure cattleman and sheepherders weren’t over-watering or over-grazing the area and ensure the logging was carried out according to whatever permits there were.”
Coleman said the rangers often had to manage conflict between users.
“It was really a tough job,” she said. “At the time there was a lot of hostility between the sheep and cattle producers. They had to handle all of that on their own.”
While the necessity of managing forest resources has not waned in the past century, the advent of modern transportation has made outpost guard stations unnecessary. Many of the stations across the country were abandoned as full-time resident stations after World War II.
Many stations have been lost to the march of time, but the forest service and private organizations have recognized the necessity of preserving the historic stations that remain, Coleman said. A number of stations in Colorado have been repurposed as recreational rentals for tourists, a process Coleman calls “adaptive reuse.”
“The idea is slowly catching on of restoring these special places and then renting them out with the proceeds going into the upkeep and maintenance of the building,” Coleman said.
Restoration and reuse may look different depending on the forest and the station, Coleman said. Locally, four historic ranger stations are significant: the Rico, Dunton, Aspen and Glade guard stations.
While the Glade Guard Station is being renovated for a recreational rental, the Aspen Guard Station has served as a summer artist-in-residence facility for 16 years. The station was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s and was repurposed in 1994.
The Dunton Guard Station, also built by the CCC in the 1930s, is used as a work station for forest service crews. The Rico station was built during the same time period and is an information center staffed by volunteers.
Along with the physical buildings, the San Juan Public Lands Center also has the original ranger diaries from the stations and hopes to create a complete history of the guard station days of the San Juan National Forest.
“Through restoration work we are really able to save these pieces of history for the future,” Coleman said. “It is a lasting legacy that we are preserving for the future.”

Reach Kimberly Benedict at [email protected].