| Albright Visitor Center and
Museum (Mammoth)
The Albright Visitor Center and Museum
(open 365 days a year) is located at Mammoth Hot Springs, five miles inside the North
Entrance and at the northwest corner of the upper loop of the Grand Loop Road. The visitor
center and all the red-roofed, many-chimneyed houses down the street from it were built by
the U.S. Cavalry during a time when this was "Fort Yellowstone," an Army post
dedicated to protecting the national park. Although the soldiers left after the Park
Service was created in 1916, outwardly the old fort has changed little from the time of
Army residency. Fort Yellowstone, comprised mostly of this block and the two rows of
buildings behind it, is one of the best remaining examples of a 1900-era cavalry post.
The visitor center (formerly bachelor officers' quarters) now houses
a museum with its major theme being history: Native Americans (pre-1800), the mountain men
(1807-1840), early exploration (1869-1871), the Army days, and early National Park
Service. In early 1998, new exhibits with a predator-prey theme were installed upstairs.
Of special note are the Moran Gallery where fine reproductions of
watercolor sketches by the painter and expeditioner Thomas Moran are displayed and the
Jackson Gallery where original photographs by William Henry Jackson, also of the 1871
Hayden Survey, are exhibited.
There is a theater in the visitor center where Park Rangers show
film and video presentations every half hour in summer and on request in winter. Films
include The Challenge of Yellowstone (1979, 25 min) on the history
of Yellowstone and the evolution of the national park idea and Thomas
"Yellowstone" Moran (1997, 12 min) on Moran's contribution toward the
establishment of Yellowstone National Park and are shown year-round.
The Division of Resource Management and Visitor Protection operates
a backcountry office inside the visitor center during the summer months. This office
issues backcountry camping permits, boating permits, fishing permits, and general
information.
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