翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Ketchikan Pulp Company
・ Ketchikan Ranger House
・ Ketchikan Television
・ Ketchikan, Alaska
・ Ketchin Building
・ Ketchowla Station
・ Ketchum
・ Ketchum (surname)
・ Ketchum Glacier
・ Ketchum Graham
・ Ketchum Grenade
・ Ketchum Inc.
・ Ketchum Ranger District Administrative Site
・ Ketchum Ridge
・ Ketchum Sun Valley Historical Society Heritage & Ski Museum
Ketchum, Idaho
・ Ketchum, Oklahoma
・ Ketchup
・ Ketchup (disambiguation)
・ Ketchup as a vegetable
・ Ketchup Clouds
・ Ketchup Eusebio
・ Ketchup Song (Stompin' Tom Connors song)
・ Ketchuptown, South Carolina
・ KETD
・ Kete
・ Kete (basket)
・ Kete (surname)
・ Kete Ioane
・ Kete Krachi


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Ketchum, Idaho : ウィキペディア英語版
Ketchum, Idaho

Ketchum is a city in Blaine County, Idaho, United States, in the central part of the state. Ketchum is the city where Ernest Hemingway committed suicide in 1961. The population was 2,689 at the 2010 census, down from 3,003 in 2000. Located in the Wood River Valley, Ketchum is adjacent to Sun Valley and the communities share many resources; both sit in the same valley beneath Bald Mountain, with its world-famous skiing. The city also draws tourists from around the world to enjoy its fishing, hiking, trail riding, tennis, shopping, art galleries, and more. The airport for Ketchum, Friedman Memorial Airport, is approximately south in Hailey.
==History==
Originally the smelting center of the Warm Springs mining district, the town was first named Leadville in 1880. The postal department decided that was too common and renamed it for David Ketchum, a local trapper and guide who had staked a claim in the basin a year earlier. Smelters were built in the 1880s, with the Philadelphia Smelter, located on Warm Springs Road, processing large amounts of lead and silver for about a decade.〔("History" ). Ketchum / Sun Valley Historical Society. Retrieved 6 March 2012〕
After the mining boom subsided in the 1890s, sheepmen from the south drove their herds north through Ketchum in the summer, to graze in the upper elevation areas of the Pioneer, Boulder, and Sawtooth mountains. By 1920, Ketchum had become the largest sheep-shipping center in the West. In the fall, massive herds of sheep flowed south into the town's livestock corrals at the Union Pacific Railroad's railhead, which connected to the main line at Shoshone.〔"Idaho for the Curious", by Cort Conley, 1982, ISBN 0-9603566-3-0, p.348-349〕
After the development of Sun Valley by the Union Pacific Railroad in 1936, Ketchum became popular with celebrities, including Gary Cooper and Ernest Hemingway. Hemingway loved the surrounding area; he fished, hunted, and in the late 1950s bought a home overlooking the Wood River in nearby Warm Springs. It was there he committed suicide; he and his granddaughter, model and actress Margaux Hemingway, are buried in the Ketchum Cemetery.
Every Labor Day weekend, Ketchum hosts the Wagon Days festival, a themed carnival featuring Old West wagon trains, narrow ore wagons, a parade, and simulated street gunfights.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ketchum, Idaho」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.