FERRY COUNTY
KELLER BUTTE
Colville Indian Reservation
30N-32E-33
30N-32E-33
July 12, 1932: “Lookouts have been stationed at the various stations on the Colville Indian forest. A man will be sent soon to the new station on Keller Butte. Mr. Patrie reports the fire hazard much less than this time last year.” (The Wenatchee World)
June 24, 1933: “The first C.C.C. camp for this district was opened Thursday with 75 men. One crew will work on the Cache Creek road, another will build a new road from the Cache Creek summit to Park City and a third crew will build a road from the summit to the new lookout tower at Keller Butte.” (The Wenatchee Daily World)
August 17, 1935: "H. J. Howard, chief cost accountant of the Spokane and Colville Indian reservations, said today that a 90-foot tower will be started Monday on Keller butte. Morris Ledoen is putting up this tower." (The Semi-Weekly Spokesman-Review)
July 17, 1943: “Many teachers are employed this summer as fire lookouts in the Colville national forest, according to Chief Ranger Mel Robertson of Nespelem. Miss Josephine Volger, a teacher in the Leadpoint school, is stationed on Keller butte.” (The Colville Examiner)
July 17, 1943: “Many teachers are employed this summer as fire lookouts in the Colville national forest, according to Chief Ranger Mel Robertson of Nespelem. Miss Josephine Volger, a teacher in the Leadpoint school, is stationed on Keller butte.” (The Colville Examiner)
November 7, 1960: "The 80-foot three-legged wooden tower, at 4831 ft. elevation, was constructed by CCC in 1935 at a total cost of $1046. A lookout shelter is fastened to the top of the tripod tower with U-bolts. The foundation of the tower consists of concrete footings with long grouted anchor rods. The immediate site area consists of large granite rocks.
This lookout is 31 miles from the Agency and 12 miles from the Cache Creek road. Access is by dirt road, moderately steep. The area is subjected to heavy winds and snow and ice in winter. Water is about a quarter miles distant. Radio reception is good. Porcupines are a nuisance and are reported to chew at tires of the fire watcher's car or any other salt-containing object that must be left on the ground. Fuel used is wood, which is available near the site. Quarters are located about a hundred feet from the base of the tower.
This tower and the shelter on top are unsound and unsafe and a threat to the safety of Bureau personnel and anyone visiting the tower. The timbers of which the tower is constructed have become brittle, and high winds that tear at it are a real and constant menace. The stairs and handrail are in extremely bad condition. Anchoring of the tower-top shelter is no longer sound. Age and weathering of the materials make effective rehabilitation impossible.
It is proposed to construct a 65-foot steel tower with quarters on top, so as to permit full-time fire surveillance without the attendant having to prepare meals and sleep on the ground level. The quarters should have vertically pivoted windows of tinted glass so as to permit unobstructed view. The area available for constructing such a tower is approximately 45 feet square with some rise in elevation from one side to the other, and consists of large rock and small amounts of earth." (Inspection Report)