5 minute read

MY JACKSON HOLE LIFE

Advertisement

HERE SHE SHARES HIGHLIGHTS

FROM HER JACKSON HOLE LIFE.

MEETING HOLLYWOOD ROYALTY

In 1954, Budge’s brother Dell May built the Western Motel on South Glenwood Street, a couple of blocks south of the Town Square. In 1966 Bonnie and her husband, Orin, bought it—for $250,000. At the time, the motel occupied five town lots and had 30 rooms and a neighboring two-bedroom house where she, Orin, and their five sons lived. “It was a different time,” Budge says. “After Labor Day, you could’ve shot a cannon down Broadway because Jackson emptied out. A lot of motels did business only during the summer months and shuttered for the winter.”

One summer in the 1960s, the Western Motel had a famous guest. “The actor Henry Fonda stay[ed] at our motel for about six weeks, because he was shooting [the movie Spencer’s Mountain],” says Budge. “I remember he said he wanted our most quiet room, so we gave him room number six, down a little hallway. Every morning he would give us a 50 dollar bill, and ask us for change. Apparently, word was, he was having an affair with one of the barmaids.” The Budges sold the Western in 1976. It operated as a motel until 2007 and then as employee housing until 2015, when it was demolished. Today, the lots that were once the Western are Springhill Suites By Marriott.

Budge shows off a painting by her brother of her family's JM Ranch near Mormon Row in what is today Grand Teton National Park.

My dad used to say, ‘If you’re on your own two feet, you help those who can’t be on their own feet yet."

KELLY AND MORMON ROW

The JM Ranch, east of Blacktail Butte, was not in the heart of Mormon Row, but Budge says that when the weather was good, her family would attend church there. Today Mormon Row is part of Grand Teton National Park and recognized as the Mormon Row Historic District. The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997. (The oft-photographed Moulton Barn is part of Mormon Row.) In the late 1930s, Budge’s dad bought an additional 500 acres adjacent to his original 160 acres. He leased this land to farmers who grew wheat, hay, and alfalfa. “My father paid 500 dollars for that parcel; it was a dollar an acre,” says Budge.

HELPING THE COMMUNITY

Budge says when they owned the Western, she saw many women, including some of her employees, “who got the hell beaten out of them.” She knew she had to help. “We set up one of the first permanent women’s shelters in Jackson at one of our trailers, which gave them a safe place to stay and sleep,” she says. Today, that women’s shelter has matured into the Community Safety Network, a nonprofit that has helped hundreds of women escape their abusers. (Budge still occasionally counsels battered women via the nonprofit’s crisis hotline.) During the height of the Covid pandemic, Budge, who owns rental properties including a mobile home park in East Jackson, provided rental forgiveness to 35 tenants. “My dad used to say, ‘If you’re on your own two feet, you help those who can’t be on their own feet yet,’” Budge says. “I remember my family was always trying to take care of somebody.”

LOCAL LIFE

MY JACKSON HOLE LIFE

BRADLY J. BONER

Some of Budge's dancing boots from over the years sit on a small table in her East Jackson home.

DANCING

Bonnie May and Orin Budge “courted” for four years before getting married in 1948. Their courtship included dancing at the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar and the Wort Hotel. “Back then we did something called the ‘Jackson Hole stomp.’ It was a cross between cowboy meets rockabilly,” says Budge. The dancing continued after they had 5 sons, 12 grandkids, and 16 great grandkids. “Orin and me, we danced a million miles together. He used to tell me, ‘Once a year, one day of the year, we’ll do anything you want to do.’ I always wanted to dance, and we were always dancing, our entire lives together we kept dancing.” Orin died in 2010, after 63 years of marriage.

HUCKLEBERRIES

“I still love huckleberry picking,” says Budge. Of course, winter is not huckleberry-picking season, but berries picked the prior summer can be canned and frozen and eaten yearround. “I just finished eating a quart and a half of them. I eat a handful with my ice cream, it’s delicious,” she says. Huckleberries, which have a sweet-tart flavor, were gathered for centuries by Native Americans for food and to use as medicine and grow in the wild around Jackson Hole. (Attempts to cultivate the berry have been unsuccessful.) Growing up, Budge, her mother, and her mother’s friend Ida Chambers took a wagon hitched to a team of horses up Blacktail Butte to pick them. “Our mother would tell us to put them in the buckets, but we probably ate more than we put in the buckets,” Budge says. The berries that Budge and her siblings didn’t eat were canned.

My father was a calm, reasonable, and hard-working man, and we worked hard right alongside him in those days—it was just what was expected of you; we never questioned it.”

THE EARLY DAYS IN JACKSON HOLE

The cover of Virginia Huidekoper’s 1978 photography book documenting local life, The Early Days in Jackson Hole, is of Budge’s father on a bucking bronc with the Tetons in the distance. To this day, Budge has a framed version of this photo hanging in her house. “My father was a calm, reasonable, and hard-working man, and we worked hard right alongside him in those days—it was just what was expected of you; we never questioned it,” she says.

SCHOOL

The school Budge attended from age 12 through 16 was on South Jackson Street in downtown Jackson. (Today it’s the site of New York City Subs.) “After school, if we had a nickel, we would walk over to the Jackson Hole Drugstore and order up a Black Cow,” she says. “It was one scoop of ice cream, lots of chocolate syrup, and a little seltzer water.” JH