At Twelve-Mile Camp. Advises Cashman not to go over glacier; treating Evyan’s & Stewart’s frozen feet; Cashman in Abercrombie 1900, p. 167; Hired to take party over the glacier. Caught in storm, 5 died, Logan missing on glacier. Jury Finding. CS1; Brown in Abercrombie 1900, p. 38; Dooley notes that “Logan seven froze to death on glacier.” Diary, 3/16/98; Summary of Taylor letter 3/5/98: Describes the heroic death of Dr. Edwin Logan of Louisville KY, trying to bring scurvy victims over the glacier. Two members of the Scientific Prospecting Co. of New York were desperately ill with scurvy; Logan, Ellerkamp, and two others tried to take them to the coast. They set out in good weather, not knowing of the blizzard raging on the glacier. The party was last seen at the fifth bench, about 7 miles from the relief station and 12 miles from the foot of the glacier. J.B. Ridge and party were among the last to see them alive. A search party of seven, found them three days later. Taylor, Ed. Erickson and Jim Acker, arrived on the scene shortly thereafter. Ellerkamp and Ellerman had been blown or fallen into a shallow crevice [sic]; Logan was tracked to a deep crevice and no one knows how far beneath the surface his body lies. The bodies were buried in Valdes two days later in one long grave. Danbury News , 4/19/99;