Quote
AnotherDave
Since first setting foot on the Mist Trail several years ago,
I've been fascinated about the hiking trails in Yosemite.
Who built them, how many people were involved, what
equipment did they use, etc....
You've probably already found most of these but I thought I'd list them anyway:
-- Near the Four Mile Trailhead on Southside Drive, and
I think also near the bottom of the Upper Yosemite Falls Trail, is a display with a picture of James McCauley, John Conway, and a nine-man trail crew taking a lunch break. I found the same picture on p. 94 of
The Yosemite Grant 1864-1906 (I got my copy at the Conservancy bookstore next to the Valley Visitor Center).
-- Conway himself mentions some details
here, about 3/4 of the way down the page.
-- There's a little more about McCauley, Conway, and trails
here and
here. I found those by Googling on [john conway yosemite].
-- NPS lists what they officially know about the Four Mile and UYF trails
here and
here. I'd take some of the "info" there with a grain of salt. "Motorized Equipment" indeed!

-- A couple of years ago I visited the research library (upstairs in the Museum building, if I remember correctly). The librarian was very helpful and handed me a thick folder of clippings about Conway. I photographed some of the items but I don't have the pics on this computer. I think it was Conway's obituary that described how his sons used to scramble "like lizards" over the rocks when they were helping him lay out the trail.
-- Last year (May and June) I saw a modern-day trail crew at work on the stretch of the Four Mile that's just below Union Point. I'm sure some of the techniques they were using had evolved far beyond 1872 technology...


...but the stonework they were doing in the same area looked just like the vintage 1872 (or at least 1920s) stuff:

(I wrote a tiny bit more about those "zipline" pictures
here.)
I'm sure there's lots more out there. If anyone comes across it, please let me know.