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ERA - The Eaglehead Repeater
Association
If you use some of the local repeaters, you should help support this group!!
Eaglehead prefers donations be given in January each year. to make
accounting easier - but will accept them ANYTIME, of course!
ERA appreciates donations in ANY amount to:
Payable to: Eaglehead Repeater Association
Mailed To: ERA c/o Bob Leo
W7LR
6790 South 3rd
Bozeman, Montana 59715
Eaglehead Repeater Association Current Directors
Todd Gahagan, Chairman
Bob Leo
Don Wilson
Don Godward
Harley Leach
Mal Goosey
Neil Ramhorst
Eaglehead Repeater Association is
in need of financial support to continue maintaining repeater sites. For
further information, contact Bob Leo, W7LR at
w7lr@aol.com or write to: Bob Leo, 6790 South 3rd, Bozeman, Montana 59715. Make any financial
contributions payable to the Eaglehead Repeater Association at the same address.
73 - Bob Leo, W7LR
The ERA appreciates comments,
suggestions and contributions from our supporters. Please submit any comments or
contributions to
W7LR@aol.com.
The story of the Eaglehead
Repeater Association is a long and interesting one.
A memo from W7JMX on June 28,
1976 invited local amateurs to a meeting to form the Gallatin Repeater
Association and to announce plans for locating a new repeater on Eaglehead
Mountain, 32 miles south of Bozeman, at about 10,000 feet elevation.
I have a mountain of
correspondence in our Eaglehead files, and by December of 1976 the name was
Eaglehead Repeater Association. I believe that the repeater was installed on
Eaglehead during the summer of 1977. A letter from Matt Montagne on August 24,
1977 shows a schedule for September 1, 1977 by a National Guard helicopter to
ferry the repeater equipment from Porcupine Ranger station up to Eaglehead.
A memo from W7JMX on March 1,
1978 showed that both the Bridger repeater and the Eaglehead repeater would be
handled by the Eaglehead Repeater Association.
In the fall of 1978,
correspondence shows interest in moving the Eaglehead repeater to Steamboat
Mountain on a site owned by Burlington Northern, in cooperation with Montana
Power Company. The elevation there is 10,300 feet. A lease agreement with BN was
completed in November 1978. The move to Steamboat was accomplished in the fall
of 1979. Coverage was great down the Paradise Valley and to Livingston and
Gardner. Coverage to Bozeman and the Gallatin Canyon was not so good. A trip was
made May 9, 1980 to make building repairs. Some trips were made by driving
through logging areas west of Tom Miner basin by four wheel drive vehicles, and
then hiking the rest of the way. A big problem with Steamboat was the difficult
access.
On January 12, 1981, W7JMX writes
that "we do have an acute fund shortage at present". Things don't
change much over the years! The same memo indicated the plans to incorporate
with the state as a non-profit organization, which was done by Don Nash.
New repeater calls were issued in
October of 1982: W7YB/R = Bridger 28/88 and W7LR/R = Steamboat 22/82. The
previous calls were WR7ADN and WR7ANC, respectively.
A December 4, 1982 letter to the
Editor of the Bozeman Daily Chronicle told how association members responded
after an avalanche took out power at Bridger Ridge. Power was off there for
several weeks. Our amateur repeater continued to work for several weeks on
battery power. Later, our members charged the batteries via a long signal cable
so that we were on the air for that 8 week outage!! We also reactivated, on low
power, the county rural fire radio.
By April of 1983, we were
planning the move of the repeater from Steamboat to Flattop Mountain, where the
22/82 repeater is still located. The reason for the move was the difficulty in
getting to Steamboat and the much better access to Flattop, as well as better
Gallatin Canyon radio coverage.
In June, 1983, members helped
with a search near Helena for a little four year old girl who was missing from a
mountain campground picnic. Unfortunately, she was never found.
A 1985 premium notice shows that
ERA paid the insurance premium for association equipment. This has been done
each year since.
A letter from the IRS in January
of 1985 shows that we had applied for a tax exempt status. After lots of paper
work by W7LR, this was granted by the IRS in June, 1985. We are exempt from
federal income tax under section 501(c) (3) and our foundation status is 509 (a)
(2).
At some time in the past, the
Eaglehead Repeater Association and the Gallatin Ham Radio Club became separate
organizations. At that time some amateurs in the area were interested in
supporting 2 meter repeaters and some were not. Support by local amateurs has
been good towards both organizations. Financial support for GHRC goes to the
GHRC treasurer, usually at the GHRC club meetings. Financial support for ERA goes
to W7LR, treasurer for the ERA, usually by mail.
Eaglehead Repeater Association
has a board of directors that meet whenever necessary to conduct association
business. Any amateur is welcome to attend these meetings, usually held in some
directors home or at the GHRC meeting room at Bozeman Senior High School. (Meetings announced on the Upcoming
Events page in advance if
possible.)
Eaglehead Repeater Association is
still in need of financial support to continue maintaining repeater sites. For
further information, contact Bob Leo, W7LR at
w7lr@aol.com or write to: Bob Leo, 6790 South 3rd, Bozeman, Montana 59715. Make any financial
contributions payable to the Eaglehead Repeater Association.
73 - Bob Leo, W7LR
The ERA appreciates comments,
suggestions and contributions from our members. Please submit any comments or
contributions to
W7LR@aol.com.
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