Francis Lee Smith Francis Lee Smith was born January 4, 1944, in
Cody, Wyoming to Irene B. and George R. Smith; he had two brothers, George D. and William H. Smith. Raised in Cody and attending
Cody High School, he studied architecture at
Montana State University, graduating in 1967 with honors.
Building of the mansion In 1952, a large
wildfire swept over Rattlesnake Mountain, just west of Cody. It left large amounts of
timber unclaimed, and Smith decided to use this to build what he described as "A tribute to the North Fork Mountains". He chose the site atop the hill as he believed it to be the geographic center of the Wapiti Valley. Lee broke ground in mid-1971, intending to build a family home for his wife and expected children. But once the first floor had been completed in early 1973, he decided to add more floors. Smith and his family lived in it while he was building it, without any electricity, running water, air conditioning, or gas, with the only source of heat in the entire building being a small wood-burning
fireplace on the first floor. In the early 1980s, Smith's wife Linda Smith-Mills divorced him, citing his continued obsession with building his mansion. According to her, when she divorced him, he seemed to "throw himself... deeper into the building of his house", and "Without me,... his house became his everything."
Death of Smith Smith was working on an upper-level balcony of the house at about 6pm on April 25, 1992, when, reportedly, a large section of timber came loose and knocked him off the balcony. He fell roughly 20 feet (6.0m), his head or neck hitting a roof below, and dying instantly. A day later, a neighbor reported having seen Smith's dead body to the local sheriff's office. Smith was pronounced dead on scene. He is buried in Cody Cemetery, in his hometown of
Cody, next to his mother and father. ==Preservation and purchase==