Oregon Vacation Guide System
Oregon History
The history of Oregon, a U.S. state, may be considered in five eras:
geologic history, inhabitation by native peoples, early exploration by
Europeans (primarily fur traders), settlement by pioneers, and modern
development.
The term "Oregon" may refer to any of three phases:
Oregon Country, a large region explored by Americans, British, and
others (and generally known to Canadians as the Columbia District); the
Oregon Territory, established by the United States two years after its
sovereignty over the region was established by the Oregon Treaty, and
before states were established in the Pacific Northwest; and the modern
U.S. state of Oregon. (It was also an early name for the Columbia
River.)
Geology
Mount Mazama erupted several millennia BC, leading to the formation of Crater Lake.
Volcanic
activity in the region has been traced to 40 million years ago, in the
Eocene era, forming much of the region's landscape. In the Pleistocene
era (the last ice age, two million to 700,000 years ago), the Columbia
River broke through Cascade Range, forming the Columbia River Gorge.
The
Columbia River and its drainage basin experienced some of the world’s
greatest known floods toward the end of the last ice age. The periodic
rupturing of ice dams at Glacial Lake Missoula resulted in discharge
rates ten times the combined flow of all the rivers of the world, as
many as forty times over a thousand-year period.
Water levels
during the Missoula Floods have been estimated at 1,250 feet (381 m) at
the Wallula Gap (in present-day Washington), 830 feet (253 m) at
Bonneville Dam, and 400 feet (122 m) over current day Portland, Oregon.
The floods' periodic inundation of the lower Columbia River Plateau
deposited rich lake sediments, establishing the fertility that supports
extensive agriculture in the modern era. They also formed many unusual
geological features, such as the channeled scablands of eastern
Washington.
Mount Mazama, once the tallest mountain in the
region at 11,000 feet, had a massive volcanic eruption approximately
5677 B.C. The eruption, estimated to have been 42 times more powerful
than the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, reduced Mazama's
approximate 11,000 foot (c.3,350 m) height by around half a mile (about
1 km) when much of the volcano fell into the volcano's partially
emptied neck and magma chamber. Mazama's collapsed caldera, in today's
southern Oregon, holds Crater Lake, and the entire mountain is located
in Crater Lake National Park (Oregon's only such park).
The
Klamath Native Americans of the area thought that the mountain was
inhabited by Llao, their god of the underworld. After the mountain
destroyed itself the Klamaths recounted the events as a great battle
between Llao and his rival Skell, their sky god.
The 1700
Cascadia earthquake resulted from a rupture in the Juan de Fuca Plate
along the coast of the Pacific Northwest. The earthquake caused a
tsunami that was detected in Japan; it may also be linked to the
Bonneville Slide, in which a large part of Washington's Table Mountain
collapsed into the Columbia River Gorge, damming the river and forming
the Bridge of the Gods, a land bridge remembered in the oral history of
local Native Americans.
In 1980, Mount St. Helens in neighboring
Washington erupted violently, temporarily reducing the Columbia River's
depth to as little as 13 feet, and disrupting Portland's economy. The
eruption deposited ash as far into Oregon as Bend.
Native peoples
See also: Native Americans in the United States, Marmes Rockshelter, and Kennewick Man
Tool artifacts of Native Americans in Oregon
Although
there is considerable evidence that humans lived in the Pacific
Northwest 15,000 years ago, the first record of human activity in
present day Oregon came from archaeologist Luther Cressman's 1938
discovery of sage bark sandals near Fort Rock Cave that places human
habitation in Oregon as early as 13,200 years ago. By 8000 B.C. there
were settlements across the state, with the majority concentrated along
the lower Columbia River, in the western valleys, and around coastal
estuaries.
By the 16th century, Oregon was home to many Native
American groups, including the Bannock, Chasta, Chinook, Kalapuya,
Klamath, Molalla, Nez Perce, Takelma, and Umpqua.
Celilo Falls,
a series of rapids on the Columbia River just upstream of present-day
The Dalles, Oregon, was a fishing site for natives for several
millennia. Native people traveled to Celilo Village from all over the
Pacific Northwest and beyond to trade. The rapids were submerged in
1957 with the construction of The Dalles Dam.
Early European exploration
1601 AD map showing unexplored Oregon Coast
Spanish
explorers found a way to explore the Pacific coast as early as 1565,
sending vessels northeast from the Philippines, riding the Kuroshio
Current in a sweeping circular route across the northern part of the
Pacific. These ships – 250 in as many years – would typically not land
before reaching Cape Mendocino in California, but some landed or
wrecked in what is now Oregon. Nehalem Indian tales recount strangers
and the discovery of items like chunks of beeswax and a lidded silver
vase, likely connected to the 1707 wreck of the San Francisco Xavier.
Juan
Pérez explored the coast of the Pacific Northwest north to British
Columbia in 1774. He was the first European to see Yaquina Head on the
Oregon Coast. In 1775 another Spanish expedition, under Juan Francisco
de la Bodega y Quadra and Bruno de Heceta, explored the coast. While
returning south Heceta found the mouth of the Columbia River, but was
unable to enter.
James Cook explored the Oregon Coast in 1778 in
search of the Northwest Passage. Beginning in the late 1780s many ships
from Britain, American, and other countries sailed to the Pacific
Northwest to engage in the region's emerging Maritime Fur Trade
business. American sea captain Robert Gray entered the Columbia in
1792, and was soon followed by a ship under the command of George
Vancouver, a British captain, who also explored Puget Sound and claimed
it for Britain.
The Lewis and Clark Expedition traveled through
the region during their expedition to explore the Louisiana Purchase.
They built their winter fort at Fort Clatsop, near the mouth of the
Columbia. Exploration by Lewis and Clark (1805–1806) and the United
Kingdom's David Thompson, who extensively explored the Columbia River
from 1807–1811, publicized the abundance of fur-bearing animals in the
area.
Following the Anglo American Treaty of 1818, the region
was "jointly occupied" by the U.S.A. and Britain. The Americans
referred to the region as Oregon Country, while the British knew it as
the Hudson's Bay Company's Columbia District, which was administered
from Fort Vancouver near present day Vancouver, Washington. Joint
occupation ended with the signing of the Oregon Treaty in 1846, when
Britain ceded all claims to lands south of the 49th parallel.
Native
peoples generally welcomed the arrival of Europeans, for the increased
trading opportunities; however, the introduction of foreign diseases
would prove devastating to local populations. Later, American
initiatives to capture the natural resources of the west, perhaps most
notably along the Columbia River, would collide with the interests of
natives; many tribes accepted multi-million dollar settlements from the
U.S. government in exchange for giving up traditional fishing sites,
moving to reservations that were often far from their homes.
In
recent times, the establishment of casinos has provided some income to
tribes that are generally impoverished. Throughout the governorship of
Ted Kulongoski, the Warm Springs Indians have negotiated for the right
to build an off-reservation casino in the Columbia River Gorge.
Settlement by pioneers
Main article: Oregon pioneer history
The
Astor Expedition of 1810–1812, financed by American businessman John
Jacob Astor, brought fur traders to the future site of Astoria by both
land and sea. Fort Astoria was the first permanent white settlement in
the region. Although the fort would remain under American control for
only a short time, it would become a component of the United States'
later claim on the region. A party returning east discovered the South
Pass through the Rocky Mountains, which would become an important
feature of the Oregon Trail.
Map of the Oregon Country, with most
heavily disputed area highlighted. The 1846 Oregon Treaty designated
this area for the United States.
At risk of being captured by
the British during the War of 1812, Fort Astoria and all other Pacific
Fur Company assets in the Oregon Country were sold to the
Montreal-based North West Company in October 1813. The North West
Company had already been expanding into the Pacific Northwest and
dominated the region unchallenged from the 1813 acquisition of the
Pacific Fur Company until 1821, when it was absorbed into the Hudson's
Bay Company. During this time the North West Company put the Astorian
scheme into practice, sending supplies by sea to the Columbia River and
exporting furs directly to China. The Hudson's Bay Company expanded the
system and during the 1820s and 1830s dominated the Pacific Northwest
from its Columbia District headquarters at Fort Vancouver (built in
1825 by the District's Chief Factor John McLoughlin across the Columbia
from present-day Portland). Although fur depletion and a crash in fur
prices undermined the company in the early 1840s, it remained an
important presence until the Oregon Treaty of 1846.
In the
1830s, several parties of Americans traveled to Oregon, further
establishing the Oregon Trail. Many of these emigrants were
missionaries seeking to convert natives to Christianity. Jason Lee was
the first, traveling in Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth's party in 1833 and
establishing the Oregon Mission in the Willamette Valley; the Whitmans
and Spaldings arrived in 1847, establishing the Whitman Mission east of
the Cascades. In 1839 the Peoria Party embarked for Oregon from
Illinois.
In 1841, wealthy master trapper and entrepreneur Ewing
Young died without a will, and there was no system to probate his
estate. A probate government was proposed at a meeting after Young's
funeral. Doctor Ira Babcock of Jason Lee's Methodist Mission was
elected Supreme Judge. Babcock chaired two meetings in 1842 at Champoeg
(half way between Lee's mission and Oregon City) to discuss wolves and
other animals of contemporary concern. These meetings were precursors
to an all-citizen meeting in 1843, which instituted a provisional
government headed by an executive committee made up of David Hill,
Alanson Beers, and Joseph Gale. This government was the first acting
public government of the Oregon Country before American annexation.
The
Oregon Trail brought many new settlers to the region, starting in
1842–1843, after the United States agreed to jointly settle the Oregon
Country with the United Kingdom. For some time, it seemed the United
States and the United Kingdom would go to war for a third time in 75
years (see Oregon boundary dispute), but the border was defined
peacefully in 1846 by the Oregon Treaty. The border between the United
States and British North America was set at the 49th parallel. The
Oregon Territory was officially organized in 1848.
Numerous
efforts to find easier overland passage to the Willamette Valley were
undertaken beginning in the 1840s. The Barlow Road, Meek Cutoff, and
Applegate Trail represented efforts to cross the Cascades in the
northern, central, and southern parts of Oregon, respectively. The
Barlow Road would become the final leg of the Oregon Trail after its
construction in 1846, and the Santiam Wagon Road would cut through the
central part of the mountains, succeeding where Meek had failed.
Settlement
increased because of the Donation Land Claim Act of 1850, in
conjunction with the forced relocation of the native population to
Indian reservations. The state was admitted to the Union on February
14, 1859.
Oregon in the Civil War
At the outbreak of the
American Civil War, regular U.S. troops were withdrawn and sent east.
Volunteer cavalry and infantry were recruited in California and sent
north to Oregon to keep peace and protect the populace. Oregon also
raised the 1st Oregon Cavalry that was activated in 1862 and served
until June 1865. During the Civil War, immigrants continued to clash
with the Paiute, Shoshone and Bannock tribes in Oregon, Idaho and
Nevada until relations degenerated into the bloody 1864 - 1868 Snake
War. The 1st Oregon Volunteer Infantry Regiment was formed in 1864 and
its last company was mustered out of service in July 1867. Both units
were used to guard travel routes and Indian reservations, escort
immigrant wagon trains, and protect settlers from Indian raiders.
Several infantry detachments also accompanied survey parties and built
roads in central and southern Oregon.
Oregon Senator Col. Edward Dickinson Baker was killed leading Union troops at the Battle of Ball's Bluff on October 21, 1861.
Railroads and growth
In
the 1880s, the proliferation of railroads assisted in marketing of the
state's lumber and wheat, as well as the more rapid growth of its
cities. This included the connection of the state to the Eastern United
States via links to the transcontinental railroads that allowed for
faster movement of goods and people. Immigration to Oregon increased
after the connection to the east. Additional transportation
improvements included the construction of several locks and canals to
ease river navigation.
Also in the 1880s, writer Frances Fuller
Victor published both fiction and histories that drew on her extensive
research of the history of the region, informed by personal interviews
with a number of Oregon pioneers. Her most noted non-fiction, which
covered many western states, was written while under contract with
Hubert Howe Bancroft's History Company, and at the time was published
under his name. Her writing was said to accurately capture the notion
of Manifest Destiny in this period of American expansion.
Racial discrimination
Both
the Oregon Territory and the State of Oregon have had laws and policies
discriminating against people of non-white racial backgrounds. An 1844
territorial statute outlawed slavery but also mandated free slaves to
leave the territory. A law adopted by the state in 1862 required all
ethnic minorities to pay a $5 annual tax. Interracial marriage was
prohibited by law between (approximately) 1861 and 1951.
Modern history
Engineer Conde McCullough designed many of Oregon's bridges, including the Yaquina Bay Bridge in Newport.
Industrial
expansion began in earnest following the construction of the Bonneville
Dam in 1933–1937 on the Columbia River. The power, food, and lumber
provided by Oregon helped fuel the development of the West, although
the periodic fluctuations in the nation's building industry have hurt
the state's economy on multiple occasions.
The state has a long
history of polarizing conflicts: Native Americans vs. British fur
trappers, British vs. settlers from the U.S., ranchers vs. farmers,
wealthy growing cities vs. established but poor rural areas, loggers
vs. environmentalists, white supremacists vs. anti-racists, social
progressivism vs. small-government conservatism, supporters of social
spending vs. anti-tax activists, and native Oregonians vs. Californians
(or outsiders in general). Oregonians also have a long history of
secessionist ideas, with people in various regions and on all sides of
the political spectrum attempting to form other states and even other
countries. (See State of Jefferson, Cascadia, and Ecotopia.)
In
1902, Oregon approved of a system of direct legislation by the state’s
citizens by way of initiative and referendum, known as the Oregon
System, and in 1908 also empowered its citizens to recall public
officials by ballot initiative. Oregon state ballots often include
politically conservative proposals such as anti-gay and pro-religious
measures side-by-side with politically liberal issues like drug
decriminalization which demonstrates the wide spectrum of political
thought in the state.
The historical policies of racial
discrimination have had longterm effects on Oregon's population. A 1994
report from an Oregon Supreme Court task force found minorities more
likely to be arrested, charged, convicted, incarcerated and on
probation than "similarly situated non-minorities." The report does not
place blame on individuals, but instead points out the problems of
institutional racism. The report recommends multicultural training of
the existing justice system personnel and also recommends diversifying
the perspectives, backgrounds and demographics of future hires.


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