The American Northwest

The American Northwest
Author: Gordon Barlow Dodds
Publisher:
Total Pages: 359
Release: 1986
Genre: Northwest, Pacific
ISBN: 9780882732398

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The Meek Cutoff

The Meek Cutoff
Author: Brooks Geer Ragen
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2017-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0295806869

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In 1845, an estimated 2,500 emigrants left Independence and St. Joseph, Missouri, for the Willamette Valley in what was soon to become the Oregon Territory. It was general knowledge that the route of the Oregon Trail through the Blue Mountains and down the Columbia River to The Dalles was grueling and dangerous. About 1,200 men, women, and children in over two hundred wagons accepted fur trapper and guide Stephen Meek's offer to lead them on a shortcut across the trackless high desert of eastern Oregon. Those who followed Meek experienced a terrible ordeal when his memory of the terrain apparently failed. Lost for weeks with little or no water and a shortage of food, the Overlanders encountered deep dust, alkali lakes, and steep, rocky terrain. Many became ill and some died in the forty days it took to travel from the Snake River in present-day Idaho to the Deschutes River near Bend, Oregon. Stories persist that children in the group found gold nuggets in a small, dry creek bed along the way. From 2006 to 2011, Brooks Ragan and a team of specialists in history, geology, global positioning, metal detecting, and aerial photography spent weeks every spring and summer tracing the Meek Cutoff. They located wagon ruts, gravesites, and other physical evidence from the most difficult part of the trail, from Vale, Oregon, to the upper reaches of the Crooked River and to a location near Redmond where a section of the train reached the Deschutes. The Meek Cutoff moves readers back and forth in time, using surviving journals from members of the 1845 party, detailed day-to-day maps, aerial photographs, and descriptions of the modern-day exploration to document an extraordinary story of the Oregon Trail.

West Coast History in Miniature

West Coast History in Miniature
Author: J P Munro-Fraser
Publisher:
Total Pages: 26
Release: 2021-04-19
Genre:
ISBN:

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The 1885 Edition of B.F. Alley and J.P. Munro's book Washington Territory was so exquisitely written history of the west coast of America in a mixed style of realism and poetics, flare with fire, that over the years since I first read it in 1985 that I have decided to re-issue it's publication with additional information, history and illustrations in 2021.It is, without doubt, the most outstanding book re-published anew by Parsons Publishing Company in our thirty-five years of existence. In this new era of instant news bites and quick news headlines, we have felt that this classic needs to be re-exposed to the reading public in bite-size pieces that can be digested more slowly than the original 1885 publication of 400 pages.Starting with the first Chapter of the original book, we have elected to submit just a bit-of-history-at-a-time via Kindle eBooks, and each sentence is packed with information.It might be of interest to the readers that these same first chapters can also be found in other west coast counties histories by the same authors, paid for by those locations who were trying to promote their attributes to eastern populations and business concerns. It is also these same first chapters that caught the attention the most that they were repeated in all the different books in the 1880s.

Utopias on Puget Sound, 1885-1915

Utopias on Puget Sound, 1885-1915
Author: Charles Pierce LeWarne
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2002-07-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0295741058

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Postmaster General James A Farley�s famous toast �to the forty-seven states and the soviet of Washington� introduces and sets the tone for this study of Washington State radicalism. The state�s colorful reputation for radical movements was established in the 1920s and 1930s by free speech fights, strikes, strong labor organizations, and woman suffrage reforms. Charles LeWarne finds the roots of this radicalism in the communitarian experiments of the late nineteenth century. Through analyses of several of these experiments, LeWarne demonstrates that the influence of a coterie of liberals and radicals centered on Puget Sound in such communities as Home, Burley, Freeland, Equality, and Port Angeles was felt in the state long after the �utopias� they came to colonize had ceased to exist. Probably the most famous of the experiments was Home Colony on Joe�s Bay near Tacoma. From a nucleus of three families, Home grew to over two hundred residents and lasted for more than twenty years. Its reputation for anarchism and flamboyance contributed to a jail sentence conviction for one editor of the Home newspaper for publishing an editorial called �The Nude and the Prudes.� Readers interested in current social movements and lifestyles will find many enlightening parallels with recent communal attempts, particularly the rejection of traditional values and the belief in a perfectible world. Whatever the differences within individual colonies, the communitarian ideal has certain general characteristics that find their way into each of these attempts to form a perfect society. Historians will welcome this treatment of an important part of the social and cultural history of the area. The book contains a mine of previously scattered information on the subject. It is a delightful footnote to the history of the Puget Sound region.