40

ECHO

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Umatilla River (Umatilla County, Oregon scenic images) (umaDA0087).jpg
OTIC Summary:
The Oregon Trail crosses the Umatilla River at Fort Henrietta Park. Signs describe Fort Henrietta, the military stockade that replaced the Umatilla Indian Agency destroyed in the Yakama Indian Wars of 1855.

The Lower Crossing
This morning after going one mile, we left the river, five mile over the ridge we crossed the river and encamped for the day in order to recruit our cattle as they were much fatigued by crossing the Blue Mountains.
-- William J. Watson
August 25, 1849 

"this days brot us the the (sic) Indian agency on the west bank of the Umatila River here we got some provisions flour at 60 per bacon 75 beef 25 shugar 75 coffee 75 per pound and hard to get at that this is a beautiful valley well calculated for farming.
-- John Newton Lewis
October 3, 1852 

Passed over a ridge of high land, then down the bottom to the crossing of the umatilla, the river has a large channel here but the water all sinks, and we passed on a bed of gravel and pebble stones, for which the stream is famous all along. On the west bank is United States Agency, a very neat looking frame house painted white, it looked cheering, as we had not seen a frame house since we left fort Laramie.
-- John or David Dinwiddie
September 2, 1853 

Destruction of the Whitman Mission in 1847 drastically altered the emigrant route. The wagon trains then began following the Umatilla River west, and forded the stream anywhere from 20 to 500 feet south of this point, depending upon the fluctuating course of the river.  This was an important campsite. These fertile Umatilla River bottom lands afforded immense growths of rye grass, waving almost six feet above the rich loam. The meadows and marshes near the river were thick with wild hay grass and tules. There was abundant feed for livestock, wood for campfires, and water for humans and animals. On the west bank, the white-frame Indian Agency offered scarce provisions for sale. The camp served as a point of repairs, preparations and respite. 

This junction also offered an option: turn north to follow the Columbia and its rapids, or continue west over the dusty, windy and often scorching-hot trek across the Columbia Plateau. Most headed due west toward Well Spring.

Look up-river toward the groves of cottonwood and alders along the quiet river banks. The pastoral scene is little changed from what the emigrants saw along the Umatilla River from 1843 to 1859.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Echo
Umatilla COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.742371,-119.195791

OTIC TOPIC:
Oregon Trail
(part of oregon trail)

SPONSORED BY:
City of Echo

beaver board texT CODED AS:
no white supremacy acknowledgment
-
no multicultural information

PUBLISHED ONLINE:
OCTOBER 11, 2012

41

ecola

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

On January 8, 1806 William Clark and perhaps fourteen of the famous expedition reached a Tillamook village of five cabins on a creek which Captain Clark named Ecola or Whale Creek. Three days earlier, two men sent out from Fort Clatsop to locate a salt making site had brought back whale blubber given them by Beach Indians. Appreciating the welcome addition to the explorers’ diet, Clark set out to find the whale or buy its blubber.

Traveling a perilous trail across Tillamook Head the food hunters, including Sacajawea and a young Indian guide, descended to ‘a butifull sand shore,’ crossing a stream later named Elk creek by early settlers. The food hunters found the whale’s 105 foot skeleton.

Some oil and 300 pounds of blubber were bought from the Indians at ‘Ecola’ Creek, who were busily rendering the whale meat with hot stones in wood trough

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Cannon Beach
Clatsop COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.917331,-123.938496

OTIC topic:
Historic Routes

beaver board texT CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
MULTICULTURAl

date published online:
september 19, 2011
42

eldorado ditch

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Burnt River Canyon (Baker County, Oregon scenic images) (bakDA0050a).jpg Gary Halvorson, Oregon State Archives
HISTORIC ELDORADO DITCH 1863-1925
A remarkable construction enterprise of its time, the ‘Eldorado Ditch’ carried water for placed mining from the Burnt River above Unity, over Eldorado Pass to Malheur City and the Willow Creek Drainage. Conceived and designed by William H. Packwood and constructed by Chinese labor, the ditch was started in 1863 and by May 1878 was carrying water more than 100 miles. The main ditch was five feet wide at the bottom and seven feet wide at the top with a grade of 4.8 feet per mile.

The ditch never recovered its $250,000 to $500,000 construction cost because of the decline of mining after the 1870’s. The ditch was the source of considerable controversy between miners and ranchers. The concrete diversion facilities 10 miles to the east at Eldorado Pass were constructed in 1918 as a last attempt by Malheur County ranchers to use the water. This renewed longstanding conflicts with Baker County ranchers protesting the loss of water. After a lengthy court battle, the use of the water was divided between the two counties. This made further use of the ditch impractical and it was abandoned in 1925.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Unity
Baker COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
44.437134,-118.181012

OTIC topic:
Geology

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
MULTICULTURAL

published online:
september 19, 2011