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Transcription
jc chazes
' r1 r' SMtew UAceO A EmyU OF YCT In I\'IA -\*J - I , I 1)' I I) ' /,, r ',., 1-9 , LI -# 't IT,; . 4 Ptspm4 my ~4J I t4w-l-st X/ww ,1 - : Sti , 1 Apvgw I 3y.____ A} .i iI 1fto 6 2 i'z/I j9y D {TSt1 _ F o ' I I ,N 1 , i , .. I * II -I . S 0 'a ob o I I Im I 4* I *aIe I1 I p 0 El ° 3 I *J I M- IX X X 0 etlp *z Z I I 6^ iI * I 1' a .14 .4 X 10' .0a to V-%0 4t I I I& I N f U L~ I 7 S i I 60 1I )0 AS PR) Itistorioal Information Siskiyou Oalloe, Ore. DOc. 28, 1937 Historloal Data of Siakiy'ou National Forest I. Beginnine of Clvlllmatian in Slskiycu Cooz tr7. The area embracea by the Sisaiyou :Nat.onal Tcrest Is tled up with some of the aurliest recorde1 history of the 'orthwest. As early as Aprl, 1792 0azrain George VanCouver eOX1ored, to *Xtertg the Northwes Coast and naw the prominent beadlend which he naed Cape Orforo, later known as Fort r.rforci and tinally as Port Orford. (1 ou0 lI 1603, the Spanlird,Captain D'Ai-uilar, sailet up the coant of Oroeon and discovered 8r: nad Cape Blenco. (Jan., 1 9, 1603) (8J PMe mountainous region inland, however, did not of°er r.oah s;,oyel for exploration and the doto.hty sailors did not rslisb the idea of trzying to get in very close to the rough and rociy shore,,and so the Sou&thwest Oreg;n Country wuL passed c in favor of the more intr1guizg pros .oct or finding the 3exh noupht for "NortW3est -assAge' or richer lands In which to trade. It rmajlne for a =ors mterial thing, the lure of rhcbs3 in fur tradingto bring the next explorers into this part of the West. In 1827 Jodediab 3mith of the Amerioan Fur Company journeyed with a party from San Jose to the head o' the Sacrmento Rivser, thence to the coast near the Mooth Of Puxsian R'iver. ?rom there they proceeded up the coast to the Pmpqua (scm. histozians say It might have b- en the Rogue, and others say Smith River - tributary of the Siuslew) whe-e they were robbed or$4 0 *,0 0 0 do re- worth of fure d4 horses and *-eui-uient by Indians. &ith and a corpanion, Daniel Prior, *scaped on foot to Port VanCouver where they were subsequently jc ined by another uber of the party, John Volkuhlain, who ecaxpd the Wassacre and masi his way alone. The Hudson Bay Comnpauy factor of Fort VanCouver later smtnaninously sett out a p&rty to recover the rrur and equlpent, more In order to z5intain their supremacy over the savags than to help a rival company. The forty bhrs. pmckeirghered were worth *1000.00 each in the China uarkets. (3 In 1828 an exploring and fur trading 1mrty under the leadershi- of the renowned ?eter Skene Ogden traveled through thM Sie'K1you country on their return to Fort VanCouver from a trip up the Columbia and fnake Rivers, down to the PTrbolt and up the Secramento, across the Klwnthg R gues and Umpqua and down the llamette to finally crose the Columbia to bore. According to one historian, at least, they took tins out to trap on the headwaters of the Baorwznuto. (4) 3 - Page 76 - Wallng 2 Page 30 - Walling 3 - Pag~e ji 4 - - WallAing Pape 122 - Walling D -Is % Again in 1832 Nwing Young lead an exploring and trading party up from California to the 'Umpqua, thence across the Cascade mountains to the Snake River. From there they returned to Sacramento and on to Saute Fe, a trip of two years'duratiln. This same Ewing Young turned his knowllede of the country and routes of travel to good Edvantage in later years when driving cattle from CLliforniu to the Willamette Valley. ,l The California Trail, as the route was becorinj ".orn w'.s traversed again In 1833 by Captein Bonneville'- pdrty urnler Joseph 4alker going 2:r= the Columbia River to Californi,. " About this ti-.e au-!id Douglas, the renouned ex:lorer i nd botalist, visited wbat is now kn- wn as Douglas County and discovered io-the scientific world 'the sugar pine which he named for tfls great friend, Dr. La.xoert. After narrow eacapes from the In.iine Douglas retreated to morb civilized prarts fror. the Uroqua re,.ion in which he was so ::uch interested. Unforturntely for posterity, the early-day 'ur traders were not inter's',ed in advertizing the country to the outside world anJ censecuently left very little wri-ten reco-' of' their truvels with the accomiaanying trials and tribulutizns. Fiocuver from what descri-ition that can be gleaned fr,.= the mettgre acco,,nts availoble oou)led with a kaowledge of the country, it is -nossible to trace the main routes of travel. No daibt the eirly exp!loring and trading expediticzns erploy-d native guides and with some scouting soon found the most accessible routes thrcr- -h the country, which in time uecaime the stage ro.5i and Ilte:- tho highways of today. Through the Rogue River and the Siskiyou mountains re have two choices of tr.ils' ?irst a route now feneral y traversed by the Pacific liijhway, and second, a crossingl.f rrc the Rogue by way of Trdil 'WincKor e?;stwtr! to the So th T- -uua and down that stream t: the route now trave ed by the Pacific Hlighway which yao necessarily a pack trai. only. It is the first nares t3;Pre of the Siatiyou are mainly interested, a route blazed by the bleaching bones of tra.pers, traders, Immigrants, miners, and cattle drive. s; " later t& become one of the famous pioneer trails of the .b'est. This route touched close tO the present Siskiyou Nati nal Forest on Cow, 7.olf, Grave and Ju.-p-Ofrl-Joe creeks, and throukg Grants Pass s*re the ftrest headquarters are locatel. In 1337 Ewing Young. of the newly tormed Willartette Valley Cattle C reny, with only &ix or eight companitons, started rrom California with around 730 bead of Spanish cattle and fought their way thuough the savage luaicns of the Rogue lilver Valley and reachd their aestination with the loss of only about 200 head.!3/ The Chroniler's Diary breeks off while, holding the Indiens 1 - Page 123 - talling 3 - ?age 123 - Walling 3 - Page 131 - Walling I-2 otf from their overnlght ca:, near the preent site of Gold MiL and it is left ti the re U1eral i'arlnation whether e went to his zeward, leavInj nly a Artially corn.leted acooxt of his adventures for pnoterity. Other cattle drivers followed, -eetinr with success or disaster ecccrling to their luck and Rbil.ty. Early day trasmpp.rs en-i trede tvo, tsEi ro-te and fo-' !t their wi7.y through the Indians of the Rogue Valley, the most wrgiiece and seveee ufr ale tho Indians o.' "'tern lnr--n or In 1646 Jesse and Lindsey Applegete Blazed e w'eaon rond the 'ilz ; 11; 9.y tc Fort l'1.l by Y.siy or tht :riacilic ' to .shl'nd thence over Creen een in¢-. nJ GU to t'.; ''-t.. ie- haE k-hn as t.e 'otothern Rcte- or -AIpplegs *e ioatd" and wp f'raiFqht rith rsny dnD'e--s of' mnrau;lin'Indiana, deep anows end E Zlb*er rivers i1 se: s senisc. Ptf object r-; to Pncou-ri.e ,cre aettler3 to core to the Wile'ette teley rc tL oy of'r thle irdluence or t..e !iud--on ?%y Co. J fro, The estabilshmrent or the ruwd end -overr.vit o! treders and -rsz-'er- br-t-"en Cli orrlhIc end Orec"n ser--(r3l to alvertise the RcXgue Vniley, .end L few b!.rdy settlern bet-n to arrive. Tne di6sccn'er- o' ,old 'n -eli ornia In 1148 caused oulte e Olt o^ travel u. snl d'wn the Calitornsia *!'rl nnd se the Apo-legn-'e Road proved tn b- en eriEer route than the Nr'frr Trei to the north, the yvars batween 1S46 nnd 1656 au, zauny lerge v;s trains tr.ko::gh thr v&ieley. . The discover7v of' fnll an :Fosenhine Creek (-;&Re Crf1 iitriot) in l51 bhrcz-ht nbout en irfl.,x Or -i.ner 1 tfbd tmdo which served to settle the corntry In a fov years where the netu-al course or aericulture and iu.JerinF wi'oulJ hive takou .ieceuee. 2) :n the spring or early miners .;roapoctinr out :rurgold on Jose-pbhine Creek enD historians ea-l 1im nlawlia) on a mall tributary called *aimer of 18LI v party or co iLorxaii Haopy Camp n thA i1izath discoeered a mun by the ua",E ofo'.fllins (sn.e aud his daugwhter, .oShinre, stayed Canyon Creek, Ln tdiei Aiz this young lady waa the .10rot white woman resident oL' the country the creek and WU equ.ont)y the county *.,as n -.- el In her h jrcr. "ithin the n-3x: year old 1isc :verie6 wse Mde in :ackson Cositty at ailor Digir-g3, in Oaliceq Althcuse, Sucker, Iemr, and other creeka, and the rise in po1Llaition w;iz resict. ith the inf.lux of uiera, gnr..lern, out;3ws and s!tt1ers, it is =all wonde- that tr :ulu wouiu aoon be b ewin. with the alreaay savo'e tiud warlike Indiana. Ti} .b . inor 'lil-Nt hA takeu p1a. o cO .tinuo sly sizice the advent or the first white man, in .2C wur & =rs serious nature tlered u) and er 1-pege 147?XalinE: 2 page 44 - Wailing I-3 General ;oseph Lane of Mexlcan War tame me oalled on to bhad lilitia and regular troops who finally -n the Indiuns i u. e head of wvans Creok east of Or-nto %ss. the Battle Crook, Rettle Mt., and ?leassnt Creek era sue o0 the narn for toworaohic features handed down rrom this outbrett. Agein on October 8, 1M, the Indians QA the Tllinoie River and Crents Peas area went on the war path, killing, burzing, and pil' !inr- from 7vana Creek to Grove CreeK. This atertAd the war thet rinelly ended in July 156 and roiiultd in all of the Southern Cr.cor 'ndienri belvig re:oved to reserv tionXs. 1 -'n ?cbruery 22, 1856, the Coa t indiins in the vicinity of ILJd 3e-ncb t.~ A to the warpath end startsl the outbreak that eventuvnly cost the lvtes of forty-one whiteag and ruch ?roaerty 'b'oufw'tut the history of thase ware and the hccompunyirg eptleIrent and r;Ininr the area now embraced by the Siskiyou '.zIlnnl Forest In re.eatedly wentioned. ,Rowever;, %'.en -!vrlF to loec'te the uctual scene of these events It Is founu tb't tiice has din-ned the 'Lemory or those fey. witnesses yet livijg. 17vnes orne riveu to teAuu-es hyea been fo'gotteu aund otbeos ,ubst ti:ted, v;n- ^yen the accrdited hist. ,rias do not alsrys apree. Theretoro. we can oa'y record the best intoration nvallable, secure verification rrom all nosaible source, nna ever kFe? our our tuned for more fac.s and truth. The building up of a cowrlete history for any ,ne aecti-r entails a 1Wteht at atient roe. .rch and A cant.;.nuzl ahrcking snd reeheoking to ,et locitions, naTws, and dut~is correct. It hes to be reumembered that =lcb of our history of t is co-un ry was written twenty to thirty years after the events occurrl and gnrnermei ro talks with various ,i7rtictlits who h-d al- re.idy began to roriet the details or wer, inclined to enlarE on their story. Tbhough, no doubt, a checxc was =ade on evailable records, the historians themselves .dIt th&t In zany oases the narratives are only hearsay and are offered to the "ubllc for whet tvey are wnrth. 7e can skip briefly over the events batween the Indian of 1855-56 and thF ynar l9Owhen the Stskiy-u Nat.' qnol Forest came Into being. 3ars Vinir.g held way for about a decsae until the esy rir.ing by hand in croeks and Fulches begen to -lay -;l'ut. The Fr1er River strike then lured th-*;9ar.ds of in^.e-c out of this naXt of the stateand their nlacea were thken by Chinese who abot i!11?he' Up what wna left. Some =inlng on a big scale was sterted and still ia carried on throl.rhout the Sliklyou and adjacent regions. 1 - Wnlling A nneroft 2.- 'alling & Bancroft r-4 In the early firtles settlers begun to take u-) jonatian land claims In the valleys, but it wue not until the buillIng of the railroad in 1883 that W.riulture be-an to refl.ly get into a Product ion basis. Small sawzlllo hid been !natelled near Sine& and u~iall towns, but with the comnFn of ragulr'r ship &nd rail transportation. 1urbering became c lolline ind.ustry and still f,,ld I ai-.ortUnt n drst in 1ooel cormurltv 1Iffo. By 1880 there were many large r111s on the coast cuttli3- ''ort Orford Csedur snd Dkuglna Fir tor export to Ca1ltornia and the Orient. The inland mills out mainly pine and fir. lisheria3 sz)on beaoux- an J portant Inlustry wnd oanneries and salt p-aCin,- plants wer located oL the Chetcos -1itol, Smith, cogue, .Axes, ;a>, and Coail.;e Rivers. Coe--erclal fis-i.ng in streens is no loni~er dons however due to depletl-n of the &elmon runs and ratrictive lerFial'ition. In the late 1870's aA or-y ----GOB an atteopt va r.ti to drive a good sized cut of sugar pine logs from the TIOInIty of GraUt* Pnas to Gz1a Boach, 2ut the venture wCs x:nstceessful as the log& were too heavy to float well and they took a terrific beating froi. the rouigh bouldor..s-,ran rive-, causing niuch load fr a brokage and brow .lng. It N L.. I - C. alling I-5 7 ifstOrloa Tafrmtlea iustorisal greats am& Loeations (W Im Dietrlet) As given in the first part of ths urite-up the clala to history of the aiskiyou country Is In the early-dsy rur trade msd ploration, the two prominent pioneer routes of travel (California Trail and Applegate Flad) smbsequest mining excitemt, lndias wars, sad finall yagriculture and lmsbering. Following Is a lst or places of historical interest, with locations and an account of the event, by ranger dstricta 1X AS (PR) Blatorloal Infoyr'tiaton Sisk~ciyou Oalliet Oregon Dec* 2R, 195'? SIEORICAL D TA OF _'OR? ORTVOIR' 1)ISIC? The area embraced by the Port Orford District and adijacent territory cams Into :rominenc. soon after the founding of ?,ort Orford in 1851, WG. T*yault, a znanitoifftsr-become a prominent figure in Or-!Son and the 'Beat landed 6h-ti i lower Columbia shore. and after various adventures joined Capt, . ±chenorls second expedition to 7Tort Orford as jh. place was now namede On August 24, 1851, with 53 comupanions they ettvnp~ted to find a route to the mines or Jackson Col~nty (Illinois Valley) which Tichenor bad represented and believed to be but thirty-five miles inlande They proceeded mouth to R~ogue River thneup the north side of that stream to wh ~t tisey calie.d the BiE Bend (may hr-ve been the present site or Mashe as they thought that they were 50 miles from -ort Orford) when the country b-cains too roup!h to continue%, At this point most of the party turned back, but nine o1' the harlieo-t decided to aontinue, As the oountry lay wrong- tor them to continue to the southsaist as tboy wanted to go, they were rorced to the north and dropped on to whet appeared to be the south fork of a river (Coquille). * They had to abandon their horses herc enS ralling In with ant Indian boy accomipani.d him on down that stream to another ~fork where t~e river was affected b-- the ocean tide. Tie party -au into more Indiana whom they emaployed to Vew them b- oauos to the mouth of the river), ae In their weakened condition they were unable to do much-for thermselves, When within several miles of the Ocean they came to a larre Indian Razicberia where the paddlers put Into shore, As they were landing the Indianasmet uDon thee- with the result that only T'Vault, Gilbert Brush# Cyrus Baden and L,.L. Wt~ lians escaped. The first two escaped only by the aid of an Indian boy who pulled them out of' the river Into a canoe whence they made their way naked and wounded, with the hel:. or friendly C-'pe Blanco Indiana.)Into Port Orford several days later. Bedes and Iiasafter a heroic battle escaped to the Umpqua settlements where Williams was bed-ridden for two ye,-re 1. - Bancroft Wafling states 10 mon in all, 1_ AS (PR) Elstorleal Slsklyou Wornation from his wounds. Baden supported and nursed him back to health; a story of devotion and sacrifice almost unparalleled in the history oa Southern Cregon. WA L.J.C. 1 - f4734 Walling I. 8'T¶DI' S Historical Infor~t ion Siskiyou e Pow rs, Oregon. Jan. 25, 193'? FrIRI'S IR ?RR !ARLY 71AT8 The f Ire of 186 was one of the largehlf not the large-t~ fire# In Oregon of which there ia any record. The date or place of origin Is not definitely known by the local settlers. Sowever. it may be recorded In some at' the early histories, It Is believed that it had Its origin In the Worth and burned South along the coast, It Is also believed that It burned the entire uuwmneW being extinguished by the late fall rains, There were no means of eoomunication and no early reports on the fire were received In this locality. The boundaries might be pieced together by contacting the remaining pioneers along the coast and the interior, It extended approxirately firom Tachats In the Worth,, along the coast to the Klainath River in the South. -'h, 1 kpe o- the of a small sailing vessel stated thrt they were In fire for seven days, The distance It burned Inland veriod up to thirty miles, 'early settlers state that in this vicinity it burned in and as far as Bear Carp. The Rogue River drainage probably wFs one of the bh)t soots of the burn. The Coquille River drainage taken as a whole escaped with a loes severe burn and the scars of the fire are not so noticeable. The boundaries of the fire where It burned Intensely can still be traced, Countless herds of deer and elk as well as small goem were destroyed in this fire. The remains of over three hundred elk were counted on what was then known as !'owland Prairie on the divide betwoen the Sixes and Coquille Riversq so,-ewho-e in the vicinity of Baker and Rowland Creeks near Powers. In 1902,when t*e fire started In wden Valley the old timers who renumbered the disasterous fire of 1868 deeldand they should With the encouragement and do all they could to extinguish it. advice of the old timers most of the settlers for rmany miles around volunteered to go and fight the fire,,and It was put out before it did too much dazwge. SI.- 3 I. eStudies IHistorical 1%.for-rti in Siskiyou THE 1!DE TNfTr_1t After the rir- or 1868 and before the elk had~a cbance to multiply to any great extent, the bide hunters came Into this area. These bide hunters or peltors as they were called, established camps all through the Coquille and Cow Creek drainages. Some of the camps whiich are still definitely known are; Cedar Swamp, Hide Camp, Cold Springs, Elk Valley, Cow Creek and Dutchman Butte, The Pelter or chief of the party generally had rour or five good hunters hired by the day to do nothing but hunt deer and elk arnd bring their pelts and the elk eye teeth to camp, The pelts were dried in the main camp-and there they were bailed topether and *arrie'1 out on pack trains to some lost where they were sold for a meager sur t - After a short period of time the game began to ret pretty scarce around these campaand tie pelt hunter began to cast an eye around for more favorable hunting, Henry Boren was the first end only pelter to venture into the vicinity of 7Tilahe. He roved In with 5 hunters to what Is now known an Dean Flait, located about 4 miles Northeast of 111ahe. The settlers of the i~ogue River area passed through the hide hunting camps on their way out to Boutherlin for supplies. They saw the country arouni these camps littered with deer and elk carcasses which had been left to rot, From their observations around these camps they knew what the results would be~and they decided to run the pelter and his crew out or the country and save the game. They banded together and made It their business to pay Mr, Boren a cal~l. Mr. Boren was infcormed that he and his crew were not wanted In that vicinity as game was one of their reans of livelihood. Stroking the barrel of his musket~,Yr, Boren told them that this was a free country and his party would stay there as long as there was any profit In pelting. The settlers gave him until sunrise the followIng morning to pull staikes and et out. Boren,,apparently thinkdng it was a bluff ande, no attempt to move, At sunrise the next morning when the bullets began to smack the pots and pans In his can=- he realized the settlers really meant business so he and his party started breaklng camp Imrmediately, This ended the hide hunting in the Rogue River country and noe doubt was an lmport,~nt contributing f'acoWr In keeping the game more plentiful In the Rogue River area, z- ' I Studies Historical Intoimation Si sklyou INDIAN SIGNAL PITS AND MX"NG DLAC'S Yb. two main Indian Camps were at Big Veadows and Eckly with smller camps at Illab. and Illinois (now called Agnees). Messages pratalniig to war or other matters or great Iportance mere sent by monk. signals. one pit was located In the This pit low saddle about on*-halt m.uwest of Barkilow t. was visible trom Iron Pt. and the Tokley Carp. Another pit was on Iron Mt., Big Meadows being visible from there. Iron 1'S.. being centrally lootted and near the Junction ot the ?ort orfords, llabe and Ickley trall was often the meeting Their decisions pI oeof the Chiefs when hol,.lng councl. could be alknalled direct to the Big Meadows and to the Slenalmen at the pit netr Barklow Vt. who could signal the Eckley Camp. During the Indian wars all the camps were kept Informed of the ovents of the soldiers by the use of smoke signals. It also Many of the war danes were beld on Jron Vt. was a toru of post ottloe. Bunters, runne-s or anyone passing by having news of not tVo great Importance, left It here in signe made by arranging rocks and pebbles in such a manner that others could Interpret the message and arry It on to his e -,0a8p. This meeting plaoe on Iron Vt. was seen by the white settlers In 1871n. ery at the things used by the Indiana were still there. noticeable. Thoe lgnal pit near Barkloa -rr- 5 Yt. is still I. Studies Historical Informzati ~n Siskiyou SLIDFS AIM) FLODS During the winter at 1891 in the latter part at January or the first part of February, there were very heavy rains and conditions were such as to cause many large slides thruout this area. The slides dammed up the streacts, auslng the water to back up behind then, when the water came over the top or cut through the slide and the water-was released,, It would rush down the canyons~,taking the debris from the slide with It and picking up additional mat' rial along the way. There were two large slides on 7ohnson Creekt, dn4~ttthe mouth of Sucker Creek which damued up lohnson Creek sand Sucker Creek, There also was a larre slide up Sucker Creek about 3/4 of' a mile, This slide was j mile wide at the creek and extended up to the top or the ridge which was at least j~mile in distance. When the water backed up by these two slides broke loose it flooded lower Johnson Creek and left up to twenty feet or boulders and Gei'ls on top-of the old creek bed. About j mile from the mouth of Johnson Creek the boulders and debris lodged in the narrow channel and formed a falls over twenty reet high. The miners' diggings below these slides were buried under the boulders and debris. There were mtuny miners working on lower Johnson Croek, and they were-all doing very well until the flood ruined their claims by buz'yin~v. their dIggi gs under the debris., They have never been able to work any or this ground sinco because of the heavy overburden, The Salmon Creek slide tour miles above Powers backed the water up tour miles behind ft before It broke loose. This ruined the mining on Salmon Creek below the slide, on the Sixes River Just above the mouth of Dry.Creek the slide buried an entire mining camp, The river cut Omr the slide, washed it away, and It Is reported that seven of the bodisa were neverrecovered, *jr- 6 I* stud i~e Miutorloea1 Information Siekiyou 'RAIU.Y , C? n'AYI. 11atzy of the early trails fol.iowed elk tri-lse Elk traveling in l--irge and smal bands browsing along the way i,@pt the brush tri:=ad back and rmade quite good trails. However they had no objections to adverse gradies and once on top at a ridre they rollowfed aloni, the very top until they were ready to leave the ridge ent irely, The main trail from the ooast to the Interior was from '-~ort Orford along tho divide between the Elk and Rogue Rivers to Iran 'It., Bald Tinob, Ranging Hoak, Eden Valley,1-Iinem1leo where it turned north to Cames Valley, Looking Clases and Sutherlin, which was the early supply poet. At Nine_ii1lo two other trails turned ofre one going East along the ridge to ?it. Reuben and Pebble Hill. the other turned South to Big Liendowng Mule Creek and down the Rogue 7-1ver* Iron !It, was a-.so an 1aportisnt trail junction* Bare a trail turned South to illahe and another to the North to Barklow pt., Rusty Butte end Zekleyo From FRckley the trail continued Worth along the county line ridge to Bennett butte, where it rfoered one branch going toward Bandon down Lamps. Creek and the other doom CatchIng Creek to the indian Camp at the forks of the South and M~iddle Forks or the Coquille iRivero While the gold mining was at Its peak on Johnson Creek and Salmon Nt. and the settlement at Eckley was quite large the stage road was extended from Eckcley to the 10almon Vt. mines and the top of the ridge between Zohngon and Salmon Creeks. Star,* coaches made reenlar tripe to the mines, 0 \, I" 1)1,7O' 11' J . 1 'P 41 AN 13) n1eterifsa cie Ore. Jan. 29g 1,8 Infolrsht ien Sisky0% So following narrat iv was written by Ranger ?.T. Lightfoot of the Agecs District from an aocount of the early days of Big Bend (lUsh) by George W. lbservey of 1,11.. aon of one of t he early day residents of the country. I have added a note in places facts as given by Walling sad calling attention to a departure f Bancroft. Iowever this account =W be entirely true in every particular excepting the movments of the troops which were taken from actual records by the historians. L4. Cooper BIG BIND O ROM RIB.S e following' story of the early settlement of 1ig Bend and an account of the battle between the soldiers and Indigns as told by Mr. George W. Vaeorvey, present postsuter of Illae post off ie stwter at Mahe, Mr. lheervey was appointe (near Big lal) ws March 14, 191S and has served continuouslys W.1444=07 Is WoV born and raised ia the lower Rogue liver Valley. seventy-five yeas of age. W. Ye mervey's fatear, LI. Veservey, b later one of the participants in this story, was born in Val.u War. Re landed in San loaeise Joined the navy during the Mleai Charles Poster, after whom In 1S49 and saw to Oregon in 18. Poster Crek was named, appears to be the chief character In this story. Big Dend ws first settled on by Charles Toster In the spring Charley., as he was called by his frlends, cam to this of 15. coast from Boston in 1849. Before coming to Big Bend, he raa a pack tral rom Crescent Clty, California to the Randolph nines north of the Coquille River and sear the oaeat. tlosterfarmed Blg lend till the fall of 185g. In December of that year, the Indiass went on the warpath. In January, 158, the hue was surrounded at night by Iftians. Thebe were eloven me with Tooter at the time ey prepared for a siege. Loop holes wer out In the walls 'othkupstales and dwn. j*x. amervey end his partner were mining at the time at the mouth efUrve Oreek near the present site of the suspension bride., en theirerelved word by the Forest Service, reseetl wane to get out at ow rTy at. broken -had war. that - ndian 1-?- once so they started down the Rogue River, lntendinp te g-' to Port orford, but upon arrival at Big BenM, they Uncovered Foster's party were fortified and deeldei tn east their lot with the Barney VCGlacken was the name or Meservey'a partner. This party. now consisting of thirt- en ren, withst-'od the siege. Sometime during the month (January 1856) this erowd imde up a purse and furnisifar two horses for one of the party (ntme of 'Monis) to go to .- lensbu-g (now Gold Beach) at the moth or izogue Rlvrw0irty t ziles distant. ;:oni was to purcbaae 2owder, caps and lead. After vainly waiting for Zonlr to return, the party decided to start for the mouth of the .;ogue River. They arrived at what is knoun as Bagnell's ?erry on February 21, 1256. 11. was on Feoruary 2'-S at daylighbt that war- fare :roke CLI. all over the lower R'ogue River co ntry, up an far as the Tosa Sith plaee below Lobster Creekv this being as fer as ernyone was livTi at that tl-e, -(the lnditne i:lllod a r'nn livin, here at the tiu*, Woster't party stayed toeether. 'Lr. -erservey's pertner, Barney vcGlacken, and another Tn, na unknmn, wer lillei In a cabin neor the 'arl Johnston place, west of BaLsell'a 7"yrr>y.- Ther- were eitbt other._in the cabin at the ti-,,.c; ell-but one nan"'iayoe in a swamp near iieming Ulou4-h. This mrn:, David Libey, took a chance and went on to see what bud bep~ened to the peo71e in -lensburg. Fe found all the people and crossed the river and had built H fort or the north side or the :4o6uC on what ls now k!own as the M. Bell-y Anoh, This fort was C nstruCted of drirttood. 'even days later, 1;.T. Yeservey also joined t is rort. The nlbt fcllowing., the Indihns outbreak at Bagnll's .7erryq Febru ry 22t, foster,, ho kneu the country, started for Port Orford. Upon arrival, be waited until a conpany or soldiers arrived under the comArt of a Captain Smith. ?o!ter was employed to guide the soldiers to Rogue i:iTer. h.ey cr.ssed the rountains and carped on a r1dee L-madiately w(st of, and overl-oking,,Big 3eynd. (ThiB spot Is rarked by a depression clearly showing the horsos'.oe eh'ae or the old -renohes where the soldie-s dug In when attacked by Indians). That night, the Indians frsmed a half circle around the oerp and with long poles hbving a hook on the end, stole most of the blankets an. anything el-e they could hook on to and drag out from under the tentssN The soldiers wrea besieged for three days and nights. As the camp was on top of a hifh dir ridge and they were out oft frr = water, their sitatlon was desperate. Again it was Foster who went for help. r. Meservey, who rmembers Foster's own story, merely states Fobster msde a run for the open ridge leading south fram the camp and ade a safe getaway'. Xhowing there were two corpanies of soldiers on their way from Crescent City to the mouth of the Tllinols River Wnar the present site or the Ageaes Ranger 8tatlon but on the opposite side of the river) to route -the Obasta Costav, -)eb-se the strongest tribe sOMW-1o Oa the Rogue Rivery Foster mi-se his way safely to this point through the mountains to avoid the Indians, Be informed tia aM officers or Captain Salth's difficulty. A4 forced mach was mad to Big lend. 41~n their arrival, the combined strength or the soldiers soan .3i *idte Indiana oq*. (Walling says that a courier from one of the other companies found SwIthls predicament and returned for help. When Smiith learned that he was to be attacked be moved from the "MAcadaws" to the ridge and sent a macssnger for help. Salth6 cownand of 50 dragoons and 30 infantry with smooth-bore muskatoona (short ranee) had crossed the mouzntains from Fort Lane (near Central Point) and been in an the 0Council of Oak Flat' where all the Wiends except Chief Jobs had aWred to surrender. Suith was to go to Big Bend (Illabe) to receive the.1ndians and escort them down the river and out to Fort Orford.) (?he Militia was engaged In chasing a mall tribe further down the river and la escorting or guarding the supply trains from the coast) ~L.J.C Captain biith lost thirteen men, who were buried near the center of the Big Bend River bottom and which is now layed out for an airplane landing field. During the many intervening years,, Dig Bend has been farmed~ and It was not unusual to occaspional2.y find a soldier'sa uniform button ,~ mmemntok of those exciting early day adventures. After this battle., there Is no record of any more disturbance from the Indiana. There Is no record svaihable of root eri adventures or where he was after this battle until somst ins during the early sixties, when he returned to Big lend and lived until he became Ill. He was taken to Bagizall's Perry where he died on'June 1883 end was buried beside his friend, Oleorge M. Bauder; In the Oold Beach cemetery, At the time Poster became ill he was la partnership with Zake iFry, who Is now living In Trek&* California. He filed on the Dig Bend ranbh and made final proof on smom in due course of time. Zacob Fry was the owner of the upper half of the present BiL3e lend ranch,, having purchesed It from 7ohn Mt. Fleming, who had bought out LfE. iteservey. Zacob Fry sold both ranches to the present owners4t Mr. md Wes. Charles Pettinger, who baey declared their intentions of deeding to the Forest Service a port ion of the ridge fo-merly known as wi~th's emp and where ecoured the Indian sitege of Bir, P-lnd and one of the gAmjor and final skirmishes that ended the Rogue !River Indian war. The upper half of Dig Dead warn f irst filed on by John Bill1ings, who proved up on It end sold It to Silas 31arriuars, who died and his widow sold It to Jacob Try, who sold It to Wr. and Mrsv. C.H. Pettingerv the Wee'"t owners, * o 1me to pettlage2. balf was first t Iled on by Jacob Fry and also sold- 11 ZAek bIth, a hpbPYg .4uek Young San, was one of the soldlers In the battle at Big Beod. It mw heF who later, We.-he soea-vb kicked the bo1 rrom under ionis, the double erossiug half. broed* when Nouic was hanged at atft9,&lA at Port OVford by the Volunteer oldiesa- tL loservey be aptain of the Gold easch Guards at the tfti. BORIS was as agitator ad was trying to stir up trouble. Re was hung for being a traitor. (Waling and Baneroft doubt this story. tonIs Is charged with perpwvtating the massacre of Gold Jeach area an lob. 22 or 23, 1856, but ls reported to have basa hanged elsewhere for other acts of violence.) LIJ.C. The old cedar rturp on the Rogue River bank at Skookum louse Butte, is stIUl to be stom. It ran Zonia, the lf-br"ed, who wm leader of the Indiana who cut this tree and started a blockbon"e Yb. soldiers m down over Skooku Rouse Butte and drove the Indiana out. .- 'I; 4i Ii (There was another "Big Dend' som 6 to 10 miles above Gold Reach. The battle at Big Bend or ILlahe is referred to by Walling aad Baenroft as the battle of "Big Meadow' but not to be confused with the "Dig Meadows" above Welc Creek.) LJ..C. . . -- 7. 4.~ i~~' 1 AS - (PR) Historical Informat ion Siskiyou (Galls. Diet.) GALICK D137RIC? The area that Is now embraced by the Gotlice District was little known to the white men before the discovery of gold by' Louis Galles, on the creek that no0w bears his names in the yeer 1851 or 52. The Rogue River which flows thru and fprav. Creek which flows into the district, however, are names connected with sowe of' the earliest history' or Southern oregon The old California trail end later the southern route or Applegste Road crossed Cm,, Wolf, Greve and :u~p-Cff-Joe Creeks some six to eight miles seast of the exterlor of' the District. \l) Th. early history of this part of the Sics:iyou National Vorest revolves around two events; ieq, the discovery of' gold and the subsequent mining activitysand the Indlian wars of 1855 and 1856. 2 Following are -Se thumb nail sketches ~feet.and -t locaitlow by legal description, where nosce-ta:nedi,,o6f historical interest in and adjacent to the district, lo Groew CreekCrossing: Located probably In See. U, T*34S., R0.46 W01% a about the sIte at the present highwey bridge. Thi. was on the old California Trail and no doubt saw some of' the early ex-l1ori-g and trapping parties visiting the Rogue River Valley. In the early swumer of 184 :esse and Lindwe Appletgate established their southern route thrn to the main Oregon-California emigrant road at Fort Hall, where they persuaded a party, bound for the lillamette Valley, to accompany them on the return trip. At Orave Creek a girl by the none of' ?Partha Leland Crowley died and was buried. ab-the o pJ..ee In 1853 acme seven or eight Indiana, the remnrant of' the small Grave Croek tribe, were treacherously massacred by a party of' whitecap In a log cabin across the road from the Dates house and buried nearby. The Bates house was supposedly near the creek crossing. One account says that the Indls~ns were buried a quarter of' a mile fro the creek.9 pro-bably on the north side.- B In November of' 1855, after the battle of' "unggry F~ills the bodies of about nine or ten soldiers wore brought back to ee66e g4,-uv' Creek and buried near the crossing, on what is now the RT. Belm ranch;- *4e, iiee/ ~ !)f ,' I - Walling. 2 - Page, 460 Walling & Bancroft 3 - 'NallIng '4-/i Iq to Oslic. Creek,_ Named for Lou&* 0mlise, 7'rench prospector, who discovered gold and mined on the croek In 1852. -. ith subsecuent discoveries of riob placer mines In the adjacent gulches, quite a settlement sprung up at the mouth ot the creek and was known 3s Oalice Creek,, and sorietimes r'eferred to as "Galleeburgw, It was at this place In 1855 that the *siore or Oeiicen took 4asce when chiers Jokm, ceorge, Limpy and Tenas Tyeeand braves surrounded a group of' 35 volunteer militia and miners. The date was the 17th of October, 2 After an a11.-day and all-alght sicge, the Indiana. withdrew~ leaving 79W, ?1ickett and Samuel Sanders dead,, and Benjamin Tufts end Allen Evans mortally wounded, Six others wounded, recovered. Sanders had marrned a grandzrvther of A*:, and Rome Crowe who still live at 1terlin and 0-lice. Accordiu-. to A.3.* Crow, Sanders was buried on a rise of ground above the old mack trail between Galiae Creok and where Carpenters store now staid.. LatSEI~en the river cut Into the bar the trail and later the ro-d mms rerouted to Pagis over the gprYe Ie Ulmpqua Joe, a friendly Indian, who later ran the tLn.,qua Joe or Tndian Ferry, several hundred yards below the sirht of the present bridge across3 the Rogue River at the lower end of Bell Oat., was wounded In this fight. By 1857 there were two stores with livery and feed at!!ble, saloons and dwellinee located on Galias Creek about where Speeds Place is located nenir the Alineda Road Bridge, There was another settlement down river about one-half mile called Ohs l1owertown" or "Skull Bar" at that tire, that Is now the site of the present Tv11aCO Of Ga~lios It was In 1857 that a shousting occured. In Oclice that resulted in the first murder trial to be hold in oesephine County. The accused was acquitted as havine shot in'selfdefense. The original court records of this and subsequent trials are In the possession of James T, Chinnock, of Grants Pass, Oregaon Es hes also an account book of Ben Adams, store-keeper of Galice, at about this time which shows som very interesting things, Flour was 10gr per lb,., bacon .509%, overalls $1.50 per pair and whiskey 25% per drink, or *5.00 per cuart& R~ubber boots,, for which there appeared to be a large demond from the miners,, were $10.00 per pa ir.(* Iverything was packed in by peck train from Crescent City by way of the Illinois Valley. Rose Crow's father ran a pack train on this route at one tlime. There appeared the names of a good many companies which were probably only partnwrship afrLairs of two to five or six man, The I - Walling 2 - Fr~3m Den Adam' a records In possession of IsT. Chinnock, Crnnta Pass$ Ore. credit business from September to hareh of the next spring wrald run into thousands of dollars and would do credit 'to a store In a town of several thousand popul!Itin- rtab today, Dale.s boomed until 1860, then faded wi"th the greet ezodu!7 of miners to the Frazer River country during. the big golri rush to that region, There bjzwwa slight rise of prouperit:- in 1869 and again ia the 1890's, when gold strikes were made, but mainly the gulches and creeks were quickly mined out Which left only 'Wiork for a co-parative fe~w In~ somei of' the large h'ydraulic mines and quartz developments. As with the rrcst of South-crn Oregon there was an influx of Chinese riners after 1860 who r'ined for a number of years. Skull Bar-- (1 3. Situated on the south bank of Ropue River, 1-rtvdiately below the mouth of Galice Creek In See, 361, TW45. RBw.9 W.?/. aA named '_or remains of' human nl:eletone found there. It probi9bly was a burying ground for an Indinn Y1illse prior to-advent of white men and before the ber v'as5 washed down by floods. This asam name was once given to the present -lte of the villope of Galles. There is evidence in~the old J~osephine County records that this name wais in use orior to 1857. 4. Battle- Bar2 Located in Soi~1'? T&33S*9 R*OW., I.M., on the North side of Rog-ue Rive.T J nmd becauce or a battle fought between Indians or the bur and w' Ite sol ilera acrose the rive'- on April 27, 1856.4. TMe rilitia rctused to cross the river so a wzrff~re of sniping was a-rried on until nightfall. The Indimns returned to the mountains south of the ;iver unmolested an the terrain was too rougirb for the whiter-to follow with their horses and supplies. 11ias Y:ere~r was wounded . ad lied on the -any to Roneburg hospital. :ohn Tzienry Cirt"11.Wd. The militia returne~i to their various forts, leaving on Wey 1. 5., Kelsey Creek: Emptying into Aogue River on the north side In Sec, 16, To33S., R.91., Axr. Named for Colonel :ohn Kelsey, of' the 2nd Regular Oregon M~ounted Volunteers who carmia~ned against the ½Ldlans. Go Big Mleadows: Sitiated mostly In Sections 1,, 2,, 1 and 12, of T.33S.,j R*lOWo,v U.K. ;came Into prominence as a winter hide-out 1. 2.- -Welling a 3 - 4 ror the I Rogue River Indiana during the winter of 1855 and '156. There In no justification round for stories of battles between uhltes,'And Indiana in this area. After the fight at Battle Bar, some three or four miles to the so)utheast on Rogue Riverfive compaiies of volunteers under Captains Williams, Wilkenson, Keith, Blakeley and Barnes (another account says garrisoned by Keith,, Blakeley, Barnes,, Bledroe and Boland with 200 son) - Noland successor to Capt. BuoF - were quartered at the Big )Meadows and constructed a fort near the present It was 4- section corner of Sees. 1 and 2. T*335*, RelOL,9 Semo¶ named Fort 1,americk in honor of General T.K. I~merick, comz~anding the Southern Oregon Volunteers. Il According to Welter Criteser, who homesteaded the south and of signs Bald Aidge in See. , ?vT,3S3., Ro9Iep Wel!., there Wtill of the old fort when he cane to the country in 1896. he advised me that the old rotting logs remained In view for some three or four years after that date and were finally burned and cleaned up by C.3T. 11'rye when he took up a honestead claim there. Criteser says that the old fort stood about one hundred -.)04imfabove the present site of Frye's barn. Though I found no description or the exact location of the fort in any of the written histories, this location is borne out by A.J. Crow, who tells me that his father described It as being near a small stream with plenty of horse feed around. Though there Is no ment ion of date of abandonment,, Crow says his father was stationed there for two years. This may be true as there is evidence of a fevi -all groups of Indians preying on settlers In the foot hills for a year after the round-uo. of the tribes at Illabs further downm the Rogue River In June, July and August of 1856~and It ts likely that a detail woul- be left to keep the Indiana out of so good a retreat. According to accounts of the capture of the bulk of the warring r'-dinn later In the sumnmer,, sone of the troops moved on down Rogue River and made a junction at Agness and Oak Flat on the Illinois River with the troop working in from the coast. 2 The Big Meadows above mentioned mrust not be confused with the The final battle of the war was Big Bend, where Illahe now Is. fought at the latter on F'ay 27th and 28th, and Is often referred to In Southern Oregon H!istory as the Battle of Bie, MaddIou&,~.N doubt this arises from the tact that the large river bar was very mui* of a meadow at that time. .Sla&e Slidoo: Situated on Rogue River In D.N. j sec. 6, T.34S.9 R*8W-ag WJ.V There Is no mention of this place In written history~and It gets Its name from the crumbling slate rock foriati on which forms sort of a bench., However., this place figured In what is called the 'First Meadows Campaign' on November 20, 185513). Vajorts Martin and Bruce and Captain Judah left EVans Creek and proceeded in 1. 'Walling 2. a* 3. a .f several days to the mouth of Whisk-ey Creek (probably via Graeve Creek) and thence up what is now the Alder Creek 'gay to the junotion with the Bronco Creek Xay., Upon finding Indian signse Bruce, followed down to the river (on Bronco Creek Way) to a bar a short ways a:;ove the mouth of Jackass Creek (now Bronco Creek), While gettinE rafts ready to arose the river they were fired upon by the Indiana From the south bank, A mad rush was made back to the shelter of the timber from!which izoefrectual firlar was maintained for some time. After several hours a retreat was cade to the point on the ridge zeveral riles north of the river where Judah and IVartin were located. A f'eneral. retref.t was then made and the cawapsigs given up until sprirG.,ji1 During the f iring on the river, Captain :udah &--used t1irselr by firing hi. 12-pound brass fiowitzer,, from a point li miles back on a rid~e out acrotss the river Canyon w'hich onl- -rudely awakened the stillness of the forest". As this was the sare bw,:n of Indions that repulsed the whites so effectively ntt the B,-ttle of Thunrry, Hill the militia cannot be blamed for not wantinp to ;mrsue the Indians into certain ambush in their rnountain fastness, far :ram .. upplies and aid and with u hardi winter setting In, In 'the spri- g of 193?, a Pornet Service crew w*lie constructiing a forest cear; at Slate elide, dU17 an ol-i cap and iall 5-shooter pistol out of the decomz 'osed slate, It had been fully loaded an.! was perhaps lost during,the mad sera'ible to shelter to escape the In,!ian'ffire. One private, William Lewis, was killed and f iveumen were moun ~ed cm- ti* M--sva '.'b-xt1-.; aed one In.Ilan was known to have been ki~led. Had the Indians wait&d until the whttemr started to cross the river the results would have benn far more tragic. a. Indian ?ry(.uaJos.'.. rry) Located in Section 4, T.35S,9 R*7960 vi.::,* Umpqua Zoe, who helped -the white*-at the battle of Galice Creek was given an allotment of' land, a short way# belovw Bell Gate on 1iorue -Iver and ran a ferry until In the early 1880's when fte and his son-in-law killed each other in a qua.-Tel over the killing of Joe's dog by the am-In-law, Joe's daughter cantinuod to Pvn the ferry for many years. The lan~d a-loty-Ant is still known as Tndian ranch), being sold by the Indian Service about 1929 or 1930. Umapqua Joe, his son-in-law and other members of the family were buried on the north side of the river n.-ar the terry lbn,1inV In later years, bill Massie,, who leased the Ferry businees, and farm,, uncovered some of the remains whl~e excavat ing for a house site. I - WallIng and Bancroft. -05- 9. Little-Afsadewor Situatec In Seco 15, and 229 T.33S*9 9 .ex* -. ?his area wias nazied by either Inaiaa f Ighters or by early trz~ppera, miners or explorers, It camn Into 2:rov-inence during, the O1esdowsw campairn of the spring of 1855, when General LArmerlcks' comarand of 53M men and orricers at the Second ~'rseon Iounted Volunteers car.e)d there far several days preceding the battle of Battle Bar and the construction of Fort Launrick at the Big t2ewsdows. A,' Tt 'probably received Its na.me trai the numbrous small meadowe anid ;-rasey benches occuring th~roug~hout the timwber on the r-o,:ntain side. The exact spot of the breastworka thrown up by the 'neor-lnt of wnilitin Is not known as far as I have been able to cietermine. Part of this area was aruatted on and subsequently homesteaded In 1910 by Henry Rosenbrook (known as Dutch limiry) who passed the filing to Yi11lian. Graiff, Graiff eventually completed the tiling and receive,-1 patent. 10. Rand. Situated in the Southeast 'I Saco 24, T*34-Z.* R.o3Wev -0-op so named when the development of the Yank Ledge (,.Uzeda Line) caused considerable :mini'-g exciteirent and an etteirpt was made to create a tounaite. Lots were surveyed arid at least one was contrected. Assistant Fore tter No-: son 7o1.WYekief f at one time made a survey and report or' the towusite area, but only an -rndated rpep (probably 1909 or 1910) is In the H~and Ranger Station 'ilpso AMcordine.to some accoJnts the nems was taken fro-m the greet gld strike in the "Rand District" of' 5outh Africa, In the 1850'. and '60'., a nam by the naew of 'Yank* equwtted in this district and farmed the flat where the Rend CoC.C, Camp now Is - a few old frult trees still remain. Accordin; to A,:, Crow, Yank had his house on the rise a'* ground, about where the C.C.C. Camp water tank is now located (See Survey of Rtmd R.S., Site-plan by L,.T* Cooper, September 1937). In 1880 the discovery at' the Yank Ledge caused considerable excitement and a town sprung up on Yan~a place called Yankville or tumiberville. M'ost of the lumbe- for building' at Galico, Yankville and ,,uartuvill. (later Alimeda) was barged down Rogrue River frouv. a mill at the mouth of Tuinp-Orr-;oe Creek,, but later a --ll was located near the mines. This leads one to believe from the Dann at Tuuberville, that the mill mentioned may have been the one located at the site of the south gate of Rend Rant-er Stati-n. where pieces or the Old uiochiner7 and th skid roads leading in from the mountain siae are Alainly to be seen at this time. Rand Rang~er Station, of course~, Is derived from the so-celled -Rand Towasite" that turned out to be only a prroctersm dream. 1L - Walling & Bancroft, 2 - Walling -rr-J7 -6- 11. Almeda This aum is riven to the rflt in the 1 9ec. sJ. 1', T.54S., R.?W., 19.P. and the now inactivf mine ecrors iogue Liver In S.E. t sec. 13, T.34s., .e8W., W.!'. 1 turinr the g la rush and excitement of 1860 a villaie sprung up on the lAt wbhich was named zuartville. This for e tine w&LE a rival to Tankyille an4 Gallce (sozetfr.es then called Caliceville and Gelieeburc) but alor.g with these villag:-s somn waned when the eupposedly rich vein turned out to be low rrade; /4 row abacks are all that reanamn. 12. V~arial: '.aN'e of the Post Otffice now locatod on 'ule Creek. The -ost 'ffrice has been roved a nurber or tfres, being located at the Leo Frye ranch lr the BiE ?:! down country and at three places on Lule Creek, to the writerh kn-wledge. The name was au gested by the birth of a dauglter to Tom Billiings (early day and agnin at present postmaster) who was given the name-o Tlriel. The name %es gradually given to the Di1 ! eadow country until the latter nar.e has airoat disappeareF± rror use, but with the ismed of the po. toffice baek to 1M.le Creek end the pl.Cin of' the neme -Bie- eWadows" on our maps, the wrong. to history will be righted. This Postortice is uni-qe in the fact that It is one of the few places in the United States that has always he. the mail packed in on mules and horses th-ugh the route has varied fr-7= Alrcde to 7ctstfork (Dothan) and fr.-, there: to Agness. -At the present time one ray send e letter from .orial by bule to Agness; from Agness to Gold 3euch by bo t, and from there by successive stages of truck, train and air to ito destination; thus involving all the methods of Pe il tr-nsportution ueed In the country today. 13. ta (aanheris) s :ndian cnly a few or the old ndlan raneh--rlas or vi lsges Of the Indians of Zosenlhine Cou;nty are !'nown today. E-cwever, a few o. the old residents can recall *ten tay were youngstea, of the rings of heaped uD earth uhere the abodes of the savages oirce at od. A.J. Crow or -orllen, Oregon, recently showed re where three such habitations had been. To the casual eye the remnin of' the dozen bi& t.-ees sone hal vllnaCe looked very much like.k had once u ,-rooted and decayed oay, out upon closer Inspecti--n It Is to be soon that the huts were located on o0en and exposed points that were free of tirber. They did not want t1beir enerips cr-iwllxg u,,on them throuwh the rorest. Aparently the natives mae their abode by excavating a round pit some two or threo feet deep and ten to twelve feet "cros, usinnu the excnvatez. earth to brnk up arot:nd the adpe of' the pit. They then erc'cted .o* es over the pit t n:1 covered then. w th sArsns or bark.Theen sits were found to be grouped quite close tooethar without order or forration. ?rom 6 to 12 lodges apparently conatituted a rancheriv In this district. The past Habitations visit(:d are loc.ted at the upper end of Hiellgate Canyon on the north bcnk or 'ioguo liver at the section corner betwoen sections 10 and 11, T.35S., R.7%., W.Vs on :urp-OCrr-Joe Creok on a point rising up from the lower end or the big bottor. thut cor-prlsea the Cook and Woodford ranch-s; and on the north bank Tump-Off-oe Creek at the mouth of a Thort draw runr.ing into the creek a bhlf mile or so west Creek. The firet and last rentionred are of the mouth of ^,quartz entirely visible fror. the '4erlin-Almwde Roipd. Z-82.A& I. STMDES Historical Information Siskciyou HISTORICAL STUDY 14. Slate Creek, So named because at slate rock in bed of creek. In 7une 3.5 Chiief Limpyb band of India=s bade a foray to Indian Creek on the Klamath. JItlled a man by name or Hill (or Null) and. returning t~way of Ewe's Ranch stole some cattle, amuel FryeMe ou' tr Bay'sa Ranch (later called Fort Rays) and came 'on the Indians In the hills at the head of Slate Cieekkin treo them. whktes tng d., three of The exact spot of the encounter Is not known. 15. L'Impy Creek. It Is generally accepted by local residents that the lower reaches of this stream was --nee the home of Chief Limrpy and his band of Indiansa though Waeling credits him with living in the Illinois Valley la some of his accounts, CM.?f LiNP7- ca In to considerable prominence during the Indian War of 1855-56. L.3T. COMM~ Dist. Forest Ranger 1. Walling, Page 237. -9-1 I-- f A.S. tvM) Eistorioal zmtonamtlm Biskiyou Th. following"seount of the battle of amcry sill as taken 7rm, 2x-Ibrest Ranger R.I. slas' acount of the battle an a deserlptlos of the loeation of the battle ground as appeared In the Cold. Anniversary zdition of the Gants Pass Courler, April 3, 1935 *'I the Orave Crook Hill., so miles west of the raflzoad bins, there took place the first and perhaps the nost ifportant battle of that war (1855-6). Wi was the battle of Bmpy HiL.. *....a spot, mad boesalty of the fight will ever remis a classleal Interesting by the death of y brave and worthy men. This mmorable field of strife Is now &ast unknown, save to the few present survivors of the volunteers who occasionally visit It. Rank underbrush and grasses hae usurped the places where blood was shed and only those faniliar with the ground can point out even the last resting place of the dead who fell there. maunwst Urged. several persons, among the. Geeral' oss ind J.W. Matton, both participating In the battle have given utterance to a desire that the brave fell there shuld he honored with seom kind of nemrlal, a simple monut at least thereby their paves might be kaow. larging up this ifdea, Mr Btton proposed a monunt to the fallen or the Indi watls to be erected by the public a measure o just and patriotic as to ecIte surprise that it Ms not been carried out. bo build such a nomat Should be the Imdiate work of the public spizited people of outhern Oregca. d-who of a visit to the battlefield of q M Mill, Mr. Satton wrote, In a styl worthy of Ivings (In Ashland Tdingst or October 19, J.) Mm sinrs since, while passing the little emetery, I halted for the purpose of visiting the gaves of z old courades. I stood beside the little rw of praves that I found blended Into one, the sounds - hard]* distinguishable; so board or stone at head or foot Is found; so one can toll these graves apart. In vilty they not a o o foe; in unlty they fell; in unity they la beneath the sod, awalting the judgmnt day. In vain I seught to determine the pave of my old friend; It was lost, lost aid Its coreade graves. After a short search onog the wed and grass that covered the grave,, I found a fragnent of a halfdeeayed heard on which I could trace the inscription which my hand bad carved full 20 yeas before-Jonathan Pedigo, killed by Indisw at th battle Of Uy Bill , October 51, 1855.' '-AJ 1a 9ougt tLeA. fts writer parehased the laud embracing tbe little burial plot referred to by W. Satton, it being a part of the original Grave formsrly owned by Sates end Twood, and being located creek rob, Pacific igway, is mies north of Create Pass. present on the At that time 192, every vestige of the gaves referred to had kvine had my attention bees obliterated and the ground farmed. been a number o^ gr wes previously bad there that fact the called to red school hol"se, I little the facine land the of In that portion a marble tombstone of frtgonts several unearthed end search a mad. ?hese pieces I rested. had It which upon and the sandstone base fence. the oolleted along Looks for Battle rield. Then I began Inquiring of those of my neighbors Who had lived ther- for many years, regarling the losation of USugry Hill. hO one seemed to know. Same had a vague idea, but none knew definitely. Being the son of a pioneer and having always taken a keen Interst 1n those things that bad to do with *cr1 settlement of our country, got from the library the several histories whieb descrlbe the battle and.the topography of the country where It was rourt, and took notee of my particulars that might be of assistance to re In my search for the lCation of the battle field. bem the opportunity finally same, In the spring of 1934s, 1 made several trips and =ained the poesible locations, as Erven ms by thost who clamed to know. on my third trip I found a location which tallied In every respeot 'ith ithq topogrephical descriptions given In the several historieswhich I bad read. After a thorough Valll*g'i', Victores eand Bnerofts' ~nd e*ibodd ezxamnuation of the area ther remained so doubt In ny mind the identical spot upon which the battle of ngy mill *t that it'as rad been fought. ,' . !1 Ballet In Ividenc.. I' kg co.bbrative evidence, Mr. Leland aoff. living on creve aree GUV Anrw.;xile south of the battlcfield, gave me a lead bullet which bi esiC ii. 4itaken from a large pine tree on the saw it of the ridge I TM ballet might have been a spent ball ~ fighting 00eure oaW c the soldiers rueketoons, (smooth bore end short range) that bad leogpd.la a ereek or division of the bark with its point barely poetrat]*X the sap wood. In this position It might have been carried o*tward b$ ts yearly growth of bark, being neither coveted with the ubre * ,/ \s,-~~~ ' :~~~~~~~~~~~~~2 ~k , /, IJ , - & yealy growth of baa account of bein embedded 1I the sapuod to be hold by It. a crack, nor deeply memo This bullet was a 5 caliber lead bullets suh as was 1sed in the maketoons or those s and with whieb the soldiers we equipped and it s1msa possible that It Eight have remaied thus embedded and earried outward with the yearly growth without altering its rolative position. Zoeati by llps. Th location or the battlerield is, by section lines, *bout five iles west and feer miles north of Leland, and In approximte seetions 16 mad Us TOwnshp 2 south, Rage 7 easts I., between the headwaters of Rook Creok and Poormans Creek. In order that we may have a comprebensive 1i" of the importance and magnitude of this battle, I w111 quote from 1anoroft's dseription: Dresription quoted. o October 28, 1655, Fitgra.d, being la te vielnity of Gre Creek, hseovered the Indians mped a few ailes south of Cow Crook Is the Grave COrk hills (losation mid be about three miles north). wee, o receivin a wasse rrom fitzgenl, st out on the th for the rendernons, having sent dispatches to Captains Harris, Welton, 11l1am o and Lewis Bre. end Rinearson, who bad just eorns la wer directed to Join the co'mbined rtor at Grave Creek, wher were concentrated on the 30th, about 250 volunteers and 105 regulars. (bwelL gives the number an 257), only a portion of Fitagerald's troops being availsble on account of the illness of Its oonder. Two companies of a battalion, ealle out by Goversor Cury mre lying at a place about a day' march south of aopqua Canyons, udr the oaomad of Captains Joseph Balco and Samuel Gordon. Captain. Mpatlent. Whim moss reached the readezvoio late at nibt, he found the Captain of the first Dragoons awaiting him, Inpatient for au attack. fpies from hi, ocm (Poes' a) and Captain Brucs's company bad reconnoitered the mW's position, which mu found to be ona hill, wel ortified id estremly &ificult to approach A zap or tbe ceuntry was prepared, ma a forced march detemined upom. Orders were issued to be ready to march at 11 o'elock, although It was already half past tea, TM plu of the attack was to plant bwitzers on an emnence threemourte of a mil from that on whieZ the Indians wer _ecaped, and afw having divided the eompwle into three columns, so stationed as to prrvent the escape of the Xndleng, to open upon the 4- enseq with gape cod shal shot. It wm hoped by thi arch, which Mm continued till morning with oseasional halts, to surprise the Indlast, but soumon. having .. t fire toa tree, that Idea was abandoned On arriving at the edge of a ravine Is front of their position, instead of plantlrg the howitzers d shelllg the Indlans, as was latended, a charge was made, In which Rlnearson and Welton led with thelr compnies,, augmented by portions of several others, and a part of the regulars rushing iz disorder down Into the ravine, thru the thick brushes and up the ascent on the other side, volunteers and regulars all eager for the first shot. The Indims occupied a mountain, bald on the side by which the troops were approaching. (fletr says: bald oa south side) and severed with heavy forest an orth sde. bos had direeted hiley and Oordon to lk oa the north, that bes the za In the front should drive the Indiana to this wver, they night he t by thee and engaged until the main force came up. i t 6d eil tS sad raOt 15 Fail /1' The attempt was made but they found it impossible to penetrate the tfngled underbrush which covered the steep acclivity, with the Indiana fortified above them, and after having several nen wounded returned to the point of attack Druce and Brris lay ooncealed a tew hmunred yards to the mouth of the attacking party, to be In rzadiness to Intercept the nq In that quarter; ut finding that so enqy eam their W, they too, joined the party la fant. In 1he ,mantime the Idlxa-shad retreated, as was anticipated, to co.er of the woods aed could -ot be approached with*t gm1t1pwLI from the oPen ground. no da wore an with vain endeavors to get at them; and at 3 p.. *arge with asm l force of aragoonsl who after firing 'everal rousds with wasketoonse utterly useless against the rifles of the Imdisner sod having several killed od wounded, fell back to their firt poeitio. (Ambrose as; As la the yer of 33, the adimas 1have all tbe gms In tbe country fse Indians each have a good rifle aod re. lver, md are ekilled In the use of thsm...Yt 12 of flseersan's eompany bad so other weapons than pistols). Orlth made a Whea darkness paded the firlg, the troops enscaped a short distance fma the battle ground at a place named by the *Bloody Sprlg, where the wrmaded one #&red for. (Yietor says: "All went supperless to their blankets' .)jtumnrlsethe next morning the eamp was attacked from al sides the indians engaging the troops until the middle of the foresoos, when being rpulsed they withdrew and Vh troops took up their marsh ter Grave Creek cod Port hSilf, carrying their wounded Whites Partall Defeated, As a result of-thebattle the whites had little eaus* for congratulo- tion, TO volunteers had 26 killed, wounded and missing; and the regulars tour killed and so. woundcd,, Including Lieut. Glbsonv who was hit in the attask on the sa on the morning or the lot. of Novmber The number of lsaims killed was variously estimated, from 8 to 20. the nmber or zaaias engaged in the battle wan also conjectured to be from 100 to 300. Buch was the unfortunate termination of a combined effort on the part of the regular and volunteer trops to check the war in its incipiency, and signified that tIme, money and blood must be spent In bringing it to a close. 'God only knows' writes a corrspondent of theSales Stateuman, wh4n or where this war will end..., these mountains are worse than the amps or Florlda.' Just Brief Outline. Rere *e are giving a brief outline, a mere statement or whet oeured,. There Is so question of the mention of the misery of an all-night march to rach the foe thru a rough mountainous country, which even today is eomparatively inaccessible, and whisk at tbht time could not have been more than din toot path for their guidance. No conment is mde regarding the two comsanies e*gaged that bad just returned from a scoutlng trip and, without tine for reat or reouperation, had imsdaIttey joined the ill-rated expedition. We are left to surmise the keen disappointment resultant UpM their arrival at the Indian enompment and discovering that sne of those who bad preceded bad built a fire to warm their benumbd fingers and that the Iniand had been thus appraised of the presene of the *oldl rs We am oaly conjecture the looks of fierce determination oa their faces asO beinIhe 4eprived of a surprise attack* they *harged, heedless of dange, rows late and across a deep brushy ravine, and so.r*nted the enMy conceaed behind a range of' law jagged rocks and bUfs &entamdingup and down the munutatn side at right angl e to the line or approach for 300 or 400 yarks, affording the ndians very advantae of position., we cannot but rfel their sense of frustration WA bMwllor20t whM tbhe usre *omptlled to realise the Impregnability of the Udian w eQ iO 'Yet they cat uased in desperation the unequal contest thzenugbitlthe1 g perilous day, cliglang to the bope that they might dislode -the snag from their inexpmgzable rocky stronghold. ituat ftmTbrturing. And as night Closed down we my se 41:. them withdrawing, slowly, Sautieuslyp Mambic to Sake Sam of their aced with them tinsd a =MUf sptig or vater in the bottom ota dep araw art to the wnt of the batt.l grod about a quar*ter or a aie whwe tbe steep sopIng grevad either ilo add It i'!possibli for than to lip 4ou in *oMfork. We 689 vislon tbem sarrying the on W domm soar tbe spring, and In thelr hasty ietvor to was the blood from their wounda, the mall flo of water seeping thro the pring soil Is soon eantimusse4td until It 1 impossible to git pue water to Griak, sad the pleas is aiad '3loowY -prigo As igt gpow on the sold Inerases untll the bodies of the d4 are frozes tiff, sad .till bult ror teir or drawing the .me.?'. fire. so firens ma be Resume rig",. WIM the coming of day and without tood, the "a resu the ficht until wel along Is the foremomi, on o*portualty Is given to retreat and the attack is gives up as hopeles sd the long arwasue reh for Orry cCroek house, Ltakem Up, ORU those who he tke part In ts, tsok of helping to *ermy a ona ltf* ovr rvumti trails emfully appreciate Uw xeursiat lg work of transporting the wonde back to the rort. 'Tb writer Neo am"Istd In such work on severml esomsic and It Is the t strenuous woaf he hea ever adeirtekes. wounded persos Duty Out1lied, Cal? thase eadewed with sonstitution* like Spar ites withstood the somli1ed It Imso old have haraships eM ezpoeur of these sxzprimses, Wonder that r. Sutton Ws Impressed to write a tribute to his buddy, Jemathem PeIgo, as quoted hevein. Vdoubtny there were others quite as wush entitled to dsi lar rcogaitloas. TW we all bnav and tearle sea& figtilag for the right as bhq _ It and preparing o- euatry for' its futur mt ! eest. Alth thnis partlou.r instnee tW railed to aseamplihb thetr objects, yet on the wole they tasseeded sad their mck was well and _pse= snt4 dose. Aad yet we, the people or Brsborm Orcgo, have allowed their gaves to beeom Obliterated until only their approximate location to kn, ad the em or the batle or Rnm P s battle lasting almost a *and a khalt, ad In weh more thm 300 troops now eagaged, 1mie of w lst thr lives diretly, and at least two others Indirectly, Is an umbk and umrked spot today. as popl of Southwe Or*ge fe a double Oty; a duty to the y or those brew soldiers who smeriiced their liv tbat tb omaty might be =d se& mad a duty to ewing posterity, to mutabl am* $beme gaves end to permamently Ge. ivuto thoesIetion of the bettle of Mgrg 311 lb ailm thm to pass from the mewury and keomlsdg of ma l wre than unpatrIotic; 1-t is a disgre. ; t-. r- fl I 1 71 i I I i... R.9 W. R. 10W. 5o' i i II JI . . . J. , . I : 1!! Lv- W.,,N\ - I R. W I,. 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I 1_ ZAI ' It f ^,Ttli I f-t i iI AN / / .r:5l_% I-1 ffi LI.,. 1 0 U; rl_ :^t -1 /I I 1lt V, L-+,--l .. _10, G<`7lf- I__ - I \, .4 eland 10, W I 6 W1 TT I RvS1zz6 `Z I_ - - i I I 1, CqI,. 10110" 00- I-___LI 'r,, 1I'll / - - j ., D. - A i YAl; GW, t-vXic t7>,~~-` r WI _ _ fILi lp-A7 - Iouii~ t Servlce I $. I -,IL - allY mm /I !! tNM~ni _ T ') \ I2T.1' I imp-A" MUProlecled 6y 5tafe S. W, I STUDIES Historical Information Siskiyou E A R L Y H I S TO R Y of NC R T E D E L CC U N T Y Some exploratory trips had been taken along the Northern California coast prior to 1850 but it was not until the early "SO's" that any appreciatable effort was made to settle what is now Del Norte County. In 1851 Captain S.R.Tompkins, Robert Williams, Ohas. Southard, Swain brothers, and others, boated up the Elamath River (1) seeking gold on each bar as they reached it. around them and watching. Indians followed them, prowling At two bars below the preselt sight of Happy Camp f2) three members of the party were murdered by the Indians. An avenging party was sent out, and the Indians killed. This was not so difficult as the Indians had only bows and arrows. The party reached the sight of Happy Camp two or three weeks after starting. On a night of hilarity names were nroposed, and the name of Happy Camp given the new town, which was the first in the present Klamath County. Shortly a new settlement was made at the mouth of the Elamath River, to be known as Klamath City.(3) The liver had been visited in 1850 by a schooner but the small boats had been swamped and the crews lost on the treacherous bar. It was in 1851 when the Newton, another schooner, brought gold seekers to found Klamath City. Houses were "ready cut" from San Francisco, one of them being an iron house to withstand the Indian attacks. The new settlement became a center of supply and a base for exploration, but existence was short-lived. ,r it- In - 2 - 1852 the iron house was shipped back to San !mancisco and Klamath Cit-r deserted. The California Le.islature of 1F1-2 organized Klamath County and in June the board of Commissioners was elected. Crescent City was next settled. In 1850 the schooner 7araeon had arrived, and been wrecked, giving the bay its name - Paragon Bay.(4) Another ship visited the bay in 1851, but it made no move to land a narty ashore. However, through the east and mid-west the legends of gold were snreading and starting a great migration. In the mountains back of the present Crescent City one lone man took out a growing treasure Of gold, planning to go back to San Francisco and enjoy-life through his remaining years. As he was about to leave, Indians attacked him and left him for dead. He arpeared in San Francisco with his mind unstable, but told of his hidden hoard of gold. the founding of the legend of the lost Cabin, which is area known as French Mill. This was supposedly in the The story of the "Lost Cabin" spread far and many adventurers looked for this lost treasure. A party came seeking this treasure in late 1851. They sighted the crescent-shaped bay on the coast, but had difficulty in landing. Outfitted anew at Althouse, Oregon Territory, promptly returning to a valley behind the present Crescent Cityov naming the location Elk vTalley(5S -because of the numerous elk grazing there. This valley still bears that name. A messenger was sent overland to San Francisco eor a ship and supplies to come to Paragon Bay. J.F.Wendell But Humphreys, the messenger, induced ito organize an expedition to St.neorge Point. They came in the schooner Pomona in the fall of 1852. In February, 1853 the first attempt was made to lay out a city. - 3 - During the winter of 1852-3, A.L.Rosborough had purchased in Wendell's name 320 acres, now Crescent City(6), and now broke it up into lots. The founders of Crescent City were F.E.Weston, G.W.Jordan, A.K. Ward, R.Humphreys, T.M.Peters, 3.K.Irving, and Wendell. sold it and geve title fof $2.50 per acre. It They later was then named after the bay's shape-- Crescent City. 1853 saw much development. first store. Gilbert and Irrrington opened the Hamilton Company and S.H.Grubler followed shortly. Lighters appeared ro-tho landing of supplies from the ships. ,' On the first day after arrival of the ships with goods for the new store, -4 It $1500 worth was sold, mostly to men from the mines and camps of the interior who were waiting on the beech. A sawmill was erected, enlarged through the two or three years and in 1856 a arist _ mill was built. In 1860 it all burned. In Arril of lFF3 Tames Raght, D. Haight, H, Davis, and Dominee arrived, and in August moved northward - to the north bank of Rowdy Creek(7) in the Smith River Valley(8) to found ranches. Here they found a fern brake shoulder-high, luscious grass, many elk, deer, bear, pheasant, ducks and geese. The name "Smith River"(9) was a question to everyone in those early days. The name was given first to a river flowing into the Rogue River- probably the Illinois. The stream now known as Smith River was accepted as the lower portion of the other Smith River in Oreeon. Fremont made remarks which support the belief. With the fast develop- ment of the lower valley of the Smith it held the name, the other stream being renamed when its mouth was discovered on the Rogue. On the 28th of August 1853 the first white child in Crescent City was born to the wife of a man named F'rame. Z-wt The child was named - 4 - Mary Frame. Indian trouble came soon. The Indians on the Chetco and Rogue were raiding and killing, and stirring un the local Indians. By fall ships were calling regularly, and aside from alertness for Indian attacks, the new town was growing fast. June 10th, 1854 saw the beginning of the first newsraner. r.old seekers were coming by every boat and pouring into the back country. Diggings on lyrtle .Creek(10) were rich, paying $15 to $20 a day per man. Indian Creek(13) and other areas in the country were very rich. There were 75 farmers in the dpring of 1854. From the one house Ji in the spring of '53 there were 300 more built during the year. from 800 to 1000 people were living adjacent to the town. In 1854 A wagon road was being discussed- to reach into the Illinois Valley,(ll) and a conmission was organized to push the project. Between March and October of 1854, with Crescent City 19 months old, 39 steam vessels and 9 sailing vessels,visited the harbor, the first bringing 3385 tons of goods, the sailing ships 540 tcns. -The state failed to Drovide funds but subscription raised O4100 for a trail between Crescent City and Klamath City in 1855. Trinidad at this time became the county seat of Klamath County, but in December it was moved to Orleans Bar.(12) In 1855 there arrived by steam 20 tons of supnlies, by sail 12 tons. It was estimated $150,000 in gold was dug from the hills and streams that year. Capt.Jones arrived with a detachment of 50 men in view of brewing trouble with Indians. In 1856 the populations of Happy Camp was 100, Indian Creek 450, Salmon River 1200, Smith River and Redwood Diggings 200, 1000. Crescent City On Bald Hills a city a city was laid out and called Vallardville(14) .37 - 5 - The legislature of 1857-8 divided Klanath and Vel Norte counties. In April of 1857 450 passengers arrived at Crescent City by sea within three days. In May 1858, on the 19, the stage road opened. A strike on the Eraser River came, and Trinidad was left with 6 inhabitants. Xerbyville was emptied by the new rush. In March of 1860 copper was discovered within 8 miles of Crescent City, near Tlack's 'erry and only 500 feet from the river. Then cooper was found in Myrtle Creek and at Low Divide, and surrounding areas. 1862-3 was a viscious winter. up trees. crushed. Rain fell in torrents. Logs washed into the streets of Crescent City. Wind tore The wharf was Smith River and Klamath 'River flooded the countryside. A larPe house near wbrt Dick(15) was carried away entirely. In 1874 chrome was discovered at Low Divide(16), and atop the copper strike which appeared one of the richest finds in the West, activity was increased. Then, in 1874, silver was found in Mtyrtle Creek. Material taken from "Del Norte County" by J. v. Bledsoe. R.12 W. o0 R.IOW-. "Mi!°1 W.- no R.9 W. a I -. 4 P: I/ , - I -1.1 \ W_4-f- PDL I NUPIETE -s ^ | luxr; *._. i ri , q. , q ~~ --I) I! i M P-1L- I 11 ,, h F t - I \11V I di \ III I #I fs, 11,G I, I 1.41 I I.. i i:- I I k I -JL" , , qw-4 'IP' -F + | ^> AS v v . $> > r I 421~~~~~~~~~~~ 1,11 1I ISr-sI P-l . -5_ AA..I f-I.ql:gll l'1 _. !: . -nY \S niu >11 1-O- I 4 j XMIY - - =1 .1: ' iM -. J PI ST X-171-D. S_ rIrM I -1 I 1 -! I I i ;-.a ~- IAl,--II/ I ic-, / -'.4'k / I - - If lbi-LobA I1- I;.c, 117-11 77At ~ ~ parafomv ,d/ 1 r-71'I !/ 57 )1 /lk I 1'P ,>3~i ' 14 'ep I .- . - lj1 -1 ~ I a Ml 00-1 W \ txlC - ra II .] \ 1 J*I JA -..; llp- LX 4*;?'f{L II tel.1,'1 19_ . .- . T .T ".. -U F . Ii IF t D--L 0 ,~, 1,, 1.vaTq i .I 1 e,y .. I. 1 21 T I /, 1 S. el4 ~Twnf r s _ ,- %I,; I I I:eY t I slacw H"t I I 1\,f i cti Ir:1 W) I VI'l " sh,4. s . 1 -I I-.-- R'N I iZ rl' I I _ ,%--I'kN ro -.r I I ;-. ( Pro ba b1c) / i ~A~-M F-Y, ),N,& thP .b K~au |R.11W. 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Historical Infortrat ou Sielyou PAGE CR'E!X DISTIC? h Page Creok District is rilh in the en'-ry day history o' Southern Oregon. It was on Josephine Creek in 1951 that gold waS first discovered In nropor,, ge t-ld In the forerert of this work. Pollowinp care other gold discoveries, sairly settlement, ..nd the openln,7 of trails and roade to Crescent Cit7. FolAcwinv are some or the 4-portant viatorleel j1r'ess or the Districtc Joso 1 line Creuk: I. Pzaxli8n) tb6 firbt IL±,meW ror oaecphine iollins (cr niiste girl residcnt ir. the Illinois Vailoy anu auukter or one oi the fi-st rinera. County ims subaquont17 r. snme aldo: 2. of golb i in hortcr o' 2The location ot the neXt thia uiLtrict was at Zallor Di_--i:gs :^r. V!ie ixyo:'. rt wtadc, 3osephine fl11 ir.l sI-co.vnry or1gir.ally unved the party or sa&-ort; who moee 'he toAtor the place had .-rown ir i!-'ort'ance, itIt find. nred Isido in houor of a C"1ifornia )o3.itici-n; the local residents believinar that they were in Cellforrnis, County was the rirst county wean oett ot jose.;-.ine County when this et orr from ;ackson County. old Jnckzaonville -- tr..do At one tire the Crescent City stare rocid pesaec. thrnupfh Weldo. Kerby: 3. Mee knao; as- irbyville, so naed since it ws founded on the donation land =s taken up in 15. 1 Waling. ?nge 453-4. 2 ra I I i n. Pase 455 elk-ii o Or amos Merby which Kerbyvile was platted in 1815 ln 31 antioipation that the county seat would be moved to a more central loeontion wnIch was soon the case, and Kerbyvl le reualned the County Sent for a nunber of years. In Januar tbe Stete Legislature changed the riai'e 1859, cieopted by tke to Napoleon but the rame fellel to be public. 4. nmgi-e'i In hoeror of r An Ce.ly ridinp earr Browr townz: 'reek. r-ner, one webfoot" 3rown on Altbouse At -no tixo, ic cl1wnid, it 3(0' to 500 frr peo-lr One o. the lar.eit naeffets founud 1nhr.nb~teted the 21lea. in Southern oregron weas Ceud nea.- there. It weighed rit at the old p-lce oC about *16.OO per oLnco. arOlmd tl".100, Illinois River:I So named for the e-rly eettler3, S. mont of whor. were frnm T11inois. Port nayfl:2 This wm8 nerely a fortified farx : use on 6. the old tHeyve far7r et the foot of Wres Eil. proreinnce as It cerAe into ef.-pe am-a siegt. by the Indiana e of duriu6 the troy4blgofle timtes In l856. I. Dollar Mt! !Siht what obscure but It The derivation o0 this n3=e is 6otae- ti generally accepted that a proecto1r wore out e new pair of eight dolltr ehne in -a dey~' travel around the rountain, which is coverwi -tith sharp rock. A battle of the Rogue River Indian '-ar or l855 - 56 oca!-2red here. S. Oregon Caves: !)soovered in s who trailed 6 boz.r to the cavern. /rb7 SlIjah Dxtvidson, fhe arac surrounding the eaves has been set aside as a nati nal monument and is now visited annually by thousands or recreatiobists'and tourists. 1 2 Wallin, - -age 452 * * 2 L1r =1 - b _ i . J _4 . _ _ . , . S I _ 0 0 _ . . W W~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ zlt Q~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w _) A ly . .. -ok/e* I /I -T37S U~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~, A i wIrl.=~u l/k ; 11< ^ ( _=/"[rv<|_~ft;x~.!y' l iI d ITTS.,: i\ X!942 h~~~~~~~~~U17I | V r CS z.c. s A- stR : W-Wj [4 Q 1 1Aq A-, Di \^^ - |r la -gs y QeV1Ss -I~~~~~~~~c B H~~~~~~~~~~~~~~li- PG~~Mrt n.. k$; ,<tv s \~~~~~~~~~~i M I AI *i' ^6r~bx 4t -i .i 1 - '-- I I !''^^..f!,~~~~~~~ TSS , 'I.Y7 . 1," i' . , 4115 ;9*>ls1.'1, S iA C. z g * ~~~~~~~~~~r \L@ E: ............ iM :S 4L N. .......................i,13 wl c i-_ 7,1 I.-. 4N Frs %, r/IY 'o I a r! 1.all ll X'. ,1oJtSosep~lioe T Y.14-#o r I IMin I "R's l, II LI' l L [~~~~~ m 9R Q0 A \rW- Iri e 1R fF. rtt T2'.llO_'Z KT_1,, _e '. T-1 TA '4 2L a thw 51i a V Ib I A&/ 4;~v W <1 } _k':_' /'A/000. 1 1- .1W ,_. 'tf WWes r r 3 -. iP _? UJRA(LF)Y II' r-J iL V A~l/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ V.- -\ 71 -7 ';'__ 1011 *r.bs , 4 WL~ni P'A§ W- T/ IH \1 S. z;i40-A r 2ekk< in5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~opI t t L , L~~~~~n~~~~l; _ltrilie X~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t o~~~~~~~~lT l,4.> I'S. iW YRi ] MP4 > el \3e g 4d 1,JS -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t hn n~ .r- 3 +na~~~~~~~ Supervisor _ _ Asst. Supr. . Supt. of Const..........._ Law En'. Ofilcer.---.Asst. For . Jun. For. (T~ch.). ... Rc.- amcn E::.n ............. Tr. Trail EnB-r ........ __ FOREST SEtv.. 8*skioua Nati anT GRANS PASS, .v, . JAN 31 38 RRE C r- j f I -~ .. .......... _.. Chuef Clerk_ -....-.- I Pur. Agent _.._ --.. Whseman -.. Oper. Clerk ____._.._ Er r............ Clerk__ Boo :keeper .............. Auditor ........ _ Cost Acctant. . File Clerk-- _. / '-- ies i- ..al is requ::ed - . s;cn is rz:_.red A (a) Distorlosl Ifromt1f 8io1iyan 9oo1 Sat amuury n1o orepa 1m forest weorvisor, mat Pams Orwa Der airl Reference Is m Attaehe plea" to your letter of lAuary sixth. tfIM th historISal InfoiMlUo s4d shgest" sopts for realtag historloal si*s for the Ohet6o Distriot as requeates. In ebWalag this InforMtim, I tried to get history tbat has sot bew already recorded la bodm*. I fbu that then ls already a vathar cow le hIaory of CaTy oomty ls the book Mioear lstory of Coos aM oties" Omm by OrIl lebp, Risorims ieh my be of use to the legieml Offlie la ceqvig their *tand checkingon very truly ysares District ae 1 4 DERIVATION 0F NAJ.XIS 0OF TOPOGRA-IRICAI ?ZATURES Flo ras Crook It In interesting to know the origin of some of the names given by the white settlers, to various places in the county. In the northern part of the county, the stream which the Indians called QUA-TO-YA is now known as Floras Creek but In the enrly days it was always spelled Flores. The word Floras might lead us to believe that the etirl- settlers gave it that name on account of the Fr~ent display of flora there in the spring an' early suwrer; but early settle-s say it was given the name in honor of a ran by the name of Flores and the early spelline seems to bear that out. Sixes River Sixes River, it is said, was named by a party of adventurous prospectors, who in the early times worked their way along the coast and came to this stream at a point where there was a large number of natives on the opposite store. The Indians cried out to then, "Klahowya Sikhs", which means, "you are walcome, friends". 'low to us it would seer. there was nothing in that expression to cause them to name the river "Sixes" but when we remember that these n~en were travelling through a now country, a strange country said to be infested with savage natives, and when they were expecting to be ambushed at any time and to biuve to fi~ht for their lives, we can well see what a relief it was to be greeted" with those words "Klahowya Sikhs" - "WXelconme, friends:,, So these men named the river "Sixes", which means "Friends or 3'riendly RIiver". Cape Blanco South of the mo~uth of this river, there Is a great headland projecting into the ocean. In early tfrnes when the ambiti:~n of the young men was to ro uest, he had only to walk out on th~is headland, there he had reached a point as near the settin;- sun as his feet could carry him,--that iz the most westerly poirt of the 'United States, the place where the wiest ends. That is Cape Blanco, discovered and named by P'artin D'Ac7uilar on ~Tanuary 19, 1603. (1) Port Orford 4h. Orford, south of this headland was named b., Captain VanCouver on April 24, 1792 in honor of the Earl of Orford, his "such respected friend".(2) The town of Port Orford was later named by Captain William Tichenor,, who was one of the fifret navigators to sail a steam vessel ndorth of Sen Francisco. In 1. Walling 2. Wallina $t / comwand of the steamer "Sea Gull," he began to make trips frnm San Francisco to the Columbia River. Es often called in at nort Orford as he frequently found it necessary to seek s'-elter from the heavy northwest winds. Be thought it might be a good idea to locate here for the reason that Previous to this tinegreat gold discoveries had been made in what is now Josephine and Jackson counties.and Captain Tichenor was carrying large cuantities of freight from San Wr ncisco to Crescent City, from which Dl:ce it was peacked across the mountain trails to this new mininc country. C.f course,,the country back of "ort Orford was unexplored and no one knew how far back from the ocean it was to the mining districts. Ccptain Tichenor thought that by locating at Port Orford, he could get a road across to these mines that give him the key to a great deal of trade. So in the ye;r lfj41 he decided to locate there. lie made his first settlement on the 9th day of June, 1851, when he landed nine men on that ramous rock, which because of the historic figLt with the Indians that took place there has ever since been known as Battle Rock. Captain Tichenor filed on a donation land claim and afterwards founded the town which he named Orford after the name of the Barbor. Rumbug ?ountain Shortly after the founding o t.lis town, Captain Tichenor brought in a party of men to help him view out a trail to the mining districts. As he observed the coast line in sailing back and forth it appeared to him that south of 'ort Orford was the westerly terminus of a high rangc of mountains ridges extending far back to the interior so he instructed his men to climb to the summit of that mountain, which terminated in steep oliffs at the ocean's edge, and to follow the dividing ridges in an easterly direction. They followed his advice as far as going to the top of the mountain, but after at rting in an easterly direction, not being mountaineers, they soon got into the canyons and became lost. After wandering around seven days, they came back to Port Orford from the north. So disgusted were these men with the advice given them by Captain Tichenor that they called the mountain "Tichenor's Tumbug". It has been known by the name of "Humbug Yountain" ever since and Is an unmistakeable land mark to travellers along the Roosevelt Eighway. Brushes Creek There is a stream known as Brushes Creek, which makes a semeicrdle around the base of Humbug Mountain. Although history is silent in regard to the origin of the name, I feel and know that every old timer who travelled up and down the coast never questioned its right 1Y to be so named. I carried the mail be- tween Gold Beach and Port Orford about 45 years ago. (1) At that time there was not a bridge in Curry County. The trails along the coast were narrow and unimproved, following the ridges and often dropping down to creek beds. Vany of these trails were old elk trails, for in early times elk ran in bands of hundreds and in traveling they always followed each other in single file. The result was deep trails where they had trod and of course they broke out some of the brush as they went through. Indians and the pioneers who came afterward naturally followed these trails. The coast trail dropped down to the creek south of Fumbug Vaountain and one vas ret w~ith such a dense growth of brush that in Dlaces it was necessary to dismount and lead the horse. So we old timers never cuestioned the origin of the name "Brushes Creek" although it was first called "Brushy Creek". Mosel Creek The next stream south of Humbug fountain, named by the Indians Cosett-Henton, is ?.ussel Creek. It is not known just how it happened to be so named, but in early times the trail crossed the stream at its mouth near the site of the old Cosutt-Fenton Indian village, at which place there were great beds of russel shells, the deposit probably being hundreds of years old. Nobody knows hzw long the Indians opercted there, but there is no doubt but the early pioneers named the stream "Yussel Creek" on account of these great deposits of shells at its mouth. Suchre Creek The origin of the name "Euchre Creek" ia not definitely known. But when the white settlers questioned the Indians regarding the name of the stream and were told "Buquaches", it probably sounded the way the Indians pronounced it, enough like "Euchre" to remind them ot that word. Geisel Cemetery The Geisel Cemetery is a moct familiar landmark to Curry County residents. The old mining town of EIlizabeth at that place, so called by a merchant there in honor of his daughter. The Geisel family were living in this settlement when the Indian war broke out on the night of February 2?, 1856. On that memorable night the Indians rushed in on the family of John Geisel killing h1G and his three sons and.taking his wife and two daughters prisoners. They were carried away by the light of the fire that destroyed the home of their loved ones (1) 1. Walling & tancroft. Rogue River Early writers differ as to the name given to the river which was known to the Indiana as To-to-tu-na. Some claim that it was named "Rogue" because of the roguish disposition of the natives who inhabited its shores at that ime. This is likely a mistake for the reason that it was known by that name before the whites had any trouble with the Indians. Long before the coming of white settlers, a French n:vigator sailing along the coast, discovered the river, and on account of the muddy, reddish colored water flowing from it, discoloring the ocean for some distance out, he nwred it the River dcowe, which means Red River. It is very likely that sone of the first miners who came to this vicinity in 1853 had one or the old trench maps showing this as the 'iver Romps These men, probably being unfamiliar with the French lnpuape and with the sound of letters in that tongue, 7istook the word for Rogue. It would be a natural mistake and it seems, to dnte, the best explanstion of the origin of the word. Gold Beach A party of prospectors coming along the coast from California, discovered that the beaches for some distence north and south of the mouth of the Rogue River were extremely rich in gold so rich that it was possible to take out as high as ^25.00 to A50.00 per day to the man, even in the crude way they had for working the sand at that time and their inexperience in this tyne of ri n . In a short time after this discovery, in 1853, the news reached other settlementg and there was a great rush of miners from various other mining sections of the west. The settlement that immediately resulted from this activity was known as Gold Beach. Later on, when Captain Tichenor became proninent in the county Athe name was changed to Ellensburg in honor of his dauge'ter Kllen.1 There were but a few white women in the country at that time and those few were greatly hobored by the miners, so they readily accepted the change in the name. It was known as Ellensburg until sometime in the late 80's when the legislature was petitioned to change it again to the original nume since mail intended for Ellensburg, Washington was being sent to Ellensburg, Oregon and vice4versa. Pistol River In the year 1853, James Vace and his companion were fording a creek called by the IndiansiChetl-lssentan, when Vace lost his pistol in the stream. RFi companion named it Pistol River, and it has borne that name ever since. Whale's Head South of Pistol River is a point known as Whalets Bead. r- 4Aj It J4O is located in the edge of the ocean opposite the ranch owned by Mcr, Edilmar Coigrove. This peculiar rook has somewhat the-appearanoe of a Whale's head and is hollow on the ocean side and has a small opening in -the top, at certain stages of the tide,, when the incoming swells rush into the cavity, It forces a jet of water up through the hole In the top of the rock in an imitation of a whale spout ing.~ Chetco River The Chetco River has retained itis original name, so named by the Chetco tribe. It is one of the few Indian names that has survived. Windohuck River The Windchuck River, home of the Hasonta tribe, we think was named by early prospectors who experienced difficulty in crossing the stream in the small Indian canoes, due to the strong wind. They probably dubbed It "Windchuck" meaning Wind River or Windy. Water,, "chuck" being the Indian word for water. Hunt Rock There seems to be a'tendency in these days to change or do away with the old'pioneer names and to adopt new ones., Thistendency is due tor our ignorance or lack of interest in the history that led up to those names,, An instance of this kind is-well illustrated by the tendency to rename the famous rock -which stands facing the Rogue-River near the town of Wedderburn. This rock. hasi been talked of a great 'deal of late on account of.- its having b~Oenselected as the Abi~trnsnt for the north end of the proposed Roosevelt' Highway Blridge acr~s -the H~ogue. Of late, many refer to itas "Ewne Rock" but it has always been known as 71m Hunt Rock or Tm Rock for short. This name dates back to the very first settle-.,, ment of the section,.. turing the gold rush in 1.853 a mapa by the naw of .Tames M1. unt, came with other miners to the Rogue -River ,mining district, Be was more agriculturally inclined than the othera, so he located a land claim where the town of' Wedderbumn,-.--, now standsi. His was the very first land claim taken in this, section of the country. Tim Hunt as he was more familiarly known, fenced in a portion of the flat and raised a large garden,, furnish-~ Ing vegetables to the miners who were too busily engaged in..prospeoq-_ t ing and mining for gold to do any farming, Xim unt's impl ve Monts , that isp his buildings, and-the, principal part or his improvements, were located neaw wb6r* the Vedderburm Hotel Uow;' stands. When the W~ien war broke out~pa. tub nigh&V ebur k' 221, 1856 a dance arinprogres i~te tna old -iIing 3oai ~ '-,.-. * where the Gold Beach Packing Company's Cannery now stands. Tust before daylight, the news came that thirty or forty people had been killed around the To-to-tu-na villag, and that the Geisel family had been murderea. ieveryone immiedidatly fled to a fort about a mile up the coast from the mon~th or the river and with the others went Tim Hunt, Eare they were beseigad by the Indians,, who in great numbers occupied the bald hills back of the fort. Then suddeily the Indiana disappeared and for two or three days they were lnot or-en. Scouts were sent out but were una'-le to find any trace a , them, so fifteen rn:. volunteerea to go to 7im. Hunts Tiace for pntatoes, as the fo')d supply in the fort v-as Cetting low. The people forti~ied there 'mid .:, t a f iew cat-le and hor e ei the tort among which were a yoke of oxen. They hitched thel yoke of oxen to a sled, and those Fitteen men drove down the coc~st to a point where the Doyle place now stands. one wan was left on this zound as a s'-ntinel. The other inen went farther downm and lelot five meh with the tear, the other nine going up thc rizer after food. Halfway to their-destination the Indians'flocked down the hills in greet numibers, where they had been concealed and irmedietely killed the man left as sentinel on the mound. The other five wan saw that they were greatly outnvrbered but hopin.- that they would be able to fight their way back to the tort, fled to the beach: '~a-re they made a stand but they could not hold off the horde of enemies who swarmed d'own on them and ~-:illed every man. The nine iren who started uD the river decided to fight their way up over the open priarie in the directi-n of the tfort. ['here were several good marksmen amrong them. so they were able to nick off the Indian leaders at some distance and keit the= from crowding in. As soon as the shots were heerd, reinforcements arrived from the fort. Thus they fought their way back to the fort carrying two wounded men, one of whom was Jim Hunt. The other was Y.B3. Gregory, who afterward becaer County Judge of Curry County. loseph V.cVey was also among themi. He afterward b'pcame a prominient business mpan in this and Del Norte County. Jim 1!unt, being the first settler, - the first white settler any place in this part of' the country and this rock being on his claim, it wus natural for the miners to name it "Hunt "Oak" and so It has been known for many, many years until recently, some have spoken of it as Flume Rock. "le the piion~ers of this country, look upon the rock as a sort of wronuTrent to those men who fought there and to the man who made the very first location or 1 nd hare. We regard It as an index to our early history and w,~ protest that the name should be discarde,2 and n-med for one who came here many years later, who :;ros-'ered and became wealthy because the way was made safe for his enterprises by the sacrifice' and bloodshed of the pioneers. As Recounted by Fred S. M"ore, Curry County Pioneer laroh 28, 1927. ZT-_ ~(JI EAUNDRS CEM hiam from John Saundersearly settler,who put in b power mill on the creek and used the mill for sawing lumber end grinding GRIZZLY Mi1. Neamd after Mr*. Grizly,en early settler who hbd a cebin on the mountain. It had previously been called Elk btn. ,U;OLTA&' It is an Indian word meaning beautifultend ehould be spelled ,uosaten. Z--XTI-R CREEK So ua ed because large bands of it along the creek and it hunters paradise'. ms a MYERS and ieer would congregate CEEZ Nad after Mr. Myers who built a catin near its moUth and prospected for gold. hamed because the rock resembles a pyramid from all angles. This used to be culled Itud Aorse AFpuntaln because it was Liter it ws changed to Wildhorse. used to pasture horses there. CHD WN. Ned because there were numerou ehinese gold miners working near the base of the mountain. 001ZROO BUTTE Nlmd after George Colebrook,early settler. 2r_ . -// SKDOMMUSIt1 Burri' The miners Jort,built in 1858 was the first fort to be built by the white settlers Just north of the mouth of the Rogue River. The Indians thought this fort was a good idea and called It Skookumbouae hoeus" which mans "good or strong house*. They were so impressed with the fort that they built one for themselves on a mountain near the Rogue River approximately 15 miles from Its mouth. They named this mountain Skookuinhouse Butte. During the Indian ware of 1856 they used this Skookimhouse for prptection. The soldiers ambushed the Indians and drove then from *k~ their fort to the Rogue River where they took to their canoses Another reinforoezant of soldiers were-Tiding on a flat rock near the mouth of Lobster Creek and when the Indians came by in their canoes the soldiers killed them. L(O-- PORT OR-O0RD wLike a dwelling left to decay from which parents and have departed foreverPort Orford dream by the sea. children The winds yet croon among the cliffs Caves,and over its beautiful blue water the gulls still fly, iavingon their shadowy wings the spirit of those who fashioned for visions of what the years would bring to the city which uwksza sdz nest ed like a white bird against the kitt hills." The story of Port Orford goes back far beyond the discovery of the Columbia River by Captain Gray. It is blended with fiction with romance end with all the stern rintsxKkx realities of human life. Port Orford comes down to us almost from time'Xmemorial. a pioneer within itself. Its It is history was first brought to light over 300 years ago by Martin de Aguilar,,an old Sparish explorer who discovered the westerly head land near here and named it Cape Blanco. he was seeking for the worlds prize in the mystic straits of Anain which as far back as 1500,Corterealazax another Spanish navigator,clained to have discovered and passed through in his ship from one great ocean to another leading to India and which he named as Anain. Captain George Vancouveras late as 1791, sailed the seas on the an same search,and at the same time to grasp an English hold 4*ea upon Spanish possessions far to the Northwest. Vancouver in his exploration charted Port Orford harbor and named the Cape rmaxuz= nearby as Cape Orford in honor of his friend the Earl of Orford. For over 200 years the Straits of Anian still continued to be a 50 ystery.kgll above the 43rd degree of latitude the Padific Coast ws an undiscovered country through the 17th and 3/4 of the 18th centuries. But this section of the Oregon Coast and indeed from Cape Mendocenia to the Columbia River for another 60 years remained largely unexplored until 1849 when another navigator,and he an# American, appeared. This navigator was Captain William Tichenor. Larly on the morning of the 27th of March Captain Tichenor lowered away his whale boat,watered and provisioned with a full creoand pulled for the Cape,leaving orders with his mate to standby along the coast south one degree,and then heave to for him. The Captain reabhing the Cape pulled and sailed with whale boat along shore, examining carefully all indentations,bays,creeks and rivers. Enter- ing the Roadstead now called Port Orford,he landed and examined the place but apprehending the difficulty with numirous naked savages and their hostile appearanoehe decided to embark and headed down the coast., shiv ,o0 iJ Cl,7 cow fvlI On. i5 4 o wlets, or- e-ar' y- 77, e// , /a /' 4Ir A .;e 5- AA .- e Y xr/27 5, DATA Of IOCATICOi OF COAST INDIAN TRIM2 The my on the preceeding page shows the names Of the principal Indian tribes who owned the country at the time Of the cornIng of the first whitojpople. It also shows the approximte boun- daries of their holdings,the location of the principal Indian Villages and gives the Indian names of the mast important stream along lie coast. -ft we know Curry County now~it is bounded on the east by Josephine County,the dividing line being an Irregular line following ranges of mountains and stream. It Is bounded on the north by Coos County and a corner of Douglas Cunt,o the west by the Pacific Qosan) and on the south by the 42nd partllel of latitude. You who have traveled south into Del Norte 0CountyCalifornia,along the old road,have notioed about a quarter of a mile south of the Windchuck River,a monumnt about five feet high standing mest of the road. It has the word 'Oregon" painted on the north side and California' on the south side with "State Line* on the east and west aides. That monument stands on the 42nd.pazeallel of latitude which in the boundary between Oregon and California. In early times,a comfort- able house stood east of the road opposite this monument. The 42nd. parallel of latitude ran through the canter of this house and it was said the family slept in the state of California ,and cooked and, ate in the state of Oregon. The language or dialect of the different tri -es shown on the map differed considerably but it was similar enough to enable members of axe tribe to converse with meubers of other tribes. Therefore,w. nighit call it the language com;'.o to all of the Coast Indiana* You will notice that these Indian words are divided Into syllables with hyphens The Indian had a peculiar wa.. of dividing his words into between. syllables with a diet inct and abrupt pause between. The lunguage was made up of a combination of gutteralogru'iting~hissiflg and clucking sounds. *Those sounds were such that very few other than their own people could imitate them. For that reason.,early writers differed very much in the spe lling of th~e Indian words. *In making the map, the spelling udopted was used by ihon.JT.L..Parrieh,an early Indian agent *in making his reports to the goverumoit. It may be that his spelling would ao nearer represent tue actual pronunciation of the words by the Indiana tnan the writing or spelling of others,but It nathe advantabe at least of being official. Tr.* first Indian tribe ih the north~the %~uo-to-ms,was a large and powerful tribe that owned considerable territory north of what is now Curry CWounty. This extended from near the Nee-efti~l-co,or to us the Goquille.River~along the coast to a point south of Port Qrford,know as kiumbug Mountain. Their eastern boundary extended to the summit of the Coast Bangs ifoumtains, The Indians placed very little value upon the interior country except as a range for the thousands of elik and deer which grated an the valleys,prairie& and hills. You will notice thatithe settlements of the Indians were principally close to the ocean or near mouths of streams empty ing into the ocean. This was because the Indians acquired the greater part of their living from the seashore~thei~r principal diet being mussels, clam and crabs or other shell fish. gV In season they were able to r 5- catch saliaon and other fish out of the streame. These C~oast Indians were a very indolent class of people for the reason that N~ature had provided generously for their needs. They did not have to work; they did not even need look one day ahead for their food. went out,the tuble was set. When the tide This illustrated to us the necessity for activity ,the need for-usn to exercise our bodies and minds. not do so,we can not develop. If we do These Indians did not have to wort and for that reason,they were dwarfed in body and mind. The ,LU&-TOSMk trite of Indians had an impS'~Ivillage at or nebr t:-ie mouth or the stream, Qua-ta-ma,know to us as Plo~se C~?ek. They had another very large village near the mouth of the Sa-Quaai xtiver~to us,Bixes River~and a third at what in now Fort Orford. This tribe had two chiefs; the head chief fesided at the Se-quo-mi village and the sub-chief at the Port ~Arford Village. Of course there were other camps and settlements all along the coast,but we are mentioning only the principal ones. The next tribe south wa-s the 008UTT-H3NTE tribe. They owned the country from the southern boundary line of the ~Zus-to-umas,south to a point on the coast where there are three large rocks In the edge of the ooean,known to early settlers as Three Sisters Rocks. They had a village at the mouth of a stream that bore the nam.,Cossutt-iienten,leter named Mussel Creek., The village was on a low flat close to the ocean. The "irizona Inn now stands opposite its location. The claimed the country from the south boundary of the Cosutt-.aentens to a point where the early mining town of 'Elizabeth was located and where the GOisel Cemetery now is. The Equachees had a 55 village on the north aide near the mouth of the stream that bore their nA&me ,quachees ,now named Euchre Creek. The next tribe,the Yahshutes claimeid the land South to a prominent headland~ape Sebastian, which is locally k-gown an Hunter's Read;1ihe tribe had two large villages~one on the north side of the To-to-tu-na (R~ogue River) and the otner on a low fiat opposite the present site of the sunset Inn. The Yabeh~utes claimed only a short distance up the t~ogue, iiver,probably three miles. .South of the Yuhshutes was the MM-SSZ tribe whose territory extended south to a-rch xRock,the south boundary of the *ill Crook Ranch. ThLe Chet)l-XFsentans had a vi2Utige near the mouth of the stream known by their tribe nam- but which we named-Pistol iliver. The course of this river is greatly changed now. You who are familiar with that vicinity know that the river rune straight out almost directly into the ocean now. In early days and up to tne year of the great flood in 1890,the river swung around athigh point north of its *present mouth,then ran for half a mile along the foot of a bluff and emptied into the ocean near a large rock opposite the home of George Renry. The Chetl-Essentan village me located on the bluff directly in front of the denry home. The Wishtenaten tribe south of the Chetl-Essentans owned the country south 'to a point known as Whale's Heoad. -~ smell Tillage at the mouth of a stream thiat bore their name is shown on the map. The Chetco tribe had two lUrge villages at the mouth of the Chetco iiiver,one on the bluff on the north side close to the present site of Brookingsatbe other on the low flats on the south side of the 1'iver. another village six miles up the river was located on the site which in now known as the Eohnsen-Gardiner place.. The Chetcos' southern neighbors,tbe tribe of .9asonta,had two villages both near the mouth of the liasonta. River. The wraite man latter nid tais river lindebuok. Going back to the To-to-tu-na or Roague River,we rind other tribes located azlong its course. The To-to-tu-n~a tribe claimed six or seven miles of the river and had a village on the north side of it at the present Bagnell ferry landing. Farther up the river was the Mae-an-o- Tin tribe wnose village w~c located on the place now k~nown as the Claude Aalker Ranch. of the Coast Indians. The 6has-Te-.Koos-Tess was the most easterly tribe They bad a large village on the north side of tne river opposite the confluence of tne Illinois River at tbe place where -,gnesz now in situated. its Recounted by Fred S.Moore,Cu~rry County Pioneer. March 28,1927. 5"1 OMANGE IN SOCIAL LIl! There has been no radical changes in the social life of the people of Curry County from that of the original settlers. This in due to isolation of tnis part of Oregonz from the remainder of the State. the It was only reoently that the Roosevelt Highiway was completed and bridges built Laromb tue numerous rivers along the coast A., ~i~ch hsa opened this morst westerly part, of Ciregon to the public. 1trior to t:.e building of tncs Roosevelt Hlighway tthe people lived mucn. t~e same La their uncestors ,t~.kirag law and order in their owni hands and "might was right". There ~-rv still ~. number of direct descendents of the original settlers living in the counts and most of the present population can be tratced back to these original families. - - ---4- '-. --,-- - ------- -- M- --- - EARLT ROUTES OF TRAVEL The early routes of travel followed the original Indian and animal trails. The trails along the coast were narrow and *niuproved, following the ridges and often dropping down to creok beds. MAny of these trails were old elk trails for in early times the elk ran in bt--nds of hundreds and in traveling they always followed each other in single rile, The result was deep trails where they nad trod and they broke out some of the brush as they went through, Indians and pioneers who came after- ward naturally followed these trails. ib&ost of the travel was along the camst ae- ta~ere was little reason to travel inland as most of the villages were along the coast. The main route of travel inland was up the Rogue R~iver with the trail following along the south bank. The present R~oosevelt iiighuey follows tbe original county road in imany places. Travel wmu very limited th~roughout the county in the early days. 1Port Orford was the only town at which ocean going veetrels could land and at tVxis time it was the initial point of land travel up and down the coast. 5O~ DISCOVERT OF GOLD ON PORT ORFORD BU CK In the fall of 1852,Captain Tichenor discovered gold on the beach near Battle Rook on a creek which ran into the ocean 100 ft. East of the rock. lie nazind It Gold River. ±ie fixed up, a rocker and explained to his oldest daughter,Azina,how to work it and with her little brotber Jack and an Indian boy 'iwould go down on the beach after doing her ZAousework; she would shovel in the black sand,while theo boys would lift and wash the sand from the rocks too large for her to h~adle. The sandB were glittering with gold and this frail girl would rock out from 20 to 50 dollars per &~y. The news of the rich beach sands soon found its way out and in 1853,a new and better fate awaited the little settlement in the unexpected turn of fortune in its i4ncertain destiny. Gold was dip.-. covered in the beach sands for 30 miles up and down the shore. in the spriAng of 1854,Port Orford was becoming a real city, but without law and order and soon the vigilantles wore organized and a whipping post erected at Fort Point. The Pegtona house,Columbus Hotel, Columbia Hotel, The Roost, Ocean House, and the Rough and Ready started In 1853. did not begin to a~enaeteu ~Ti0 gold seekers. *There ball, a show house, These hotels was a dance bix saloons, bowling alley,six stores,two meat muirkets,China laundry,two shoe shops,'an barber shop which had little to do as most of the mn let their whiskers and bair grow. The Whiskey Run A-1max mines north of the mouth of the Coquille were very rich and all these miners The gold supply seemed unexhaustablo spent separating the gold from the sand. traded at Port, Urford. . Many evenings were This was done by putting *the &and in the pans into the oven to dry and then blowing away the black sand and leaving the gold dust. lost. In this careless way much was A't least ten million dollars in gold dust was taken out along tne beach from Gold Bieach to Whiskey Run. In the year 1859,Port Orford was no longer the live place with its many people and places of amusement. began to decline and so~n it was remaining. Ever since 18,56 it practically destroved,only 3 families DATA ON INDIUN TRIBES AT PORT ORFORD The name of the Tribe was %guah-To-Mah. Han-Hult-i-Tan the chief had his home at Sixes,a d Tag-on-Ecia was the sub-chief at Port Orford. This band claimed the country between the summit of the south boundaries of the Ma-So-iab (mouth of the Coquille River) to Humbug Mtn. where the la-ds of the Coselt-.ientens commenced. There were living at Port Orford in 1852,103 men 93 women,51 male children, No one sickone blind,caused from the Battle of 56 female children. Battle Roe}. only weapons were the bow and They had no guns-theO arrow and large knives made from flint. Their cooking was done by roasting before the fire or in pots,made airtight with grass and heated with stoneso7 Fish,snell food, acorns, elk a d deer meat were their principal source of subsistence. Each family had 3 elk pits.> In their ears and nosn they had small ornaments of bones and tied in a club behind. Their hair was long and black They were dressed in garments made principally of skins of otter, bear, deer and fox.-The women aoxxx wove a mat of grass or bark split into threads and fastened around their knees. hips m hanging down to their Most of the children were naked . The Indians at this time were in a primitive condition. Their homes were constructed by excavating a hole in the ground 12 to 16 ft square and four or five ft.deep inside of which puncheons or split stuff were set upright six or eight feet high. X Upon the top of these boards or thatches the roof was placed. the gable end a round hole was made sufficiently large for the -4--t entrance of one person. The descent was made by passing down a pole upon whioh rude notches were out for steps. warm and smoky. q The houses were generally fl1DIAN WARS TheAliogue River Indian war occurred in 1856. Every horn on tile atogu. Liver below Big Bend,sixty in all, -u.e'e burned and 26 persons killed. Ttere were 31 victims of this hnd four sons. in55acke including 3omn Geisel Cha~rles ioster otrried the news to Fort (%.rford and sent t, wbzJle boat down 2zx the coast to open coinunication with the block house, drowned. This boat was overturned ia the surf and the six mn Their bodies were out to pieces by the Indiazxs who were watching their efforts. Pioneer Hiistory of Coos a~nd Curry Counties, Oregon. Orville Dodge,Iiistorian Sslem,-oregon. Capitol Printing q C-O. 18S98 vRL! The first LII1MP2-RrOG TNDTSTSRT stuw mill arrived at Port Crford on the schooner loan Diego" in 1854, Tne ocers of the mill were Neefus and L.B. Tiobenor. mill gave employment to 25 tmnghud a capacity of This first 5000 ft. s.L. every ten nours. ligtrters Lnd orought The lumber was loaded on vessels by 125.00 per thousand at San FrF-nciseo. .. illieum S. 8insor of honored pioneer name was the mechanical prepaire manager there and was azong those to, rear this first shipment to market. it went trere under t. e name be g.:ve itas Ceddar,and by tnis name it is still known to the workd. rort Orford k plank road was uumx made to the mills cad was covered with sawdust. toena of Fercheon horses easily drew the tuuz txese roads and dov The great tremendous loads over to the beach every few hou~rs. F INFOMAT ION ON EARLT Sn'rTLMIKR The following inforimtion was obtained from Mr. X.IL. Bogardus of Gold Beaoh,~regon. Air. Bogardus has mide a hobby of collecting historical information,especially concerning the town of Port Z)rford. noe has copies of memy of t~ae ori~~inal papers concerning the establishing of the town of kort O'rford of which I have copied a few that relate the early history. ST;~TENENT_ OF CYRUJS HEDBUNi.. I-.tAte of ~)regon Bs County of Douglas) 'tin this 24th day of October personally appeared Cyrus :.edden, who being duly sworn according to laiw by me,the undersigned 1notary Public In and for the State taforessid,deposes and says that he is personally acquainted with William Tichenor,of the county of Curry and state aforesaid; that the said William Tichenor did,on or about the 4tha or 5th day of Junae,18.51,employ him,together with nine others, to go to the plaoe which is now called Port Orford, in this State,for tthe purpose of making a permanent settlement for himself and family, and landed at the place aforesaid on the ninth(9th). of the sam month. 1 continued with xW companions at the plane aforesaid until the night of the eleventh (~.lth) of the same month,when we were compelled to abandon the same place on account of the Indians, whom we were compelled to fight until we abandoned tne place. '0e all went through the mountains into tile settlements and arrived at Port land in th~j# GCO State about the 20th day of July the saw year. On or about the first day of *'ugust we agin 1.ft Portland with Capt.Willian Tichenor to return to the &am place, at which we arrived at the saw place and continued until the middle of bapteuber,when one half of our Party were killed by the Indiana. Gu&ptain Tichenor wontinued to occupy and possess the sam claim continuously from the first of out, landing to this time,with the exception of' the nine aiforesaid. Hie brought his family to the same place on or ubout the middle of liay of the following yeer, and has occupied the same plhce with himself aand family from the first landing to the present time,and that he has always declared it his home. Bnd residence from the first of his going there until the present tim;.. and at the same place his family are residing, I an in no way interested In his land claim and do know that he la the only one who is entitled to the said land claim known as Port Orford. Cyrus Haddon Subscribed and sworn to before me this 24th day of October, A.D, 1861,at Hosebuzg 9 Orer-on. In witness whereof I ha-we here-unto set zW hand and seal of office the day and year first above written. S .7.Ctiadwick,, biotary Public for Oregon. Residence Douglas County,Oregon. July 27,1857. John I.Sutton, R.W.Dunbar,R.H.Mmith and H.B.Tichenor recite: In 1851 Tichanor,Saith and Hubbard,as a company~sent 82 men to Port Orford,laid out a toum,began selling lots,and established Port Orford. About three years since William Tichenor deeded his house hand lot to H.B.Tichenor and Z.Furman Neefus. T"here in upon the land about 60 buildings,of which one is a sawmill that cost about 416,000.00,3 hotels,8 stores,2 saloons,l bell alley and about 14 buildings belonging to the United States garrison. of entry,and is the county seat. now a post toun~port First building erected in town was a store ( except tne Block Houses). Within the bounds of the land an claimed by William Tichenor in mining ground that has paid as high as 450.00 per day to the men and has been worked every year for the last four years. M~RA~CT From the general description of T.338 R.15d.surveyed by Daniel Murphy in 1857: The toun of Port Orford, the county seat of Curry county, is situated near the northern boundary, in Sections 4 and 5. It contains about 28 houses and a populat ion of about 18. There are 4 dry goods and grocert storesz* 1 drug-store, 1 hotel~l billiard saloon and post office and one dram shop. The town has very little trade, being solely dependent on the gold mines distant about 27 miles in a NE.direction. The 'United States mail steamer touches here semi- monthly for the maile, when the weather is favorable. During the prevalence of the south and southeast winds she can't stop. The United States Military Garrison adjoins the town on the west but is now abandoned. ------------- S EISTOR! OF Tz-E SAIMON4 CM!ING IND!TRY' The business of canning salmon on the Pacific coast was begun in the spring of 1864 at the town of IashingtonYolo County California by the firm of Eapgood,liume, & Co. Hearing that salmon of a fine quality were very plentiful at the Rogue RiverMr. R.D.Iiume purchased a location end built a can- nery there the latter part or 18'76 and in the spring of 1877. Much to his surprise he packed only 3197 cases which was all that could be obtained by the utmost exert ion,which proved that the reports, except as to quality,were echoes of the past. As soon has Mr. Hume realized how few salmon the stream offered he began operations toward stocking the stream. Ilia first efforts were disappointing but by constant experimenting he perfected a method of successfully prophgating the salmon, he is one of the early pioneers in this field and should be credited for the work he has done. R~eference-- .5almon of the Pacific Coast by R.D.iiume- 7 6 1893. THE BATTLE OF BATTIZ ROCK This is the true history of the battle of Battle Rock as condensed from Mr. Tichenors story. "On the first day of June 1851,Captain Tichenor and his cousin,Syrus tiedden,xzwnksd secured eight volunteers to establish Port Orford. &- good supply or arma,auinnition and provisions were purchased at Portland and the voyagers set out. The steamer "Sea Gull" left Astoria,Oregon,on the evening of June 6th 1851 and on the morning Of June 9th were landed on the beach at Port Orford,between what is Fort Point. now known as Battle Rock and There were but few Indians in sight and they appeared friendly but by their actions the men could see that they did not like to have them there. 8aptain Tichenor had a ships cannon placed on the rock. The men were then placed on the rock and Captain Tichenor sailed for 'an Francisco planning to return in about 14 days and bring sup- * plies,arms and more men to aid him in his enterprise of establishing a colony. As soon as the "Sea Gull* departed,five Indians came down to the beach making signs to speak. away and not come back. be gone in 14 days. The Indiana told the men they must go The men informed the Indians that they would 4hen the "Sea Gull" did not return,having been delayed in San Prancisco,the Indiana became impatient with the whites not departing and attacked them. Several battles ensued with many Indians being killed and the white men wounded but they finally , V"i 1. / / escaped off the rock and after suffering almost unbelievable hardships they finally reached the mouth of the Umzpqua River where tey were Lgain with white mn afd safety. oI, ; I,,, ;V Z- 72 -172 | St. Sr I Sut c f _ _ swI - - orr't) 1 O\- ',- C. A S (PI) .-.. . .... wistoriomi wnormation ~ COWALLIS V0 CMCMNT WMT - 0LVMA tCALVOMItA In 11MS Ths mterial hao been preped as a review of Bulletin 'go. 6 of a miueogzaphed series of brief innumaripts published by the 'Works Progroes Administration vey of Oregon. of Oregon in their County and Loeal Ristorioal Resords Surw The original aceount was written In 1901 by Willi. S, Poeuddon as a *rminisoencs of his trit from Corvallis to Oresoent City, Califoraia, mud return In the spring of 1qP4. e haed been retained to defend Do"r Cushin, ameused of murous assault, for a fee of ftSO which an he desoribed It semed "a veritable Cod sear. the ftist publiention of this aooount. Te WPA fulletln ws Mr. Ve6addon loft Corvallis-on Varah 1? travelling from Corvallis to Albany on the stagelne end from there to Roseburg on the Oregon to Califtonis RR. R ie ws on his wy to Crescent Oity to defend Dora Oushma aesused of assualt. Roseburg _s than the terminus of the railroad. Reeause of the fear of swollen streas. In the eoast country sad the Impassable eonditions of mountain roads Vef'detn deoidedto "out out' the Drain, Soottoburg, and Wapire City route and take his chances by stage from Rlosebur to Jump-off-Joe and across country for the WorthWest of Oalifornia, Sip Rszford, en mwle of Dors Cuehman, Joined young loner 's at Roseburg mud on the evening of March 19 they took the stop for " 3 -m off-Joe"(approximately uaers Merlin to now located) over "bottomless" roads, 1oer the road trned tourd Applegate, via .irbyville, Illinois River, Sailor Diggings end to Osskeyts'FordIng on Smith River. This fordIag he listed as sewn miles from Oomners(now the town of Smith River) and frrm ihere 16 miles to Cresoent City. Fram Sailor mggings to the fording he gives the route as a mountainous serpentine way known as the "Old Crescent City Wrall. This i believed to be that is now called the Old 0squst TfaIl over ltlk Camp ridge. * Oaquase Il 7t aReninisceae" - a usladden started the trip from 7upmoffJoeo afoot but soon gave this up ad purchased a hots. on which he sade the balanoe of his journey. Es recounts he s littlo of interest f the tl. he crossed the Pogue River until be reached Sailor Diggings, He saw an occasional jaekrabbit and a few doer at a long distance but remarks, "the great abundance of fish In the different strem seemad indeed strange and the amber thersof semd eountless" 'Upon reaching Marette an the Oregon .18d of the mountain road leading to Crescent ity the am ware Infomd It msu ipossible to travel the mountain road because the cutos w filled with 1 to g0 feet of snow. Beoause of the wollen stra at Marlette thesmn were forced to %backtreck five miles to an old bridge and there to take the "Old crescent Trail"" "40 miles' to "Oskey'e Tording" following the tracks of two mls* which had md. the only previous trip over ts trail that winter. The mn found a cabin about 20 niles out in Which there was horseAfter feading the horsea the m pushed on to a greasers camp where they spent the night. The greaserwas in winter quarters with a paoktrain rfed. of mules. The next morning L'l'adden and his companion pushed on to Oaskey's Ford *wichthey readhe& about 10 An. There they found instead of a ford a "verltable toynt" over whloh they wae? ferried by the greaser operator who charged them one dollar each,.(The author relates that It ws only seven miles to Ooner but this distance sem far short of the road distance to the toun of fith River) The ferrymmn told the men that by going over Hardscrabble Mountain instead of following the river they eould out off at least three mile.* ( This route my be sommhat th, osa as that of the present Low 1)ivide Trail, at least for a portlon of the way) This shortcut e taken. but the mno lost the trail In heavy sum and wr forced to spend the night In an old cabin. In the Morning they retraoed their way to Gaskey's where they had an "%loea A.dinner" They mwre then again ferried to the North side of the river and =de their way to the Orners by following elosely along the river bank. On this trip they found a giant redwood 42 feet in dlreumforenee and therefore fourteen feet In diamter,- a grand tre, without limbs for forty or ore feet from the grond*. When KoFedden arrived at Corners he found that his job in crescent City was asly an imposible one i he followed the usual methods of 6fence, Dora Cushmens brother 2i11 had recently been convicted or lareny mad had trieked the Sheriff$ UClelilmaand skipped the country with a squaw. Dora himself had; been in several scrapes which his father had gotten him out of but thli t ,had used a revolver on a Bill White in a fuss growing out of a poker pus at the Corners. Public opinion was thus against Dora so YcFadden decided "Log Ball" was his only recourse. * The author uses both " Old crescent" mad Tld Crescent City Trail" "Reminiscenoe" - 3 Thie plan worked out for freeing Dora was to got the sheriff to allow Dora to attend a meting of citizems at the Del Norte Hotel called to "resolute" the govezuent to zemove at once the Crescent City, Smiath River and Lagoon Indiana to the Humbolt Indian Reservation, Dora was to clip out fra this meting and stake his way to the "Rac. ?rack""four miles out". from there to go the "Redwood" route to $SM-th River, His grandfather, W.Rezford, had a place on the edge of Smith River Valley and on the edge zf & high hill. Bask of this placc. ranged the hills along which ran a trall. About two miles from Rezxfoz'd~a on this trail was a point uhi oh cmeanded a view of the trail toward the ocean, Dora was to make his way to this point which would be his first resting place and to uhi oh blankets and food would be brought. Thie plan worked out as contemplated and after spending two days at the resting point Dor" worked his way on into Oregon, Moladden met him at another Uncles' by the name of Ross on the Winchuck and helped him got started on Worth, going as far with him as the Chetoo River, McFadden next defended an Indian at Crescent City who was In jail for shooting one "Britches, a Clamath". He was successful in this defence but attributes his victory not so much to his tact and display of oratory as to the "uty' regard of the case as minor and their desire to drink bad whiskey over the bar Oat A~m Murphy's expense". Tim Murpby was a member of the California Legisleture from Del Norte county and as our writer describes him "their beau ideal of Ood-given manhood", As the schooner bearing Ti* caus to Crescent City Just as the Indian's trial was ending the speed with which the jury decided the case is also attributed to their desire to learn the latest happenings at San Franiscao end Sacramento direct from Tim, An additional factor in the defence of the Indian was the disfavor which the jury composed of at least five Irishmen had for the "Mean, overbearing" redhead Prosecuting Attorney,, Bill Savell, "Five hundred years of Ibglish oppression of the Irish had to be avenged and which in this case meant to got Bill Savell'. In describing his trips from Corners to Crescent City Moctdden told of throe available routes I the Fort 7ones(believed to be by Ilk Valley and old Port Tones) the flsdwood(likely by Fort Dick and near the present Coast Highway route) and the Sand Hill way along the ocean. on his first 1krip he teak the Sand Hill way and recounts of finding miles of lagoons (now Lake Earl) on which were winnuserable ducksl, geese and other web-footed fowls". Other residents of Crescent City and Del Worte County were mentioned In the story, Macon)the deputy sheriff who was also editor-in-chief of the "Del Norte something-or-other* and drew the wrath of Yofadden when he devoted "about half a eoluun In his paper to a write-up on how Sheriff McClellan had been victimixed by a young "webfoot* lawyer In the escape of Dora Cushman Bes also mentioned an Irishman by the name of Mdfamaza, believed to btl-noestar of the many M~a~aras in the county. With the trial of *Glassy-eye-Bob~ths Indian at an end McFadden received with duW ceremony one hundred an fifty-cent pieces, or S60.00 from the Indiana of Bob's tribe. He then decided It was time to start on his return Jouney and on April 13 left the Corners for Corvallis. return trip was made with less happenings than the first trip. if`-7,3- noe One night "Reuinescanoe --. 4 - was spent beside a tree before he reached the greaser %ho was wintering the pack train. The balance of the trip was usad without say =jor adventure. In concluding the narrative McFadden wrote: 'Vy leaflet as a trail blazer for a neriod of five brief weeks I. thus hastily recorded In load pencil. For three evenings before the warmth of a November fire of 1908!1 have been gazing backward more than thirty-four' years,, and vihile the record to somewhat di~ed by time, a*such of It as remains In tangible form you now have. It to only contributed as a reuiniscence of the past, supposing that come one of you. my sixz boys, and Elle1n or Tulia might, In some quiet hour, when the frosts have thinned your looksaCare to follow these lines. The pleasure on my part In complying witb your request is fully compensaaed to for the short time Imposed in recording it. So my s~ory is now ended.* Submitted by: VMER a, LOWEID District Mauger iI zUSr OF TH Sam= ber 9. *me. UTIUS The presA" Slsyo latimi Forest dates bak to Septow lMOOS as for as mW uritttm reserd In the Inpervisar's win ohs Cb t*i date &XILrman, them cen miasliom of the General Lend Of iIt7dirtd Spe8alh Agent Bender to w e nd report an the watershed of the South Fork of th Coquille, 1iver and ighbring tributaries of the Rogu nd qUam Rivers. Sender 9 mho was familiar with the eowntryp *made the report witbout einstiuou sad remdgd witbrml en Oober 31, 108, of the area mlesedb blue lime an ImV No. 1. atted This report vs subtted to the Direcotr of the Goeloical B r for L onuidletio mad an )NW 2, 199, he returnd the repor with the . Adan tha it be approvwd and teit ali at the li south of the od area to the State line be Isoluded. This was then ealied wThe Proposed Rague River Poreot Reserve' O ealy 23, 1099, Specali Agewt L* Miller us irected to make an xInation md report an t propoed reserve Sn sa t oe Oregen. and e Deeber 16, 1900 e suitted a favorabi. Ixe r eevvrizng about eiutthe area aeame by the U*S.GoS. Again# afte reviswing ft repart# the Direstair reaseneded e Oetddw 30* 1901, that AU of the lands tum1n *mmisidee be ditbdram _. O uy 23. 1901, la a press Intwisw stated bo desire to e"o the reserv, o Herm agai Bedj hwevw* Kera soen afterwards became invoved La Polities while rumihu for Congress mand joined the IowersM ih In Coo., COurry. and eoesepbim eowatise spainet the w4,h&t'in1-n east, he beme an' atIt straoelt m esmdo.e M to this pressre, an adverse report was nade to th Seerwtmay of Interlor an January II,, 190g.. and the ease us oloe* Anst who oneimserd the re-opening of the matte Ls ma* amad elsee La the old Moo. but vpon the rea Bps" 1903, uw Agent mhd aof _S41R~ in ere D. s udti D. LIllI, imately the ato cn April 4 sn atea as diskiyow outional Parest In Oregos ws md. The teep)d der of' Vt'tdraWelwa maes by Commssimer Rielarda i"N'Waslmcton an April 29., 1903, and uwas roosoved by, the iser and ftoeivw of the Roseburg Land Offio. the next dq. This us the beginxaing of iat ms later to beem the Biskiyou NUAwiml ?*-st. 11 Appsamatel 1,2l2,020 aores we affooted by the ordr, ains than s titaary In the 81ikiyou ublab took In m ramwwly suggested. FeM the reeards it is found that a mem Com, probaby a Bpeoiul Aent of the Lm"d Oto, by the name made quite a detailed eaination, and favorable report an the 0roqMY prior to the date aresaw- tme or other duiwx the o at withdrawal or shortlyatew d. In site o all goppoaition the _itbftvwl beam pae ~43 the PresIns psoolamation creatiM the Forest ~t , wuler date at Narob 2, 1907. Uwe. land waq, a4ded an the north by~withdrevin an tDeoenbw north and st tchips 17, 1906, wbiio mbraced six or so. of Fort Orford and was proposed an the Coquille Forest Reserves It wa jadoinistered by the 81i*you as long as It mm In existThis later addition was xoutly eliminated by 19214 wie o, 15.000 wes er opened to mit7. h. 1907. the tera mse dropped and 'National Forest' adopted. y the Act of Congress on Haish Rese: .' "crest The addition aud elimation of a Mreet umber of aras,, both large ad m1, took plase fran 1909 to "a late as 199 and waild wake a lalety surwry to emmrate& so only the mmr or iportant awn vill be considered. The first oms to gotlo. with the reoaowndtio of Forest MAsistan Jho* D. Outre, that the area (shdmnan Map , No. 1 ia green lines) be added to the Klmth Tatial ForestP and he further resonded that the whole ara mm known as the Gaquot Ranger Distriot be transferred to aftinistration %Vthe SiSkIyOU. The date of withdrawal Is not disclosed by the tiles. U* a xap in sho wdth the se west boundary as in nw In *tfeot was amended or so It Is presumed that Guthrie's ea that be Izluied only the publio la which may he resulted in the irregular west boundary. Considerable ohu ges took plaoe om the north end of the Other ohanes weo made, n Rough Forest. as Is stated abov and Ready reeko The first change in etatus of Importance was the withdrwal from ,ntry 1w ell public land law ot four sections surrodidiC the Oregon Caves. On Auust 3, 1907, Superviso Anderson requested innediatos temorary withdrawal to prevent xineral entry and seat several =m to ney sad poet the bua rie. The withdrawal was =Ld. on August 12v 1907, and after further dimnds wr mad* by the Oregon State Conservation Can' mis^ion, the President oreated the Oregon Caves National Jam at by proclamation of July 10. 1909. On October . 190, R*srt AtDLu, tf. B. 8.et SHrylee amvwwq Im gmvd, Ammtte4 a reot ad up trm his sur-v wbieh outlne tbobmdmle a they nw are* Thi et the ara dam from the fow' section that it teuwrly eactaime to 480 acros. The area rooned undr the jmrisdiatici of the Foret Brvioe aIl 193o4 ube of the ?agBorVIo, It VWa tezs d to the admintration Pwtbw Iormation reodiwd ks olewsl the drigl. of the Coquille Forest Dexem as oulimad in vi*le bx4Ws an IWV lo. 1 of this repe. Moet of the eliziuntims we aoommtcd tor, butther area In Towwddp 9 g5. we others yet to disolose, as th Rea 13 'g The CoqUO Satimal Fiest Ms Unde the saw £-. WiU arriwl of Aeting Supe-wiau an as the 5iskyo n u3. J. Anderson iu savber 1906 to July 1, 190. wh the tw o units bo umvtaed by proolatic of the 1roulamnt, The liMp No. bomdwyof the obined NAtimi forst La shwn portion of the Iawth A olw this repr. o 2 Nationa Forest man also i1w e4 In this proolomt inn A najor ohmge Lu the bUaau ourred In // *he vas traam th Gasquet Diatiot of the jasmt National rrst e boundarle" I=osf the Sskyoi to the nded by Jdl De e about th. sam as reoo of this ari Oubrie In 1907, Tbe Forest derives its name from the siskiyou ljountal" whiah It largely covers. The word SiskiyoU (1) la of doubtful origin, there being. several beliefr as to it deriatiton. One eag tkat while eLoeod, an employee of the coonly aosepted Rudsom Day Company.wa orossing this range of mountains In 183 he lost a number If his horses during a mow stem. one mg a re Indiaa Is bob-talled running horge and as there were CiP event ooeurrse the where pase mountainous the gave they Party the the Neof ?he Pass of the 8isklyou, Sisloul boein Orea for Walling'. History of JZksuon, Xosopi1nes Cooe, '40ob-tailed-hore*. arppi gives an aceount of 1to counties curry and DouSUo mmo also 8iskiyou Callfornia. *ortbern in exploration and bob-tailed horse in the Chinook Jargon. b Another belief to that Frenoh Canadian fteppero called the mUatains' Si GailouX from six peaks that eould been see fim the stones. "six oalfilio= gsix 1ttbs words Old Calif` o7,Aprleaus. ued bythe therefore gadeally boae'a Also it It thought that Slklcyou ia a corruption of a local I Indian word for mountains. n KAMLY AWIUTATION (1906-1913) For the period frm Neovber 1906 to the end of 1913, onl a mii t of lafwtion Is a1ilabie, whieb Is em twined ia ta. dim meries of a few of the old ranu6s and what La left @f the old records. Rever wa fInd tht No. J. Anderm, Reager frm the &tIQUI Forest (mt. Hod) arrivd in Oranti Pasasm Aoting 8Erviaw In Nawm8w 1906 and set up ma office In the old Con Buildln& About the firot af the yvee 190.7 fth . Outbrie was assigned as DepA7 Suprvlso ii Vs Andersn#, asm of U. Jo. Andwrso ma the first clerk. (It Is not 1 Oregn it he mas under farm appointmen.) About the first of April 1907, MelvIn No Lomiss GesP rociridgo, Fred NwriU, and ¢. 0. 0iddinp ware apointed Forest Ouaidso In Amat Jo P. W. itt me added to tS for". and it to l1bely that W. Jo 3Jm. 'No B. 91lbwy, E4*Irt Dean and -. m thbrs rowivd thefr f I about this tum. Lewis was acuired ir. 19f with the additfio of the dthb River ision or t m&*th fttimma Forest (Gaequat Qidtrlot;)S 'r(A r John B. Oribble was appointd in Agust of In 1908 e bavsevideueoft Bemy Z. Hoor and Nelson F. Usodtff working an the Forest as Forest Assistarts. in 1909. o. L. *W and HaW Bo HIIIU received appointsants but resiped a yew or so later. Warre wiarne Coopw# frcm the old OrXon tami Forest, mm detailed for a whil to make a survy of the trall syvtm. In the spring of 1909 the Forest wa divided into ra=r distrit, NLw' I 2 5 (6 med mad Ne Location of' s lOrlbblo Rm~er ftatio )l1 :r(1910) Shasta Costa 38. J. P. DtIitt Rend (i Btao uwthl 1917) It S le Oali.. Choto = w. B. e Pace cree d as follmst BLA.W In Port Orford A4 m .. . ULeIS . Par. Crook ?.* S. Iestmoare Re 8. Gasque ft*t PFork I. S. (hAw _** 5rtmsfeed to ViMyou I 1911 Other sm io worked an the Forest durUX the years 19081913 as Forest Guards and -RAxgerx wasc costelloes itu - , .7.JoJes A. W. Leis VoLmin, 'N. Fe Ramte Charlie inwls, riezm i'Mraoes Hesied rttrook, mod Everett E. Garphom* 5. Blanksnsbip is as Dog 047or on hmstma entry murvy work. Joan asC. J. Conoverw s assigned as a ?oreut Assistant duwing this period Allen U6 Hodgeon suoo._ded Outbwio as Deputy Supe8vior, cmd Ur'h L. Upsas sueeedod H. Vemon Anderson as olorke ,.~ I_. _ Vl R Le ftpervis' Anderson res5Vn*d 1910 and as. sueoeeded by ra., from lRegSmn5. 7"m mm trsfastued to the Olymipc about UldrxmeC of 1912 and wan sweeeded by T. r. M"aduff, who had gas tcc the Siskiyou to the old Bantia Nutiam Forest. 1inno The work durLM 1907 eanted mainly of fi.ld tious ad reports co tizber and .to* ola3.e, xazz of which ur. frwandu t. B Upri Andro and Rangers Milbuzy ad Oribble reeeved spocial aomendatiom frai the Forester for fwreting vt attempts to dofravd the Dovermt. 8cm June 11 clad. vak ms dm an well an bosdary and addnIstratiws site surys. About 1912 a larre zwdasr ,of homestead entry xwyg and settil'St oMaes berz to oause work. Considerable Uoxwary was sur ed in 1908. A. few d=i timber sale wr md* in 1910 to zas:ng co- panics. Considerale time aft the ru~ers mm spmt cc btal 0astructian and uaintcziaws, and an bu.11dIMn headquarters srtationso only 33 miles of telephone hUe wes eranatruod prior to 1913s whn 123 ile, Vere put U. Dring the suar xmthsp fis. uupression and preodX a took 1lt of the Forest offlreeI ttme. A suaary of *osts of a&&d istration and protection at the Parests per aore, for the years 1908 to 1913 inclusive, as i* Civen in the January 1M Lai w of the SIs1ddyou dulletla Is as tfolaw a 190 $0.0187 1911 0*0178 199 0.016 1922 0.22 L910 0.01 1913 0.0215 The oost of adndnistratin alome in 1913 was $0,0027, and the oest of protection alone wu *0.0061. sligtly below the Regional aeraCe for that year. w 5i,, :2Tu * - 5§eMi 4 pi 4. e3. l *" Apo eSol ~4 Mlbw7 7..t#.~ use .. 4 o * - _ SOC aww ~~~~~~~~l~ D@ dta&1. AS Assistantsduu mivv .m w KLco ftlim m4 was. r"M8 us befokut1%mamiJago.3gw the as 3bl WOU ~~~~4 uu th rw *st b to t-6Simi* tk am* w~U l~~~~666 -dIwodomu sf._ b o ja_ of;t" b u -0~~ ~~ Pox akvw *wZl>it4y tandti^8 _ w. 1~~ 1913, ap MA >.mu-*,-#* is. vas. . .o. 3tO p g - Oontiud -1911 A Znmu stove for tril VWe and gwarda Ms tried out by lner Witt for the first ti.. an the Siskiyouo 13 18 x 20 iSzew Pzd o t S100. eonstruted am the A sumwy of pefmnont iqravmm*s Pcreut to June 50. i_". a ±^'o10s L'urinc Misal Yfear l91l4 Trails Total to Juno30. 19i m!iles) 3.*5D 1 57*50 o.) 0 0 (No,) (No,) 0 (miles) go (1o) 0 Bridceas 201*50 2 M.) ToeLines Barm Other Bldg1. FOces Water Dev. 10 a 21 139W 3 Settlmact Cases F.T. 1911 60 No. Total to June 30a 1924 go. 3m No. 23 SO,,1 Listed 10.* 424 'her"e 2.299 7, No. xtoo ser-ton No* 18-f Telephon lines wre bwii built to big Ft, tr, m Zeft to foaol Peak, a trail and lie to Ship MotaN and the Chetee line extendd a-e Lopg Ri6oe A *hke_ shelte ws ULt an buid 131b by the loot at a *oet of 25% for nails* The Sq. CreelRook Creek section of th Coquille River Trail was .mristdby fommu Rager 1. Do Hilli udl sontaot* A home md bm wmm eoastructed at Fee Gourd Station duwrI the r and tl tm 1v.r saved at a lewd plow 8ine. nui Leutboyp lom*8 submitted an idea tor' a be'ush-becke Fim During the fie seaon the follawing anush of fire gords were hireds 2 Pot Orford Distri*t 4 Agnev Gaiie, nisa 5 PNa Creek Distriot Chboo Gasquet were made to equip the lookots, fir the firs time, with firefinders, either Osbarne type or, lsoking tush-brm* 4hmoimade t the lagst 4 5 S S_ritm dsi DtiS_ . anxi atmthris:Athrr a o Formo fi ob It $4P0 ergo 19011 cantund eocureds one in Eden Valley and am n neJL )VIIter Creek, whisk east, Ls M r~eI. I. LFllx put it, the en am of' #3050000. The ==ber Of tires is not fc=4 though there wer on the Pep Crok District, totaling 300 awes and costing $500.00. The reagera tiose days spoke of the site of tires in lr.-fig.hting *cute rather theni In sores,* Ranger W. Jo Jmw.s rde 28 howu from Packsaddle Lookout to a ftre noa YALiay Mie, with only a stp to oat and rest a tow minutes alonC the wyo. ypical of Jones, he stated that %be saddle wi tired' when he arrived. Dy the end of 1914,. each district had at least two lookout stations eameeted with telephoms lintes. Pictures of the first Osborne firefinder, me an the Xt. Eood, appared In the r 1I Lamas of the Siskiyou Buletin. LAMS Laud ela sication was one of the big jobs during 1914. 1. J. Jones spent a mont1c In Portland oan the Consayaobet land fraud ease which ended in a eonwuition. TIMZR XANAGEMU42 FlantIn.s of Ponderosa and sugaw plne were nade n High Dom, ratricks Croc., nC. Ce-ret Creoek %r* 22,200 trees were planed on 2 acres at a *ost of 819.9O peW ace, Baotner re -sinad molter-Uldld tizker nesr A.zuawa and reported consideraie loing since his emcination in 1912. In the spring of 19314. 25,dp3 seedlivi s were truasplacted at the Pae Creek Sursery by Ranger Y. Xs Louis. DEuing -the Clerk W~an- Vaim4d graxshcppors~~ which to o0at the plagu. RANGE AMD WILILIF aLew is c hickensii[ VAIADI The openig date of the der hitIng season wa postponed from hAuust to Soptener 1 bwy Governor # s.t due to the extrawly dry sao~wA Ia January 191, the Sisilyou Bulletin was volved, by ryason of a need to exress now ideas,, acquaint the Forest force hf4 plans of work and happenings the Forest, eid to foster loyalty and toem work. The yea IM sew the Farext with maps cmpleted for a1l renger districts, distriot sections being made on a iae-imo scale. 1931&- - Contimmi Ranger DeWitt rented a house t Rand ather being quartered fU live years In a tat ouv. Alder Spring Rmge Station near Ismbts Butte ms abandod d to the elsnatia of 15,000 acres In thet area, Anl rengers wee st"il clearing land and planting hq at their am e~emas to feed their stock. The late vinter and spring of l9l24 prodtrnd a vwy heavy rain and gn~rall, yet the Ar s hot and dry* Alga S lr coded ^or t1 as ace~~~~~~~~~~~~'I* ff-6 1915 so To Ib~mf supuvisor Do So Reynolds DOPuty Zuperisor Re. to B2a i. 3. curt Rauger at Large, Dhstriot Rsangvrv Por Orford District Bao. e U. L. 1Upson a~.a CluD no s C E. Sable * J. 1e Deitt U0 ?4Lewis %. Jo Jon" s A* 'W LMI, B Pronnl ge Ja=y 8to In Distrit of the Age A nea Gallss cre Pa, I Cheteo U forely eorkc o vis cratr B I, Shann* shr egri Spoowl was asinda C. 36 Id. swoool Rjv),6 (,Rg DixtriatDre of Jeaksan Codty, ad olork Int Flood Agetl ors -tgero transerrd to the 8tuy an April I " ofcvws, C. P. Alln a Assitant a4ointda al Is trt J. F. Csa tSd " sn Ranes ree P ioktne , len offi I oob Xr$ Pozv dtalCd to teOant Ps ange Iatco be indtdinitum 1anStev Spawol rwusted ya vith his ail istrs C. Allns aoitled C* F* .Sd s t s at 8hmsft Costs tfr the vintor of 1915-1926. Packsaddleo *ji.a work eausisted at construsting a lookoat on IzWrviMtEW~ type with celled InteriSr-iftsh oost Itain-sh" for m£terial $.OO 8 tar peeking, =d $26Bt. tfr labor, a total of SZW4.O8* The satevia rar Dea cow was packed in and bUildings, eanstraeted at Zden Valley Ranger statian. workics&stated an th* Mae~r~le-ak of the goods te. pbone Usr% and a 1600Dgallm capaolty water tank was installed vountain ws eaqmltod b en Mt. Bolivar The telephone lil to abip rut and a line tram Forren Otard Station to Onion aital, e arf The Ftrest received an allotmnot of $500. tar Correl Road# *iah ma omsidered uiot.n event, of the St Tral sirs palletin tug season le the s o*jeot of nwh discussion in the ad various types sds by the rngere, wre 1-915 tried out. Wt* Galaiulsed estal sips re t1i;k b%* the paint pee Is Navhk mud mm reeeived that the ve~hew bueau v=l quip few eo"oMrti, winds. Later, 8 stations In the Region F ast eas Comp ms nmed am at eigft stations in the degiom. Fires wore a big problem this seasn. jaws stated that it mm the worst season unae 190I, aWd el Leis belisewd it ma the wort in the history of the F 4- sin -in September brought on a fales sons* of seouritys rudeIy dispelled In Ootdber wdth a large nihor of tb's. fleorts indloate tbat two seriou fir*e oemured an the 00,110,4 Distriot* ano on Onion 31mtu~ and the Aothr em the South Fork of Galoe Creok, jbish eost #500.0, to suppress Dwitt reparted 15 fire., wound 5,500 eares bwnsd and a east of sloe, to $700.00 Page Crek District had 29 flres# 295 scrs bwmd, and About 65 x root or timer ms I supyrosuion east of t396*3l. killed. The, Ofteq~ut Distriot bad 4 fires in October that bw'red 2#000 astres (1,000 eaves reproduastiaz) and eost $5*00.00 plus $76.00 coxtributed, tine for suppressiom. Total yorest figures are,imo ava~ilablo. A uotroryal, patrol us invokad for the tint Musts the relte bein on the Orants ?tss'cresevat citjy mogm Road fraiame. mintm4 to Dorteleda. Daily raund triyt vwe md0 Of 14& miles at ft average cost or 00.0212 per maile. The fIrst esopastive firve suppressimMon voaoremd.w Also wes organized at Port Ortord by higer Jo Be Owlg oxdi, umu de esue~c. em this N*Jset ~ yteother rangers. Curl orgenised, 6 mno who on S~*a3at tosal A Forest Servies exhibit at the Agate Carxidva at Part Wrord attracted eavas Savable, attea*tim, ftu-usa' SeodUff S~At Out a sirvAlar letter requesting OPinions em PFOr t Service smthods and polio i~e of fire promtIgoe out of 41l replies eheebad, 23 var strongly in tavor' of busing I.Sez'brullah, bm'* fields,, bruskIW rid~e, top., end sp~esi bosards In spring and fall, 7 ware undecided as to the questions avid 1 persons, 3 of iWSe were ss, r time esplqe~s, wore in favor et absolute proteotiem. 1915 -M Oonld LAMM Quite ot a b of cad Olas wn cruised oan Zn Ridg to determine the tIir values. Jumn 11 slabn wok me still a big Job this eaon and land classifioatlionus a ujor projeot, with A I1land being detailed to the Forest to oodo t the wark. T3WVM MIJWEWMT Timber usnmgt sonsistod of reonnaissance vork an Jack's Crooek a the Chtoo District, vith Rbert Craig,, Jr. in obarge. An ealarted plantiag prwrm was instituted with 3g00O Part Orford cedar to bo planted war MacOribble Rangr Sation on the Part Oford Districts. 4,000 maritie pines an the Gasquet District, and 10,000 big trem an the Chtoo, Jones reportd. howeyer, that he received only 6,600 trees, *dch were planted an the north side of Crasker Cresk on asres, and that he fared for their surival an the planting was dim late In the spring. RAVOR AND IsILDLIWE ANA:11S D.r-tt reparted 150 buck dor oe killed in the vicinity of Dear Oip. 00 Li 1916 ,MSBNM Supervisor Deput D. B. Reyolds V. Le DOM R. It 1alM J 8upsrvisor iporest xkininer Clark Ranger at Large District ftier$ Part Orford Distrit C. FP. Ano (tqwariy J. P. De~itt Ui. K. A. U.Lewis Distriat "tr,, a fin eharge) Oclies Pago Creek : Cheoo * ~ * c h s wt. * U The prationry appointbsent of C. F. Allan me terminated at the sad of the fir* ason. B. I. 4an D.C., In De.aber. tr fd to clerical work in Washinctan, Ba won back to the Agness Disrict at the beginning of the fire season. After years as en Assistant Range' in c*arge of a district, he reeswd an appoit t as Forest flangar with no is- creas in salary but with a maul exns, allowa1es. Zu%" e e-a*k as usual use the main item of in the giddymn aulletine A gjpc!Lad portable tesopbm available thi seson. A tolphsan line was o ruci Pek by the $tate, the Forest fwruisbing the material. River iliw ve started by Ourle Fifty saldl cap aites - and iqp vd 'by the winere and guars.d discussion beom to loft The Sixe were eloeaed Ranger Jews and Guard Noore omstrusted a log stringer bridge emeas the Chatea. The logs wers 33 x IWO and weeo ban& logged by ts ta am and lated into pla... Tbo bth the irt trall fr tin. Fork Ranger Station resolved a oat of paint for A eabin us eanstruoted an Bald Uountain and a qu iCreok to Bald Snob us Jr-/P cualetsd. 1916 w0 CaM..mn FM A suminery of the fire revords far 1916. from the gsekiyou ftlletizi. is as tolloval Class A 99 lumber of fires -1 48 I 93 C-3 Total 243 1 2 Llchtniu Causes: C-2 2 35 bra" Thruimi CmPrs 35 a Unka 285 Total The above s*3res do not cerreepood but at least sho that thws,40~~~flison the Farests especially In October, as vitmood by Bela's repirt of 38 tire betme October net 1 dss. 10 and 6 amr Ithe f 104 Fires, 85 per *a* The Anss District had a total of *ioh weIr ncendiary. The Forest ammory shows a total of 314 1oes brnd and a tire #Wpresson cost far labor* eqipmat tsNif-AV Ion Said @Ultlb"Od time at $1,015600a The largot hwber of tirn" fighters yet =lyed at one time, 75, Is also hb. Proteation oosts for 1916 we tive. as *o009 total ependitures, all appropriatims, reoepts, par awes and net 1a,509J.2 9*,7%69W LAM Land classifioaticm us still carried on this year but by the local trs. The Coos Sq Lber Caqmn timber sale an Land Creek got wW with Bury Baefow La olarge. The sales . omted t 270270,000 feet valued at S38,139.00. Stuage rat"e wwe *1.25 uA for Dglas fi, MO0 for Part Orford .ear* and S.50 finr other speoies. *1.00 forP red *edar, G!4ON AID WILM MM Two Biologicl SurvWy hunters we's placed In Curry Comty for the first time. DW-it reported 50 huntre an 2,000 acres In Dear Camp emtry, all of which wae SuWoS.,fUl. tro~ule us had cm the Chsto tine sheep-killn I=m4Ab3. o r and ber. ReM64 r"conalessm. iwk was oarvied o by all rangers as pil II It ait wIff Ii Ii Ii aSw g3 U " il ri 'is Ii K wII a rvIt' I 4 q S 90 XI 'I Rif of I I. II I 0I I. I Fl Fi £rj And oa to I Ot 0 1917 MUSOJWL F maeutt F. DOB3. Isyme g. t. hefter Dept4 Supervisor Forest 3izAer U. Le UPPsm Mark Jo Be o~wl Distriot Pangw& Poft Orfmrd Disb~trc 2.o ID J.o. I.UL , D J tt U0JoJomes * * u. cPag a A*I.Leda Apass CAll u eCr.. k Cheteo , *G.quet Personel chuesz Re U. Cambers was assigned to GaILl. fram Crater T&oelt~. PFaest tar' Jsw37 * Fetwwruu, ed Mrombi, in N*Vmber J"~F.e mended a. Amd~st.A 1Ia~sr ~ l foess' firumm. we reemaSaer n the Califormia and OegM= Lumber ComPUIT sale. In Jaaowy, Danger J. D. Wet was trmm terred fraom the Crater SMatioal Poet (Ro River) to relidy g. 3. hegrr an the Coo Dv Lmuw Ca%*w "is so ttat the latter oold attend to plNtig md other works Wat want bask to the Crater In Maroh. In April Aager Vla8tin, , Drbin _as transerred frm the Siuslaw t replos, . 1. ItaMuas vf bad gm to 6ashigton. Ih the fall Raner West MN detailed from the Crater to Instruet tanger Cebell lz msalixg and tb~w ae dt iqiovnmas undartaken ware. A ?a&* mme wireofottbridg. across Rogue River me but by the loes people at Ams. mde the leadership of Rager Nsa, it ws M eetllg. The Middle Elk Road me MMveyed and wark started en tbe CoqIai, Rie Trail A telepham lS (line went via Johasom Ioutaft).tMw Sixes River liews eamleted and th* lJim frm Rend to swaS greatly iWOved. Wire me oroded for the Mt. Daily lb. It the fall work wes started on the Red Ranger ftatus bus. 1917 - Coutins( FM This year taxd the efforts of the Foasat foor to the uumst. orw eluig with the lurat fire oftses yet eomm the Forest offlews bad to work aot-handed due to mar risess ad low salaries. Other work, rush as w draft registration, Utmry road reportes Red Cress drivs, and Liberty Loon drives, mide Os added Vb1dsue A m 7 is tound in the JTanry foa sI of the 1917 fir. sease whiab Is as 1918 8lakiyou Bftl, ti, Fires by classes A 41 C01 U5 B 46 causess 0-2 Cr3 Ttal 94 II 247 13 6 -u - )lselaneou X*.. Ars Durned . 2 21 Timber Lad Private, Tinmr Land OPM Raional Pbrst OPen Private 8,0114 60,;4 , 5. Votal Tidie D stoeds NfttiMij Forest ftIvaste toa Cost at at $17Aze 5,888 N ft. Um* Maue at $ 9.30 14*238 it ft. ben* mdued uppressom. This does not tell all of th $18,0724 story hoWVWr, " Jones utins large fires in the interior to his dlstrict that ere, bmt Is lw value areas and an whieh he took no aetiem at mU. Om ruh tire started near' Molses embla ea Dmld Fees Creek md run wet to Bear Creek, 1%yla waste to a strlip at ot an to Ue miles wide and ton to tlve dies loug. hunger 1r. 4 JAms. and tsw hager Costellee and wift had a nrw esea on Pekeaddie Lorko The Sn ftght the fire outide, and Mra Costeile fough It Ins1. set tire to their Ubds s their horse, wich ve Sparks blowing through the shakd time* They had a hard tia *avin badly sin*e This was in Oetober. Ote Ir tire ooorred an the Middle Fork 3th led Fest Prk Cow Cremk. 4_We Rivm 1917 - Coctixd The Agusa District us bwdest hit, with 75 fir"*. Frty and 19,011 ree insid with thouand wes burned outsdes 12,560.000 fett box. of National Fost t1=ber killed and a large area of yogrowthe doeUrodo Eighty-fiw per enit of thee fim er e i..rndiry. Ranger A, I. Lads reported that he fought fires all summar mid watelod them bum all falls dlm to bad buning oaditimis md lak of help. A l4y lookout us a~loyed this *sso, an Bald XKnbv the first on record. The basl hoe earns Into guieral aproed by all rayess se and wa amepted and Diwing this yaw it appeared to be the praoti.. to hold the rangers at headquarters to do the dispatching and let the guards headl the f.ies. Lug. fires On Lad Creek nea the Coos SW Company sals gave Baefner plenty to worry about. LADS The first sumr hoe site surny an resord ee mde at 0aquet. The Gold Beach people oiroulated a petition to ha" most Sontior all of the National F8oet in Curvy County el1uineate mmt ws turned in favor at the Forest around Part Orford by an Illustrated lecture by Jacobson of the Regiona Omooe In April the first sooodatime for tourists to the Me brother- Oregon Caves we fwulsbed by C. W. N1.d, lwe, Riebard 'MA' S8rvine pia Roloy, had ben and me 4wlved asF ad guide at the Cave during the r months. TIMM Tb*w m aaettritio 1A7 yellow ph, and sar eosted of trsplantlag piw seedlings at the Page Creek awwy,o the best output yets, and the starting or eutting an the California and Oregom L~mr Comany saed on Jaeks Creek. In Jua7r* Crater Natioa R. Ve Cdbrs, reager an furlouh frm the Foret, us assigned to the Gaie, Distrist to help DeWitt cruise mdltr-killed timber untIl at April 1. Rmnges Jo Do Holat s aleso assigi.d to this wrwk whlioh ws In the vlainity of the Aboda Mine* 1917- Catimid yew*tof 1917 nas ubsherd zi with an eztrwly olA p1,U whiGh 12 dqs of frwayig wethe at Agness in J"r. UR. Lws rpeprtd vonai4able less of stock In his distaist. Appareuatly it wee a dry uagth- howms, as the 0asquot au COatto distrists eah repoted a rire for gte tmtso aw of fdoh reachd 100 Lcrn la sl**e Chrin xdnb boom quit. active during this yar. gi: /6 194-18 This yew started .ttwith t folleng pummmml hi. D. F. J.edvld a Be to E.fner He So Iuwbin Forest ainu Sealer us Jo F. Campb e IWM S*bi3 TIMpr Clerk (2 hows daily) J. B. Cu1 Distriet li; Re 10 Beim ~ RFeDeitt a UO Lis L, ng1 Port Onrud Distriwb Agoems *Oalie U, * 'we Jo Jew A. V. Lewis Page Creek " wt, o * Oasqauat Persoq1 Changes t. L. Utjsoa s trsnsted to the Poultry 1Bwgxedry Extn tension Servies Deprtont a Agricultu, In Jamatry with Mis F. I* Abram mooseding him Juy 1 as Forest Clerk. Rnger Test retzoed to th Crater (Rogu JMve) NatIl Forest 9 and Raniger So A. Mow. was traisterred frq, that ftrest to the Cooe Bq Luaew Ccapany sale. follig Nationa In A~rIlv ganger A. 'We Lewis resigned and was repisoed the =nth by Reager George S. Case ftrc Awfoest the Oen (IMt. Bood) r_ g.' Durbin won back to theSiuslaw Ntictul Forest, a Depty Supervisor D. Be Reynolds resigned June 15 to go Into road emtraoting work. During Nay A. He Wright wee twmiw arnly detailed from the Rgional Office t help with i. wore In 0otobers 'No Es irby was appointed as Forest aud and assigned to the Agws, Zistriet. Talbt was assgmed t Office. work i The wintbr was open and ernasideable Imrov Wus ean hteadsrs t ld9 and the serly sprin foiad rk under v. o a Goaerti lead olessfloatlice The laddle Ilk Road basis with help frmloosl and the people a Fort Od*.4 A road was started tmgaask mere e Ih Plateau by shrw ad rus r-l? 1918' Cmantimaod A aw omub ds extteri aesled Inid% was built an Bad nob and fwthar work s dome an the Coquill. River Trail wear the lam n 181 pl1. In Demero a trail was surwyed fram, Mle Croek to w Creek on a water graft The force had plent or wablem with fIr. this seaon Labor was sarce and good guards hard to obtain at $75400 pr th The Apnes District had to mploy two womon, aid the Page Creek and Port Orford Districts maplyod ,onm.ea No Parent smrleas ire ailabl. but on the rap Creek District we find 38 fires* 15M "mg of National Fwest l1n bdwrn with a less or 55.100 foot bone of tinber killed aid a F.F. cost at $29121.37. Six thousand areshad burnd own by The Apigne District had 23 fir" by J47 1. onet vhioh wa a 5,00O sore fire an the bead of the Tet Pork of Lulo Crek. Robert Bachimad Mdelvin 3bpb, laborens, _ere August 1. killed by a sg ubile fighting tire nm Walker Frairles #a incendiary tire presmmy set by areo of a eattleeno One large fire burned en the Chaeoo, but no suppression work me dom imisc It was In a lo value areas Other large fires oourred at 58akyo Frk, Rattlesne owdtan Bald ills, ?lanW Cre, Barrington Reach on the OaequetDistrict, Dcx Creek an the Pap Creek District, and Ned Mmmtuin on the Cheteoo Inm Junae a fire burned about all of the oosaity wat of J60i Creek beta the Windlack and Chateo Rivers d straying Ax residences, Ur" bare, m hotels sod Jiles of fining. The Galle District had s sC fire ih ooourraed at Borseshoe Bad Guard Station. It destroyed a bar and tses. No acreage ms givno RANGS AND WILU.IFE dAWMMn Other Items of note this year include the planting of 25,000 trout in the South Fork of the Coquille River by the Forest Service, end sportaman. iaICELLAIZOW MetAo Is ade, of the installatimi of the first bath tub In a Siekiyou ranger station,, at 1and. It was prohamod from a miniar oomea for M2500. The Influenza epidemic got under ways, and Ranager Curl admnistered 300 doses of vaccine in the absence atof doctor 1918 .Cobma in t3e Part orftt .msrye DszoS~bw dA= to 16 yg =nthtvrtwiodd an exmth, Yes at Bad and 14 7e. at Page Croo.k Y-/f QQI 19 L. F. Abrazm Forest xIaus Clork F. IAhm Jo. DO Curl Re I.B. l Jo. Po Del?1tt U. U. LOISW 1 ., Joes George 8. Case DIstrict Rancer. Port Orford District Jo. F. Campbell cWo B. A. Bealr, California An Oregon Umber Co, wsa c=Wan s 3 . Coon Bad Lumbr V. no Yo a a * U * a V a a a adb~~~ Pag Creo a a Chatoo Ga-ur Foerst Guarda Agness District T. Io 1mt arrivd In April " Depty Supervisor, and Forest Guaid 'W. 16 Kirb resipad August 31, due to low salary. Ron-or J. D. Curl resie"d at th. end of the yew and ws Pago summede by Ruger Me C. "CaU Supervisor Macduff wm trasferred to the Casca" National Forest sad was replaced on the Sinkl~vo by K. He NoDanielso Fred Cruma mu assigied as Forest R.mgw (saler) an the Chatoo District d 4 Po Campbell us taken off the California end Oregon Luhmbe Cmpan seal ad assigmed to other work. 1mpmemenn vark duiwng the yew insl'adsd work on the VWiohok Road construction of the Rogue Rive Tr41 tran Yul Cresk to estdCreok ad the start at work an the Cbetoo Trail* timbers we NM too Installed in the Rogue River Trail s- pansion bridge mr Rainie Falls and other work duie at a total cost at 03,09*00. This bridge was oonstrited In 190. b n to progs alang the coast The 5oomevolt BlghvW be A ready-cut lookout cabin us placed On Pearso1 Peakk Trail alad burning vas tried out but abandoned due to szbssslv oe t and danger .f eecaping fires. K. P. Cil iver t did location vk an the Price Trail (CoUllo nllbe). 16) 1919 " catid rn The first fire of the seamno ooourred an JanuarY 10 an the 0asquat District. The fire season wm mostly Mt ty the Page Croek and Oalice Districts this season because of an *1eotrisal stem on August 10 end 11. Bowver, there wers also the usual insediary and other man-sused fire.. and the rangers ware usually quit, shm r Labor vas soares d Tw. t-fouw tires oooured on the PFae Croek Districts burzng about 11400 acres. Paner 34 K. Lewis and one cn handled 9 class Al ire In om dV Nomayis foud for the Frost. LAMA There vas sme talk of mcluding the redwood groves nar Crescent City in the aiskiyou national Farost. A stall sale of 100 3 feet was =a. stie zple aticaw voro received for tber en Similo Creek. an Slate8 Crook. Teat- E4ZGE AND WILDLIFE HAW== Dewitt reported that huaters in the Bear Camp smmtr little suoess&. had Day was worth $50.00 and grain $75.00 per ton Inx the Chotoo country early in the year. January 1919 broucht a alary inerease to all bads ot $21.0 per am% and a second epido.o of Influwsa. Land olassifloation vwk was still in order. Taperatures. went dom to seroaat Bnd and Par. Creek# md 216 F. at HLoCribblo. Misoellamo1Wn ItIM i lXW trkey risin in the NXrl ooutryo wheo" tbey had to be packed via pak train to markets Thu 1° Pe= the Siekdiou bulletlns wa iIM the fofllwing peremi an the Siddyma at the bqiioniag of the years 3. Be MeDiels Supervso Foesat eale. g. Scaler A, 2owe F. I. Abra Rn5.nm' C. & 0. sae Coo Day Lut.r Coo sale Clark District I"ugr N. I. P l Part Ortar . Ap5s Aest. PRWW * Distriet Ruamerp I. K. Lewi '. P. Jams Oeowge Case W Agaet U Racger 9 *:ts Macoribble V.*So S U 9 5 Pao Credk a U Msta Costa LI6 8U Pa* C.UU 345 xm O : : Gas a Sth * Pc Ro 35. I. J. Joes et to Ala In Februuwy sad J. Fe Cpdbl took Charge of the Chstoo District. R. I, Mm gave zotie. at resigastian April 1, and Voa Dqyeuter took oharge of the 4pwss Distniet, In Jay# Bnt went to Alask s speciul Agent ftr the Depart- next ot Inteio and vs repisoed by 16 L. nlu *0 stayed unti August 12,0 vtn he replaced Sqprvisor Oteebson an the D.sehutes Perd Grove v" detailed to an air patrol3 mo at larob 71.1d sad after emleting his s sun., roiimsd scaling an the C&lihsui aad Oregon Lxabe Caq esle* In June be took up his dbles a" an obseve at Medfod ith the eoopezatiwg ( $WTI") air patrol Old as replaced an tbs California and Orng Lumber Caquw sale by Sealer Co A. Suith. Afte the eloe, of ts fire soam. Orwor returned to the Siskiyu bd helped Benr arice tiZe the C Uo" = the 8aum Croek area. In Desamber be retund to feaal an Ore0 Lueber CoWW oae at Brookings. for several £thso Jeekeon was detailed to Powers to assist Karl Willit us assigzid as Forest at A esso uar4o statutory, olls, 19M - Cantimaed The telephone line from Apese to Snw Cmp ws started In 1920, and 17 nil" of the Sizes River-21k River telephone lin Cosiderable work us dm an the Chetee Trail at a eost of $aO,00 pe milse also an the Migins Copper, ighutert, Pebble M11l, and Rook CrZe Trails, ad the 1.Imhuk road. Good naintaaoe appropriations wel reeei'ed this sesson* The first Garerzunt trok an the Siskiyou, a converted ohain drive ArW Ford mm received and priqptly naed 'TrosWd. It wus later traded for a G*X*Cos and aother Ford a a zotor. cc1. wer received* Survey of the proposed Erduoo Buwesu of Publio RoAds. Sh h of old Sinan ebwey was started by the ght. of the yeur vwa the conviotion in Janary ____ of in 4 idiari ona Dimond Creek. 1lie had been charged with setting fires in the Bald Pao Creek, vpw Cb.too and North Fark &mth River watersheds for years and =doubtedly mu resasible for the great burns in that eoun.rye After his death a few years later there was a noticeable change In the fire situation. Ouard (later Assistant PRangr) A. F. Van Deventer seoured the evidence in the above oase durin the previous fire season, A sunry of' the l9M fire season gives the follo.lag figures. Class B -1 C-2 15 13 10 1 Total 39 A Comm igti Imandiary II Bdse Duning 2 Ceapprs 9 3 Emls Ao4ge burned Dnago to N,?. tiler sad rn Damge to private Cost indluding eootributed tir;e Value of cooperation 776 3470.00 37.75 2,209.Zj M*6.9 This van considered a fine reoord, eve with a vwy favwable season. An airple patrol, based at )eford, by the mr Air Bawls.. ovee southern Oregon northern California 2:24'O - Conla Tbm roewu lookoszt weo mplqvrd ou the Forest this LAM A ew'rv was made of the Oregon. Caves of the Decil Offleo and J. F. Ca.bl1 In 19 cw by Fe U. cleator sposial ws. pmts mna red 18, with reoei$s af clam Minmd was 17. *130.00 plus visoellawous Items. The 1916 sale to the Coca o r Z r CmW en Land Creek Wselode8 and 6 million feet bo.4 ae was sd The 191 sale was stimated at 27,p74000 tet bom., end SZ*8,200 feet of tber os cuts Anothr sawgfony sale of 2& million feet me started on Salmou Crookc msde and wriing of 50 million _r'e A total of 5ight m~as~notted 19 million tst bm.. in 1919. brlxug In $28578.00. The owwwrial, tiaber on the Forest Ms eatinabed at 11 billien test b... on National ?weft land and 3 billion tfet an patented land. wAo I DwAND XA Th. Fbllowing statisties we gleaned from the "'Beklyou Dulletia' Tuber of permits 112 Cattle, gaed 2,65 shoop gr6sod 1,1o Orating rvelspta C&I $1,651.0 130.00 SW Total Neesipte 1,78.00 NI8CUJL&NS30 The Orls ar or te Forest was given as 1.670,000 aeree. otal reeipte for the year mu liskiyoma 10th In the Region* U~~~~~tS~~ - q $30.776.00, placing the Je Fe D4T1tt Dqut' Supervisor (Actiag) ?West xypminer Cark F. lo AU-MS X. C. Page A. F. van D _er J.? . Campbell Goge S. Case Prd Orwv S. A. NOW* District ftgwe 3 V 0 Paet Orord Distriet Wie0 a Fac. Creek *S , S 9w *ietoL sdharU Uv^X - Sealer, C. A 0o Sale, Drookings 0 Coo Bay L=&w Cas Sale Powers Personmu Chanm In Apri.* K. C. Poo plaoing DeWitt. The Ap s blmd, with Van Dventer In t~otnd at 8,asrIbble Rmager took chage of thw Gale" Distis, reand Fot Orford Distrifts we eamebarghe Ike ColtA,Pud, us*sgemStations an NW 24v ?.*R Fahnb rispisead 0ruvww la ehazg Of the CaliforU & Oregm Lumbar CompW sal* Oruvu' ret*wne to t;: Argy Coosermtiw Airplane Patna an liaison off Or ad Xm* te )Iathe no ild for' a uiz woe ts traiming detail. At the close of the year, DeWitt, ift ha4 bew asilped to the Swupert1vis* ofrloso wnt Usk to the GILew Distriot at bU a requst.* Pes resigned to go Luto the dairy business M Orazts Pass. At the end or the fire season Ditriet as Cmpbdl's assistant. Gruvre rotwized to the Cb*U9 ?arnbm was celled to 1'wtland at the sic.. of the year* lminumants wmied an this year Included tbh Cbetso aid Pfte Trilso lbl CreekwDitoh Creec seotion of the Rqgm Plvw Tril, and the Bum Cap tolepbaa lines, Cavse. A read ma suvqox 4mad opleted In Domner, to the Oregon Spswlteatlos wer 8 feet of trea with 2-toot width of ditches an each side. The first Iran laddere were lustulled in the Or*&= C0mes repmacing sons or the eld wood=*lrme M -wOCmtiowd Fin rho firt item unde this emption ms the Law bu m Schol uaer T= Talbot at Portland& wbish mm attamded by anger J* Po DItto wo a~epost3y visitd all district rangers an the ?amwt to import to thea the kzwuedge be hod gained. Chief fireme (protective assistants) began to be used awe widely this oseso. the ranger to do te the fire *aaon. The preotlee )mtofw* had been tfo antoh d bold d the ofice In So sm.ry us found tor tbis yew, but it pr not a bad fire seas. The wet fire we the 2,000-mare inoudIary fie aoa Emrd Crook (Galls District), The air patrol mel isestinued an Septebr 10 and not resumed again &w to lack of ftmds for operating ezponsess The flw-yemr amrage tire eout for the Forest uwrs give at this tlue as #9000.00. About one-third of the buwsd erege occurrd In October this seasw# TflWER IINMIMWAU The Page, Creek nureary ubich Ranger meM It.LWis had us discontinued this se.son. The last 60,000 pandaros pine were sw* to the Crater (RaIve ivwr) managed sine for plting, Pot Orford oedar stuupaCe prices wer It nw being priced at $5*00 por I toot bo:. still elimbn , The California & Oregon L.'er CorejW sale re ted cubw ting In march after being obut dow sline Doo r of 1920. Thq Mit 1*075.00D reet in Warh and 1,9l.15X0 feet In Ap41. The Cos May Lmmw Cmpwn out 1,16,o000 in mrch and l.6U.l,,60 teot in A4rh. Very littl. Valleys this "eor. smilling us done In the Reou, and Sale inspections RA1GR AMt WnELI m =ad by Lu.rn linois riokson. XARADUWT MM1 us a fawarable year for grazing,~ and anl stock left the rawg In good monditiam. QI"d 1A f cutied A bIg ven fi I&9 Oroft Pass boeuty mas the cm1letio o the Sewag Rapids din, plaomig 12,000 acres um ditch and providing mb6a for4#000 sore ae at a st .tof 9g.00p aewe. A ocinuial s1u wa -tm4 at Agns.. and a stoek e*soolMies at Wilmz Creek* The uail route from )hrlu to Cold Bosch via the Roqus Hiva Trail was disomtinadq The Oalio Distict still bad a lady lookaft on Onion UolunaiBo. J 16 aDsaviols Jo. to Camqbel B. S. aefnw superviser DOPUtW Supervisor (Aating) Forest 8xtnw Clwk 8. As mg" 14 no. 7ar.l Smiso Coos 3w Lvu' Co. sale, Pors A. P. Van Dsvvter Distriet hng or, Agnos Distrlot oobined Jo Distit Reagr, oaue District a a* Gpe Crek (In ;UrLO) Chaloo Distriot Distriet Rager, Gasqtwt District to Fe 4 Abris Sealw, C. & o0 Lbr Deitt L* He Me Lewis Fred Orear O16g 8. Ca. co., sale, U ,Brooings with Pat Orfwd District parsoano ChAzes in March Fred Oruvr resipud and me rsplacod an Yb Chstoo Distriet by Van Dwventur ranger in Iaoho Llqd 0. Lymn of U ar4 regang we apointed plsed in oharge of the Agnoss Distriot. Joka I. rEuSo of Rodu=4 Oregono was also ppointed and given charge of the part Orfard Distriot, whish sial tok rar district ststus Both m hmdquartered at 8bsa Costa =tl August, 1dh lqa roed his headquarters to Acusso whlch be shred with JoFP Cq- ben* wh we mde a eetnd fire dispatehr for the Ape", Pot wards and Chatoo Distrists. It is not kou vsa Frsrhm vctwad to the CalifauA Oregan Ludw Cp sale, but at lset be wes acala &oaling early In the year. Van Devauter r~igzmd July 2D. an Ouard A, A. Wilki* took ergo of the Chet" Distniet. lmovmuTs Read oemetuoiAm A umin e em Oles hat. PrniDMe this yewr ith $Mo,000.00 allotted for ros and tralls. The umi, projots on the Szes Rivr Rod4 unois Riw Roam and the matatmee of the Wimr Rad. The firat road the Fest of =m outwas the arrival of a 2ta lt plla and gradar for use on the Uluer Road, whioh we the largest project of the seasam, Thoe ost of the Sizes flyer need we 0*-OO A 275-foot loag Page wu ide toot-bridge we ,-trulow 1922 - Contimmd across the nlinois niver at the Anderson rmh. A hore terry across the P.tu River at HZoseshoe Dm4 is mmied as being in uses The Apaeso-eo re t1lephone line was oaltod before the fir. seasong and the flisc River lis wa started in the fen. Tolephave lines wr onstruted trem CsW 6 to Bear Basin, Borseaho Dead to Dea Cq, ad work started in the late f1ll an the Kwrb-mOrepn Caves Wtvpbm. lineby Rangers Lewiso Cambell, Iqmn, and Bre. A standard lodoko cbin wa pak 26 miles into hip Mountain and omasb stdthe 1luda being restwout by ranger labor during the Proceeding vinter, A cabinatof the soe type was packed In aid built OR Mt's Alys Mort of the old roads in the 0Gaqet District 1a minxs tamned and a 112-otot foob-bridge me built across Indio Creok near th mouth of the Cree Furthew Iprora work mm done in the tall at the Oregon Caves. awe steel ladders being installedl FMf "Forest Protection NWe us stressed this year mm than ever befo. June we a very dr month and eaused scm trouble Jwith tire. early in August, Jo Po Cazmpboll was stationed at Agiwes to act as dispatcher for the Cbetee, Agwess, Districts, 4 Port Orord an ragIes mode practicable 'by the 1oWletion of the Apo aetwoore t line It me hoped that If this ezpeilat prov desirable, the outral dietaher system vald be eadod to in1lule the Whele Forest as soo as the necssary emoeation system VS cowleted. A large tire occurred an Tim Creek near Saloon, 3Lovintmimo and Dafter repored that nearly all the out-eer lad aron Fowne was burned9 destrqrin all of the young reprodustion. The Siskiyou mm second In the Region this season in the m26r oat ne ia rimes). There wus which bmd 1,300 acres of lational Forest acree of yrivae land, heoy cost S6776.00 as plaoed at $4,9963.00 tar Jhatimal Forest a total o 63 fires land and 3,282 to suprs. Dninp timber. LAS On Harch 3D# 19220 a Land Exchange Act we enacted whIlh caused a tentative proposal of exchange for 1,500 ecres at private land In Swds Basin and saw 2,000 wee emr Pm,*. Nothing us aooombished In this line, bose . 12 - Contimod The CM= Caves Road m opused to travl in May, md 9,923 visite.s had new thi Cove. betwe 30. July 1 end Septibeu A speoil use perft ms issud to a Mr. Nmnfem rar a tourist esp at the Caves. Te Culif0mi, & Oegn Umber Oqisz CupMW sales bad a ood r'u this ywwo end Coos Bqe Lhuber The Coos DV Unber their ase by fall. In Cmpazy, hs, # bad about oaVp1. Uaroh, they out 2,030,030 feet bom,, d In Aprl the out was 1*79723s feet Both leratos epessed their re11utauo to puorhase awre lItimi Forest tihr* hmr, as the _wIO ws up to *1.75 for Douglas fir and $646 for Part Orfwd oedare. ( all tbeir operatious In 22, the COOs D Lume CmpsW out 1,30#00#000 fest of ti mw, and the entire out far the con BW area Pr this yew, was plesed at 661ilItn t.&, PwAME AMD WZLDLW RIAflAUM Juary, Fobruary, and Mareh of 1922 were etraly co the stoakam, abnamwa losses. due to deep snow oau bard a, shota td rfo a o Assistant Forester Will C. Barae us an inspection of grauing work con the Sisktlyoma %Ui season MXISCILLARB)3 StatiStios GODOWMIM the tim or the r-us in the 19, Siskiyo Bulletin, as follows. Avenge nober of asys ra*sd Average zumbher of day in the ti.1d wer RaPg_ DeWitt had the mt spt In the feld wer oted 323 189.06 das, vith 330, of whish 221 1923 PERSONNEL The year was started with the following personnel on the Forest: E. E. J. F. H. E. F. I. McDaniels Campbell Haefner Abrams J. W. Brewer Supervisor Deputy Supervisor (Acting) Forest Examiner Clerk District Ranger, Port Orford District L. G. Lyman , Agness M. M. Lewis , Page Creek J. P. DeWitt A. A. Wilkie George S. Case , , Galice Chetoo , Gasquet Personnel Changes In February, J. F. Campbell was transferred to the Oakridge District of the Cascade National Forest. In April, Lyman went back to the Crater National Forest, and H. H. Long of the Park Service and formerly of Districts (Regions) 1 and 3, was assigned to the Agness District. Brewer resigned and the Port Orford District was again combined with the Agness District. Roy 0. Park of the Cascade National Forest was assigned to the Page Creek District as Assistant Ranger under Lewis. On April 23, Frank Vail was assigned to the Agness District as Assistant Ranger under Long. During this month Ranger (Scaler) W. R. Farnham was transferred to the Oakridge District as assistant to Campbell. In July, Scaler S. A. Moore was transferred to the Crater (Rogue River) National Forest. In May, Ranger Chisi Skarr started work above Wedderburn on the Wedderburn-Agness Road. September brought more changes in personnel. Long was transferred to the Siuslaw National Forest, and J. C. Scharff, a guard on the Malheur National Forest, was appointed ranger and placed in charge of the Agness District. The Port Orford District was again partitioned from the Agness District, and Vail was put in charge. This time its boundaries included Eden Valley and the head of the West Fork of Cow Creek. -5p I.(~ IMPOVENT3 roasA Allo£tm for this yer included a $56,100.00 for and trails sonsisting of the followings Agnes* Bridge edderburn Road Agess W Illinois River Road Maintenanoe or Trails Maintename of Roads Conotruotion of Trails $16,000.00 8000.00 5*700.00 ll2moo liaOOoo 11,900.00 There u also additional lanous mll proJentse m1 allotments for misool- A standard lookout oabin mm oonutuct ons COv Six year the 0aver*nt spent $L00,o0Q0.00 Durin ts on Federal road projeots In Souther Oregon, 130.00.00 an the Crescent City breakwater and #300,000.00 on the Port of Coon Day. In May a "Cletrac' and grader were reoeivd for the Agpos road job, and the Apesa Drige was started. Telephons limes were constructed furaa Onion bMoutain to Slate Cree Hanger Station,, Oregon Caves to b'iskuy Peak, and from Pap Croek t o Elk Valley. Construstion work was started or ocoleted on the Orepn Caves, Lake Mountain,, Saner Pesk, Sucker Creek and Dounda:y (Oaquet Distriot) tails. A D-6 type eabin ws peaed In and sonstruated on Onion Mountane by ftll, 23,000.00 bad be= spent on the Agnese Bridge and It ws still not 0o0epte4 ?1ree started sarly in 192, with a 700 aoe fire be Pow" end Purple Mountain, before RmnM Long arrived on his distri ct Forest Protection week was stressed more thn evero. It bad been plnned to uss, aefaer as oentral dispatoher at Agms. but the idea was abandoned. The ter "Protective AssistantO was used this season for the first time in the a35- 1923 - Continied At the end of the season8 the 8upervisor concluded that road and trail ores wre fer superior to plok-W labor an firs and that the Service should own nw pack stock - to rew* persozal gain as an incentive for Lwoediary fireso A tioe wary for the saon gives the followin, tatis- Fires bg Classes. A B C Total 11 7 20 30 NJ. Private 1,787 Inside - Outside Total 718 740 3,245 Dwate - N.?. #l,519.61 Cost of all fires $8266.74 The Slid. Crook fire was worst Cost - 94#M27905 The Olso Distriot bad 9 of the 12 lightoing ffire. The Aooa Distriet had 8 of the 32 incendiary fires. LA=D lie -a beaded by George C. Sabin formed a coopa and ecwured a *Speial Use P Oregon Caves in oonsidemuat worth of iq"romnts. fmitto operate a resort at . of putting in 4l90,OW. The C. & 0. Company sale closed in )Uarcoh Total sIe to APrlI 3, 65.2aeno feet 5.1. plus 15Oooo fet still In the woods to be soaled. Prelmnr anagment plan were made for the timer an the South Fork Coquille River. Th trade boomed in Port Orflrd Cedar with aocelerated logigf In the Mddle Rlk and Sixes River c.ontry* ol The winter of 1922 ad 1923 was an munually dry one* 4.42 ihe of rainfall at sin the 82 to 85 inues fbr the year previous. eaqariso with 1924 PEMNW. The personnl of the ?orest was as fllows at the bgininic of 19241 to He NoDoniels Bo Es Uafner F. 1., Abrams J. C. Scharff Prank Vail Georce ea"e A. A. W'ilki. K. U. LSWIS Roy 0. Park Jo. P. Delitt Supervisor Deputy Supervisor Clerk Distric Raner. Aguess District * 0 *Port 0rfrd " trf I*l *O quet U o * *~Chwtoo, * 3~ I*r: Alseb. Range * District 1Ran-er. Galion U Personnel ChnM n April 1 , Supervisor, ad J. as Assistent under as well as "Maing U. 31 Lewis was promoted to Assistant Co Sdharff was transferred to pag Creek Ldis who retained charp of the distrist Deputy Supervisor rosponsibilities. ]kW 0. Park was assigned to Agness as Distriot Ranger. IA Nq, A. No Wright took over the Forest a and NoDeniels went to the Regional Offie. uerisor Vail aoved the Port Orford District headfarters frm Agneus to 3dan Valley. In July, Vail resigned and the Port Orford District was handled jointly by the Agnss and Galioo Districts until fiall A.* W Borip arrived in O0toboxWA ftlio. District. took arpe of the DeIitt van transferred to Pago Creek, as District sanger In ebarge* and Sehartf was transferred to the Prt, Orford District with hesdquarteor at Pcuers. is seaon a a now idea In lookout cabin oonstru1tion. Instoad of packing in reaywout l1sb. it wus whipswed war VW lo04os for standard osbins at a sost of #70*00 per N. Labor was whipsawn and stored on Iron D-5 Type Cabin end Imber was sand at Dear Basin (Gasqust District.) :.I Untain for a the cabin ocustruated lei2 - Contimed The Boundary Trail was coopleted and work done an the Ship Mountain Trail* Ranger Chris Ska8r again ran a road orw on the Agwas. 'Wddwu road project and the Apes* Bridge was completed for travl. Work was still progressing an the ledwood and Roosevelt hi*NMAys FnRE SLC Ps wore put into us at all ranger distriot headquarters in 1924 A mild winter and dry spring resulted In critical ball Ing conditions. Two bad lighig stoaus ooorred*, one in ths mouth of June and the other La the mouth of Septaero incendiary spots as listed by the Supervisor ware Floa Camp, Quostam Creek* iest FPork Cw Creeks Pistol River and iWc Creek# the latter In the Page Crook Districto The incendiary situation on Bald Face Croek did along with the passing of old Simon ilbo. The Agas. District had 70 tires for the saon, 7 of whiab ware Incendiary and 14 caused by li&htnizg. Howver, a mber of the latter ooaurred in the fall on that portion of the Pbrest included orinarily In the Port Orford District. Rlager Par* sta. that he bad L0 fires In 20 days in September* A stmary for the Forest gyes us the following tigures Fires by Classes A B C 39 34 50 Total 3 This includes 7 fires entering the Forest from the outside and 16 fires outside that did not enter. Acg &t70 1718 Prvteo - Inside 2.394 -X Ir Outside Total 1*776 21v38 1' l924- Cntlizued National Forest lossens Coaste $lOJ6*3 0D 33*21.00 Lightonin firox ouased 53.4 oaused fires were 1.eul of the totl and mn- LANDS A pbition was circulated by residents of the LlA Creak oountry to have the area beteem Mule Crek and KelS. y Croek ellminated from the rational Forest. TIM~ft NAMAODM Tentative applicatiom were re1eived tor timber an theSouth Fork of the Coquille River. Coda A record prose to date was paid for Port Orfbrd sgo for cedar oay.) ar Uarshfild - 025.00 per Me (probably A -w hardood saw1ill was established at 17odderburn and Tnoak and Canoa Bu pooling beam quite aotive alog the ooast. Bids were reoeived fbr timberon Sand iock Uountai aboe Powe s*at #7.50 per V. tor Port Orford Cedar and $2.00 per Me for Douglas Fire Hcuwoers the male was ne RANGE ANDUIW LIF RAG The vilinity In and around Horseshoe Bend beoam badly Infested with grasshoppers mid the rang., was ruined.e au DLLoNta1 &&e ftone of the Gasqmst Distriat was attsoWe by a 00upr aN received a badly lacerated hand. Stan. fouzht the a;MI off with rocks a a pocket knife and wen for help, Be mw od the help of ma of his neighbors and retuwd to the esa of the aooidmit and with their aid and that of his dos the animal was treed and shot. It mg vey poor and In a stervirig oonditim* It Masured 7 feet and 6 inohe laig, PMSOrNL JUiUmz7 Is I9M25 tfw. the follaming PasoMu F. I, Arms LooS OriMf supervisor Assistant Supervisor Forest x"iner Chief Clark Clark J. C. Sehsrf A. Me Baig. Distrit Rageu9 Part Orford * *wOahioe Y. U. LdWIh 0 " , Re 0 Park 4* P. DMiTtt William Colvin G. 8. Case * 1104 Croo ,Pae " (Guad in Cbhrwg) Chtwo Distriot laugers Gasqut an the Pmers R.8. Zdqrs. Rand Jt.S. : S B Shasta Costs LB. a a Pace Creek R*S* 9 a Nwtmorne R.5. Smithork c .S* A. A. 1Ciode, resigmed JSZ=r I and wa replamed an the Chete District In February by Ray Park. Par Acneas Distriot by, Pl l. B son$ In turn ws replsed cm the On Pbruary 1, go Be Haefmr, after 16 yesr as Te an the 81siym oal Assistant, me transferred to the Casade Forest to tWa *harg of thenter Sala, Be was repisoed by Juder Forester Russl ftmoa. eorge Boees me assigned to the Pa& Creek District as Assistaxit RanMe under DWItt. Imseel Bameo ms the fiast JimIa Forester m the Far.st In Moreh a1 the district rapgers wre gathered ud the leadership of Raegar Ditt to construct a ground gireult line 1res Oradts Pass to Rand Rge Otati. a distance o The Dm5 typ loout osbia cm Irm limAtn mm completed during the suar Work progressed an the n mois Rivr. south York Chates Ormybeeke and Eqie Creok Trails. The Chetao Iwm and Low DIvift trais ware ea1etedo an the Beer Ca.p-Galis, Tra. remanstruation work ms das Work _s shut down an the Agws Road (fra weddawun) In Ibeh by the Forest Servisei but ihe Curry County same through with the neessary eopwations a contract me let to E. R. Milr for the final13 silos to Lhstr crook for $7,29o.o, whiok ms Z- I ,I 192 eampleted In Novmbe. per Atl.. - Cmn1t The job Wabeen costing about tIde unk In 5ovner en egremmut me. signed witk Del Norte CcunLy to ecmstrt a $12,000*00 read Into Big Flt on a 50-5 basis. Ramgor Chris Sher built a 290-toot bridge scroe Lebst of Ames Bz Itatioi. (it floated aq Creek at the durig the flood of Ferbrua 1927.) FmZ Fortysis fires bad ocm'red an the For'..t by the mad of Septmbers end after a two-week period of 4p wther In O0tobr a second fire smeas oocurred vhio cAmsd another dozen rams fir... Iost of the late fires this season wore snell, though one butmed 30 acres an the Page Creek District. No s*mries tar the soason, wre fo. ial with a comme Arrsngamts me made soly in the son a&UVlene ompo at Crescent CIta to land towu si and equ1dm at Big nFla a distane of p0 nils, for $15.00 per trip*. Hwvero thwo. La no resord of advwtato being take of this serviLe. Duing 1925, appliostimm mer received frol Zone Orq tw bams site, an the Rogue River at UfLaldO Baa' tAm a paty a siur wishing to build a SM2,00*00 hol cm 2lk Creek an the Reodo NIghw~ja an from tbe Rormands for a hatel at Patricks Crok Tbe latter pr'ojest mms the only me to swateriailise thouagh 0a' later assured a mineral patent to tinke* Bar* TuBER MANARMU A sle wa mldo to Tom and Everett ayes an the South Fork or the Cocuille Rver ,just iside the Forest boadary. in 126 $19,000.00 in stumpago fro the saIe had netted the 7.50 for Part Orwts sodar, $2.00 for _ 0 agree Prices wr Dmzglae fir, $1.50 for red *dsr, ald 50 tor obher speciso. Russel Boom handled the sale this year. Tbo Califrmias & Oregon Luesr Omaz?' don indefinitelyp laying off 800 no. RAS AND MUR, at Brookings elsed NANM= liz hundred ooupr were estisated for the Forest, but the figure va reuced by the Regimel Otfflo, Commorcial fishing in the Chtote sand liaxhuok Rivers, ubm C= hs ~~~~Tr- ria 19M- CostIns4 losd tor t*.)asmimane November 20 ba4d produce 1000 *Uh brought -round $100 aplo to th. ishmbusm. fihn Four ssmPle plats Were fSrnd an Albert Pawux# rancs mAd a IUdy smig out-oww land me Instituted by Baox end Sobrff* Pogls Mapsd of the Rional Offloo was In shage a the study. ta,. Bd Lookout wAstru sk 1byhtmim early in the ySWr which tor two aides Off the rof ad shattered all of the 39 JmaUa1 1996 temA the follming persmI a the Siskiyou Russel S. Bacon Fannie I, Aburam LOaUI Griai 8uqpeviiso Assistant Supervisor Teelmical Asietant Chief Clark Clark Joam C. Dietuist Daner me IL Low" 8olmff PAwl NA stepheson A, lWe origo 4 P. PDai 8 * R. 0. Park C. So Cose U ,8 Part Ortbrd District A@e Pago Crook a U Gasquset In Pbruarys Sohurff rFtwned to the Mallmar Forest, baiy replaocd by Le Jo Coce, Firest and La IM an th forly guard a the )oumt Bood Oaus Distriote ationd Assistant Forester A. C. Jekscn, of the Mt. Boo4 mesosigned as Teohalel Assistant, replaocig Russel Baone fto in Marhs want to the Eldorado Natiadl Forget ia CaufauIa. In JAy, Roy 0. era*resigned NA wa replaced by Gorge 'e Borws as District Ranger. C. D. Cameon, Proteetive Assistant a the FPo Creek District in 3.925 mad 1926, we appoited Assistant Ranger at Pop rek In plase of Dews. Junio 7crste D. No Mathws, of the Qqua Farest, was asigud to the bYies sale In Jly, whw he rmined until Ssstaer 18# 'RIM the Mae ma s10A d4. Be returned to the pqw. The Tinsup 1YN mad Ilinos RiversTrail we ocilated this Yew*. The linois River tolepher line ve emploted, and a lII= Ms eonstwucted fro Cn 2 aees Eden Ridge to the I)rtle Creeb' Mean line In emoopratica with the Coos County Fire PatraI AssesI-atime. BUMh miles of ne lime eamaneoed th Coquille Di'umr line dirzwt Into Sbasta Costa, Ranger Station, ellizzaiiting th ewitch at Bald lnob and taking the stub line from there to Reogu Diver off the Rogue River Iine. XZ**s CCt ==~~~~~~~~~~~~ A readyhacut (out at Page Creek) IockA oabin mas paeked la 1926 - COztlnad and built an 8angw Peak Lati ceonstuted a oh Peak on the Sims rire. cid the Coca Cauty ?Ie Patro Agoescabla, D6 tye style, M ftar Leaf Dw bri~dc wero oomettrutod = 4he !o-us fivur Trall at lIb1key and Iadow Creok. Highwq wrk mm still prgressUg%, and the Bi. ?'lat rloa4 project was ooileted. A sinXle truss br1d.. 65 foot 1=n and 35 feet ahm low water, was conctruated aoross Siver Crrek cm the lunois fLier Trani it Ws co t1ested NZovumber 6 mud wnt out with the high wvter of Uoya.ber Oi. Approxi;ately *30,000 damage wa suffered by the omw Red2md MZbwm A.1a same period o' high water, Sth Plvw during the rt=een and one-balf miles of the Low Diided maintained and rowatruotod. Road wire Fres this yewr a well bloaw the 15-year Sskiyom average, bohIn rnuber ead ootst There w 29 fires, with a euppresian coost of 8lO*OO Sew of these were insendiary. LANMl Coopesr ad Jac'sm cruisod 3 acres of ttobe naer lUsaribble Ouard Station for a proposed :bo propmentes hweows objected to purchaae of the fir tiiber, an they desired amy Poat Orford oedar. A. Go Joksn did scm additictol srveyinc in the oregm Cames, seekig infarmatim as to the feasibility of emnstrum a mmw mtra* and exit to and fram the imdergrmd ehabrs. The Swede Baen Luker Campui moved their mill to a z site and purhased rima a 80 sores of Kational Forest land early In the season, with plar to purchase ere in oinootia with milluin their am timber. The Coas Bay Lumber CmceW surveyed for a railroad down the Sixes Fjver, Th 1~w dsl red outting from early July to Ziperber l8, PMGE A.tD UZILDI F "owky I DMM nasin in roa. Liver was publioizd by Zne. Grey' story Rffle = Logue fierr in tho *'Fildad Strome Wasimo A rod 6zd im olvb w organxed at Brookins, ad Agmess reported a very euseesful dewr bmIng seasan. 1926 The gralzg std - Caitlmasd an outf-er lands we continud at In Outa@ber the Cheteo Diatriet h1adquarters to Eaidci frm Ieto me mBed . mbe Ethw bad bown ine. bmrly days of the woeto and the Agaves District headquarter were moved from Sbasta Costa to Agneow earlie in the seaso. J$-4/t -la7 The prsoanel of the Forest an Januery 1, 1927O u A. Ho Wright so N. Levs A. G. Jacks= Founie I* Abram Lans, Griffin Le Je Coop P.e tevenon A*. We Bori0 J.P? DWI C. D. Comr 0. W. Boere C S. Case Spri Ast. ftpervisor Aesst Forester Chief Clark Clerk Distriot Rancr. Port Orford District a a ApJew , calo , C " A t Rau ' District Rane, Cheto a a asaq O Janua7 8, 1927, supervisor Wright was transferred to the TobOc Forsst in Arisoma ad on Februar 15a 1927s Jo He BilliMUsa ariv" fro the Olyqio Forest as the n Su-pervi Gore Aims Leana Oriffin resigned mid mm replaced by Lies Basel Wily as seoond oork* A. Co Button mmn assigned as Bridge ftcInZe on the Rogue River Suspnsion bridge at RWM Fall1s dwing the sunre Durbe this yew, so telephoe lines wer onstrwcted me being 2ptut. Lie fron the Forest servi.. line at GLice Creek lo the 9wier HIll Hie. A telephone lin was constructed from Brookings to Itw Ma2r and other telephoe lime an the District twe with the BAwbor Ranw Stations The Forest euftwed the worse flood of all tim on 1dbruary 21, mg 22# The Rogue River bridg, at Ble Gate and aboe RdinI Iw out and the nw Agnoss Bridge uas daugds as to be &aNrorn to all*excpt foot travel. In sl about #75#000.00 In dwaagos occurred to Fbrest Service iqrovelawts an the Siekiyou. DurTing the sean, bridges were conetruoted acrs Silver Creok on the Illiois Rivr trail and across Rogue River at Rajale palls. Oaitluad -127- A am ranger du1lin was e*Wl.ted as Aougs, Is the tll a road tirm Gal. a prainarY bastio to Bear CWp. aurveY was zude for The hans terry at }sose 3m!, built In v1925 went out and we not replaasdo In Noveaber of 1921, a formr fti at this point wont to oww FM This msaon wason. of the st saomsetgl evr pwirensee by %is Nrest La lie of fire ontol Thom woo only 30 fires ihiah burned a total o 67 aom at a ost of S1*60*0 for Aprossion wA *aused the less of 47X fest box. of tiuber. Fir 'zr Classea, A C B 214 Lightnt" 1 - 11 Inoendiary a 7 Bookers 30 K11.isalamas.a _ 1 2 1 L=3 A prposa to furfter deve the harbor at Cremit City wa approved by thw board of AM bmOi*ftv* Assistant Ibroetor, N.As ShermAn ad" a talk at the board A ta-tion gt4 us i mtlng La erten TIMER NANAwfu 02ttizn Mas resiwd an the Naye muti teln vha the sal. was obosed. =la and was omtinued, RIMS AM WIlDLIFE X=NAG= PoW htUg Ms reotrtd In the Chetoo Distraict Tmao vas also a poor aorn crop. : 4"n IOW7 . CautluzrAs experiment or running 50 oehep on Johnson Ikomtoain me reported swuesful to datoo To coutur wHae bnked in 10 dAy by the Colego near Pistol1 River. rhirty-six oouvmr wer bagged In cum' Countyr this yeacv KrScELLAMU~S A new rIM system was established this year. RIoeipts from July 1, to Sptember 30, were as20.05* the lawest In the Rogione X as a~~~48ft Tbo yeor beM with tkotefllving peremmel lina-up = the Forest, and their headquartwso J N. Billinples Sqxwrview C.ret~s Pae" * V Assistant Supervisor A, G. Jsekwou Fanise I. Abris ael Cilley) Fradmiwurg Chief Clerk Clerk * U District Ranger, Part Orford AP as a GAls,.. a P Stephenson Borice A. Vh De~itt C. 3t. c. US BOW Go Via W I"c' o C a~~~~ Asut. ~ugm Case , k .st. S a Litoo 066.s # S Powers R*So #e . Ague" Rog* RPd R*8S R L.Ro 2: Per c,. Barber htbUtork Persnnmel Csng,.e In Jalys, Cae.., r"eign.4 to go int after3 ten years ani the Gas quet Diatrifto private ploynta and C. 1) Csasron _ ro- mated to fiil his plaao, an the Chatoo In 1927 plaf Leo D. QN.akebush Protective Assistant we appointed Assistant Toner in Caswua' 1U3FROV)E3ZMT This ye sa tie beim3Ig of an effort t livixg tasillties for the dietrist "Mare build better and better rager stetims In all yespeoto. $1,DO we originally allotted tar this "pa ewks The Apo" ranger residensi P was(3opl.ted In all details Om builts. The Power raer statiM reel.' we tatrted in the WI end wred on dur1Zg the wintr and an eMae building don" woothe ?y the raw g A D.6 tp lokout sabin uas pak"d in fr= est Fork and oonstructed4an Mt. Bolivsr at a cost of uaoimd t*,200, about belt et Vbiob VW* for pasin. lmb cabina were, started by goav4 lbo an omen o (Port Orford District) and near Ni=- oile Miountain, and were coWleted the toliluing year' The Big Flat Road _a ompleted during the yer 3ZJ-Coat, 15-tea,.spaoltW bridge we built acros But* C001614 and a Om* R.a ' Cantimes 19X The eonstruation of ww tzalls = the alski'an wt tor. _rd mcre rpldly this year* A war trail 17 Dles in laeth ws mstruated frwm Cq=z Creok to Chotoo Peek. Two nd rn-balf silos ofthe Ed= Valley-Cold Sptlv Trail was relocated aram the north ad. of Mt. Bolivar. The Upper £11k rIver ?rall oostratiu wans sonxtimond A 105-ftot bridtlso w built across t'<oe Trt Perk of the t tMIW first lIcegirdr Illilns -Ivor noar thce State 'Uin. bridge built in the ragloan according to C:rar. hi yw saw the Osborno Jr. (6) ieinds put Into A ftire oasrtiC on Setw Uountain r'an 9 ales, bw1ubg a strip 2 :Uw wio, It detroayed the Loues Creek sohol and ome far. buildings and tiwneated Grants Pse* The Forest had 50 fires during the satoee, but the burned aremd oost woe not ofmprartivfly larMe. Quite an epideni4 of burwimC buildings took plaee, which remalted It two Class C tires. LW 'ltninc activ:ty iraoroaeed citthe year due to dolopmt work and good strikes In th Peck and Bunker Ml1 ines, The old Patrieks Creek Eotel (old loettian) was bid. Jureas built a $22,000 Iodg* near llsho. Early In -th *measn 700 3 feet of sugar Vim e s s.*~ to the 8usd. Basin Lusber CoqupW tathesaneo.~ yo and later 821 'e mu oat to Six hundred tbcrzss:d feet of cua pine and pmderova pine wee sold to Velcter & Son an Slate Creed 4 A Port Orrd coder was sold In th Tin Creek bun for $2.60 pw thousand. The waldlr telleet tres, a rediwmod 475 feet in heigft, was cla1id by %blNorte Coumty. On Jul 25. the Swede Basin Lber Campaj (Spaldiags) zdll In S5ede Usinx burned, xa ple= werc =ad for a rnw IU at Grouts ?aso The Coos DV Lwbm Caq disomtinued packing woo to loggn donkvy. an =ules and retirned to the oeaxtlonal method of bauling In wood logs by doney. $1,V eBm-Coakow JUN02 AND UZWLl7 NMI IT Fisb were pla~nW la Nwdy Ou*l of &dth ivezr. and other taibutarise Dow huntifg in the Oasqust Distrist mm powi. hep paled an the Sis kyoincrased frm 50 had in 1926 to 1,p5head in 1920*0and hoepes me reased u... eutertald for in- =8Caaz=o Ma1'h prodused the hardest stom of the year with a The Rogue Rivw rainfall ct 11 to 15 inches @m the Fw.*A ros 21 fot an Neroh 26a The first '*ow How trip of lewd mE staged by the Supervisor an a trip ovr the Big Flat Road VaW Cf CretOUt Ci CoVMty COMsiOl On coc *d by the Comii lodsa newspaper men, and influsixtal citisms of Del Zots Cc~tY. 192 Mw year was startdth a?. R* Billliagales K. no a. 1 s A* 0. Jaekam P. 1. Abaans 113*1 Fredeabwg Lo Jo Cooper Po No Stephen~on*Auess A. '. 8 orio J P. Witt L. D. Qtackdbush o.I. Beors Co D. CGnwma fte tol1ming persomul supervisor Ast. SUperVisor Fbrust aminer =hef Clek Clet District lt,, Part Orford Distriot District * Gaice * a ce rek Asnar Ranger Page Cre* District "er# Chatoo Pl~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Personl qhunms Osqus On Psbruary 31# Go 'V. Down mm transrerred to the Lone Crock District of 1-i heMheur National Forst and was replacd a tho Chatoo District bn?. N St The Agaess District was takcmm over b7 Pa e Co To Allen ftosm l Guard and Assimt;ut Ranger an the Giskiyou and =ors reoetly In timber sue oirk an the Coscd Tho Rancer's rouidmoe was oapleted at Powers Ranger Station and a Flrsants cabin built at Wilidorse. Work was eontinud an t Upper E3lk River trail, tzrm Solvon Nowntain to Hao1ribbl. Rangr Stacme, A road from Peavino Hountain to the Dunir 1rfl Mm Was onstruobd by the nw ope rators of the Bunker iLU WlneS Tir'. bridges wre oontaetod an the Illinois River Road* end No. 9 wire reple 4*5 wils of No. 12 wire In the 0nion M~amntin line. A consirable mileage of w;a t rails was constructed and sa old trails mere aiztainsdo A preliuixz7 location n-V' was =d* for the iapW CW resd. The mauso of 1929 va one of th worst fire seasma* war downiwed by the ftrest and was undoubtedly te ovar eleslowed by the Port Orford District. $x,9? worst 1_9 himddit - COntland $eptweber 19, and 20, wer dmy of e ztremly I mad bad fires started south of Elk River aid burned Intothe edge of Port Orftrd and an Sal= Creek nwar Powrs* During the smk. pall whieb was ceated, a fire was started an Grassy Enob that burned around 9,000 ames. Other rires comrred an Jobmso komtaln end in Ndwi Vall at the sam time but we hld to m1 sise One thmna.ZK and siz1iy five awene bad burned an the Fbrest by the end of Uaye Sizteem fire, had ooourred by S*ptmer Ip and 2 more IW the and of the month. R.avy rains fell &uvin October but by November 23,, fie started t burno A series of several hwaored ineendiery fises were not an the North Fork of Elk River which ama. osded in burning Barklow and Salmon Ma~mtsins and destroying on., of the finest stands of reproduntion an the Pbrest. This fire burnsd the anst rapidly at nighs the nitts of Noveer 28, an 29. beim the worst vbe the kymthiermopaph at Brookings regired a relative humidity of IV at midnitht. The fir ftihters were handicapped by lack of iwter at the highm el*eaions wher taw fire burned n yet were ooldp wets an miserable at oaws in low anyons wher a to ettled In* Hluidity varied trom 85 in the low eaumtryto 2e at the lower edge of the fire and then don to lalst noJith on Use Ugh points at night where a 40 o 50 mile per hou Northeast wind me blowinc. The Barkw lk*antfir tre " It s, naed buied 9,000 acres wad had a poeritr of 26 nile:. The sason flmaI aied with a rain on Deoener 7. In all, ther were 71 fires which burned 23,000 ames, _eStrQVV4 thirt'mor mil1on tost BO.M. of VArohanftbl* tibw valued at M06*0O030 - $26,000.00 wth of xww&aon and, In all rwest to tie extent of aepoo5 ased damm~p to the and a cost of *8*713 s00 lar tires set by ranchers almi the coast rn into X Forst and an. fire caused a M45,0O00 lo" In the ReduoA war uCoest Cty. F*rMr Supervisor UoDwnel sated that b dsow semi tirs bum In tibw mad brush on the Siskiyou iu ever month of the yar. i-5a