Columbia River
This 2000 km river, roughly 800 km of which wends through Canada, has its source in
southeastern
British Columbia's Columbia Lake. It passes into the United States where it meets the Pacific Ocean
at the divide between
Washington and
Oregon State.
Spanish explorers had named it Rio de San Roque in 1775, and it was called Oregon
River by
Jonathan Carver in 1766; it was not until 1792 that Boston trader
Captain Robert Gray named it after his ship.
1
David Thompson, then of the North West Company, explored the westward Columbia in 1811 to find American
traders already present in
Fort Astoria, on the south side of the Columbia's delta.
2
As several early despatches show, this river served as a natural border between British
and US interests until, after much tension in
Oregon Territory, the Oregon Treaty of 1846 settled an enforceable borderline north of the Columbia
to the 49th parallel, which is now the Canada-US border.
- 1. Columbia River, BC Geographical Names Information System.
- 2. James Marsh, Columbia River, The Canadian Encyclopedia.