Snake River
Snake River is the 13th largest river in the United States, and it is the largest
tributary of the
Columbia River.
1 The river rises in western Wyoming, and flows westwards before swinging north into
the state of Washington. Its drainage basin goes through six US states.
Large amounts of salmon travelled up the
Columbia River and into Snake River, which supported large Aboriginal populations along the river.
2 The first European explorers in the area misinterpreted a local Aboriginal hand sign
for fish, which they took to mean snake, thus giving the Snake River its name.
3
Snake River was inside the land-dispute area between the United States and Canada;
indeed, the HBC decided to kill all the beavers along the Snake River, so there would
be less incentive for the Americans to settle.
4 By 1848, when Snake River became part of the
Oregon Territory, most of the beaver population had been decimated.
5
This document records the events surrounding an 1858 skirmish between US mounted troops and the
Aboriginals in the area. Shortly after the US troops crossed the Snake River, the
Americans were
met by a number Indians of the Spokan and other Tribes who objected to the soldiers
passing through their country...two [American] officers and five men killed, together
with some ten more wounded, and being moreover short of ammunition, [the Americans]
quietly withdrew leaving behind all baggage and stores and two mountain howitzers.
- 1. J.C Kammerer, Largest Rivers in the United States, The United States Geological Survey.
- 2. Daniel. S. Meatte, Western Snake River Prehistory, Digital Atlas of Idaho.
- 3. Snake River Country, National Wild and Scenic Rivers.
- 4. Roger Kaza, Hudson's Bay Company, Engines of Our Ingenuity.
- 5. Ibid.