The Dalles
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The land trail
stopped here until Samuel Barlow built a road around Mt. Hood in
1846. Getting from Whitman Mission to the Columbia River was not
a problem for the travelers. Emigrants who had visited Whitman Mission
often went down the Walla Walla River to the Columbia River, while
other travelers who took the southern route, the Umatilla Cutoff,
through Pendleton and Echo followed the Umatilla River. Once they
reached the Columbia River, a major decision had to be made--What
now? Some travelers built boats or rafts, while others hired Indian
boatmen with their great canoes, or Hudson's Bay Company boats to
get them down the river. The weary travelers were facing the challenge
of the Columbia, an enormous river carrying the volume of all the
rivers they had already crossed combined. This magnificent river
was full of rapids, huge rocks, and high cliff walls all posing
tremendous dangers to the travelers. Many emigrants lost their lives
at this point so near to their final destination.
The more cautious
of the travelers carefully worked their wagons down the banks of
the Columbia, but then came The Dalles, a place in the river where
two great rocks restricted and channelled the flow of the entire
river between them. (The Dalles translates literally to "the trough".)
There was absolutely no way for the wagons to continue on the riverbank,
for it was about to cut through the Cascade Range, creating the
Columbia River Gorge. At The Dalles some emigrants carried their
belongings around the falls, then traded their oxen to Indians for
boat fare downstream. If all went well, they would spend as little
as two days on the river, soon after came the end to their months-long
journey.
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Last modified on:
January 31, 2004
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