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Pend Oreille County, in the
extreme northeast corner of Washington, was the last county created in the
state. The long narrow strip of land bordering the Idaho Panhandle comprised
the easternmost part of Stevens County until designated a separate county in 1911.
In 1912, Newport, the largest town, defeated three other contenders to become
county seat. The name Pend Oreille derives from a French-Canadian fur trade
moniker for local Indians who probably wore large ear pendants. The area that
became the small, sparsely populated county was in many ways the last
frontier in the state. Its inhabitants were first the indigenous peoples,
then fur traders and explorers, followed by missionaries, then miners,
loggers, and homesteaders. Industries such as timber, mining, and cement
manufacture provided employment, but most of the profits flowed to outside
investors, leaving little for local development. Today the county is working
to upgrade its economy, while its scenic beauty and recreational
opportunities are attracting tourism and settlement.
First Peoples
The earliest inhabitants of the
land now within Pend Oreille County were Indian tribes: Archaeological
evidence shows Native American presence as early as 11,000 years ago. In 1809
the North West Company explorer David Thompson (1770-1857) made his first
trip down the Pend Oreille River. The Indians he found were the Kalispels,
which means "camas people," after a root that was their staple
food, and the Pend Oreilles. The Kalispels currently have a reservation near
Usk, the smallest in the state, while many Pend Oreilles now live in Montana.
In 1950, the Bureau of Indian Affairs combined the Kalispels and remaining
Washington Pend Oreilles into a single tribe. David Thompson and the fur
traders who followed did not establish any forts or permanent settlements in
present Pend Oreille County.
Protestant missionaries, with
their rather austere version of Christianity and failure to understand
traditional Indian ways, met with little success among the Kalispels. The Jesuits
fared better, and most of the Kalispels are still Catholic. Few of the
Kalispels were involved in the Indian wars following the massacre of
Protestant missionaries Marcus and Narcissa Whitman at Waiilatpu in 1847. The
diseases brought by traders and settlers decimated the population. White
settlement and the reservation system forever altered the traditional
Kalispel way of life. The strength of the remaining approximately 340
Kalispels lies not in numbers but in determination and vision. Their off-reservation
Northern Quest Casino at Airway Heights near Spokane supports, among other
projects, the Camas Institute, which addresses educational, vocational,
mental, and spiritual needs of tribal members and aspires to provide a model
for other tribes.
Gold, Lead, and Zinc
The first substantial influx of
non-Indians came in the late 1850s with the discovery of gold in the Metaline
area in the northern part of the county. This loose, surface
"placer" gold attracted many who had failed to strike it rich in
the California gold rush, including Chinese prospectors who were later driven
out by a combination of white and Indian hostility. Permanent settlement of
the Metaline area did not begin until 1884.
The real mining bonanza,
however, would not be in placer gold, but in lead and zinc extracted from the
Metaline Mining District by hard-rock mining methods. From 1928 to the early
1950s, the district was the state's major producer of these metals. During
World War II, "soldier-miners" were deployed to the Metaline mines
to help produce lead and zinc for the war effort.
The Forest Resource
Timber was the other major
extractive industry in the area that became Pend Oreille County. At the time
of earliest settlement, the area was almost entirely forested with such trees
as western white pine, ponderosa pine, fir, Douglas fir (which is not a true
fir), and western red cedar. The acquisition of timberland was complicated.
Much came to be owned by the Northern Pacific Railroad through the 1864
Northern Pacific Land Grant. The grant deeded public land over to the
railroad in alternating square miles, resulting in a "checkerboard"
pattern of public and railroad land parcels along the railroad right-of-way.
Although the railroad land was supposed to be opened to homesteaders within
five years of completing tracks, repeated failures of the Northern Pacific
delayed this promise. Eventually huge multi-state timber corporations, rather
than homesteaders, acquired millions of these acres in Pend Oreille County
and elsewhere in a virtual give-away.
Yet local timber companies and
sawmills did proliferate. Edwin (Hamp) Winchester built the first sawmill in
the area, to supply settlers in the Calispell (variant spelling of Kalispel)
Valley. The most successful local company was that of Frederick A. Blackwell
(1852-1922), who by 1909 owned 65,000 acres in the northern part of the
county and built sawmills at Spirit Lake, Idaho, and Ione, Washington, in
Pend Oreille County, both under the company name Panhandle Lumber Company. The
Panhandle mill in Ione was the first all-electric sawmill in the Inland
Northwest. Of particular importance to the area was the cedar pole industry,
which supplied poles for burgeoning electric, telephone, and telegraph
systems throughout the country.
The loggers who worked for these
companies were a combination of local men with families nearby and single,
itinerant lumberjacks who traveled from camp to camp with their bedrolls on
their backs. Working conditions were difficult and dangerous, pay was low,
and hours were long. Bunkhouse life was primitive, but food was usually good
and plentiful. The one thing loggers would not tolerate was a bad cook and
stingy rations. The single men often squandered a month's wages on a weekend
spree in town. By the 1920s, efforts by the Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW), commonly called the Wobblies, were somewhat successful in bringing
about better conditions, shorter hours, and higher wages for Pend Oreille
County loggers as well as miners.
Steamboat Era
Steamboat service began on the
Pend Oreille River in 1888 and continued for more than three decades as the
chief mode of transporting people and freight of the region. Navigation
presented few problems between Newport and just south of Box Canyon. But passage
beyond that point was impossible until 1899, when the channel was widened
enough to allow limited navigation of the rapids. Elmer ("Cap")
Arnold of Blueslide was the only known captain skilled enough to make the Box
Canyon run on a regular basis. Otherwise, passengers and freight had to be
portaged around the rapids by wagon, then loaded onto the Metaline to
continue down river. In 1907 an expensive federal blasting and widening
project, at the behest of mining and timber interests, enabled seasonal boat
service to Metaline Falls.
Probably the most notable
riverboat was the sternwheeler Ione, one of Frederick Blackwell's various
enterprises. This "floating palace" (Bamonte, 137), accommodating
500 passengers, provided pleasure excursions from Newport. All of these
boats, big and small, were crucial to the development of the region in
transporting settlers, miners, loggers, cement workers, and eventually the
builders of a railroad that would replace river transport.
The Railroad Arrives
Because the Pend Oreille River
inconveniently flowed north, Blackwell could not float his logs south to
existing markets and railheads. The log rafts had to be towed upstream to
Newport, a slow and uneconomical process. The Great Northern reached Newport
in 1892 enabling rail shipment from that point.
In 1910, primarily in order to
transport his logs to the railhead, Blackwell completed his Idaho &
Washington Northern Railroad running from near Post Falls, Idaho, north to
Metaline Falls via Newport, mostly along the Pend Oreille River. It soon
became an all-purpose railroad, moving not only lumber, but zinc, lead,
cement products, and all kinds of freight needed by settlers. Its beautifully
appointed passenger cars transported the people of the area. Its high bridge
crossing the Pend Oreille at Box Canyon was a feat of engineering for the
time. With the coming of Blackwell's
railroad, the colorful steamboat era on the Pend Oreille began to wane. In
1914 the Milwaukee Railroad took control of the Idaho & Washington Northern,
which then became merely a feeder for the Milwaukee. The line was
discontinued in the 1970s except for a freight service now called the Pend
Oreille Valley Railroad, with connections to transcontinental lines. On
occasional weekends, the Pend Oreille Valley Lions Club runs a popular
re-enactment of the old passenger service between Ione and Metaline Falls.
Passengers hold their breath while the train stops on the high trestle to
provide a view of Box Canyon.
Gotta Match?
By the early 1920s, another company,
Diamond Match, had overtaken Panhandle as the top timber operation in the
county. Amazingly, the demand for matches at the time was such that 80 per
cent of its stock of mighty Pend Oreille white pines was reduced to matches.
The Dalkena Lumber Company and Ohio Match were also long-term competitors of
Panhandle Lumber.
Over the years, more than 250
sawmills operated at various times in Pend Oreille County, ranging from
gigantic operations to small single-family businesses. Many small logging
operations were based on homesteads acquired under the Homestead Act of 1862,
the Timber and Stone Act of 1878, or the 1906 Forest Homestead Act. However,
some homesteaders, instead of "proving up" the land for their own
use, "fronted" for large timber interests such as Panhandle and
immediately sold out to them, often in exchange for stock or a promise of
employment. Fluctuating prices, fires, and depressions caused the demise of
others. Vaagen Brothers of Ione, the last major sawmill in the county, closed
in 1995.
Cement
The cement industry, made
possible by deposits of limestone and quartz near Metaline Falls, was another
mainstay of the county economy. The Lehigh Portland Cement Company
(originally Inland Portland Cement Company) was incorporated at Metaline
Falls in 1909.
Although the major capital to
build the plant came from Pennsylvania, substantial local investors and
company developers were Lewis P. Larsen (1876-1955), the founder of Metaline
Falls, and Frederick Blackwell. In its heyday, Lehigh employed 400, and
Blackwell's railroad (later Milwaukee), which terminated at the plant, hauled
12 to 15 cars of cement a day. Until closure of the cement plant in 1990,
Metaline Falls was a dusty but prosperous town.
Homesteading
Agriculture was slow to develop
in Pend Oreille County and never became very profitable. Of course initially
it was based on homesteading. Settlers found a few natural valleys and
meadows, such as the Calispell Valley, that appeared to have agricultural
potential, but soon discovered them to be in a flood plain. The remainder of
the area was mostly mountainous and heavily forested. In 1906, the Forest Homestead
Act was passed. Under its provisions, 160-acre plots judged to have
agricultural potential were released from the reserved forests. In Pend
Oreille County, homesteading under this act was sometimes a ruse to gain and
resell timber holdings. Those who actually intended to farm, once they had
logged their claims, faced the backbreaking task of stump removal. Local
conditions in many areas were more conducive to dairying than to growing
crops. These farms first supplied the logging and mining camps and later the
creameries in growing towns such as Newport. In 1944 there were 75 commercial
dairies in Pend Oreille County. None remain today.
Whether for logging or
agriculture, most small private holdings in Pend Oreille County were
unprofitable, yielding a precarious existence for the families that held on.
Many homesteaders had to find extra work during part of the year, leaving
their families to face snowbound winters without them. Local midwives such as
Jennie Wooding delivered the babies. The first permanent physician in the
area was Dr. John T. Phillips (1871-1942), who came to Newport in 1900. Many
settlers simply abandoned their homesteads, and the last public lands were
withdrawn from homesteading in 1935.
Community Life
Not all frontier life was
hardship and failure, though. The settlers valued education: A family would
donate land for a school and the building of a one-room log schoolhouse would
be a community effort. For many children, the route to school was long and hazardous.
Others, living too far from any school, were taught at home. Older children
often boarded with families in town for high school. Barn dances, and school
and Grange activities provided the social life typical of frontier
communities.
Some of the early settlers did
reasonably well and even established towns. A Welshman, George H. Jones (b.
1863), founded Usk in 1886, naming it after a town in Wales. The Cusick
family began arriving in the Calispell Valley in 1882, and by 1902 Joe Cusick
(1868-1927) had platted the town of Cusick. Ione was founded by homesteader
Elmer Hall in 1896, when he established its first post office. Charles
Talmadge platted Newport in 1898. Danish immigrant Lewis Larsen, not only
built Metaline Falls on the land occupied by three of his mining claims
(1910) but became fairly wealthy in the process, with a home designed by
Spokane's renowned architect Kirtland Cutter.
Floods and Fires
The most serious natural
disasters in the region were floods and fires. The floods of 1894 and 1948
swept away the farms, homes and livelihoods of many. Albeni Falls Dam,
completed just across the Idaho border in 1955, has reduced flooding in the
Pend Oreille Valley.
Forest and sawmill fires were
frequent and ruinous but none equaled the catastrophic fire of 1910, which
blackened three million acres from northeastern Washington to western
Montana. After weeks of drought and searing temperatures, on August 20 a
violent wind whipped a number of small fires into a single howling firestorm.
In the Pend Oreille area, "There was a solid front of fire ten miles
wide, from just south of Dalkena down to three miles north of Newport"
(Chance, Lumber, 111-112) Many Pend Oreille County people survived by digging
holes in the ground.
The town of Dalkena and its
sawmill were consumed, but the company rebuilt. Panhandle and other companies
lost enormous stands of timber but were able to conduct extensive salvage
logging after the fire. More lives were lost and timber and towns destroyed
in Idaho than in Washington.
Becoming a County
From 1900 to 1910, the
population of the area, still part of Stevens County, grew from roughly 1,200
to 5,900. In the early days of settlement, the county seat of Colville was
accessible only by trail across the Selkirk Mountains. The Great Northern
Railroad substantially relieved the area's isolation when, on May 28, 1892,
its first passenger train from Chicago arrived in Newport. Completion of this
transcontinental line in 1893 opened Newport to national markets. Serving as
a port both for the Pend Oreille River and the Great Northern, the city
became the primary distribution center for the Pend Oreille region's vast
natural resources. When residents of the area began
to agitate for a county of their own, Fred L. Wolf (1877-1957), owner and
publisher of the Newport Miner, and Fred Trumbull, an Ione attorney,
circulated petitions and lobbied legislators. They received outside help from
State Senator Oliver Hall of Colfax whose brother Elmer founded Ione. Oliver
Hall had a lodge at Sullivan Lake and loved the area for hunting and fishing.
The legislature passed a bill creating Pend Oreille County, Governor Marion
E. Hay signed it into law, and it went into effect on June 10, 1911. The new
county comprised the easternmost portion of former Stevens County, an area 67
miles long (north to south) and averaging 22 miles in width. It was named
Pend Oreille County in preference to Oliver Hall's suggestion of Allen
County, after John B. Allen, Washington state's first United States senator.
Four towns sought to be named
county seat -- Newport, Cusick, Usk, and Ione. Newport, the hub for both
river and rail transportation, had the largest population and was closest to
Spokane and towns of North Idaho. After being named temporary county seat,
its position was confirmed in 1912 by popular vote. Today, with a population
of about 2,000, Newport remains the largest town in the county.
The new county still faced a
need for roads. Wagon roads, mainly cooperative efforts of the settlers
themselves, linked communities along the Pend Oreille River with Newport, but
they were sometimes impassable. Fred Wolf of Newport and others agitated for
state highways as well as a bridge across the Pend Oreille at Newport. The
state legislature created the Pend Oreille State Highway from Spokane to
Newport in 1917, and in 1929, a state highway was completed from Newport
along the Pend Oreille River to the Canadian border. During Prohibition, it
provided a convenient bootlegging route from Canada. Today it is part of the
scenic International Selkirk Loop to Nelson, British Columbia, and down
through the Idaho Panhandle. Ferries still crossed the Pend Oreille at
various points until 1963. Fred Wolf's long-sought bridge linking Washington
to Idaho at Newport was completed 1927 as an interstate project.
The Great Depression
The stock market crash of 1929
and Great Depression that followed did not affect Pend Oreille County
immediately, but gradually lumber (except for Diamond Match), mining, banks,
and agriculture began to fail, with subsequent loss of jobs. A state agency,
the Washington Emergency Relief Administration, set up camps for homeless,
unemployed men, one of which was a temporary facility at Newport. An
effective federal relief effort, the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
created in 1933, employed single young men to help conserve natural resources
and develop infrastructure in many parts of the country. In Pend Oreille
County major CCC camps were established at Sullivan and Davis lakes. Between
them they added a ranger station, an airstrip, part of State Highway 211,
trails and other improvements. Many veterans of the program attributed their
work ethic to having served in the CCC.
Another Depression-era federal
program was more controversial. The Resettlement Program, known also as the
Scattered Settlers Project, was designed to return much of the marginal
privately owned land to the public domain. The intentions were good: to buy
back their land and resettle distressed farmers, as well as to reclaim and
better manage forest land and natural resources. The problematic result in
Pend Oreille County was the disruption of communities that were viable though
poor and even the "rescue" of farmers who actually were surviving.
Furthermore, many farmers received less than fair value for their land and
were never resettled satisfactorily. Most of the Pend Oreille County land
reclaimed under this program was added to existing national forests. The
Kaniksu and Colville national forests still occupy vast tracts of the county.
To Build a Dam
A major achievement of the 1950s
was construction of the Box Canyon Dam by the Pend Oreille County Public
Utility District, the first PUD in the state to build its own dam. In
addition to hydroelectric power, it provides a campground, boat launches, a
fish hatchery, and environmental maintenance of the riparian areas.
Seattle City Light's Boundary
Dam in Z Canyon near the Canadian border began generating electricity in
1967. Its backwaters have made this wild and scenic stretch of the Pend
Oreille River navigable and open to recreation.
Pend Oreille County Today
Today Pend Oreille County has
more than its share of problems, including rural poverty. For years,
promising young people have left in search of higher education and jobs. But
educational opportunities are improving with distance learning and extension
courses offered at Newport and Ione by community colleges and universities
based outside the county.
Pend Oreille County is now part
of a Tri-County Development District (with Ferry and Stevens counties) to create jobs and a sustainable
diverse economy. The hospital complex at Newport, paper and fiber mills at
Usk, the multi-state Stimson Lumber Company, largest private landowner in the
county, and the recently reopened Pend Oreille Mine are among the major
employers. The population has inched up to 12,000, leaving, according to the
county website, "ample space for wildlife to thrive" and plenty of
opportunity for residents and tourists to enjoy its "lakes, thousands of
acres of forest and mountains climbing to heights of 7,500 feet."
The Pend Oreille River is now
partly tamed, its lake like shores south of Box Canyon Dam lined with upscale
vacation homes, while its northern reaches are still wild enough for the most
adventurous. Obviously the goal for Pend Oreille County is to improve its
economy while conserving its scenic and recreational attractions.
Essay Author: Laura Arksey
With Our Thanks and
Appreciation, this Essay was Reprinted from: HistoryLink.org
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