Parting of the Ways

Parting of the Ways (HM2BOV)

Location: Declo, ID 83323 Cassia County
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Country: United States of America
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N 42° 34.626', W 113° 13.164'

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Inscription

California Road at Raft River

In 1811 the first white expedition to go through this area of the Snake River and the lower end of the Raft River Valley was the Wilson Price Hunt expedition from St. Louis to Astoria. However, the area was well known to the French and British trappers.
The California Cutoff was first proven a feasible route in 1826 by Peter Skene Ogden and his Snake Brigade who crossed Granite Pass. Joseph Chiles, in 1842, determined a wagon route was feasible as he wandered from California to Fort Hall. In 1843, Chiles, with Joseph Walker as guide, eight wagons, and thirty emigrants, turned southwest here and headed to California. Walker defined the California Wagon Trail from here to the Humboldt and to California. John C. Fremont camped September 26, 1843, on the Raft River. From 1843-48, the California Cutoff was the main route from here, southwest to the City of Rocks.
Between 1841 and 1860, about 500,000 people passed this point. Before 1848, more than 100,000 emigrants turned here on their journey. The route continued to be used until the railroads connected in 1869.
The Parting of the Ways could be called Decision Point because here some people finally decided between heading to Oregon or California. As noted in the dairy of H.M Judson, August 11, 1862, "...bid goodby to...they take the California road, we keep our eyes straight



ahead. No tear shed, no regrets expressed. We feel considerable relieved and think we have had our train purged of many a contrary stubborn disposition and shall have less contention and fault finding."
When the California Trail meant the Salt Lake Cutoff, many pioneers took that trail into the Salt Lake Valley. Returning members of the Mormon Battalion, traveling east, pioneered a route to Salt Lake. Addison Pratt, of the Mormon Battalion, named "Twin Sisters: in the City of Rocks. This route was used by 25,000 travelers in 1849-1850, and thousands more passed through until 1869. An estimated one-third of the forty-niners traveled this way.
Details
HM NumberHM2BOV
Series This marker is part of the California Trail series
Tags
Year Placed2011
Placed ByDaughters of Utah Pioneers
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Wednesday, September 26th, 2018 at 11:02am PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)12T E 317860 N 4716241
Decimal Degrees42.57710000, -113.21940000
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 42° 34.626', W 113° 13.164'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds42° 34' 37.56" N, 113° 13' 9.84" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Area Code(s)208
Which side of the road?Marker is on the right when traveling North
Closest Postal AddressAt or near 130 2880 E, Declo ID 83323, US
Alternative Maps Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap

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