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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM167C_hansen-bridge_Eden-ID.html
Until 1919, when a high suspension bridge was completed here, this 16-mile long river gorge could be crossed only in a rowboat. With 14 cables, each more than 900 feet long, a $100,000 suspension bridge was wide enough to accommodate two lanes of …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM163K_hunt-camp_Jerome-ID.html
Excluded from their west coast homes by military authorities, more than 9000 Japanese Americans occupied Hunt Relocation Camp 4 miles north of here between 1942 & 1945.Until they could resettle in other places, they live in wartime tarpaper barrac…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14PZ_michel-bourdon_Challis-ID.html
This Valley was discovered in 1822 by an expedition of Hudson's Bay Company trappers led by Michel Bourdon. Bourdon had come to the Northwest with David Thompson, who had started the Idaho fur trade in 1808-9. Trappers searched everywhere for beav…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14PE_sacajawea-historic-byway_Salmon-ID.html
[This marker also serves as a site map for historical and natural resource sites. The text is entered in the order of their numbers.]1. Mud Lake Wildlife Management AreaMud Lake Wildlife Management Area was established in 1940 by the Idaho Departm…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14NV_in-memory-of-jeff-allen-and-shane-heath_North-Fork-ID.html
In memory ofJeff Allen and Shane Heath,Indianola Helitack Crew members,lost in the Cramer Fire near here onJuly 22, 2003.This will be a lasting place of remembrance and gratitude for their lives and service, a place for wildland firefighters to re…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14NU_deep-creek_Gibbonsville-ID.html
Sept. 2, 1805 Lewis and Clark proceeded with much difficulty up the North Fork, they camped on the west side of the river in this vicinity. Clark wrote "...we were obliged to cut a road, over rocky hill Slides where our horses were in peteal dange…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14NE_fort-bonneville_Carmen-ID.html
In a grove of cottonwoods across the river, Capt. B.L.E. Bonneville established a winter fur trade post. Sept. 26, 1832. His fort, described by a rival trapper as "a miserable establishment" - - -"consisted of several log cabins, low, badly constr…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14ND_lewis-and-clark_North-Fork-ID.html
Clark explored the first few miles of the rugged canyon of the Salmon below here late in August 1805. His small advance party camped here with poor but friendly Indians. Clark reported that the Salmon "is almost one continued rapid," and that pass…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14M6_lewis-and-clark_Gibbonsville-ID.html
On their way north searching for a route over Idaho's mountain barrier, Lewis and Clark left this canyon and ascended a high ridge to reach Bitterroot Valley, September 3-4, 1805. No Indian trail came this way, but Tobe, their experienced Shoshoni…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM14L4_hungry-wet-and-cold_North-Fork-ID.html
The historic Lewis and Clark Expedition travelled along this river in 1805. As the first white men to document this region, their maps, diaries, and encounters with different cultures forever changed the western landscape. Cold, wet and hungry, Ca…