A Brief History of the South Sound Country
By Edward Echtle
Native Peoples

For centuries the
Chehalis,
Cowlitz,
Nisqually, and
Squaxin peoples made their
homes on the inlets, prairies, and valleys of the South Sound
region. Numerous shellfish beds, salmon
streams, and edible plants allowed native peoples to prosper and
develop a rich cultural heritage with intricate social and economic
ties. At the
Squaxin
Island Museum, visitors can learn about life in the South Sound
Country prior to European contact. Cultural artifacts combine
with oral history to give visitors a look at the continuity of native
life up to the present day.
The State Capitol Museum
also offers a glimpse of traditional native life, represented in an
interior reconstruction of a communal house and a garden showcasing
many plants used by native peoples. Other museums such a the
Lewis County Historical Museum
and the
Cowlitz River Valley Historical Society and
Old Settlers Museum display artifacts of native life collected by
early settlers. South of Olympia, the
Mima Mounds Natural
Preserve invites visitors to walk through a restored example of a
prairie ecosystem like the ones cultivated by natives for
centuries. Through periodic controlled burns, natives promoted
the growth of camas root and other food and medicinal plants on these
prairies.
Contact and Fur Trade
When outsiders began exploring the inland waters of what is now Puget
Sound, they marveled at the verdant country. Climax
forests of
evergreens blanketed the shorelines and inland valleys, growing to
immense size. An expedition
commanded by
British
Captain George Vancouver in 1892 was the first documented
exploration of the South Sound waterways by Europeans. Lieutenant
Peter Puget, who accompanied Vancouver, led a long boat survey party
and produced the earliest charts of the area.
By the 1830s, the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) established
Fort Vancouver on the Columbia
River and began scouting a location for an outpost on Puget Sound to
conduct trade with the natives. They followed an ancient trade
route north, the shortest distance between the Cowlitz River and Puget
Sound. This trail became the main north-south trail for travelers
in the area, known as the “
Cowlitz Trail.”
The HBC built the “
Nisqually House”
trade post adjacent to the village of the Sequalitchew band of the
Nisqually people, near what is now the town of Dupont. The
Dupont Museum displays
artifacts and images relating to the fort.
At Cowlitz Prairie, near present day Toledo, the Hudson’s Bay Co. also
established Cowlitz Farms and Mission to solidify their claim to the
region and to diversify their business beyond the fur trade toward
agriculture. Despite their efforts, the numbers of Americans
entering the territory soon outstripped the numbers of HBC
employees. Today the site of
Cowlitz
Mission is still a Catholic Church and the cemetery is the last
resting place of many of the earliest Europeans in the area.
Settlement

By the 1840s, American settlers who traveled
the
Oregon Trail were
pushing
northward across the Columbia River. They too followed the
Cowlitz Trail, which settlers saw as a northern extension of the Oregon
Trail. Among the earliest arrivals in what is now Washington was
John
R. Jackson, who located just on the prairie just north of Cowlitz
Farms. The small cabin, now known as the
John
R. Jackson House, was a main stop on the Cowlitz Trail and served
as the first American courthouse north of the Columbia River.
In 1846 the
Simmons-Bush
Party were the first Americans to settle on Puget Sound and founded
the community of New Market, now
Tumwater. Pioneer
George
Bush, a “mulatto” arrived in Oregon to find that white settlers
banned non-whites from locating there to avoid the
contentious
politics
of the slavery issue. Rather than separate, the band of
pioneers
moved north beyond the reach of the exclusion law. Later,
white
settlers asked Congress to secure Bush’s claim to his land.
The George
Bush Historical Marker located on the Bush’s original homestead land
tells the story. Other blacks also settled in the South Sound
Country. An early African American homesteader named
George
Washington settled the area that is now
Centralia and platted the
town.
The city of
Chehalis
started life as “Saunders Bottom,” a rather soggy
stop along the Cowlitz Trail. Earlier, settlers founded the town
of
Claquato
on the west side of the valley on higher ground and constructed the
Claquato Church in 1858, one of the oldest still standing in
Washington. When the
Northern
Pacific Railroad laid tracks through Chehalis in 1872, settlers
relocated near the station, leaving the town of Claquato relatively
unchanged to the present.
In Centralia the
Joseph
Borst Home is another of the few surviving structures from this
early period. Located where the Cowlitz Trail crossed the
Chehalis River, the Borst’s
homestead also served as a stop on the trail. Daniel R.
Bigelow was another early arrival whose family home survives today as
Bigelow House Museum.
Bigelow arrived in 1851 after crossing the Oregon Trail fresh from
Harvard Law School. Other settlers immediately solicited his help
in organizing the territory of Washington where he served as one of its
first legislators and co-author of the Territorial Constitution.
Other early arrivals included Nathaniel Crosby (grandfather of Bing
Crosby) who settled in Tumwater in the 1860s and operated a
store. The
Historic
Crosby House ca1860 is now part of the
Tumwater
Historic Park. Hidden away south of Olympia is the
Miller
Brewer House, another of the few remaining early homesteads.
In Lacey, the
Jacob
Smith House now serves as a community center. All
of these surviving homes give visitors a glimpse of early settler life
in the Puget Sound country.
Arriving along with American and European settlers, Chinese immigrants
also lived and worked in the area. Despite sparse mention in
local histories, they filled an important need for seasonal
labor. The Chinese worked as oyster gatherers, road builders,
hop-pickers, and in logging camps and lumber mills. Due to the
low numbers of women in the early west, they also filled the role of
launderers, house servants, and cooks. At Olympia, there was a
community of Chinese living in “
Chinatown” near
the downtown core long before railroad construction began in the
area. A marker located at
Olympia’s
Heritage Park gives details.
Treaty Wars

In
1854
Isaac
Stevens, the first governor of Washington Territory met with native
leaders to negotiate secession of their lands to the US.
The
first meeting was held at Nisqually, at the council grounds on the
banks of She Na Nam creek. During the winter of 1855-56 some
natives
rebelled against the settlers because they had not agreed to the treaty.
In response, the settlers formed volunteer militias and constructed a
number of forts, including the Borst
Blockhouse at Centralia. Monuments also mark the location of
other forts in the area including
Fort
Eaton and
Chambers
Blockhouse
near
Lacey,
Fort
Henness near Rochester, and
Rutledge
Blockhouse.

During the short but
violent conflict both sides committed armed combatants to the field and
tragedy resulted. In January 1856 natives
laid
siege to Seattle for an entire day, killing two. In April,
volunteer militia forces
massacred
the Nisqually Village at Mashel Creek. The Puget Sound Indian
War ended with the capture of Leschi and the surrender of Quiemuth,
both Nisqually leaders instrumental in organizing the native
resistance. An unknown assailant
murdered
Quiemuth while he was under guard in Governor Stevens’ office in
Olympia; Leschi endured two controversial trials over his role in the
conflict. Bent on retribution, settlers convicted Leschi as a
murderer despite his status as a combatant in a war.
Leschi
was hanged near
Fort
Steilacoom in February 1857, yet his fight for
treaty rights and native sovereignty remains an immediate issue to the
present. In 2004 a special "
Historical
Court of Inquiry and Justice" reviewed the facts of the case and
found Leschi not guilty of the charges for which he was executed.
Industries
From the start, creating an economic industrial base for trade was a
priority for settlers. The Deschutes River Falls at Tumwater was
the draw for the Simmons-Bush party as a power source for
industry. There, settlers
built the
first American sawmill and gristmill on Puget Sound.
The maritime trades played a critical role in the early development of
the South Sound region. Early settlers found overland travel much
more arduous than water travel. Most families in the area owned
at least one canoe, usually procured from local natives through barter
or sale. By the 1850s there was regular trade with the outside
world as ships arrived and departed carrying passengers and
merchandise. Soon after,
steamboats
proliferated on Puget Sound, serving as the main form of
transportation. At the
Mason County
Historical Museum you can learn about the early sternwheelers that
served Shelton and South Puget Sound.
Among the earliest industry in the area was production of lumber
for
export. As settlement in the Northwest grew, so did the demand
for building materials. Soon, logging operations pushed deep into
the forested hills of the South Sound Country. The
Cowlitz River Valley Historical Society and Old
Settlers Museum,
Lewis
County Historical Museum,
Mason County
Historical Museum, and the
Tenino Depot Museum,
all display tools, photos, and artifacts tracing this key part of the
region’s development.

By the early 1870s, passenger and freight railroad
construction was
underway in the area. The
Northern
Pacific built its main line from Kalama on the Columbia River to
Tacoma on Puget Sound, closely following the Cowlitz Trail route
through the South Sound country. The
Lewis County Historical Museum,
and the
Tenino Depot
Museum are both housed in classic depots dating from the heyday of
the Northern Pacific Railroad. Each contains artifacts and photos
documenting the importance of the railroad to the region.
Agriculture was another important industry. At Yelm, citizens
formed an irrigation district and built a canal system that provided
water to numerous local farms on Yelm Prairie from the 1920s to the
1960s. The
Yelm Prairie Historical Museum
displays information on the impact of this development and information
on early settlers and the founding of the community. In Boistfort
Valley, west of Chehalis, hop growing became a major economic force as
it did in other parts of western Washington in the late 1800s.
Hop drying barns still survive, now converted for other uses.
Dairy and chicken farming also played a large role in the area’s
development. The town of Winlock was once the “Egg Capital of the
World” shipping tons of poultry products over the years. Exhibits
in the
Winlock Historical Museum trace the
history.
Sandstone quarries at Tenino provided building material throughout the
American west. The main quarry was directly adjacent to the
railroad line, making shipment very easy. Tenino’s distinctive
sandstone business district developed as a way to promote the industry
and to make the town more fireproof after devastating blazes destroyed
the old business district. Many buildings in the area use the
stone in their construction, including the east wing of the
old State
Capitol Building in downtown Olympia. However, by the 1920s,
the advent of poured concrete construction replaced Tenino sandstone
due to its lower cost, greatly reducing demand.
Education
Early settlers saw public education as a key component of a democratic
society and took great pains to provide their youth with education
opportunities. One and two-room schoolhouses once dotted the
region, serving the children of nearby families in all grades
simultaneously. Few examples of these remain today. One
very
intact example is the
Gate
City School, near Rochester. Recently, citizens rescued the
historic Ticknor School from
destruction, relocating it next to the
Tenino Depot Museum.
Another display at the
Joseph Borst Home
recreates just such an early schoolhouse. The
Lacey Museum and the
Winlock
Historical Museum also display artifacts, documents and memories of
school life in the area. Currently the
Rainier Historical
Society is refurbishing its historic 1915 school as a community
center.
The Twentieth Century

By the
early 1900s, new immigrants brought by steamships and by train
came to live and work in the South Sound Country. Scandinavians,
Eastern and Southern Europeans, Asians, and others arrived to fill the
growing need for labor. Working conditions for these laborers was
harsh and wages low. Labor unions such as the
Industrial
Workers of the World (IWW), also known as “Wobblies” found avid
followers among these men who came to America looking to better their
situation. The IWW, known for its wildcat strikes and work
slowdowns, fought for better conditions and a standard eight-hour work
day. Their activities generated a great deal of ill-will toward
them by business owners.
These tensions erupted into violence in 1919 when
WWI veterans raided
the Centralia IWW Hall in 1919. The Wobblies shot four
veterans and in the ensuing violence a mob lynched IWW member Wesley
Everest. A memorial to the dead veterans and a nearby
mural
commemorating the Wobblies is in Centralia’s George Washington
Park.
Planned company-owned towns with homes designed to accommodate families
replaced the formerly all male bunkhouse camps that marked early
industry. Despite their loss of industry, towns such as
Dupont,
and
Ryderwood
remain relatively intact, containing much of their original
character. Other company towns including
Bordeaux,
(lumber)
Tono,
(coal) and Vail (lumber) ceased to exist when the companies closed
their operations. The Dupont factory, founded in 1912, produced
explosives for World War I. Ryderwood, built by the Long-Bell
Lumber Company was designed as a model family-friendly community.
Driving the magnanimity of companies to create such community however
was a desire to subvert the power of the labor unions. Companies
such as DuPont and Long-Bell hoped that family men were less likely to
strike. The
DuPont Museum
tells the story of the town and the story of the workers and
families.

As industrial development quickened on Puget
Sound so did the call for
faster means to transport raw materials to processing. In 1910
the tugboat
Sand Man began
her long career on Puget Sound as one of the numerous tugs hauling
logs, coal, and anything else thast needed hauling.
Sand Man was one of the first tugs
to use a gasoline engine, making her a very modern and fast
vessel.
Sand Man
remained a work boat until only recently, before she was restored in
2002. The
Sand Man Foundation maintains
the tug at Olympia’s
Percival
Dock for public viewing.
By the early Twentieth Century, many citizens became interested in
preserving and marking historical Sites connected to the early
settlement era of Washington. Ezra Meeker of Puyallup conducted a
much publicized retracing of the Oregon Trail for the purpose of
placing historic markers. Meeker travelled west to east,
dedicating historic markers along the way.
The Great Depression of the 1930s brought Federal Funding for public
works projects. Washington State Parks were among the many
beneficiaries of programs such as the Works Progress Administration
(WPA) and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). Millersylvania
State Park, Rainbow Falls State Park, and Lewis and Clark State Park
all have buildings, roads, trails, bridges, and other infrastructure
constructed by the CCC.
Few events had the impact on the South Sound area as the World
Wars. During both World War I and World War II, Americans and
immigrants streamed into the area to work in wartime industry.
Ship building, logging, agriculture, and numerous other industries
switched into high gear, producing record amounts of goods. Most
importantly, families threw themselves into the war efforts, by either
serving in the military or as home front volunteers. At the
Veterans Memorial Museum in
Chehalis artifacts, documents and oral histories combine to preserve
the memory of the sacrifices of those who served. In Tumwater,
the
Olympic Flight Museum
exhibits aircraft from several conflicts. The airport itself is
also historic, having served as a satellite base for nearby McChord Air
Field during WWII. The US Air Corps stationed a squadron of
P-38 Lightnings here
and used the area for air combat training.
The visitor to Washington State’s South Sound Country will find these
links and many more to the rich history of the area, its people,
places, and settlements. Individually, these stories offer an
intimate view of family life, business relations, and community
involvement. Together, the historic sites in the South Sound
Country combine to create an understanding of the shared heritage that
reflects the larger history of Pacific Northwest.
Whether it’s a lumber bunkhouse, a homestead cabin, a refined
Victorian home, or an aircraft hangar, visitors will come away with a
better understanding of the sense of commitment to community, industry,
and family life that laid the foundation for today’s communities.
Again, welcome to the South Sound Country!