Other Scholarly Content
 

Cowlitz corridor

Public Deposited

Downloadable Content

Download PDF
https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/defaults/5d86p3851

Descriptions

Attribute NameValues
Creator
Abstract
  • "... The Cowlitz Valley connects the prairies south of the Sound with the Columbia Valley and Oregon. It is a natural corridor, used continuously and with ever increasing frequency for more than a century. The story of the Cowlitz Corridor is primarily one of modes of travel. It begins with foot trails and shovel-nosed Indian canoes and ends with U. S. 99 converted to four lanes and astra-domed streamliners traveling over the same roadbed where once puffed the first standard gauge locomotive in Washington, the sturdy hut small Minnetonka. In between were long years when even a governor's wife, in order to traverse the valley, was forced to sit all day cramped in a narrow canoe, when the one road was so muddy and steep the stagecoach horses had to be changed at the end of a nine-mile run, and when the only way a farmer could get his oats out to the Portland market was on a shallow draft steamboat that could make regular runs when the water was just right. But always there was movement of some kind explorers taking a first look at new country; families moving in to settle; the first produce going out to market; sheep being herded north; cattle for export being floated south; farm machinery going up; potatoes and hops coming down; gold seekers rushing south to California in '49 and north to Alaska in '98; first citizens canoeing down to Monticello to petition for a territory in 1852 and going north to Olympia to establish a government in '53; new army draftees being hurried up to the Seattle Port of Embarkation in 1942; rotation troops going home from Korea in 1952. Through the years the movement has been steady, sometimes exciting, always interesting. This is the story of the corridor."--Preface
  • Gerald W. Williams Collection
Resource Type
Date Available
Date Issued
Subject
Table of Contents
  • I. First came explorers -- II. Canoe and bateau -- III. Came religion and government -- IV. Terrible road but beautiful -- V. Commerce comes to Cowlitz -- VI. N.P. lays its first rails -- VII. Monticello steamboat enterprise -- VIII. Opening of Kellogg era -- IX. Steamboating in its heyday -- X. Close of steamboat era -- XI. Good roads at last.
Rights Statement
Publisher
Peer Reviewed
Language
Digitization Specifications
  • Master files scanned at 300 ppi (24-bit Color/8-bit Greyscale/Bitonal) using BScan ILL Version 2.0.0 on a Bookeye 2 Color, BE2-SCL-N2 in TIF format. PDF derivative saved from TIF file using Adobe Acrobat 6.0 Professional. CVista PdfCompressor 4.0 was used for pdf compression and textual OCR.
Replaces

Relationships

Parents:

This work has no parents.

Items