NATIVE AMERICAN HISTORY
Native Tribes
The fertility of the Columbia River Gorge and the surrounding land made it a prime spot for many Native American Tribes to call home. Archaeological remains date back thousands of years in the area but no one is sure exactly when the first peoples arrived. There is a strong argument for the fact that remains may not still be in the area from the earliest peoples but that doesn't mean they weren't there. As discussed in the Bridge of the Gods, flooding and other natural disasters could have wiped away remains of those peoples.
Local tribes often fished, hunted, and took trips for spiritual purposes all along the Columbia River. Tribes that didn't reside right next to it would travel to fish from its, then, plentiful waters. It was not uncommon for tribes to visit each other and even spend part of a year living with neighboring tribes.
Due to the constant moving of the people, tribes who may have used or traveled through what is now the Mark O. Hatfield Wilderness may have included:
Clackamas, Sahaptian, Chinookan, Molallan, Multnomah, Tualatin & Santiam Kalapuyan
http://www.usgennet.org/usa/or/county/clackamas/IndianMap.html
http://www.native-languages.org/oregon.htm
When Lewis & Clark first arrived in the area many of these tribes were eager to trade . Relations were positive and many of the tribes were eager to build relations with the white man. Unfortunately, relations did not stay positive. As more and more people moved onto the lands the Native Americans possessed, illness brought by the settlers, and their greed for land caused tensions. Misunderstandings and misconceptions only served to fuel the fire. Eventually, the United States Government chased most of the peoples off their lands and onto reservations. Treaties were signed and then violated by the U.S. Government regularly. Man-made alterations of the Columbia River Gorge over the last hundred plus years caused greater problems for the Natives and their way of life. More recently with the creation of the Columbia River Gorge Scenic Area, the U.S. Government has been working to try and improve the situation. Many Native American's still use and hold sacred the Columbia River Gorge and surrounding lands today.
Bridge of The Gods
Although there are no
eyewitness accounts of the landslide, stories live through the legends told by
Native American tribes. A popular legend describes how two competing brothers
were separated by the Columbia River, but reconnected when the Great Spirit
built the Bridge of the Gods. When their two tribes began to fight, the Great
Spirit destroyed the bridge. The rapids were the remnants of the collapsed
bridge (Bernyce,B, 1996).