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Fort Hall

Fort Hall was a fort in the Western United States that was built in 1834 as a fur trading post by Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth. It was located on the Snake River in the eastern Oregon Country, now part of present-day Bannock County in southeastern Idaho. Wyeth was an inventor and businessman from Boston, Massachusetts, who also founded a post at Fort William, in present-day Portland, Oregon, as part of a plan for a new trading and fisheries company. In 1837, unable to compete with the powerful British Hudson's Bay Company, based at Fort Vancouver, Wyeth sold both posts to it. Great Britain and the United States both operated in the Oregon Country in these years.

Fort Hall
Fur Trade Outpost
Constructed:1834; 189 years ago (1834)
Company built:Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth
Location:Fort Hall, Idaho, U.S.
Continent:North America
Later Ownership:1837: Hudson's Bay Company
1846: United States Army
Abandoned:By 1863
Fort Hall
Marker at the first Fort Hall site, 1958
Location11 mi. W of Fort Hall,
Fort Hall Indian Reservation
Built1834; 189 years ago (1834)
NRHP reference No.66000306
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1964
Designated NHLJanuary 20, 1961[1]
Fort Hall Site
Fort Hall (United States Army, 1873-1883)
Nearest cityBlackfoot, Idaho
Area160 acres (65 ha)
Built1870; 153 years ago (1870)
NRHP reference No.74000732
Added to NRHPNovember 21, 1974

After being included in United States territory in 1846 upon settlement of the northern boundary with Canada, Fort Hall developed as an important station for emigrants through the 1850s on the Oregon Trail; it was located at the end of the common 500-mile (800 km) stretch from the East shared by the three far west emigrant trails. Soon after Fort Hall, the Oregon and California Trails diverged in northwesterly and southwesterly directions. An estimated 270,000 emigrants reached Fort Hall on their way west. The town of Fort Hall later developed eleven miles (18 km) to the east, and Pocatello developed about thirty miles (50 km) south on the Portneuf River.

In the 1860s, Fort Hall was the key post for the overland stage, mail and freight lines to the towns and camps of the mining frontier in the Pacific Northwest. In 1870 a New Fort Hall was constructed to carry out that function; it was located about 25 miles to the northeast. It protected stagecoach, mail and travelers to the Northwest.

Fort Hall is considered the most important trading post in the Snake River Valley. It was included within the Fort Hall Indian Reservation under the treaty of 1867. No building remains at either of its sites. The Old Fort Hall site was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1961,[1] and the New Fort Hall site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

History edit

This area was long inhabited by varying cultures of indigenous peoples. By the time of European encounter, the historic Shoshone and Bannock peoples had been occupying the area for centuries. It was called Botoode in Shoshoni.[2] They were among the Plains peoples who had adopted horses to use as part of their nomadic and seasonal movement associated with hunting game, particularly bison. French trappers and British traders from Canada had traded with them long before American explorers arrived.

Oregon Country edit

In the late 1820s, Hall J. Kelley of Boston was among men who became interested in commercial possibilities in the Oregon Country, described by a later historian as offering a "field of exploitation for adventurous capital".[3] He recruited Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth, an inventor and businessman who had made the ice industry successful in Boston, to his plan to invest in an expedition to the Northwest where they would make their fortunes. They planned a joint expedition in 1831, with intentions to establish a company for fur trading and developing a salmon fishery to rival New England's cod fishery. Organizing the expedition suffered delays and it never took place.

In 1832 Wyeth decided to proceed on his own with an independent expedition. With a company of 70-100 men, he intended to establish a fishery and trading post on the Columbia River near its confluence with the Willamette River (part of present-day Portland, Oregon). Related plans were to supply trade goods to trappers in the Rocky Mountains and possibly slaughter and dry bison for export to Cuba. A major investor in the fishery/trading post enterprise was Henry Hall, a partner of the Boston firm Tucker & Williams & Henry Hall.[3] In addition to fur trading, they planned to export salmon to New England and Hawaii.

In 1832, Benjamin Louis Eulalie de Bonneville and his party had first taken wagons over the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains. This route had been rediscovered by trappers in 1824. It led back to the North Platte River valley, which was being developed as a key route in connecting the East by a wagon road to the Oregon Country. The Platte Rivers were chief transportation corridors, and the river valleys provided level land for wagons. This was the route for 500 miles (800 km) from the Missouri River fur ports at Independence and St. Joseph, Missouri. Other emigrants went overland starting from St. Louis, Missouri, where the fur companies and emigrant suppliers were based.

The Native Americans had used South Pass, as well as a more northerly trail which they had guided the Lewis and Clark Expedition to follow during their 1804–1806 journey into Oregon and to the Pacific Coast. It had frequent obstacles, turns and switchbacks, making it difficult for wagon trains, mules and oxen, the common beasts of burden for the emigrants.

The 1834 trappers' rendezvous was held at a meadow around Hams Fork, (near present-day Granger, Wyoming); the annual events were occasions for sales between mountain men, who were independent trappers and traders, and agents of the fur companies, who bought the furs and supplied the traders with goods. The rendezvous were organized by the fur companies and were several-day affairs that were business, but festive in nature and oiled by alcohol.

Old Fort Hall (1834–1856) edit

 
Courtyard of 1960s replica at Pocatello

In July 1834, Wyeth found that, despite his contract with Milton Sublette of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, its agents at the rendezvous refused to accept his goods. They paid only to cover the advance and the forfeit, claiming that they were dissolving the business. Wyeth notified Tucker & Williams of the problems. As he was left with stocks of goods, he advised them of his intention to go west about 150 miles (240 km) to the Snake River country (present-day southeastern Idaho) and try to do business there. He was sending word in advance to Indian tribes to bring in buffalo robes for trading.[4]

Wyeth and his party traveled west some 150 miles (240 km) to the Snake near the mouth of the Portneuf. They constructed the wooden storehouses at Fort Hall. Wyeth named the fort after a major expedition investor, Henry Hall. They finished a palisade around the fort on July 31, 1834; it was the only outpost of European Americans in that area of the Oregon Country.

Because of the Oregon boundary dispute between the United States and Great Britain, the region was open to settlement and economic activity, but not any formal claims. In practice, the Hudson's Bay Company maintained an effective monopoly on trade in the region. The British company controlled the Columbia River's watershed. It shut out the independent trapper-trader mountain men and cut severely into the profit margins of the larger American overland fur trading companies—mostly organized in St. Louis. Between the Hudson's Bay Company and John Jacob Astor's near-monopoly of American fur traders with the American Fur Company, new companies regularly failed in their first half decade. Most mountain men had started to work under contract to the big companies.

When Fort Hall was completed, Wyeth continued toward the Columbia River with members of his expedition. They encountered the Methodist missionary Jason Lee on his way to start the Methodist Mission in the Willamette Valley. Once Wyeth reached the lower Columbia, he built Fort William to serve as the 'envisioned' "regular rendezvous point" on the Columbia.[5]

The HBC had been trapping in the Snake country for years. Using its trading post at Fort Boise, it drove Wyeth's company out of business, and he sold Fort Hall to the HBC.[6] The peak of the fur market had already passed, as furs were becoming scarce due to over trapping and European demand had declined due to changes in taste.

Having struggled to keep workers and failed to make enough money, in August 1837, Wyeth sold both his forts to the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). It controlled most of the fur trade in the Oregon Country (which they called the Columbia District or the Columbia Department) from their headquarters at Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River. As the British did not want American pioneers in Oregon, the HBC managers newly installed at Fort Hall discouraged pioneers. They showed new emigrants the abandoned wagons of earlier emigrants who lost their oxen. They were forced to proceed on foot with any remaining domestic animals.

Oregon migration edit

 
Replica of the first Fort Hall in Pocatello

In 1843, Marcus Whitman, a missionary who had established a mission near present-day Walla Walla, Washington, led a wagon train westward from Fort Hall, despite discouragement from the British. His reports, when received back east amidst the country-wide expansionist mindset of true believers in manifest destiny, started a growing flood of settlers increasing in numbers year by year.

The settlers were reinforced by the Presidential politics with Democrats demanding a settlement of the "Oregon Question" and proposing a border far to the north of today's boundary between the United States and Canada. The election year's slogans and bad press, Democratic hawks' control of the U.S. legislatures, the steep decrease in fur market demand, and finally the declaration of war by Mexico over the annexation of their rebel state of Texas all had an accelerating effect greasing the diplomatic wrangling and finally putting an Administration-sponsored treaty before the Senate which set the current boundary, where it was quickly adopted under the wartime congressional session. No one saw any reason to embarrass their own parties or President, and fighting two wars in widely different geographic theaters was nonsensical. The treaty triggered an explosion of settlers heading west in 1846, and the Mormon Exodus had already begun in Illinois and Missouri. U.S. Army forces were assigned to send patrols and safeguard the road.

In the following years, the number of emigrant wagon trains increased dramatically as the migration of people increased to the West. Fort Hall became a welcome stop along the trail for hundreds of thousands of emigrants. It continued as an important trading post for mountain men and the Native Americans of the region, in particular the Shoshone.

In 1846, the Oregon Treaty settled boundaries in the Northwest between Great Britain (Canada) and the United States; Fort Hall was included within the U.S. and its territories. From 1849 to 1850, Cantonment Loring, a U.S. military camp, was located three miles (5 km) downriver from Fort Hall. Its garrison was assigned to protect the Oregon Trail, but the camp was abandoned due to long-distance supply difficulties. Instead the Army dispatched expeditions from Oregon to guard the trail to Fort Hall during each summer after 1855, as the migrations continued.

Civil War and after edit

With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, emigrant traffic declined and the Army abandoned Fort Hall. It was briefly occupied by the Volunteer soldiers of the Union Army. Flood waters of the Snake River washed away the Old Fort Hall in 1863. Fort Hall was rebuilt in 1864, on Spring Creek just north of the original Fort Hall. The old fort was taken apart to construct the new fortified stage station. The following year, the site was abandoned. The Volunteer troops moved to Camp Lander until 1866. It was located three miles (5 km) southeast of the original Fort Hall, at the junction of the Salt Lake and Boise roads.

In 1867, the United States established the Fort Hall Indian Reservation for displaced Boise and Bruneau Shoshone, with local Shoshone and Bannock included under an 1868 treaty.[7] They had suffered years of encroachment on their territory by European-American settlers. The town of Fort Hall developed about 11 miles (18 km) east of the old trading post and fort; both are within the reservation. In 1961, the site of the original Fort Hall, which is marked by a memorial, was declared a National Historic Landmark.

A replica of the original Fort Hall was constructed in the 1960s in Pocatello, about thirty miles (50 km) away, and is operated as a public museum.

New Fort Hall edit

On May 27, 1870, the U.S. Army built another military Fort Hall on Lincoln Creek, twelve miles (20 km) east of the Snake River and about 25 miles (40 km) northeast of the old Fort Hall. Captain James Edward Putnam and a company of soldiers built the new facility. Army soldiers were garrisoned to protect stagecoach travelers, the U.S. mail, and workers going to mining areas in the Northwest. The Army abandoned the fort on June 11, 1883.

The federal government transferred the land and barracks to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), which adapted the buildings as an Indian boarding school. This was part of a late-nineteenth century movement to establish residential schools for immersion education of Native American children to learn the English language and European-American culture. The buildings were eventually relocated to Ross Fork Creek within the reservation.[8]

None of the original buildings remains at either site; the 1870 site is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . National Historic Landmarks Program. National Park Service. Archived from the original on September 20, 2012. Retrieved February 7, 2008.
  2. ^ Gould, Drusilla; Loether, Christopher (2002). An Introduction to the Shoshoni Language:Dammen Daigwape. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. ISBN 978-0874807301.
  3. ^ a b Eaton, W. Clement (June 1935). "Nathaniel Wyeth's Oregon Expeditions". The Pacific Historical Review. JSTOR. 4 (2): 101–113. doi:10.2307/3633722. JSTOR 3633722.
  4. ^ "Messr Tucker & Williams, from Hams Fork of the Colorado of the West, July 1st 1834", Selected Letters of Nathaniel J. Wyeth, accessed 30 April 2012
  5. ^ Wyeth, Nathaniel J. "Selected Letters of Nathaniel J. Wyeth". personal letters. Xmission.com. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
  6. ^ Mackie, Richard Somerset (1997). Trading Beyond the Mountains: The British Fur Trade on the Pacific 1793-1843. Vancouver: University of British Columbia (UBC) Press. pp. 106–107. ISBN 978-0-7748-0613-8.
  7. ^ (PDF). Idaho State Historical Society. January 1993. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 18, 2016. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
  8. ^ Frazer, Robert W. (1975). Forts of the West: Military Forts and Presidios and Posts Commonly Called Forts West of the Mississippi River to 1898. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 43–45. ISBN 978-0806112503.

External links edit

  • Fort Hall Replica official site
  • Fort Hall Accounts

43°01′12″N 112°38′05″W / 43.0201°N 112.6347°W / 43.0201; -112.6347

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For other uses see Fort Hall disambiguation Fort Hall was a fort in the Western United States that was built in 1834 as a fur trading post by Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth It was located on the Snake River in the eastern Oregon Country now part of present day Bannock County in southeastern Idaho Wyeth was an inventor and businessman from Boston Massachusetts who also founded a post at Fort William in present day Portland Oregon as part of a plan for a new trading and fisheries company In 1837 unable to compete with the powerful British Hudson s Bay Company based at Fort Vancouver Wyeth sold both posts to it Great Britain and the United States both operated in the Oregon Country in these years Fort HallFur Trade OutpostConstructed 1834 189 years ago 1834 Company built Nathaniel Jarvis WyethLocation Fort Hall Idaho U S Continent North AmericaLater Ownership 1837 Hudson s Bay Company1846 United States ArmyAbandoned By 1863Fort HallU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkMarker at the first Fort Hall site 1958Show map of the United StatesShow map of IdahoLocation11 mi W of Fort Hall Fort Hall Indian ReservationBuilt1834 189 years ago 1834 NRHP reference No 66000306Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1964Designated NHLJanuary 20 1961 1 Fort Hall Site Fort Hall United States Army 1873 1883 U S National Register of Historic PlacesShow map of IdahoShow map of the United StatesNearest cityBlackfoot IdahoArea160 acres 65 ha Built1870 153 years ago 1870 NRHP reference No 74000732Added to NRHPNovember 21 1974After being included in United States territory in 1846 upon settlement of the northern boundary with Canada Fort Hall developed as an important station for emigrants through the 1850s on the Oregon Trail it was located at the end of the common 500 mile 800 km stretch from the East shared by the three far west emigrant trails Soon after Fort Hall the Oregon and California Trails diverged in northwesterly and southwesterly directions An estimated 270 000 emigrants reached Fort Hall on their way west The town of Fort Hall later developed eleven miles 18 km to the east and Pocatello developed about thirty miles 50 km south on the Portneuf River In the 1860s Fort Hall was the key post for the overland stage mail and freight lines to the towns and camps of the mining frontier in the Pacific Northwest In 1870 a New Fort Hall was constructed to carry out that function it was located about 25 miles to the northeast It protected stagecoach mail and travelers to the Northwest Fort Hall is considered the most important trading post in the Snake River Valley It was included within the Fort Hall Indian Reservation under the treaty of 1867 No building remains at either of its sites The Old Fort Hall site was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1961 1 and the New Fort Hall site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Contents 1 History 1 1 Oregon Country 1 2 Old Fort Hall 1834 1856 1 3 Oregon migration 1 4 Civil War and after 2 New Fort Hall 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThis area was long inhabited by varying cultures of indigenous peoples By the time of European encounter the historic Shoshone and Bannock peoples had been occupying the area for centuries It was called Botoode in Shoshoni 2 They were among the Plains peoples who had adopted horses to use as part of their nomadic and seasonal movement associated with hunting game particularly bison French trappers and British traders from Canada had traded with them long before American explorers arrived Oregon Country edit Main article Oregon Country In the late 1820s Hall J Kelley of Boston was among men who became interested in commercial possibilities in the Oregon Country described by a later historian as offering a field of exploitation for adventurous capital 3 He recruited Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth an inventor and businessman who had made the ice industry successful in Boston to his plan to invest in an expedition to the Northwest where they would make their fortunes They planned a joint expedition in 1831 with intentions to establish a company for fur trading and developing a salmon fishery to rival New England s cod fishery Organizing the expedition suffered delays and it never took place In 1832 Wyeth decided to proceed on his own with an independent expedition With a company of 70 100 men he intended to establish a fishery and trading post on the Columbia River near its confluence with the Willamette River part of present day Portland Oregon Related plans were to supply trade goods to trappers in the Rocky Mountains and possibly slaughter and dry bison for export to Cuba A major investor in the fishery trading post enterprise was Henry Hall a partner of the Boston firm Tucker amp Williams amp Henry Hall 3 In addition to fur trading they planned to export salmon to New England and Hawaii In 1832 Benjamin Louis Eulalie de Bonneville and his party had first taken wagons over the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains This route had been rediscovered by trappers in 1824 It led back to the North Platte River valley which was being developed as a key route in connecting the East by a wagon road to the Oregon Country The Platte Rivers were chief transportation corridors and the river valleys provided level land for wagons This was the route for 500 miles 800 km from the Missouri River fur ports at Independence and St Joseph Missouri Other emigrants went overland starting from St Louis Missouri where the fur companies and emigrant suppliers were based The Native Americans had used South Pass as well as a more northerly trail which they had guided the Lewis and Clark Expedition to follow during their 1804 1806 journey into Oregon and to the Pacific Coast It had frequent obstacles turns and switchbacks making it difficult for wagon trains mules and oxen the common beasts of burden for the emigrants The 1834 trappers rendezvous was held at a meadow around Hams Fork near present day Granger Wyoming the annual events were occasions for sales between mountain men who were independent trappers and traders and agents of the fur companies who bought the furs and supplied the traders with goods The rendezvous were organized by the fur companies and were several day affairs that were business but festive in nature and oiled by alcohol Old Fort Hall 1834 1856 edit nbsp Courtyard of 1960s replica at PocatelloIn July 1834 Wyeth found that despite his contract with Milton Sublette of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company its agents at the rendezvous refused to accept his goods They paid only to cover the advance and the forfeit claiming that they were dissolving the business Wyeth notified Tucker amp Williams of the problems As he was left with stocks of goods he advised them of his intention to go west about 150 miles 240 km to the Snake River country present day southeastern Idaho and try to do business there He was sending word in advance to Indian tribes to bring in buffalo robes for trading 4 Wyeth and his party traveled west some 150 miles 240 km to the Snake near the mouth of the Portneuf They constructed the wooden storehouses at Fort Hall Wyeth named the fort after a major expedition investor Henry Hall They finished a palisade around the fort on July 31 1834 it was the only outpost of European Americans in that area of the Oregon Country Because of the Oregon boundary dispute between the United States and Great Britain the region was open to settlement and economic activity but not any formal claims In practice the Hudson s Bay Company maintained an effective monopoly on trade in the region The British company controlled the Columbia River s watershed It shut out the independent trapper trader mountain men and cut severely into the profit margins of the larger American overland fur trading companies mostly organized in St Louis Between the Hudson s Bay Company and John Jacob Astor s near monopoly of American fur traders with the American Fur Company new companies regularly failed in their first half decade Most mountain men had started to work under contract to the big companies When Fort Hall was completed Wyeth continued toward the Columbia River with members of his expedition They encountered the Methodist missionary Jason Lee on his way to start the Methodist Mission in the Willamette Valley Once Wyeth reached the lower Columbia he built Fort William to serve as the envisioned regular rendezvous point on the Columbia 5 The HBC had been trapping in the Snake country for years Using its trading post at Fort Boise it drove Wyeth s company out of business and he sold Fort Hall to the HBC 6 The peak of the fur market had already passed as furs were becoming scarce due to over trapping and European demand had declined due to changes in taste Having struggled to keep workers and failed to make enough money in August 1837 Wyeth sold both his forts to the Hudson s Bay Company HBC It controlled most of the fur trade in the Oregon Country which they called the Columbia District or the Columbia Department from their headquarters at Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River As the British did not want American pioneers in Oregon the HBC managers newly installed at Fort Hall discouraged pioneers They showed new emigrants the abandoned wagons of earlier emigrants who lost their oxen They were forced to proceed on foot with any remaining domestic animals Oregon migration edit nbsp Replica of the first Fort Hall in PocatelloIn 1843 Marcus Whitman a missionary who had established a mission near present day Walla Walla Washington led a wagon train westward from Fort Hall despite discouragement from the British His reports when received back east amidst the country wide expansionist mindset of true believers in manifest destiny started a growing flood of settlers increasing in numbers year by year The settlers were reinforced by the Presidential politics with Democrats demanding a settlement of the Oregon Question and proposing a border far to the north of today s boundary between the United States and Canada The election year s slogans and bad press Democratic hawks control of the U S legislatures the steep decrease in fur market demand and finally the declaration of war by Mexico over the annexation of their rebel state of Texas all had an accelerating effect greasing the diplomatic wrangling and finally putting an Administration sponsored treaty before the Senate which set the current boundary where it was quickly adopted under the wartime congressional session No one saw any reason to embarrass their own parties or President and fighting two wars in widely different geographic theaters was nonsensical The treaty triggered an explosion of settlers heading west in 1846 and the Mormon Exodus had already begun in Illinois and Missouri U S Army forces were assigned to send patrols and safeguard the road In the following years the number of emigrant wagon trains increased dramatically as the migration of people increased to the West Fort Hall became a welcome stop along the trail for hundreds of thousands of emigrants It continued as an important trading post for mountain men and the Native Americans of the region in particular the Shoshone In 1846 the Oregon Treaty settled boundaries in the Northwest between Great Britain Canada and the United States Fort Hall was included within the U S and its territories From 1849 to 1850 Cantonment Loring a U S military camp was located three miles 5 km downriver from Fort Hall Its garrison was assigned to protect the Oregon Trail but the camp was abandoned due to long distance supply difficulties Instead the Army dispatched expeditions from Oregon to guard the trail to Fort Hall during each summer after 1855 as the migrations continued Civil War and after edit With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 emigrant traffic declined and the Army abandoned Fort Hall It was briefly occupied by the Volunteer soldiers of the Union Army Flood waters of the Snake River washed away the Old Fort Hall in 1863 Fort Hall was rebuilt in 1864 on Spring Creek just north of the original Fort Hall The old fort was taken apart to construct the new fortified stage station The following year the site was abandoned The Volunteer troops moved to Camp Lander until 1866 It was located three miles 5 km southeast of the original Fort Hall at the junction of the Salt Lake and Boise roads In 1867 the United States established the Fort Hall Indian Reservation for displaced Boise and Bruneau Shoshone with local Shoshone and Bannock included under an 1868 treaty 7 They had suffered years of encroachment on their territory by European American settlers The town of Fort Hall developed about 11 miles 18 km east of the old trading post and fort both are within the reservation In 1961 the site of the original Fort Hall which is marked by a memorial was declared a National Historic Landmark A replica of the original Fort Hall was constructed in the 1960s in Pocatello about thirty miles 50 km away and is operated as a public museum New Fort Hall editOn May 27 1870 the U S Army built another military Fort Hall on Lincoln Creek twelve miles 20 km east of the Snake River and about 25 miles 40 km northeast of the old Fort Hall Captain James Edward Putnam and a company of soldiers built the new facility Army soldiers were garrisoned to protect stagecoach travelers the U S mail and workers going to mining areas in the Northwest The Army abandoned the fort on June 11 1883 The federal government transferred the land and barracks to the Bureau of Indian Affairs BIA which adapted the buildings as an Indian boarding school This was part of a late nineteenth century movement to establish residential schools for immersion education of Native American children to learn the English language and European American culture The buildings were eventually relocated to Ross Fork Creek within the reservation 8 None of the original buildings remains at either site the 1870 site is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places See also editList of National Historic Landmarks in Idaho National Register of Historic Places in Bannock County IdahoReferences edit a b Fort Hall National Historic Landmarks Program National Park Service Archived from the original on September 20 2012 Retrieved February 7 2008 Gould Drusilla Loether Christopher 2002 An Introduction to the Shoshoni Language Dammen Daigwape Salt Lake City University of Utah Press ISBN 978 0874807301 a b Eaton W Clement June 1935 Nathaniel Wyeth s Oregon Expeditions The Pacific Historical Review JSTOR 4 2 101 113 doi 10 2307 3633722 JSTOR 3633722 Messr Tucker amp Williams from Hams Fork of the Colorado of the West July 1st 1834 Selected Letters of Nathaniel J Wyeth accessed 30 April 2012 Wyeth Nathaniel J Selected Letters of Nathaniel J Wyeth personal letters Xmission com Retrieved 2007 03 02 Mackie Richard Somerset 1997 Trading Beyond the Mountains The British Fur Trade on the Pacific 1793 1843 Vancouver University of British Columbia UBC Press pp 106 107 ISBN 978 0 7748 0613 8 Fort Hall Tribal Headquarters Reference Series 964 PDF Idaho State Historical Society January 1993 Archived from the original PDF on April 18 2016 Retrieved April 30 2012 Frazer Robert W 1975 Forts of the West Military Forts and Presidios and Posts Commonly Called Forts West of the Mississippi River to 1898 University of Oklahoma Press pp 43 45 ISBN 978 0806112503 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort Hall Fort Hall Replica official site Fort Hall Accounts43 01 12 N 112 38 05 W 43 0201 N 112 6347 W 43 0201 112 6347 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Hall amp oldid 1178902433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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