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Skagit River JournalThe most in-depth, comprehensive site about the Skagit Covers from British Columbia to Puget Sound. Counties covered: Skagit, Whatcom, Island, San Juan, Snohomish & BC. An evolving history dedicated to committing random acts of historical kindness |
Home of the Tarheel Stomp Mortimer Cook slept here & named the town Bug |
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This photo is of a 4th of July celebration in 1911 with the extended Wainright family in Sauk on the north shore of the Skagit. Samuel Henry Wainright, who was also a hotelkeeper in old Sauk City on the south shore, is at the far right, with the beard. His son, Harry Henry Wainright, who once rowed the canoe ferry across the Skagit to Sauk, is in the center, with the watermelon. . Photo courtesy of Harry's granddaughter, Diane Marie Wainright McMurdie. Do you have photos or documents you would like to share about your family or the old days here? Please consider
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Work was first started on a wagon road at Sauk City on Skagit river up Sauk river to Monte Cristo about 45 miles away through mountains and forest all the way. The system of construction was a winding dirt road following the least resistance by avoiding the larger trees as far as possible. No gravel was hauled at any place. In swamps and soft places, puncheon split from trees on right of way was used, and this winding narrow road was pushed through to Monte Cristo or nearly so in the late fall of 1891.At the edge of Darrington you can see an obelisk-type monument to that trail, which forester Nels Bruseth arranged in 1938. An amazing mountain man, known for running up and down hills rather than merely walking — and then also known for his calm, collected study of the environment and flora and faun, Bruseth learned the ways of Indians and their respect for and explanation of the mountains and rivers all around them. For instance, Indians recalled about the 1881 explorers only that they "shook dirt and water in pans." One can imagine their quizzical looks as they saw teams of men and beasts lugging huge pieces of iron along the trails that their Indian ancestors had blazed centuries before. In his little 1926 book, Indian Stories and Legends of the Stillaguamish and Allied Tribes, Bruseth recorded this explanation for some of the landmarks of the Sauk area:
Machinery for a sawmill was hauled in along with the progress of the construction of the road, that is. The machinery for the mill weighted many tons and was moved by horses, oxen and mules by relays as building the road progressed. This moving of the machinery and supplies to the established roadbuilding crews along the route wsa done entirely by the [word left out] known as freight crew, four and six horse teams and some oxen teams. Also some pack trains to carry supplies to the front crews, the timber fallers and swampers cutting out the right of way and building bridges.
Thus it can be see that the mass of machinery and men, horses, mules and oxen moved like a large caravan up the Sauk river chopping and blasting their way through and taking all machinery for a sawmill along at the same time. Thus it will be seen that the trail from Sauk City to Monte Cristo arrived there nearly all together, crew, bag and baggage and thus established the Sauk River Monte Cristo Pioneer Train in 1891.
So-bahli-ahli (Whitehorse Mountain) was once a woman. She had come from east of the mountains. Near where she settled lived a man, Quay-hae-eths. She liked him very much, and he became her man, and they lived happily together, but this was not to last. Up from the whulge (Puget sound) came another woman, Ska-dulvas (Mt. Higgins above Darrington) a young maiden of many charms.In the Lushootseed Indian dialect, So-bahli-ahli meant "the lofty lady from the east." Whitehorse was apparently named by Fred Olds, a Michigan native who settled nearby in 1895 and went in search of his white horse, which had wandered away. A neighbor pointed to the mountain and declared, "Doesn't that patch of snow on the mountain look just like your old white horse?" So the mountain was named, according to Bruseth. Mt. Higgins is named for Walter B. Higgins, who pioneered a homestead near Hazel as early as 1887, according to Poehlman. Poehlman also spent hours learning the ways of Indians in preparation for her book and interviewed elderly tribe members. She discovered the legend that Indians did not live permanently at the spot that became Darrington. They came up from their camps closer to the Puget sound and picked the wild berries and dug for edible roots, or hunted for wild game, all to prepare for winter. They then congregated at Sauk Prairie.
She looked at Quay-hae-eths, envied So-bahli-ahli and decided to steal him. She dressed herself in beautiful colors, mostly red; smiled at and talked nice to the man. He made a move toward her! She suddenly grabbed him and placed him behind her. Then a battle began. The noise was terrific; hair flew all over the sky; rocks whizzed through the air, hit their mark, rolled down and made big rock piles down below. The battle ended in victory for Ska-dulvas, but she was disfigured for life by So-bahli-ahli who reached over and with her fingernails scratched those deep gashes across the face of her enemy. The man did not interfere the least in the battle. He just stood still and looked on. He stands there yet, the highest bald nob on the north eat of Mt. Higgins.
Continue to Part 2. Keep in mind that these stories have not been extensively updated and corrected since they were posted in 2002. A full update is planned in the next year. Part Two includes stories from Charles Dwelley, Ray Jordan, Sam Strom, the Illustrated History of Skagit and Snohomish Counties, Diane Marie Wainright McMurdie, and our research into several of the original Sauk-area pioneers. Also see the links below for more information on the Sauk City area.
Read how to sort through our 800-plus stories. |
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