- South Umpqua River
The South Umpqua River is a tributary of the
Umpqua River , approximately convert|95|mi|km|0 long, in southwesternOregon in theUnited States . It drains part of theCascade Range east of Roseburg. The river passes through a remote canyon in its upper reaches then emerges in the populatedSouth Umpqua Valley near Roseburg.Description
It rises in the high Cascades north of Fish Mountain, formed by the confluence of two short forks in eastern Douglas County approximately convert|20|mi|km|0 northwest of
Crater Lake . It flows generally southwest through a remote canyon in theUmpqua National Forest to Tiller, then west past Milo and Days Creek. It emerges into the South Umpqua Valley at Canyonville, passing underInterstate 5 and flowing north along highway past Tri-City, Myrtle Creek, and Roseburg. It joins the North Umpqua from the south to form the Umpqua approximately convert|6|mi|km|0 northwest of Roseburg.It receives Cow Creek from the south approximately convert|5|mi|km|0 southwest of Tri-City.
In the early 19th century, the lower river through the South Umpqua Valley was inhabited by several bands of the Coquille, including the Upper Umpqua and the Cow Creek bands (who ceded their lands to the U.S. government in the 1854
Kalapuya Treaty ).Beginning in the 1820s, hunters and trappers of the
Hudson's Bay Company began using the South Umpqua River valley to move along what became known as theSiskiyou Trail . The Siskiyou Trail was based on existing Native American footpaths, and connected the Pacific Northwest, with California's Central Valley. In 1846, spurred by the desire to create a safer trail for emigrants to use to reach theWillamette Valley , Jesse andLindsay Applegate , Levi Scott, and 13 other companions explored a new route through the valley that connected the southernWillamette Valley withGoose Lake inNorthern California ; there, what became known as theApplegate Trail , connected with the northmost branch of theCalifornia Trail . The original Siskiyou Trail route through the valley is closely followed today by Interstate 5.The valley became an important timber-producing region in the 20th century.
External links
* [http://www.pioneer-net.com/~community/ South Umpqua Valley Community]
* [http://www.ccrh.org/comm/cottage/primary/treaty.htm Kalapuya Treaty]
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