On the Eve of Tragedy
—Trail Creek —
(Three panels make up this informational marker:)
Natural Travel Corridor
Clark's 1806 Route
Captain Clark and his party found great quantities of camas just beginning to bloom when they passed here on Sunday July 6, 1806. As they left the forested mountains trails went in several directions. But Sacajawea knew the area well. She had gathered camas plants here as a child.
Clark wrote:
"the Indian women wife to Shabono informed me ... when we ascended the higher part of the plain we would discover a gap in the mountains in our direction to the Canoes."
The high mountain plain (Big Hole Valley) they were about to enter remains much the same as Clark found it. Wildfire has burned portions of this area, much like 200 years ago. The Columbian ground squirrel, or "whistling squirrel," continues to burrow in the meadows.
"we ascended a Small rise and beheld an open boutifull Leavel Valley or plain of about 20 Miles wide and near 60 long extending N. & S. in every direction around which I could see high points of Mountains Covered with Snow." — William Clark
On the Eve of Tragedy
Battle in the Big Hole
On August 6th, 1877 an estimated 800 Nez Perce passed this way on their flight to freedom. Many in
the group thought they had left the conflict behind.
They did not know that Colonel Gibbon was right behind them. Several young men wanted to scout back along the trail, just to be sure. But Chief Looking Glass would not agree. Scouting would violate the trust of their peace agreement with the Bitterroot settlers.
"All right, Looking Glass, you are one of the chiefs! I have no wife, no children to be placed fronting the danger that I feel coming to us. Whatever the gains, whatever the loss, it is yours" — Five Wounds, a Nez Perce warrior who wanted to send scouts back over the trail.
August 9th, 1877 the dawn's silence was shattered by the attack of Gibbon's 7th U.S. Infantry and the Bitterroot Volunteers under Captain John B. Catlin.
Visit the Big Hole National Battlefield where the Nez Perce were asleep beside the river that morning.
Trail Creek
Why is it Called Trail Creek?
Indian tribes traveled this route east to the buffalo on the plains and west for the salmon in the rivers. Clark wrote that they
"entered an extensive open Leavel plain in which the Indian trail Scattered in Such a manner that we Could not pursue it." (July 6, 1806)
"La-Im-Tse-La Lik," the name used by the Salish Indians, means "place of the ground squirrel." Trappers called the area "Big Hole,"
a term meaning "broad, flat, mountain-rimmed valley."
Things to See and Do:
Welcome to Trail Creek, the primary route used for thousands of years between the Big Hole, Bitterroot and Salmon areas.
· Walk through time on the Nez Perce Historic Trail along Trail Creek Road to Gibbon Pass, or along Highway 43 to Big Hole National Battlefield.
· Hike the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail, which separates the water flowing toward the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans. Enjoy the Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness area.
· Drive the Trail Creek/Gibbon Pass road to Sula, or the Gibbonsville road over Big Hole Pass to Gibbonsville. These were the traditional travel routes before Highway 93 was opened. They are open during the summer only.
· Camp or picnic near traditional Indian sites at May Creek, Indian Trees, of Spring Gulch campgrounds, Spend the night in a Forest Service cabin or lookout.
· Visit Big Hole National Battlefield, Chief Joseph Pass. Relax at Lost Trail or Jackson Hot Springs.
· Look for elk, moose, deer and birds along Trail Creek or Gibbons Pass roads, especially during the early morning or evening. Watch for ground squirrels and moose along Highway 43. Fish the Big Hole River.
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