Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1E8N_glacial-lake-missoula_Hope-ID.html
Force of energy unleashed was hundreds of times the explosive energy of Mt. Saint Helens Flood events occurred more than a dozen times before the last torrential cataclysm of 12-15,000 years ago Glacial Lake Missoula and the Channeled Scabla…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1E8L_glacial-ice-dam_Hope-ID.html
Glaciers advanced and retreated a dozen times or moreDamming Glacial Lake Missoula Bursting with gargantuan force Flooding areas 400 miles away Shaping today's landscape in Idaho, Washington and Oregon Glacial ice above lake level. Tall as a 20…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1E8I_lake-pend-oreille_Hope-ID.html
When the last of the continental ice sheets blocked this valley, a great lake extended over 200 miles into Montana. Ice about as high as the mountain ridges held back water as deep as 800 to 1000 feet at Missoula, ten to twenty thousand years a…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1E88_hope-east-hope_Hope-ID.html
HenriettaTugboat for Hope Lumber Original Thornton SchoolSpring Creek ca 1909 1894 Flood Changed LandscapeDestroyed buildings along the tracksFloodwaters at level of present highway Hope Lumber Company, East HopeFueled the economy of a ne…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1E87_david-thompson-finnan-macdonald_Hope-ID.html
At Mamaloose Point, two milesSouth, Kullyspell house,first trading post in Idaho,was built September, 1809 byDavid Thompson andFinnan Macdonald
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1E84_kullyspell-house_Hope-ID.html
Idaho's fur trade began in the fall of 1809 when David Thompson built a trading post 2.5 miles southwest of here. Kullyspell House (Thompson spelled "Kalispell" that way) was the earliest fur trade post in the American Pacific Northwest. A geog…
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