travagant to say that the territory to which the Oregon
trail was made fifty-eight years ago will some day be made
to support forty millions in comfort.
This paper, it will be observed, has dealt entirely with
the native race in Northwestern Oregon, because this was
the field of the race contest. The point to which the
guiding minds of the white race looked as most desirable.
Jefferson said, and Benton repeated: "Plant thirty thou-
sand rifles at the mouth of the Columbia." The first ex-
ploring party sent out by the former selected as the most
interesting region in which to make excursions, the dis-
trict now containing the first and second chosen commer-
cial centers,— Vancouver and Portland.
The native race amid whom these were planted were
described in their average manhood as mean, cowardly
and thievish . Forty years later, to this description might
be added ignorant, superstitious, and utterly without pub-
lic spirit. The tribes east and south from this district
were, excepting those located at the great fishing centers
on the Columbia, less thievish, and much more bold and
spirited in self-defense.
To the recent and valuable historical description of
those tribes, including the natives in what is now Western
Washington, I am indebted to the life of Isaac Ingalls
Stevens, by his son, Hazard Stevens, for the number of
natives west, as well as east, of the Cascades treated with
by Governor Stevens in 1855, just before the natural lead-
ers of the native race made their only united effort to
stem the tide of inflow of the white race.