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1867: First road through Snoqualmie Pass Opens
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On October 7, 1867, the Seattle Weekly Intelligencer
announces that the first wagon road is completed over Snoqualmie Pass
through the Cascade Mountains. The importance of this route was realized as
early as 1855, but it was not until 1865 that a group of Seattle men
located and surveyed a route for the road.
(RIGHT) Leading cattle over Snoqualmie Pass to the Seattle
markets in 1868
The surveying party consisted of William Perkins, L. V. Wyckoff, Arthur
Denny (1822-1899), and John Ross. Seattle residents raised $2,500 for the
project and William Perkins and a crew of 20 men were hired to construct a
road from Rangers Prairie (the future North Bend) to Snoqualmie Pass. While
the road was being constructed during 1865, a train of six wagons made the
first traverse of Snoqualmie Pass.
The King County Commissioners and a number of King County citizens wanted
to extend the road to Seattle. A road already ran from Seattle to the Black
River (near the future site of Renton). King County Commissioners set an
election in June 1866 to raise $2,000 to extend the road from Black River
to Rangers Prairie. King County passed it overwhelmingly with a vote of 115
for and 4 against.
In June 1867, King County hired Henry Manchester to extend the road at the
rate of $130 per mile. The following year, Jeremiah Borst (1830-1890)
continued the roadwork. On October 7, 1867, the wagon road was completed
from Seattle to Ellensburg. Additional funds were expended to maintain and
improve the route so that by 1870 about $15,000 in public funds and $5,000
in private funds had been spent on the road.
The first to take advantage of the wagon road were meat dealers who
conducted many cattle drives through Snoqualmie Pass.
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