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Massacre Rocks State Park

 

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Located along the Snake River west of American Falls, Massacre Rocks State Park  features a famous configuration of boulders along the south bank of the Snake, known alternatively as Massacre Rocks, "Gate of Death", or "Devil's Gate".  A famous spot along the Oregon Trail and California Trail during the middle 19th century, emigrants gave this name to the narrow passage of the trail through the rocks, from the fear of possible ambush by Native Americans. According to diaries of emigrants, settlers in five wagons clashed with Shoshoni just east of the rocks on August 9th and 10th, 1862. Ten emigrants died in the fight, which involved four wagon trains. The skirmishes actually took place east of the park and not at Devil’s Gate as commonly believed, but the undeserved name stuck.

 

Massacre Rocks State Park,

Boulders in Massacre Rocks State Park, deposited during the Bonneville Event

 

Actually settlers and the natives made use of the area for generations because the Snake River is accessible and relatively gentle in this part of its run, and the violent episodes were the exception, not the rule.

All that’s left of an extinct volcano, the rocks were often used as campsite for wagon trains along the trail. Many emigrants carved their names and dates on the rock face, which is now protected by a shelter. The actual passage through the rocks is now the route of Interstate 86 along the south edge of the park.

Geologically the park was created during the repeated volcanic activity on the Snake River Plain. The rocks themselves were deposited in their present location at the end of the last ice age, approximately 14,500 years ago, during the catastrophic flood known as the Bonneville Flood, when much of Lake Bonneville surged down the Snake River. A notch in the cliff on the north bank of the Snake opposite the park was the site of an ancient waterfall of a side channel of the waters in the aftermath of the flood.

The 995 acre park also includes a visitor's center describing the history and geology of the park. Massacre Rocks State Park offers access to the Snake River as well as a 50 unit campground with water and electrical hookups for RV's, picnic areas, restrooms, and hot showers.  Along the foot trails you can see remnants of the original Oregon Trail on the south side of Interstate 86.

Contact Information:

Massacre Rocks State Park
10 miles west of American Falls, (off I-86)
 3592 N. Park Lane
American Fall

s, Idaho 83211
208-548-2672 

 

 

 

 

Ruts of the Emigrant Trail near Massacre Rocks

Ruts of the Emigrant Trail near Massacre Rocks

 

 

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Ghost Towns of the NorthwestGhost Towns of the Northwest, by Norman D. Weis

Travel through the ghost-town country of the Pacific Northwest, guided by the camera and pen of Norman D. Weis. Both well known and obscure towns, with intriguing names such as Comeback Mine Camp, Electric, Ruby, Greenback, Disautel, and Old Todora entice you to explore their secrets.  The book explores 62 abandoned towns in the boonies of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. The author has given you a head start in your quest, having explored new angles for information on some of the more familiar ghost-towns, or visiting with old-timers for an offbeat story or two. The enigmas of lesser known areas are unraveled as Weis tells how he located each place, and conducted his on-site study of remains to decipher the town's reason for existence and the cause of its demise.

New - $12.95  (Retails for $17.95) Item #os104

 

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