Oregon Native American History
Fossils found in the Paisley Caves in Oregon’s south-central region suggest that the first Native Americans arrived in the area more than 14,000 years ago from Asia. By the 16th century, these Indigenous people formed dozens of clans. Before the first European settlers arrived, they comprised more than 200,000 people and spoke over 60 languages. Major groups included the Chinook, Coos, Siuslaw, Coquille, Tillamook, Takelma, Molalla, Klamath, Modoc, Kalapuyan and Athabaskans, among others.
Oregon’s first permanent settlers in the early 19th century traded furs with Indigenous people and repeatedly brought deadly epidemics of malaria and other diseases. Throughout the 1830s, these outbreaks wiped out an estimated 80 to 90 percent of the Indigenous populations in some parts of the state.
In 1834, Methodist preacher Jason Lee arrived in Oregon intending to convert Indigenous people to Christianity. He founded the Indian Manual Training School—later known as Willamette University—in Salem in 1835. Although he was unsuccessful in his conversion efforts, his lobbying to Congress on behalf of Oregon laid the foundations for the territory’s eventual annexation. Over the following years, more Protestant missionaries, including the Whitmans, Spaldings, Eells, Walkers, Smiths and Clarks arrived in Oregon territory—none of whom were very successful in Christianizing Indigenous people.
Throughout the 1840s, many new settlers from the Oregon Trail took over Indigenous lands and introduced epidemics that wiped out more of the Native American population. In 1847, men from the Cayuse and Umatilla tribes rebelled against the incursion and killed roughly a dozen settlers, including the Whitman missionaries. The incident set off the Cayuse War between Indigenous tribes and the Oregon volunteer militia, who were later joined by the United States Army. Other battles between settlers and Native Americans, including the Rogue River Wars and the Yakima War, resulted in the deaths of hundreds of Indigenous people.
In 1855, numerous treaties forced the Cayuse, Kalapuyan, Clackamas, Molalla and other tribes to give up their land to the United States government and move to reservations. Many did not survive the 200-mile journey known as Oregon’s Trail of Tears. Throughout the 1860s and 1870s, more so-called “Indian Wars” with tribes including the Klamath, Modoc, Yahooskin Paiute, Modocs, Nez Perce and Northern Paiute stripped Indigenous people of their remaining native lands.
Throughout the next century, settlers continued to claim Oregon lands with the help of the Dawes Severalty Act of 1887, which allowed the federal government to break up tribal reservation lands and resell plots to non-native settlers. From 1953 to 1954, Congress passed resolutions known as the Termination of Tribes, which dissolved Oregon’s Indigenous groups, including the Grand Ronde, Siletz, Coquille, Coos, Lower Umpqua, Siuslaw and Klamath. Their lands were taken over and sold to settlers. With the goal of “assimilating” Indigenous people into the general population, the Indian Relocation Act of 1956 forced Native Americans out of reservations and into urban cities such as Portland.
In 1968, Native Americans in Oregon joined the American Indian Movement to protest government policies that they blamed for poverty and cultural loss in their communities. From the 1970s to 1980s, nine Oregon groups were restored their federally-recognized status, including the Burns Paiute of Harney County Tribe; Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians; Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde; Confederated Tribes of Siletz; Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation; Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians; Coquille Indian Tribe; Klamath Tribes; and the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs.
Oregon Exploration and Colonial History
In 1774, Spanish explorer Juan Perez arrived for the first documented European visit to Oregon's coast. The following year, the Spanish explorers Bruno de Hezeta and Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra “discovered” the Columbia River. However, it wasn’t until 1792 that American Robert Grey sailed into the Columbia River, followed the same year by British captain George Vancouver.
Perhaps the most famous European exploration of the future state was the Lewis and Clark Expedition, which charted the Oregon territory from 1805 to 1806. Commissioned by the U.S. Department of War, explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark voyaged the Columbia River with 30 travelers. Aided by the Nez Perce tribe, they spent the winter near Astoria at Fort Clatsop. Throughout their trip, the group cataloged hundreds of new plant and animal species and mapped the Pacific Northwest, helping lay future claims to the territory for the United States.
The first permanent European settlement in Oregon was established in 1811 at Fort George (now known as Astoria) by the British Pacific Fur Company. The British-Canadian Hudson Bay Company, which also traded in furs, later founded Fort Vancouver in 1824. Over the following decades, Oregon became the center of a robust regional fur trading network.
Competition between American and British companies led to a strategy of “trapping out” or decimating beaver populations in certain areas to prevent competitors from moving in. Due to the high demand for beaver hats and coats and unregulated trapping during these early settlement years, beavers were nearly extinct by the end of the 19th century. Since then, proper management has allowed semi-aquatic mammals to flourish once again. Known as the “Beaver State,” Oregon features a picture of a beaver on the back of its state flag.