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Disease and Displacement of the Native AmericansIn the 1830s a "fever and ague," later determined to be malaria, devastated Native Americans living on the mid and lower Columbia River, and in the Willamette Valley. More than eighty percent of the Cascade Indians were killed by the epidemic . An Indian camp at the huckleberry fields of Meadow Creek, near Twin Buttes, Skamania County. Photo taken by deceased Washougal resident Martha Klonginger Ford. Courtesy of The Columbia Gorge Interpretive Center |
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Surviving Cascade Indians continued to live on the Columbia
River, harvesting salmon during the seasonal migrations. Some Cascades
lived part of the year outside Fort Vancouver. In 1855, Cascade Indians
were accused of joining the Yakama and the Klickitats in an attack on
Fort Cascades. The blockhouse had recently been built at the Cascades
Rapids after war broke out between the US Army and Native Americans on
the Columbia Plateau. An Indian confederation, which evidence suggests
did not include the Cascade Indians, captured Fort Cascades, but was defeated
by US army troops the following day. Settlers and army members murdered,
held captive, and hung many Cascades as a result of the attack. The war,
which became known as the Yakima War, was instigated when miners invaded
Plateau Indians' land.
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