Southwestern Idaho: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 43°30′N 116°30′W / 43.500°N 116.500°W / 43.500; -116.500
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Southwestern Idaho was originally inhabited by three main Native American tribes: the [[Northern Shoshone|Shoshone-Bannock]], the [[Nez Perce people|Nez Perce]], and the [[Northern Paiute people|Northern Paiute]]. These people were among the first inhabitants in Idaho, first living in the area as early as 12,000 years ago.<ref name="fs">{{cite web|url=https://www.fs.usda.gov/main/boise/learning/history-culture|title=Boise National Forest: History & Culture|publisher=U.S. Forest Service|access-date= 10 January 2024}}</ref> The Native Americans tribes were nomadic, adopting a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, and had an annual [[Rendezvous (fur trade)|rendezvous]] in the [[Treasure Valley|Boise Valley]], which also included catching salmon.<ref>{{cite web |last=Boise |first=City of |url=http://www.boiseuu.org/msearch/brochures/HistoryOfBoise.pdf |title=History of Boise; City of Boise, Boise Department of Arts & History, Idaho Statesman |publisher=City of Boise |date=2013 |access-date=February 6, 2021 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210207031522/http://www.boiseuu.org/msearch/brochures/HistoryOfBoise.pdf |archive-date=February 7, 2021 }}</ref>
Southwestern Idaho was originally inhabited by three main Native American tribes: the [[Northern Shoshone|Shoshone-Bannock]], the [[Nez Perce people|Nez Perce]], and the [[Northern Paiute people|Northern Paiute]]. These people were among the first inhabitants in Idaho, first living in the area as early as 12,000 years ago.<ref name="fs">{{cite web|url=https://www.fs.usda.gov/main/boise/learning/history-culture|title=Boise National Forest: History & Culture|publisher=U.S. Forest Service|access-date= 10 January 2024}}</ref> The Native Americans tribes were nomadic, adopting a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, and had an annual [[Rendezvous (fur trade)|rendezvous]] in the [[Treasure Valley|Boise Valley]], which also included catching salmon.<ref>{{cite web |last=Boise |first=City of |url=http://www.boiseuu.org/msearch/brochures/HistoryOfBoise.pdf |title=History of Boise; City of Boise, Boise Department of Arts & History, Idaho Statesman |publisher=City of Boise |date=2013 |access-date=February 6, 2021 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210207031522/http://www.boiseuu.org/msearch/brochures/HistoryOfBoise.pdf |archive-date=February 7, 2021 }}</ref>


Spanish explorers in the late 1500's explored parts of the American West, including southwestern Idaho, and introduced the Native Americans of the area to pigs, horses, domestic fowl, corn, tomatoes, and garlic. After the [[Lewis & Clark Expedition]] through Idaho, French-Canadian fur trappers further explored the area. [[Mountain men]], included Spaniards and Mexicans, lived off the land in Southwestern Idaho, trading with the Native Americans in the area. However, it wasn't until further development in [[Oregon]], the mass exodus of settlers to the West on the [[Oregon Trail|Oregon]], [[California Trail|Californian]], and [[Mormon Trail|Mormon]] trails, the establishment of [[Fort Boise]], and the Idaho Gold Rush in the 1850's and 60's that settling of Southwestern Idaho began to increase. In order to support mining towns, such as [[Idaho City]], and the growing area of Boise, numerous ranching and agriculture businesses were set up in the area.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/idaho-history-and-heritage-177411856/|publisher=Smithsonian Magazine|title=Idaho - History and Heritage|date=6 November 2007}}</ref> The Native American tribes in the 1870's were forced onto reservations, with the [[Nez Perce War]] resulting because of this issue. By 1877, all tribes native to Southwestern Idaho were located on reservations.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://isc.idaho.gov/tribal-state/tribalhistory|title=Tribal History: Organized under the auspices of the Idaho Supreme Court|publisher=State of Idaho Judicial Branch|website=Tribal State Court Forum|access-date=10 January 2024}]</ref>
Spanish explorers in the late 1500's explored parts of the American West, including southwestern Idaho, and introduced the Native Americans of the area to pigs, horses, domestic fowl, corn, tomatoes, and garlic. After the [[Lewis & Clark Expedition]] through Idaho, French-Canadian fur trappers further explored the area. [[Mountain men]], included Spaniards and Mexicans, lived off the land in Southwestern Idaho, trading with the Native Americans in the area. However, it wasn't until further development in [[Oregon]], the mass exodus of settlers to the West on the [[Oregon Trail|Oregon]], [[California Trail|Californian]], and [[Mormon Trail|Mormon]] trails, the establishment of [[Fort Boise]], and the Idaho Gold Rush in the 1850's and 60's that settling of Southwestern Idaho began to increase. In order to support mining towns, such as [[Idaho City]], [[Booneville, Idaho|Booneville]], [[Ruby City, Idaho|Ruby City]], and [[Silver City, Idaho|Silver City]], and the growing area of Boise, numerous ranching and agriculture businesses were set up in the area.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/idaho-history-and-heritage-177411856/|publisher=Smithsonian Magazine|title=Idaho - History and Heritage|date=6 November 2007}}</ref><ref name="owy">{{cite web|url=https://owyheecounty.net/community/#:~:text=A%20Bit%20of%20History,comes%20from%20early%20fur%20trappers.|title=COMMUNITY - Owyhee County, Idaho|publisher=Owyhee County|access-date= 10 January 2024}}</ref> One of the biggest ranching operations in 1869 was in Owyhee County, where an original 1,400 [[Cattle#Singular terminology issue|head]] of cattle was driven around the county, forging the area's cattle industry that persists today. At an unknown time, there were an estimated 100,000 head of cattle in the area of Owyhee.<ref name="owy" />


{{Quote box
However, rapid and exponential growth was relatively contained by the limits of agriculture and irrigation over the next half century, as Southwestern Idaho has an arid climate that makes long-term, practical farming difficult. Numerous small-scale, private companies aimed to establish irrigation in the lands outside of the easily watered lands near the Boise Valley, but were often disorganized, and had difficulty upscaling to larger areas. As such, the [[Desert Land Act of 1894|Casey Act]], passed in 1894, allowed for the [[reclamation states]] with public lands to sell 160-acre plots of lands to farmers, which would then have irrigation districts approved by the state's office of reclamation engineering; a notable example is the Pioneer Irrigation District, established by 1900 near Caldwell and the surrounding areas (such as [[Notus, Idaho|Notus]] and [[Middleton, Idaho|Middleton]]). Idaho benefitted the most from the Carey Act, with around 60% of all land utilized by the Carey Act was located in Idaho, including Southwestern Idaho. In the early 1900's, reclamation projects, such as [[Arrowrock Dam]], the [[New York Canal (Idaho)|New York Canal]], the [[Cascade Dam]], and the [[Anderson Ranch Dam]] all helped irrigate and make the area more sustainable and liveable. These projects, coupled alongside the underground pumping of water (started in 1950) continue to supply Southwestern Idaho with it's necessary water supply.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://history.idaho.gov/wp-content/uploads/0260_Irrigation-in-Idaho-1.pdf|title=IRRIGATION IN IDAHO|date=June 1971|publisher=Idaho State Historical Society|access-date10 January 2024}}</ref>
|quote = This piece of country is worth looking after. The lakes and streams abound with fish at this time of the year and the game is plentiful…. The Payette Lake, a beautiful sheet of water 12 miles long, in places is dotted with richly wooded inlets set like emerald gems on the bosom of the liquid mirror.
|author = - [[N.B. Willey]]
|source = Warren Times, 1874.
|width = 25%
|align = right
}}
Meanwhile, the communities around the area of Boise also began to grow. [[N. B. Willey]], future governor of Idaho, wrote to the Warren Times, a newspaper, creating interest in the area around [[Payette Lake]], and the future site of [[McCall, Idaho|McCall]]. In a few years, commercial fisheries would come to operation on Payette Lake, selling fresh, salted, and dried [[Chinook salmon]] and white fish to the areas in the Boise Valley. Overtime, infrastructure, including a hotel, the Meadow-to-Warren Trail (now [[Idaho State Highway 55]]), and a post office led to the southern shore of Payette Lake to become the center of mining, recreation, forestry, and agriculture for the McCall area. Over the next 20 years, expansion would continue with commercial camps, more hotels, private clubs, church clubs, and scenic tours.<ref name="mc">{{cite web|url=https://visitmccall.org/about/historic-information/|title=Historic Information|publisher=McCall Chamber of Commerce|access-date=10 January 2024}}</ref>

During this time period, the Native American tribes that had inhabited Southwestern Idaho were forced onto reservations in the 1870's, with the [[Nez Perce War]] resulting because of this issue. By 1877, all tribes native to Southwestern Idaho were located on reservations.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://isc.idaho.gov/tribal-state/tribalhistory|title=Tribal History: Organized under the auspices of the Idaho Supreme Court|publisher=State of Idaho Judicial Branch|website=Tribal State Court Forum|access-date=10 January 2024}}</ref>

Rapid and exponential growth was relatively contained by the limits of agriculture and irrigation over the next half century, as Southwestern Idaho has an arid climate that makes long-term, practical farming difficult. Numerous small-scale, private companies aimed to establish irrigation in the lands outside of the easily watered lands near the Boise Valley, but were often disorganized, and had difficulty upscaling to larger areas. As such, the [[Desert Land Act of 1894|Casey Act]], passed in 1894, allowed for the [[reclamation states]] with public lands to sell 160-acre plots of lands to farmers, which would then have irrigation districts approved by the state's office of reclamation engineering; a notable example is the Pioneer Irrigation District, established by 1900 near Caldwell and the surrounding areas (such as [[Notus, Idaho|Notus]] and [[Middleton, Idaho|Middleton]]). Idaho benefitted the most from the Carey Act, with around 60% of all land utilized by the Carey Act was located in Idaho, including Southwestern Idaho. In the early 1900's, reclamation projects, such as [[Arrowrock Dam]], the [[New York Canal (Idaho)|New York Canal]], the [[Cascade Dam]], and the [[Anderson Ranch Dam]] all helped irrigate and make the area more sustainable and liveable. These projects, coupled alongside the underground pumping of water (started in 1950) continue to supply Southwestern Idaho with it's necessary water supply.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://history.idaho.gov/wp-content/uploads/0260_Irrigation-in-Idaho-1.pdf|title=IRRIGATION IN IDAHO|date=June 1971|publisher=Idaho State Historical Society|access-date=10 January 2024}}</ref>

Today, Southwestern Idaho is Idaho's primary and most well-known metropolitan area, with numerous [[Industry (economics)|industries]], such as business, finance, agriculture, recreation, and tourism.


==Cities and towns==
==Cities and towns==

Revision as of 03:43, 11 January 2024

Southwestern Idaho highlighted in red on a map of Idaho.

Southwestern Idaho is a geographical term for the area along the U.S. state of Idaho's borders with Oregon and Nevada. It includes the populous areas of the Boise metropolitan area and Treasure Valley.[1][2]

The counties of Ada, Adams, Boise, Canyon, Elmore, Gem, Owyhee, Payette, Valley, and Washington are included in the region.

Demographics

In the 2020 Census, the ten county area had a combined population of 845,395 people; 45.9% of the state's population.[3] Ada and Canyon are the two most populous counties in Idaho, and both have (respectively) experienced a 36.6% and 31.2% growth in population since 2010, making them among the fastest growing counties in terms of population in the state.[4]

The largest city in Southwestern Idaho, and in the state, is Boise, with a population of 235,684. Other major cities include Meridian, Nampa, Caldwell, Fruitland, Weiser, Homedale, McCall, and Emmett.

History

Southwestern Idaho was originally inhabited by three main Native American tribes: the Shoshone-Bannock, the Nez Perce, and the Northern Paiute. These people were among the first inhabitants in Idaho, first living in the area as early as 12,000 years ago.[5] The Native Americans tribes were nomadic, adopting a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, and had an annual rendezvous in the Boise Valley, which also included catching salmon.[6]

Spanish explorers in the late 1500's explored parts of the American West, including southwestern Idaho, and introduced the Native Americans of the area to pigs, horses, domestic fowl, corn, tomatoes, and garlic. After the Lewis & Clark Expedition through Idaho, French-Canadian fur trappers further explored the area. Mountain men, included Spaniards and Mexicans, lived off the land in Southwestern Idaho, trading with the Native Americans in the area. However, it wasn't until further development in Oregon, the mass exodus of settlers to the West on the Oregon, Californian, and Mormon trails, the establishment of Fort Boise, and the Idaho Gold Rush in the 1850's and 60's that settling of Southwestern Idaho began to increase. In order to support mining towns, such as Idaho City, Booneville, Ruby City, and Silver City, and the growing area of Boise, numerous ranching and agriculture businesses were set up in the area.[7][8] One of the biggest ranching operations in 1869 was in Owyhee County, where an original 1,400 head of cattle was driven around the county, forging the area's cattle industry that persists today. At an unknown time, there were an estimated 100,000 head of cattle in the area of Owyhee.[8]

This piece of country is worth looking after. The lakes and streams abound with fish at this time of the year and the game is plentiful…. The Payette Lake, a beautiful sheet of water 12 miles long, in places is dotted with richly wooded inlets set like emerald gems on the bosom of the liquid mirror.

- N.B. Willey, Warren Times, 1874.

Meanwhile, the communities around the area of Boise also began to grow. N. B. Willey, future governor of Idaho, wrote to the Warren Times, a newspaper, creating interest in the area around Payette Lake, and the future site of McCall. In a few years, commercial fisheries would come to operation on Payette Lake, selling fresh, salted, and dried Chinook salmon and white fish to the areas in the Boise Valley. Overtime, infrastructure, including a hotel, the Meadow-to-Warren Trail (now Idaho State Highway 55), and a post office led to the southern shore of Payette Lake to become the center of mining, recreation, forestry, and agriculture for the McCall area. Over the next 20 years, expansion would continue with commercial camps, more hotels, private clubs, church clubs, and scenic tours.[9]

During this time period, the Native American tribes that had inhabited Southwestern Idaho were forced onto reservations in the 1870's, with the Nez Perce War resulting because of this issue. By 1877, all tribes native to Southwestern Idaho were located on reservations.[10]

Rapid and exponential growth was relatively contained by the limits of agriculture and irrigation over the next half century, as Southwestern Idaho has an arid climate that makes long-term, practical farming difficult. Numerous small-scale, private companies aimed to establish irrigation in the lands outside of the easily watered lands near the Boise Valley, but were often disorganized, and had difficulty upscaling to larger areas. As such, the Casey Act, passed in 1894, allowed for the reclamation states with public lands to sell 160-acre plots of lands to farmers, which would then have irrigation districts approved by the state's office of reclamation engineering; a notable example is the Pioneer Irrigation District, established by 1900 near Caldwell and the surrounding areas (such as Notus and Middleton). Idaho benefitted the most from the Carey Act, with around 60% of all land utilized by the Carey Act was located in Idaho, including Southwestern Idaho. In the early 1900's, reclamation projects, such as Arrowrock Dam, the New York Canal, the Cascade Dam, and the Anderson Ranch Dam all helped irrigate and make the area more sustainable and liveable. These projects, coupled alongside the underground pumping of water (started in 1950) continue to supply Southwestern Idaho with it's necessary water supply.[11]

Today, Southwestern Idaho is Idaho's primary and most well-known metropolitan area, with numerous industries, such as business, finance, agriculture, recreation, and tourism.

Cities and towns

External links

References

  1. ^ "Discover Southwest Idaho | Boise Idaho Information & More". Visit Idaho. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
  2. ^ Brent Thomas, Idaho Fish and Game. "Southwest Region | Idaho Hunt Planner". idfg.idaho.gov. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
  3. ^ "2020 Census Demographic Data Map Viewer". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  4. ^ "Population of Counties in Idaho (2024)". World Population Review. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  5. ^ "Boise National Forest: History & Culture". U.S. Forest Service. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  6. ^ Boise, City of (2013). "History of Boise; City of Boise, Boise Department of Arts & History, Idaho Statesman" (PDF). City of Boise. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 7, 2021. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  7. ^ "Idaho - History and Heritage". Smithsonian Magazine. 6 November 2007.
  8. ^ a b "COMMUNITY - Owyhee County, Idaho". Owyhee County. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Historic Information". McCall Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  10. ^ "Tribal History: Organized under the auspices of the Idaho Supreme Court". Tribal State Court Forum. State of Idaho Judicial Branch. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  11. ^ "IRRIGATION IN IDAHO" (PDF). Idaho State Historical Society. June 1971. Retrieved 10 January 2024.

43°30′N 116°30′W / 43.500°N 116.500°W / 43.500; -116.500