|
|
|
|
Recent Updates |
|
|
|
|
 |
Idaho News |
Read All News
|
Beautiful, Offbeat Northern... Jul 22, 2007 12:07:45 Curious it may be, but there is not a single national park in Idaho, a state with more public forest land, more wilderness, more white water than any other in the country outside of the superlative-trumping asterisk of Alaska. It has two dozen sit... |
USDA seeks origin of Idaho ... Jun 22, 2007 12:06:31 Scientists are using DNA comparisons to try to find out how a microscopic wormlike pest that attacks potato plants made its way into this country _... |
Help find these missing peo... May 13, 2007 11:05:51 Click link below and help find these missing people:http://www.missingkids. com/missingkids/servlet/PubCas eSearchServlet?act=usMapSearch &missSta... |
Idaho Golf Courses Apr 23, 2007 06:04:27 Golf Digest Rates Idaho Golf CoursesCourses Receiving Recognition on National Level Third Hole, Osprey Meadows, Tamarack Resort. DONNELLY, Idaho (... |
|
Read All News
|
|
|
|
|
|
Upcoming Concerts in Idaho
|
View All
|
 |
At Knitting Factory Concert House (Formerly B...
on 2009-11-05 22:30
|
|
At Idaho Center
on 2009-12-07 14:00
|
|
At Colonial Theatre
on 2010-03-05 22:30
|
|
At Holt Arena
on 2009-04-23 03:30
|
|
|
|
|
 |
Latest Visitors to Idaho |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Idaho Suggested Videos
|
 |
|
No videos found, you can suggest the following video(s) to the owner: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Message from the Governor of Idaho |
 |
Time Line:
NORTHWEST TERRITORY 1803-1847 | 1803 | The Louisiana Territory, which extended west of the Mississippi to Idaho, purchased by the United States from France for $15 million. | | 1805 | Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark discover Idaho at Lemhi Pass, and cross into north Idaho over the Lolo Trail August 12. Lewis and Clark sail past Spalding October 8, meet with Nez Perce Indians at Weippe Prairie. | | 1806 | Lewis and Clark spend more than six weeks with the Nez Perce Indians in the Kamiah area before returning eastward across the Lolo Trail. | | 1810 | David Thompson commences fur trade near Bonners Ferry. 1809 David Thompson constructs Kullyspell House by Lake Pend Oreille. First establishment erected in the NORTHWEST, built for the Northwest Fur Company. | | 1810 | Missouri Fur Company establishes Fort Henry near St. Anthony, first American trading post. | | 1811 | Pacific Fur Company expedition, the Astorians, explore the Snake River Valley on their way to the Columbia River. Led by Wilson P. Hunt, the westward journey discovers the Boise Valley. | | 1812 | Donald Mackenzie establishes a winter fur trading post at Lewiston for the Astorians. | | 1813 | John Reid starts fur trading post on the lower Boise River, but Bannock Indians wipe it out in 1814. | | 1818 | Donald Mackenzie makes first exploration of southern Idaho with his Snake River expedition of trappers. Treaty of joint occupancy between Great Britain and the United States leaves Oregon country (including Idaho) open to citizens of both nations. | | 1820 | Treaty between Spain and U.S. establishes the southern boundary of Idaho (Oregon Territory) at 42nd parallel. | | 1823 | Battle fought in Lemhi Valley between men of the Snake River country expedition and the Piegan Indians. | | 1824 | Alexander Ross and Jedediah Smith lead separate expeditions in exploring much of the Salmon River country. Peter Skene Ogden begins trapping in Idaho. Russia cedes NORTHWEST Territory to United States in a treaty. | | 1827 | Rendezvous at Bear Lake for fur trading. | | 1829 | Rendezvous held at Pierre's Hole, now known as the Teton basin, where hundreds of mountain men and fur trappers congregated. | | 1830 | Rendezvous with the Indians held on the Blackfoot River, where competition in fur trading became intensely keen. | | 1831 | Fur trappers of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, led by Kit Carson, winter on the Salmon River. | | 1832 | Captain B.L.E. Bonneville leads the first crossing of the Rocky Mountains in covered wagons. The company reaches the Lemhi River on September 19. Rendezvous at Pierre's Hole. Battle of Pierre's hole occurs July 18 between American fur trappers and the Grosventre Indians. | | 1834 | Fort Hall, established by Americans under Captain Nathaniel Wyeth, becomes a hub for trails and roads to the western parts of the United States. Fort Boise erected by the Hudson Bay Company near the mouth of the Boise River. | | 1836 | Henry Harmon Spalding establishes a Nez Perce Indian mission at Lapwai. | | 1837 | First school in Idaho opens for Indian children at Lapwai. First white child born in Idaho is Eliza Spalding born at Lapwai. | | 1839 | Henry Spalding starts publishing the Bible in Lapwai on the earliest printing press in the Pacific Northwest. Chief Timothy, the first native Christian leader, baptized November 17. | | 1840 | Father Pierre Jean de Smet begins missionary work in Idaho. | | 1842 | Father Point establishes the Jesuit Coeur d' Alene mission of the Sacred Heart near Saint Maries. The Mission moves to a site near Cataldo in 1846, and is transferred in 1877 to Desmet where it stands today. | | 1843 | Oregon Trail established in Idaho, which crossed the border near Montpelier, passed by Fort Hall, then westward south of the Snake River to the ford below Salmon Falls, then to Fort Boise, crossing the Snake River into Oregon. | | 1846 | Sacred Heart mission established on the Coeur d'Alene River. The United States acquires all land south of 49 degrees longitude by a treaty with Great Britain. |
|
|
|
|
|
Idaho Description |
|
Great State. Miners' uprisings During its first years of statehood, Idaho was plagued by labor unrest in the mining district of Coeur d'Alene. In 1892, miners called a strike which developed into a shooting war between union miners and company guards. Each side accused the other of starting the fight. The first shots were exchanged at the Frisco mine in Frisco, in the Burke-Canyon north and east of Wallace. The Frisco mine was blown up, and company guards were taken prisoner. The violence soon spilled over into the nearby community of Gem, where union miners attempted to locate a Pinkerton spy who had infiltrated their union and was passing information to the mine operators. But agent Charlie Siringo escaped by cutting a Hole in the floor of his room. Strikers forced the Gem mine to close, then travelled west to the Bunker Hill mining complex near Wardner, and closed down that facility as well. Several had been killed in the Burke-Canyon fighting. The Idaho National Guard and federal troops were dispatched to the area, and union miners and sympathizers were thrown into bullpens. Hostilities would erupt at the Bunker Hill facility once again in 1899, when seventeen union miners were fired for having joined the union. Other union miners were likewise ordered to draw their pay and leave. Angry members of the union converged on the area and blew up the Bunker Hill Mill, killing two company men. In both disputes, the union's complaints included pay, hours of work, the right of miners to belong to the union, and the mine owners' use of informants and undercover agents. The violence committed by union miners was answered with a brutal response in 1892 and in 1899. Through the western Federation of Miners (WFM) union, the battles in the mining district became closely tied to a major miners' strike in Colorado. The struggle culminated in the December 1905 assassination of former Governor Frank Steunenberg by Harry Orchard (also known as Albert Horsley), a member of the WFM. Orchard was allegedly incensed by Steunenberg's efforts as governor to break an 1899 strike after being elected on a pro-labor platform. Pinkerton detective James McParland conducted the investigation into the assassination. In 1907, WFM Secretary Treasurer "Big Bill" Haywood and two other WFM leaders were tried on a charge of conspiracy to murder Steunenberg, with Orchard testifying against them as part of a deal made with McParland. The nationally publicized trial featured Senator William E. Borah as prosecuting attorney and Clarence Darrow representing the defendants. The defense team presented evidence that Orchard had been a Pinkerton agent and had acted as a paid informant for the Cripple Creek mine Owners' Association. Darrow argued that Orchard's real motive in the assassination had been revenge for a declaration of martial law by Steunenberg, which prompted Orchard to gamble away a share in the Hercules mine that would otherwise have made him wealthy. Two of the WFM leaders were acquitted in two separate trials, and the third was released. Orchard was convicted and sentenced to death. His sentence was commuted, and he spent the rest of his life in an Idaho prison.
|
|
|
|
|
Owner's Other Assets |
 |
|
| faqs.com |
| Hits: 188 |
| Return: 9.00% |
|
Votes: 0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Connecticut
Owned By: Hits: 1205
Return: 1.44%
Votes:
+2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Polls |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|