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The
Bear River is the largest tributary to the Great Salt
Lake. Its volume at times reaches 1.4 million acre feet
of water. Beginning in Utah's Uinta Mountains, the swift-falling
stream first heads north and then changes into a slow
meandering stream in Wyoming. It then flows west into
Idaho and south into Utah. After flowing nearly 500 miles,
it finally empties into Bear River Bay of the Great Salt
Lake, ending ninety miles from its place of beginning.
Shoshoni Indians lived near the Bear River before Anglo
settlement. They were primarily hunter/gatherers who occasionally
traded and fought with Cheyenne, Crow, and Blackfoot tribes.
The fur trade brought white trappers to the area. In 1812
Robert Stuart, returning from Astoria, Oregon, heard stories
from white men on the Snake River of a river to the south;
he was persuaded to take a look at what he later called
Miller's River, named after his guide, Joseph Miller.
William Sublette led a party in 1824 from the Green River
to Soda Springs, the Bear River's northernmost point.
So colorful were the stories of the Bear River that the
trappers' rendezvous of 1825 and 1827 were held here.
Jedediah Smith attended the 1827 rendezvous after his
ill-fated California trip. Peter Skene Ogden locally directed
the Hudson's Bay Company policy to rid the region of furs
in order to discourage American traders and settlers.
Other famous trappers who visited the Bear River include
B.L.E. Bonneville, Zenos Leonard, Black Harris, and Osborn
Russell. Missionaries who visited the river included Jason
and Daniel Lee as well as Father Jean Paul De Smet. John
Charles Fremont explored the area in 1843 and his report
helped prepare the Mormons for their new life in the West.
Some Mormons thought they were coming west to settle the
Bear River Valley. They explored the mouth of the Bear
in April 1848 in the Mud Hen, a fifteen-foot skiff
built from fir planks and launched in the Jordan River
at Salt Lake City. The next year, Howard Stansbury and
John W. Gunnison, U.S. Topographical Engineers, took Albert
Carrington and a crew of men on a circumnavigational expedition
of the Great Salt Lake. Their craft was left high on a
mud flat in the Bear River Bay when a sudden April snowstorm
nearly took their lives. In 1863, during the Civil War,
Colonel Patrick Connor took troops north from Salt Lake
to Cache Valley in order to chastise some Bannock (Shoshone)
Indians who had been raiding emigrant wagon trains. Connor
surprised the Indians' winter encampment on the Bear River
and killed 250 Indians in what has come to be viewed as
a controversial and terrible action.
The James A. Garfield, a paddle-wheeler, carried
ore from the south shore of the Great Salt Lake up the
Bear River as far as Corinne for transshipment by rail
before 1874.
Geologists John W. Powell and G.K. Gilbert reported as
early as 1878 that the Bear River waters would generate
controversy. The truth of their foresight was proven when
one of the first stream-gauging stations in the U.S. was
established at Collinston in 1889. Farmers in Wyoming,
Idaho, and Utah wanted as much water as they could get
and power companies filed for rights. Coming close to
Bear Lake but not part of it, the River was joined by
an inlet in 1918 in order that river waters could be stored
in the lake. Under the 1955 Bear River Compact water rights
have been redefined and use is regulated more to the users'
satisfaction.
Jay M. Haymond
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