HISTORICAL FACTS ABOUT IDAHO

MARKER Prior to the arrival of European and Mexican explorers, roughly 8,000 Native Americans representing two distinct groups inhabited Idaho: the Great Basin Shoshone and Bannock tribes and the Plateau tribes of the Coeur d'Alene, Nez Perce and Kootenai. Today, Idaho's Native American heritage, their tribes and their chiefs are reflected in the naming of Nez Perce, Benewah, Shoshone, Bannock and Kootenai counties and the communities of Shoshone, Pocatello, Blackfoot, Nezperce, White Bird, Kamiah, Lapwai, Weippe, Kooskia, Picabo and Tendoy.
MARKER Spanish explorers made trips to the Northwest beginning in 1592. Spaniards introduced pigs, horses, domestic fowl, tomatoes, beans, corn and garlic to the Native Americans of the Northwest.
MARKER Lewis and Clark were the first Euro-Americans to set foot on what is now known as Idaho. They encountered Spanish-speaking Native Americans as well as those who spoke their tribal language. They were followed by French-Canadian fur trappers, resulting in names of communities like Coeur d’Alene (French for "heart of an awl") and Boise (French for "wooded").
MARKER Even the impact of Hawaiian Islanders employed as laborers in the Northwest fur trade received recognition through the naming of Owyhee County. Almost the entire staff of Ft. Boise from 1834-1844 were from the Hawaiian Islands.
MARKER Mountain men, including some Spaniards and Mexicans, lived off the land as trappers and hunters. In the 1860s, there were a number of Mexican vaqueros (cowboys) living in the Treasure Valley. By 1863, Mexicans were mining at Spanishtown, a camp near Rocky Bar, and other Idaho mines. Jesus Urquides, one of several successful Mexican businesspeople, came to Boise in 1863, became a prominent Pacific Northwest packer, and built the Spanish Village in the 1870s to house his Mexican packers. The 1870 census included 60 Mexican-born individuals.
MARKER York, William Clark's Black servant, traveled through what is now Idaho in 1805 with the Lewis and Clark expedition. Respected by the Indians, York today is credited as being of great value to the success of the trip. Some of the fur trappers, traders and miners who followed were Black, including one who helped build the first mission in the Northwest. Until after the Civil War, only free Blacks or escaped slaves came West unless brought by their owners. The entry of the railroad through southern Idaho starting in the 1880s resulted in a number of Blacks settling in Pocatello. Four companies of troops from the 24th Regiment (a Black unit) were sent to Idaho in 1899 to maintain order during the Coeur d' Alene mining strikes. The 1900 Idaho census listed 940 Blacks.
MARKER At one time during the Gold Rush of the early 1800s, Idaho's population was one-quarter Chinese. By 1870, a majority of all Idaho miners were Chinese.
MARKER In the mid-1800s, as with other western states, most early Idaho settlers fled the East to escape what they saw as officially sanctioned harassment of individuals for their beliefs. This was true of Mormons fleeing persecution and Union and Confederate supporters desperately seeking to flee the Civil War. During the 1890s, there were several thousand Japanese laborers constructing the railroad through Idaho. Idaho in 1896 became the fourth state in the nation to give women the right to vote. The territorial legislature had come close to giving women the right to vote as early as 1869. The territorial legislature in 1867 passed a statute making Idaho a community property state. It was not until the turn of the century that women in more than a handful of states had equal rights to the family assets. In 1972, Idaho became the first state in the Nation to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment.
MARKER Between 1900 and 1920, a large number of Basque immigrants came to Idaho from the Pyrenees to work as sheepherders. Today, Boise, Idaho's capital, has the largest Basque community in the United States.
MARKER Idaho was the first state in the nation to elect a Jewish governor. Moses Alexander was elected in 1914 and re-elected in 1916.
MARKER In 1990, Larry EchoHawk was the first Native American to be elected attorney general.