The
Stone Bridge is a
causeway built by the
United States Army in 1867.
It crosses the marshy
channel that connects Hart Lake
and Crump
Lake
in a remote area of Lake County
in eastern Oregon
, United States
. It was later incorporated into the
Oregon Central Military Wagon Road which was
completed in 1872.
The wagon road eventually became the subject
of scandal and litigation ending with a United States
Supreme Court
decision in 1893. The Stone Bridge and the
Oregon Central Military Wagon Road were listed together on the
National Register
of Historic Places in 1974. Today, the Stone Bridge in located
on land claimed by the State of Oregon under
riparian rights. The wagon road adjacent to the
Stone Bridge is owned by the
United States Government and is
administered by
Bureau of Land
Management.
Camp Warner
In 1865, the Army decided it needed a fort near the Warner Lakes to
facilitate the interdiction of Indian raiding parties passing
through the area.
Army scouts from Fort Vancouver
selected a site along Honey Creek on the west side
of the Warner Lakes in what is today Lake County, Oregon. In
1866, a unit of the
14 Infantry Regiment
was sent from
Fort Boise to establish the
fort.
The
14 Infantry came by way of Fort Harney
, arriving on the east side of the Warner Lakes in
late summer. The Army was unable to cross the chain of lakes
which stretched more than seventy miles north to south. After
several skirmishes with Indians, the soldiers decided to build
Camp Warner on the east side of the lakes. The camp was
sited poorly and its construction was hasty. As a result, the men
had a very difficult winter, losing one sergeant who froze to death
during a snow storm.
In the spring of 1867, the 14 Infantry was replaced by a company of
the
23 Infantry
Regiment. In February, General
George
Crook visited Camp Warner. Crook directed that the camp be
moved to the Honey Creek site west of the lakes. To get the Army’s
wagons and equipment across the Warner wetlands, forty men under
the command of Captain James Henton were assigned to build a bridge
across a narrow, marshy channel between Hart Lake and Crump Lake.
Shortly after the bridge was begun a second detachment was sent
ahead to construct the new fort. The bridge was completed that
summer and the soldiers moved into the new camp, which was named
Fort Warner.
By 1869, the Indian raids in south-central Oregon had ended and a
treaty had been signed. With no Indian raiders left in the area,
Fort Warner was abandoned in 1874. While the fort is gone, the
Stone Bridge the Army built to cross the Warner wetlands still
exists.
Bridge structure
The Stone Bridge was the first large structure built in the
south-central part of Oregon. It was constructed between 16 May and
24 July 1867 by forty men from the 23 Infantry Regiment under the
supervision of Captain James Henton. The site chosen for the bridge
was a narrow marsh that connects Hart Lake and Crump Lake, two
large lakes at the southern end of the seventy-mile long chain of
lakes and
wetlands known as Warner
Lakes.
The Stone Bridge is actually a quarter mile long causeway rather
than a traditional
bridge.
It was constructed by
hauling basalt boulders and smaller rocks
from nearby Hart
Mountain
and dumping
them into the marsh. When it was completed, the causeway was
probably several feet above the water level and was wide enough for
wagons to pass over it.
The Army abandoned the crossing in 1874 when it closed Fort Warner
and left the area. In the meantime, the Oregon Central Military
Wagon Road had begun using the Stone Bridge to cross the Warner
Lakes. However, the road company never maintained it. After the
military road was abandoned, local ranchers used the causeway as a
cattle crossing for many years. Eventually, the causeway settled
into the soft marshy ground, disappearing beneath the water. Today,
the Stone Bridge is completely underwater except during periods of
drought. As a result, it is very difficult to find.
Road construction
Oregon Central Military Wagon Road
1865 and 1869, the
United States
Congress awarded land grants to the State of Oregon to pass on
to companies constructing military wagon roads. The roads were
intended to facilitate the movement of Army units within the state
and promote settlement along the routes. Congress eventually
authorized the construction of five military wagon roads in Oregon.
The first military road was approved by Congress on 2 July 1865.
Known as
the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road, it was to run from Eugene, Oregon
to Fort Boise in Idaho
.
The
Civil War had drained the
United States treasury
and the State of Oregon did not have a tax base
sufficient to support road construction so the government financed
the military road projects with land grants. Private
companies were specifically chartered to construct the roads.
Congress allowed the construction companies to claim three sections
of land for every mile of road they built, every odd numbered
section in a swath covering three miles on either side of the road.
As ten-mile sections of road were completed, the companies could
claim up to thirty sections of land along the route as payment.
Once the tracts were
patented, the
company could sell or lease the land to recover the cost of
construction and create profits for its investors.
As a result, road surveyors laid out routes designed to pass
through as much well watered, desirable land as possible.
For
example, when the Oregon Central military road reached the summit
of the Cascade Mountains, it did
not head due east toward Fort Boise; instead, it turned south
through the upper Deschutes River
country into the Klamath Basin
. It then followed the
Williamson and
Sprague Rivers, claiming large parts of the
Klamath Indian
Reservation.
The Oregon Central road meandered through the
Goose
Lake
Valley, the Warner Valley, the Harney Basin, and
the Pueblo Valley, securing thousands of acres of valuable grazing
land before finally turning north toward Fort Boise.
Scandal and litigation
On 12 January 1870, Oregon’s Governor,
George L. Woods, certified to the
United States Secretary
of the Interior that the road was complete. This allowed the
Oregon Central Military Wagon Road Company to claim
property along the route. However, most of the Oregon Central
roadway was nothing more than a rudimentary trail.
In reality, the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road was a giant
scam, designed to acquire public lands at
little or no cost to the road company’s investors. Nevertheless,
the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road Company claimed a total of
875,196 acres of public land. The company was able to patent
235,568 acres before law suits ended the fraud. Legal disputes kept
the ownership of these lands in question for decades, preventing
honest settlers from claiming land grants for farms and ranches. In
addition, the company paid no taxes while the land claims were
disputed. At the same time, the value of the land and its timber,
minerals, and grazing potential continued to increase as the
property rights were passed from one investor group to the next.
Finally, newspaper reports of the fraud compelled Congress to
investigate. This lead to a major court case, known as the
United States versus the California and Oregon Land
Company. That case was decided by the United States Supreme
Court on 6 March 1893. As a result, the United States Government
was able to reclaim the unpatented lands; however, title to
patented lands remained in private hands.
Eventually, the land passed into the hands of the
Oregon Valley
Land Company, which
subdivided it into 14,000 lots and
parcels.
The property was finally sold in a
nationally advertised auction held in Lakeview, Oregon
in 1909. The company sold a total of 340,000
acres. Many of the properties included a separate lot in the town
of Lakeview along with the rural land purchase. Many buyers bid on
land without actually seeing it. As a result, the company was able
to sell thousands of acres of dry, worthless land during their week
long auction. As a result, very few purchasers ever lived on their
property or received economic benefits from it.
Route
Route of the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road
Oregon Central Military Wagon Road was a circuitous 420 mile wagon
trace designed to capture government land grants rather than link
destinations.
Today, Oregon
Route 58 (also know as the Willamette Pass Highway) follow the
first leg of the Oregon Central military road from Eugene over the
Cascades to Central
Oregon
.
At that
point, the original road headed south through northern Klamath
County
past what is now the community of Chemult
. It followed the Williamson and Sprague
Rivers before turning east into Lake County.
The road road passed
over Drews
Gap
and followed Drews Creek through the north end of
the Goose Lake Valley
, along what is Oregon
Route 140 today.
It then
crossed the Warner
Mountains
and entered the Warner Valley, crossing over the
Warner Lakes at the Stone Bridge between Crump Lake and Hart
Lake. The road continued south of Hart Mountain,
through what is today the Hart
Mountain National Antelope Refuge
. The road crossed the Catlow Valley and then
Steens
Mountain
.
It
continued through Harney County
, entering Malheur County
near the Whitehorse Ranch on the east side of the
Pueblo Valley. From there the road follows Crooked Creek
northeast, passing near what is now Rome, Oregon
. From there it ran along Jordan Creek to
Silver City,
Idaho
.
Historic Site
The Stone Bridge and the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road were
historically important projects undertaken by the United States
Government and the State of Oregon. Because it is a unique military
and transportation history site, the Stone Bridge and an adjacent
section of the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road were listed on
the National Register of Historic Places on 8 November 1974.
Despite this designation, both are very difficult to find. A marker
was placed at the east end of the Stone Bridge in 1975; however,
the causeway itself is only visible when the water level in the
adjoining lakes drops to a low level. Some sections of the military
road have become part of Oregon’s modern road network while crude
dirt roads follow the route in other places; however, most of the
original road has completely disappeared.
References
- "Stone Bridge and the Oregon Central Military Wagon Road",
National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination
Form, National Register of Historic Places, United States Park
Service, United States Department of Interior, Washington, D.C., 13
August 1974.
- McArthur, Lewis A. and Lewis L. McArthur, "Stone Bridge",
Oregon Geographic Names (Seventh Edition), Oregon
Historical Society Press, Portland, Oregon, 2003, p. 916.
- Bach, Melva M., "Camp Warner Moved to Honey Creek – 1867",
History of the Fremont National Forest, Fremont National
Forest, Unites States Forest Service, United States Department of
Agriculture, Lakeview, Oregon, 1981, p. 14.
- "Oregon Central Military Road", Oregon State Office,
Bureau of Land Management, United States Department of Interior,
Portland, Oregon, 17 September 2009.
- "Oregon History: Uncle Sam's Handiwork",
Oregon Blue Book, Oregon State Archives, Office of the
Secretary of State, State of Oregon, Salem, Oregon, 17 September
2009.
- "Unblushing Land Frauds; The President Sends
Information to Congress How Big Chunks of the Public Domain Have
Been Stolen by Wagon Road Companies in Oregon", New York
Times, New York, New York, 21 March 1888.
- "United States v. California & Oregon Land Co., 148
U.S. 31 (1893)", United States Supreme Court decision,
Washington, D.C., decided 6 March 1893.
- Beckham, Stephen Dow and Florence K. Lentz, "The Dalles-Boise Military Road", Rocks and Hard
Places: Historic Resources Study, John Day Fossil Beds
National Monument, National Park Service, United States Department
of the Interior, Seattle, Washington, 2000.
- “Decision of Court in relation to Military Road
through the Klamath Reservation”, Annual Reports of the
Department of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1898:
Indian Affairs, Washington, D.C., p. 552.
- Richard Engeman, Oregon Historical Society,
“Lake County Court House”, The Oregon History
Project, Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon, 2005
- Oregon, 1879, David Rumsey Map Collection, Rand
McNally and Company, 3 October 2009.
- "Stone Bridge and the Oregon Central Military Wagon
Road", National Register of Historic Places,
www.nationalregisterofhistoricalplaces.com, 24 September 2009.
External links