Thank you for your patience while we retrieve your images.
Uploaded 26-Jun-17
Taken 1-Mar-17
Visitors 130


19 of 54 photos
Thumbnails
Info
Photo Info

Dimensions1256 x 750
Original file size632 KB
Image typeJPEG
Color spacesRGB
Date taken2-Mar-17 01:06
Shooting Conditions

Camera makeNIKON CORPORATION
Camera modelNIKON D300
FlashNot fired
Exposure modeManual
Exposure prog.Manual
ISO speedISO 400
Metering modeSpot
Digital zoom1x
Mouth of Evans Creek on the Rogue

Mouth of Evans Creek on the Rogue

In the early 1850s a ferry run by Coyote Evans operated just east of here at the present-day City of Rogue River, not far from a small Takelma village at the creek's junction with the Rogue. On July 18, 1852, the day after attending an abortive peace conference upriver that ended in a melee, John Lamerick's Jacksonville volunteers attacked the village and killed several women. The peace conference had been called by Indian Agent Alonzo Skinner at Big Bar across from Lower Table Rock, but disintegrated when a volunteer opened fire and the warriors scattered. Reports differ on how many Indians were killed, ranging from four, according to Skinner, to at least 20, according to newspaper accounts. The agitated volunteers then broke into small groups and left Big Bar with calls for “extermination” raids along the Rogue.