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Long
before the first Euro-American emigrants trekked westward, this
road was a trail used by the Takelma and Shasta Peoples as a trade
route. With the arrival of settlers and gold-seekers, the trail
quickly became a wagon road called Indian Market Road.
During
the 1850s, the increased population of Euro-Americans, their occupation
of traditional food gathering areas, and often hostile behavior,
caused the most serious Indian Wars in U.S. history.
In 1854, the bodies of several dead, possibly murdered, Native Americans
were discovered along this road in a narrow prairie several miles
northeast of this marker. For many years thereafter this portion
of Oregon was known as the Dead Indian Country, and
until recently, this road was officially called Dead Indian
Road.
Recognizing
the negative connotations associated with the name Dead Indian
Road, and acknowledging that many Native Americans lost their
lives in this valley as a consequence of westward expansion, the
name was changed to Dead Indian Memorial Road in 1993.
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