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Clark County History: Mules and pack animals

Clark County History: Mules and pack animals By Martin Middlewood for The Columbian Published: January 10, 2021, 6:00am Share: A Vancouver Barracks mule train returns from the Lacamas Creek artillery range (renamed Camp Bonneville in 1909) along the city streets around 1908. The convoy heads down 10th Street (now Evergreen Boulevard) toward the barracks packing ammunition. The troopers belong to the U.S. Army Mountain Gun Battery, 2nd Field Artillery Regiment stationed here between 1904 and 1913. The steeple of the First Presbyterian Church and the minister s home rise in the background. (Contributed by Vancouver Barracks Military Association) Contrary to Hollywood’s horsey version of the West, mules played a big role. Gen. George Crook preferred riding a mule, so did William “Buffalo Bill” Cody and Gen. O. O. Howard. Perhaps filmmakers assumed soldiers, cowboys, gunslingers and lawmen looked more formidable straddling horses instead of mules.

Clark County History: First Chinese residents

Clark County History: First Chinese residents By Martin Middlewood, for The Columbian Published: December 20, 2020, 6:05am Share: Chin Wing was the Cantonese cook for Major General Thomas M. Anderson, commandant of Vancouver Barracks 1886-1898. His cook s photo was taken about 1890 and is one of the earliest photos of a Chinese person living in Clark County. (Contributed by Clark County Historical Museum) When the photographer snapped this studio photo of Chin Wing in 1890, Washington had been a state just one year, and the Chinese population reached 3,260. Twenty years earlier, the census found 234 Chinese in the Washington Territory, and by 1880, the number reached 3,186.

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