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Site Information for Nez Perce Nee-Me-Poo Trail

ActivitiesBird Watching#Hiking#History#Picnicking#Sightseeing#Wildlife Viewing
AltSiteTypesNational Forest Trail#National Historic Site
AmenitiesTrail
Bookit
CreatedBydbo
DateCreated12/21/2024 5:00:50 PM
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DefImageFileName635878443793312948.jpg
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DirectionsThe 1,170-mile trail begins at Wallowa Lake, Oregon and travels through Big Hole National Battlefield, and ends at the Bear Paw Battlefield, Montana near Chinook, Montana.The 1,170-mile trail begins at Wallowa Lake, Oregon and travels through Big Hole National Battlefield, and ends at the Bear Paw Battlefield, Montana near Chinook, Montana.
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Emailinfo@fs.usda.gov
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ImageFileName635878443905322384.jpg#635878443531697594.jpg
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Latitude45.79286
Longitude-113.949653
MailingCityDarby
MailingFirmBitterroot National Forest
MailingStateMT
MailingStreetPO Box 388
MailingZip59829
NetDescriptionsCongress passed the National Trails System Act in 1968, establishing a framework for a nationwide system of scenic, recreational, and historic trails. The Nez Perce (Nimíipuu or Nee-Me-Poo) National Historic Trail stretches from Wallowa Lake, Oregon, to the Bear Paw Battlefield near Chinook, Montana. It was added to this system by Congress as a National Historic Trail in 1986. The 1877 flight of the Nez Perce from their homelands while pursued by U.S. Army Generals Howard, Sturgis, and Miles, is one of the most fascinating and sorrowful events in Western U.S. history. Chief Joseph, Chief Looking Glass, Chief White Bird, Chief Ollokot, Chief Lean Elk, and others led nearly 750 Nez Perce men, women, and children and twice that many horses over 1,170 miles through the mountains, on a trip that lasted from June to October of 1877. Forced to abandon hopes for a peaceful move to the Lapwai reservation, the Nez Perce chiefs saw flight to Canada as their last promise for peace. The flight of the Nez Perce began on June 15, 1877. Pursued by the Army, they intended initially to seek safety with their Crow allies on the plains to the east. Their desperate and circuitous route as they tried to escape the pursuing white forces is what we now call the Nez Perce National Historic Trail. This route was used in its entirety only once; however, component trails and roads that made up the route bore generations of use prior to and after the 1877 flight of the nontreaty Nez Perce. The trail starts at Wallowa Lake, Oregon, then heads northeast and crosses the Snake River at Dug Bar. It enters Idaho at Lewiston and cuts across north-central Idaho, entering Montana near Lolo Pass. It then travels through the Bitterroot Valley, after which it re-enters Idaho at Bannock Pass and travels east back into Montana at Targhee Pass to cross the Continental Divide. It bisects Yellowstone National Park, and then follows the Clark Fork of the Yellowstone out of Wyoming into Montana. The trail heads north to the Bear's Paw Mountains, ending 40 miles from the Canadian border.
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PhoneNo1406-821-3913
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PhoneNof406-821-4264
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ServiceCityWisdom
SiteId4438
SiteMembers1|http://www.visitmt.com|Y#11|http://www.wintermt.com|#32|http://www.lewisandclark.state.mt.us|#94|http://indiannations.visitmt.com|
SiteNameNez Perce Nee-Me-Poo Trail
SiteRegionGold West
SiteRegMemGOLD WEST
SiteTypeNational Forest Trail
StreetCitySula
StreetFirm
StreetStateMT
StreetStreetHighway 93
StreetZip59871
Urlhttps://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/bitterroot/recreation/recarea/?recid=60646

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