Jedediah Smith

Explorer Jedidiah Smith is not only credited as being the first American to enter California from the east, but also opened a coastal route from California to Washington state and helped rediscover the South Pass --a Northwestern route to Wyoming-- on a fur-trading expedition.

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Did You Know?

Route 66 was built along one of Smith's trails to California.

Jedediah Smith was born June 24, 1798 in Bainbridge, New York and died on May 27, 1831, near the Cimarron River while on route to Santa Fe.

A trader and explorer, Jedediah Smith was the first American to enter California from the east and return from it using an overland route.

Smith probably made his first trip west while still in his teens. In 1822 he joined a fur-trading expedition to the Rocky Mountains and continued in the Rocky Mountain trade for the remainder of the decade.

In 1824 Smith belonged to the party that rediscovered the South Pass, a passage to the Northwest through Wyoming. Two years later, he and a trading party (Smith now owned his own trading company) left Great Salt Lake and crossed the Mojave Desert to southern California, becoming the first Americans to enter California from the east.

Blocked by the suspicious Mexican governor of California, Smith altered his plan to go north into Oregon. Instead, in 1827, he journeyed to the American River near Sacramento and then crossed the Sierra Nevada and the desert to return to Great Salt Lake. He thus became the first American to return from California on an overland route.

Later in 1827 he retraced his steps from Great Salt Lake to southern California, but this time Mohave Indians attacked his party and killed 10 of his 18 men. He and the other survivors made it to California and then in 1828 proceeded north up the coast to Oregon. An attack by the Umpqua Indians slew all but two of the expedition, and Smith retired from the Rocky Mountain trade in 1830. He had succeeded, however, in opening up the coastal route from California to Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River.

In 1831 Smith turned to the Santa Fe trade. In May of that year, however, he was surrounded and killed by Comanche Indians at a water hole near the Cimarron River while en route to Santa Fe.

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