Eager to show the more established European powers that the young republic of  the United States was the equal of any of them, the U.S. Congress, in 1836, approved the  "United States Exploring Expedition."  This was to be a large-scale voyage of exploration to  the Pacific to rival that undertaken by Captain Cook.

       In 1838, a flotilla of six ships, led by the U.S.S. Vincennes and commanded by Navy  Lt. Charles Wilkes, headed out from Hampton Roads, Virginia, and began a trip that would  last six years.  The ships were filled with botanists, naturalists, and other scientists,  who were charged with learning and helping to preserve indigenous plants and animals, and  with learning what they could about native peoples.

       After exploring much of the southern Pacific Ocean, including Fiji, Hawaii and  Antarctica, the U.S. Ex Ex, as it was called, began exploring
US Exploring Expedition
the coastal Pacific Northwest,  and in Spring 1841, anchored off the mouth of the Columbia River.  Lt. Wilkes sent ashore an  overland exploring party, led by George Emmons.  Emmons' party was to travel south from  present-day Portland, Oregon, through what is now Oregon and Northern California, and was to  meet up again with Wilkes' ships at the Mexican settlement of San Francisco.

       Emmons' group began an epic journey south through uncharted territory, and were the  first Americans to record seeing Mt. Shasta (calling it "Shaste Peak"). They traveled down  the Sacramento River (calling it the "Destruction River"), very likely passing through the  site of Upper Soda Springs. They noted the "soda springs" they found along the River south  of Mt. Shasta, and one of these springs where they recorded a visit may have been Upper Soda  Springs.
The 1834 Drive
Earliest Development
Megafauna
Lava Flow
Early People
The Okwanuchu
Hunters and Trappers
The 1834 Drive
US Exploring Expedition
Earliest Development
McCloud's First Property
Wintu and Tauhindali
Upper Soda Resort
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