The "Grave Creek Covered
Bridge", pictured above, is one of the few covered bridges that remain in southern
Oregon. From Vancouver B.C. to the Mexican border, it is the only one visible from the I-5
freeway.
In the fall of 1846, the first emigrant train from Fort Hall, Idaho, to travel the
southern route to the Willamette Valley camped on the north side of this creek, then
Woodpile Creek. Martha Leland Crowley,
16 years old died of typhoid fever during this encampment and was buried 150 feet north of
the creek on the east side or a white oak tree that was later removed for the present
roadway, thus the name "Grave Creek".
When James H. Twogood laid out his land claim in the fall of 1851 and filed it on May 1st
1852, he named it the Grave Creek Ranch in memory of that unfortunate incident.
McDonough Harkness, his partner, was the first postmaster of Josephine County in the newly
named town of Leland on March 28,1855. Harkness was killed by the
Indians in April 1856 while riding dispatch for the Army during the second Indian War of
southern Oregon which started in October of 1855.
A stockade was built around a log wayside and the hotel building at Leland. The small town
was the gateway to the lower Rogue country where Indians retreated so it became the
gathering point of a large force of regular army and volunteers and was known as Fort Leland.
A major encounter of the war took place some 8 miles west of the Fort known as the Battle
of Hungry Hill. This ill-fated engagement produced some 37 dead, wounded and missing. Some
of these soldiers were buried north of the Fort at the corner of the present Leland road
and old Pacific highway.
The last remnants of old Leland are the three large maple trees to the north on the east
side of the road and the Ft. Leland rock-lined well on the west side of the road both on
private property. In 1860 the Grave Creek Ranch became an overland stage stop for the
California Oregon Stage Line. A new hotel known as the Grave Creek House #2 was built and
operated until it burned down in December of 1875. A nearby farmhouse was enlarged enough
to accommodate the stage company and was known as the Grave Creek House #3 or Harkness
Inn. President Hayes, his wife and entourage spent the night here on September 28,1880.
Throughout the years the Grave Creek watershed was home to hundreds of gold miners. Many
millions of dollars worth of gold came out of this area.
So when you are driving by stop and visit this historical area.

Call Toll Free: 1-888-411-1846
Local: 541-472-8545
500 Sunny Valley Loop
Sunny Valley, Oregon 97497
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"A Must See"
The Applegate Wagon Trail Interpretive Center Museum In Sunny Valley offers a glimpse into
the colorful history of this rugged area through the stories of the pioneer settlers, the
naming of Grave Creek, the discovery of gold, the impact of the stageline, and the
building of the railroad. |
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