Native Americans Humans may have lived in the Yosemite area as long as 8,000 to 10,000 years ago. Habitation of the
Yosemite Valley proper can be traced to about 3,000 years ago, when vegetation and game in the region was similar to that present today; the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada had
acorns,
deer, and
salmon, while the eastern Sierra had
pinyon nuts and
obsidian.
Native American groups traveled between these two regions to trade and raid. Archaeologists divide the pre-European American contact period of the region into three cultural phases. The Crane Flat phase lasted from 1000 BCE to 500 CE and is marked by hunting with the
atl atl and the use of
grinding stones. The Tarmarack phase lasted from 500 until 1200, marked by a shift to using smaller rock points, indicating development and use of the
bow and arrow. The Mariposa phase lasted from 1200 until contact with European Americans. Trade between tribes became more widespread during the Mariposa phase, and the diet continued to improve.
Paiutes,
Miwok, and
Monos visited the area to trade; one major trading route went over
Mono Pass and through
Bloody Canyon to
Mono Lake in Eastern California.
Paiutes were the primary inhabitants of the Yosemite area and the foothills to the east during the Mariposa and historic phases. The Central Sierra Miwoks lived along the drainage area of the
Tuolumne and
Stanislaus Rivers, while the Paiutes inhabited the upper drainage of the
Merced and
Chowchilla Rivers. The Paiutes of Yosemite Valley called themselves the
Ah-wah-ne-chee, meaning "dwellers in Ahwahnee." The Ahwahneechees were decimated by a disease in about 1800, and left the valley, although about 200 returned under the leadership of
Tenaya, son of an Ahwahneechee chief. Displaced Native Americans from the Californian coast moved to the Sierra Nevada during the early-to-mid-19th century, bringing with them their knowledge of
Spanish food, technology, and clothing. Joining forces with the other tribes in the area, they raided
land grant ranchos on the coast and drove herds of horses to the Sierra, where horse meat became a major new food source.
Exploration by European Americans Although there were
Spanish missions,
pueblos (towns),
presidios (forts), and
ranchos along the coast of California, no Spanish explorers visited the Sierra Nevada. The first European Americans to visit the mountains were amongst a group led by fur trapper
Jedediah Smith, crossing north of the Yosemite area in May 1827, at
Ebbetts Pass. A group of trappers led by mountain man
Joseph Reddeford Walker may have seen Yosemite Valley in the autumn of 1833. Walker approached a valley rim as he led his party across the Sierra Nevada, but he did not enter it. A member of the group, Zenas Leonard, wrote in his journal that streams from the valley rim dropped "from one lofty precipice to another, until they are exhausted in rain below. Some of these precipices appeared to us to be more than a mile high." The Walker party probably visited either the
Tuolumne or
Merced Groves of
giant sequoia, becoming the first non-indigenous people to see the giant trees, but journals relating to the Walker party were destroyed in 1839, in a print shop fire in Philadelphia. The part of the Sierra Nevada where the park is located was long considered to be a physical barrier to European American settlers, traders, trappers, and travelers. That situation changed in 1848 after gold was discovered in the foothills west of the range. Travel and trade activity dramatically increased in the area during the ensuing
California Gold Rush. Resources depended upon by local Native Americans were depleted or destroyed, and disease brought by the newcomers spread rapidly through indigenous populations. Extermination of native culture became a policy of the United States Government. The first confirmed sighting of Yosemite Valley by a non-indigenous person occurred on October 18, 1849, by William P. Abrams and a companion. Abrams accurately described some landmarks, but it is uncertain whether he or his companion actually entered the valley. In 1850, one of three brothers, Joseph, William, or Nathan Screech, became the first confirmed non-indigenous person to enter
Hetch Hetchy Valley. Joseph Screech returned two years later and spoke with the Native Americans living there, asking them what the name of a grass-covered seed meal was and was told, "hatch hatchy." The surveying crew of Allexey W. Von Schmidt conducted the first systematic traverse of any part of the Yosemite area backcountry in 1855, when it extended an approximation of the Mount Diablo Baseline eastward from a point west of the present park boundary, to a point south of Mono Lake. The actual route taken was 5 to 6 miles south of the actual baseline, due to topographic difficulties, including the Tuolumne River canyon at low elevations, and steep mountain slopes higher up. This was the first straight line survey made across the Sierra Nevada From 1879 to 1883 large parts of the western half of the park were surveyed as part of the General Land Office survey. The individual contracted for the largest area, one S. A. Hanson, was later listed among those associated with the
Benson Syndicate, and he combined actual with probably fabricated surveys. Topographic surveys performed by Lieutenant
Montgomery M. Macomb, under George M Wheeler's
Surveys West of the 100th Meridian, were completed in the late 1870s and early 1880s.
Mariposa Wars James Savage's trading camp on the
Merced River, west of Yosemite Valley, was raided by Native Americans in December 1850, after which the raiders retreated into the mountains. The camp had been founded because the
California Gold Rush had begun in 1849 bringing more than 40,000 gold seekers down the
California Trail into northern and central California. This rapid influx of non-native settlers precipitated the
California genocide of the indigenous peoples in the State. Before 1849, much of Northern and Central California had been populated by Native Americans and
Californios (the descendants of early
Spanish settlers). However by 1873, almost 80 percent of California's Native American population had been wiped out by conflict and disease, and their historic land seized by settlers from
Mexico,
South America,
Europe,
Australia, and
China. The subsequent campaigns led by the
Mariposa Battalion in 1851 became known as the
Mariposa War. Savage led the battalion into Yosemite Valley in 1851, in pursuit of around 200 Ahwaneechees led by Chief Tenaya. On March 27, 1851, the company of 50 to 60 men reached what is now called Old Inspiration Point, from where Yosemite Valley's main features are visible. Chief Tenaya and his band were eventually captured and their village burned, fulfilling the prophecy an old and dying
medicine man had given Tenaya many years before. The Ahwahnechee were marched from their tribal lands under armed guards led by Captain John Bowling, to the
Fresno River Reservation. With the fighting ended, the battalion was disbanded on July 1, 1851. Life on the reservation was unpleasant and the Ahwahneechee longed to return to the Yosemite area. Reservation officials consented and allowed Tenaya and some of his band to return to their lands. However, in May 1852 a group of eight armed miners entered Yosemite Valley and were allegedly attacked by Tenaya's warriors; two of the miners were killed. In retaliation regular army troops under the direction of Lt. Tredwell Moore shot dead six Ahwahneechee who were in possession of European clothing. Tenaya's band fled the valley and sought refuge with the
Mono people, his mother's tribe. A year later, in mid-1853, the Ahwahneechee returned to the valley but they betrayed the hospitality of their former Mono hosts by stealing horses that the Mono had taken from non-indigenous ranchers. In return, the Monos tracked down and killed many of the remaining Ahwahneechee, including Tenaya (
Tenaya Lake is named after the fallen chief). Inter-tribal hostilities eventually subsided and by the mid-1850s local European American residents started to befriend Native Americans still living in the Yosemite area.
Naming the area named many of the features in the area of the park, including Yosemite Valley. Photo from his 1880 book,
Discovery of the Yosemite, and the Indian War of 1851, which led to that event During the military campaigns of the Mariposa War, members of the Mariposa Battalion had proposed names for the valley while they were camped at Bridalveil Meadow. The company physician who had been attached to Savage's unit, Dr.
Lafayette Bunnell, suggested "Yo-sem-i-ty". It was the name that the surrounding Sierra Miwok peoples used, as they feared the tribes in the Yosemite Valley. Savage, who spoke some native dialects, translated this as "full-grown grizzly bear." Bunnell named many other local topographic features on the same trip. Bunnell drafted an article about the trip, but destroyed it when a newspaper correspondent in
San Francisco suggested cutting his 1,500- foot (460 m) height estimate for the valley's walls in half; the walls are in fact twice the height that Bunnell surmised. The first published account of Yosemite Valley was written by Lt. Tredwell Moore for the January 20, 1854, issue of the
Mariposa Chronicle, establishing the modern spelling of
Yosemite. Bunnell described his awestruck impressions of the valley in his book,
The Discovery of the Yosemite, published in 1892.
Artists, photographers, and the first tourists photographed by
Carleton E. Watkins Forty-eight Non-Indian people visited Yosemite Valley in 1855, including San Francisco writer
James Mason Hutchings and artist
Thomas Ayres. Hutchings wrote an article about his experience that was published in the July 12, 1855, issue of the
Mariposa Gazette and Ayres' sketch of
Yosemite Falls was published in late 1855; four of his drawings were presented in the lead article of the July 1856 and initial issue of ''Hutchings' Illustrated California Magazine''. The article and illustrations created tourist interest in Yosemite and eventually led to its protection. Ayres returned in 1856 and visited
Tuolumne Meadows in the area's high country. His highly detailed angularly exaggerated artwork and his written accounts were distributed nationally and an art exhibition of his drawings was held in New York City. Hutchings took photographer
Charles Leander Weed to Yosemite Valley in 1859; Weed took the first photographs of the valley's features, which were presented to the public in a September exhibition held in San Francisco. Hutchings published four installments of "The Great Yo-semite Valley" from October 1859 to March 1860 in his magazine and re-published a collection of these articles in his
Scenes of Wonder and Curiosity in California, which remained in print into the 1870s. .
Carleton Watkins exhibited his Yosemite views at the
1867 Paris International Exposition. Photographer
Ansel Adams made his first trip to Yosemite in 1916; his photographs of the valley made him famous in the 1920s and 1930s. Adams willed the originals of his Yosemite photos to the Yosemite Park Association, and visitors can still buy direct prints from his original negatives. The studio in which the prints are sold was established in 1902 by artist
Harry Cassie Best. Milton and Houston Mann opened a toll road to Yosemite Valley in 1856, up the South Fork of the Merced River. They charged the then considerable sum of two
dollars per person until the road was bought by
Mariposa County, after which it became free. In 1856, settler
Galen Clark discovered the
Mariposa Grove of giant sequoia at
Wawona, an indigenous encampment in what is now the southwestern part of the park. Clark completed a bridge over the South Fork of the Merced River in 1857 at Wawona for traffic headed toward Yosemite Valley and provided a way station for travelers on the road the Mann brothers built to the valley. Simple lodgings, later called the Lower Hotel, were completed soon afterward; the Upper Hotel, later renamed Hutchings House and eventually known as
Cedar Cottage, was opened in 1859. In 1876, the more substantial
Wawona Hotel was built to serve tourists visiting the nearby grove of big trees and those on their way to Yosemite Valley. Aaron Harris opened the first campground business in Yosemite in 1876. == State grant ==