Hope Valley was historically inhabited by the Northern
Washoe people, whose traditional homeland centered around
Lake Tahoe and extended into the mountains to the south and west, and the desert valleys and ranges to the east. Every winter, a group of Northern Washoes would travel through the valley by snowshoe along a trail they called
Pewećeli Yeweš. First they would cross westward to reach the western slope of the Sierra Nevada, where they would harvest salmon from the
American River. Then, after smoking the salmon to preserve it for their return journey, they would retrace their steps eastward to bring the salmon to their compatriots overwintering in the desert to the east of Hope Valley. In the summer of 1848, the soldiers of a
Mormon Battalion detachment gave the valley its English name. These Mormons were returning to
Utah after completing their service in the
Mexican–American War. The soldiers were in poor spirits after three of their men had been killed in an incident about a month before at
Tragedy Spring, across Carson Pass to the west. When they saw the valley, "[their] spirits revived when they arrived in sight of it." Thus they christened the newfound valley "Hope Valley". Henry W. Bigler, a soldier in the battalion, wrote that they "campt [sic] at the head of what we called Hope Valley as we began to have hope." Analogously, in 1855, surveyors christened two similar valleys to the south as "Faith Valley" and "Charity Valley", in reference to the three
theological virtues of
Christianity. During California's
Gold Rush era, Hope Valley served as a crucial transportation conduit across the Sierra Nevada. It carried the initial route of the
California Trail through the eastern slopes of the Sierras, as well as the initial route of the Pony Express. It was also part of the route used by the famous
Snowshoe Thompson. In the early 20th century, a proposal was studied to dam the valley in order to form a
reservoir. This proposal, however, was never carried out. ==Conservation== Hope Valley is part of the Carson Ranger District of
Humboldt–Toiyabe National Forest. With the exception of a few scattered
inholdings, the entire area of Hope Valley is within this national forest. The valley borders
Eldorado National Forest at Carson Pass, and the
Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, a special unit of the
U.S. Forest Service, at Luther Pass. In 1989, the
California Department of Fish and Wildlife designated of valley bottom as
Hope Valley Wildlife Area. ==See also==