Indigenous names It has been difficult to establish place names for Mount Hood that are of indigenous etymology, or to reconstruct names that may have been used prior to European contact.
Wy'east The name Wy'east has been associated with Mount Hood for more than a century, but no evidence suggests that it is a genuine name for the mountain in any indigenous language. The name was possibly inspired by an 1890 work of author
Frederic Balch, although Balch does not use it himself. The name may have been popularized by his story being combined with a play around 1911 at Pacific College. It is also possible it was 'invented' by scholars in the 20th century or even a minister hearing it second-hand around the same time the play was happening. In one version of Balch's story, the two sons of the Great Spirit Sahale fell in love with the beautiful maiden Loowit, who could not decide which to choose. The two braves, Wy'east and Pahto (unnamed in his novel, but appearing in a later adaptation), burned forests and villages in their battle over her. Sahale became enraged and smote the three lovers. Seeing what he had done, he erected three mountain peaks to mark where each fell. He made beautiful
Mount St. Helens for Loowit, proud and erect Mount Hood for Wy'east, and the somber
Mount Adams for the mourning Pahto. There are other versions of the legend. In another telling, Wy'east (Hood) battles Pahto (Adams) for the fair La-wa-la-clough (St. Helens). Or again Wy'east, the chief of the
Multnomah tribe, competed with the chief of the
Klickitat tribe. Their great anger led to their transformation into volcanoes. Their battle is said to have destroyed the
Bridge of the Gods and thus created the great
Cascades Rapids of the
Columbia River.
Other names The mountain sits partly inside the reservation of the
Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, which comprises multiple languages including
Sahaptin,
Upper Chinook/Kiksht (Wasco) and
Numu (Paiute). However, it has been difficult to determine names originating from these or other indigenous languages specifically referring to Mount Hood.
Eugene Hunn suggests that the mountain may have lacked a specific name: Learning a landscape is not simply a matter of naming all the rivers and mountains... The Native American perspective emphasizes by contrast places as focal points of activity, places where significant human-landscape interactions occur. Thus, while a few prominent peaks may be given Indian names, such as
taxùma [təqʷuʔməʔ] for
Mt. Rainier (in the
Puget Salish language) or
lawilayt-łà [lawílatɬa], literally "the smoker," for Mt. St. Helens (in Sahaptin), other prominent peaks, e.g. Mts. Adams and Hood, are known simply as
pàtu, a general term for snow-capped summit.
Current name ,
Mount Hood, 1869 The mountain was given its present name on October 29, 1792, by
Lt. William Broughton, a member of Captain
George Vancouver's exploration expedition. Lt. Broughton observed its peak while at Belle Vue Point of what is now called
Sauvie Island during his travels up the Columbia River, writing, "A very high, snowy mountain now appeared rising beautifully conspicuous in the midst of an extensive tract of low or moderately elevated land [location of today's
Vancouver, Washington] lying S 67 E., and seemed to announce a termination to the river." Lt. Broughton named the mountain after
Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood, a British admiral. Two French explorers from the
Hudson's Bay Company may have traveled into the
Dog River area east of Mount Hood in 1818. They reported climbing to a glacier on "Montagne de Neige" (
Mountain of Snow), probably Eliot Glacier. A second ammunition ship,
AE-29, was commissioned in May 1971 and decommissioned in August 1999. ==Volcanic activity==