Puget Sound has been home to many Indigenous peoples, such as the
Lushootseed-speaking peoples, as well as the
Twana,
Chimakum, and
Klallam, for millennia. The earliest known presence of Indigenous inhabitants in the Puget Sound region is between 14,000 BCE to 6,000 BCE. Dispatched in an attempt to locate the fabled
Northwest Passage, British Royal Navy captain
George Vancouver anchored on May 19, 1792, on the shores of
Seattle, explored Puget Sound, and claimed it for
Great Britain on June 4 the same year, naming it for one of his officers,
Lieutenant Peter Puget. He further named the entire region;
New Georgia, after King
George III. After 1818 Britain and the United States, which both claimed the
Oregon Country, agreed to "joint occupancy", deferring resolution of the
Oregon boundary dispute. The
Puget Sound Agricultural Company was formed by the Hudson's Bay Company to encourage settlement. Pursuant to the 1846
Oregon Treaty; Puget Sound which was part of the disputed region became US territory. American
maritime fur traders visited Puget Sound in the early 19th century. An
Hudson's Bay Company expedition led by
James McMillan in late 1824 was first non-Indigenous group to enter Puget Sound since George Vancouver in 1792. The expedition went on to reach the
Fraser River, first again to reach the lower Fraser since Fraser himself in 1808. The first non-Indigenous settlement in the Puget Sound area was
Fort Nisqually, a fur trade post of the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) built in 1833.
Fort Nisqually was part of the HBC's
Columbia District, headquartered at
Fort Vancouver. In 1838, the HBC's subsidy operation, the Puget Sound Agricultural Company was established in part to procure resources and trade, as well as to further establish British claim to the region. Missionaries J.P. Richmond and W.H. Wilson were attending Fort Nisqually for two years by 1840. British ships, such as the
Beaver, exported foodstuffs and provisions from Fort Nisqually, and would eventually export Puget Sound lumber, an industry that would soon outpace the dominant fur trading market and drive the early Puget Sound economy. The first organized American expedition took place under the helm of Commander
Charles Wilkes, whose exploring party sailed up Puget Sound in 1841. The first permanent American settlement on Puget Sound was
Tumwater, founded in 1845 by Americans who had come via the
Oregon Trail. The decision to settle north of the Columbia River was made in part because one of the settlers,
George Washington Bush, was considered
black and the
Provisional Government of Oregon banned the residency of mulattoes but did not actively enforce the restriction north of the river. In 1853
Washington Territory was formed from part of
Oregon Territory. In 1888 the
Northern Pacific railroad line reached Puget Sound, linking the region to eastern states. Washington State was admitted to the union in 1889 as part of the
Enabling Act, and the regions borders have since remained unchanged. ==Transportation==