Stevens Pass is named after
John Frank Stevens, the first non-indigenous person to discover it.
Native Americans familiar with the area knew of the pass, although very little is known about Native American routes through the mountains. Hubert C. Ward, exploring the area for the
Northern Pacific Railway in 1872, heard from some Native Americans that there was a low pass at the head of Nason Creek, a tributary of the Wenatchee River, which led to one of the sources of the Skykomish River. Albert Bowman Rogers of the
Great Northern Railway, learned from Native Americans in 1887 that the Skykomish River and Nason Creek had sources close to one another but that neither natives nor whites visited the Nason Creek area. Neither Ward nor Rogers had time to fully explore the area. In 1890, Stevens conducted a thorough survey for the Great Northern, located the pass, and determined it to be the best suited for a railway crossing of the
North Cascades. He wrote that there was no indication that the pass was used — there was no sign of any trails,
blazes, campsites, or old campfires, for at least in either direction and that the area was thickly forested and covered with almost impenetrable brush. Stevens wrote, "the region promised nothing to the prospector, while Indians and Whites crossing the mountains used either
Snoqualmie on the south or the
Indian Pass on the north." Stevens had also charted
Marias Pass in northwestern
Montana, on the
Continental Divide near
Glacier National Park. ==Notable avalanches==