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John Day Crossing Historic Site

Situated on the east bank of the lower John Day River, this site marks the location where two branches of the Oregon trail converged to meet at the John Day River crossing. Looking up on the hillside, one can see white markers planted to mark the actual routes as they descend the hillside. Imagine trying to keep wagons and stock from plunging down the hillside, unchecked. Some emigrants who descended one branch of the Oregon Trail here are said to have remarked that the other branch must have been better because it could not be worse than the one they descended.

Follow the trail markers along the road just above the historic site for ¼ mile to a small interpretive site. Here, one afforded a vantage of the approach of the John Day River crossing. Depending on the time of year one views the crossing, the river’s volume of water can look quite ominous. Most of the journal entries date from the late summer and fall, however, when water levels on this free-flowing river are greatly reduced. Today, a primitive boat launch is used as the last public takeout on the John Day Wild & Scenic River before Tumwater falls.

Know Before You Go:

Point of Interest:

John Day Crossing Historic Site is just one of several Bureau of Land Management historic sites marking significant locations along the 2000-mile Oregon National Historic Trail.

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