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==History== Prior to the Europeans' arrival to the area, it was inhabited by numerous Native American tribes, with the Cowlitz tribe being the largest. They were drawn to the region by the abundance of [[salmon]]. The Cowlitz are considered to be the first regional inhabitants to engage in commerce as they traded extensively with other tribes in [[Western Washington|Western]] and [[Eastern Washington]]. The Cowlitz Indian population declined significantly from the 1829-1830 [[smallpox]] outbreak. European explorers discovered and began navigating the [[Columbia River]] in 1792 as [[British people|British]] Lieutenant W. R. Broughton sailed up the river to and past present day Cowlitz County. Then on November 5, 1805, [[Lewis and Clark Expedition|Lewis and Clark]] camped at the mouth of the [[Kalama River]]. Over the following days, they would reach the present sites of Kelso and Longview. By the 1820s, the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] had established a lucrative [[fur trade]] in the region. Furs were shipped down the [[Cowlitz River]] to the Columbia where they were loaded and shipped around the world. Trade declined significantly in the late 1830s as over-hunting reduced the annual yields, and wearing fur had become less fashionable. During the next several decades, white settlement of the region was in full swing. Most of the settlers homesteaded near the tributaries that fed the Columbia River, forming settlements. The first was Monticello, near present-day Longview. In 1841 several families with the HBC directed [[James Sinclair (fur trader)|Sinclair]] expedition from [[Red River Colony]] settled there. On November 25, 1852, at Monticello, settlers from the Cowlitz and [[Puget Sound]] regions drafted a petition (the [[Monticello Convention]]) to the federal government, calling for a separate territory north of the Columbia River to be carved out of the existing [[Oregon Territory]]. The petition was successful; three months later the [[United States Congress]] formed the Columbia Territory, although it was soon renamed [[Washington Territory]]. The newly separated territory was governed by two existing counties. In August 1845, the Oregon Territorial government had created Vancouver County. Its boundary covered the entire area of present-day Washington state. In December of that same year, the Oregon Territorial government sliced off the eastern portion to create [[Lewis County, Washington|Lewis County]]. In 1849 the reduced Vancouver County was renamed [[Clark County, Washington|Clark County]]. So when the new Washington Territorial government began functioning, among its first actions was the creation of Cowlitz County, from the southwestern portion of Clark County. This proclamation was finalized on April 24, 1854, signed into law by Governor [[Isaac Stevens]]. Later in 1854, the western portion of the new county was partitioned off to form [[Wahkiakum County, Washington|Wahkiakum County]]; otherwise the county's boundary has remained unchanged until the present. Nearly every town that sprang up in the late 19th century began around a [[logging]] or [[sawmill|lumber-milling]] operation. In the latter half of the 1920s, the [[Weyerhaeuser|Weyerhaeuser Company]] and [[Long-Bell Lumber Company]] established processing facilities. At the time, these two facilities were the first and second largest in the world. The county is still heavily dependent on the timber industry.<ref name="ESD">{{Cite web |date=October 1998 |title=Cowlitz and Wahkiakum County Profile |url=http://govdocs.evergreen.edu/wastate/wslmia/countyprofiles/cowlitz-wahkiakum/1998oct.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100703092708/http://govdocs.evergreen.edu/wastate/wslmia/countyprofiles/cowlitz-wahkiakum/1998oct.pdf |archive-date=July 3, 2010 |access-date=September 14, 2009 |publisher=Employment Security Department |format=[[comma-separated values|CSV]]}}</ref> Four towns have functioned as the Cowlitz County seat:<ref>{{Cite web |title=Cowlitz County |url=http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wasgs/cowlitz.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110626224834/http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wasgs/cowlitz.pdf |archive-date=June 26, 2011 |access-date=September 14, 2009 |format=CSV}}</ref> * [[Longview, Washington|Monticello]] (1854β1865) * [[Freeport, Washington|Freeport]] (1865β1872) * [[Kalama, Washington|Kalama]] (1872β1922) * [[Kelso, Washington|Kelso]] (1922βPresent)
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