6-445: Klamath County may refer to: Klamath County, California , a former county of the U.S. state of California Klamath County, Oregon , a current county of the U.S. state of Oregon [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
12-525: The captive indigenous subsequently died of starvation and exposure at Fort Humboldt. The European-American settler's economy suffered from the effects of the Indian "wars", which disrupted the supplies to the settlements from the coastal towns. Worse still was the devastating effects of the Great Flood of 1862 which swept away the riverside settlements, mining works and ferries. In 1874 Klamath County
18-531: The county, and so, in 1856, the county seat was moved inland, to Orleans Bar , now Orleans. In 1857, Del Norte County , including Crescent City , was split off from Klamath County. The county's economy was never healthy after the gold rush. The area was contested with indigenous tribes. The "Klamath and Salmon River Indian "War""and the 1858-1864 "Bald Hills War" involved European-American vigilantes hunting down and killing most indigenous adult males and killing, capturing, or enslaving women and children. Many of
24-423: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Klamath_County&oldid=932946342 " Category : United States county name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Klamath County, California Klamath County
30-466: The west to the middle of what is now Siskiyou County in the east. It is the only county in California to be disestablished. The original county seat was Trinidad , on the county's southwestern coast. In 1854 the county seat was moved to Crescent City , because of its larger population. But the western portion of the county was unrepresentative of the mining interests in the eastern portion of
36-535: Was a county of California from 1851 to 1874. During its existence, the county seat moved twice and ultimately portions of the territory it once had were carved up and added to nearby counties. It was formed from the northwestern portion of Trinity County , and originally included all of the northwestern part of the state, from the Mad River in the south to Oregon in the north, from the Pacific Ocean in
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