Washington - Klickitat County - Historic Districts
Klickitat County Washington (Historic Districts) has 2 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 1 place of National significance. Significant places include Wishram Indian Village Site, Homesteads of the Dalles Mountain Ranch Historic District.

Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Native American dating back to 1000. Prominent architectural styles found in Klickitat Country are Queen Anne.

Homesteads of the Dalles Mountain Ranch Historic District (added 2009 - - #09001234)
340 Dalles Mountain Rd., beginning approx. 2.8 mi. N. of WA 14 jct. , Dallesport
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Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Agriculture
Period of Significance:
1950-1974, 1925-1949, 1900-1924, 1875-1899
Owner:
State
Historic Function:
Agriculture/Subsistence, Agriculture/Subsistence, Agriculture/Subsistence, Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Agricultural Fields, Agricultural Outbuildings, Animal Facility, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Vacant/Not In Use
Wishram Indian Village Site (added 1972 - - #72001278)
Also known as Horsethief Lake State Park
Address Restricted , The Dalles
Murderbike~commonswiki, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Historic Significance:
Information Potential
Area of Significance:
Art, Prehistoric, Social History
Cultural Affiliation:
Native American
Period of Significance:
1499-1000 AD
Owner:
State
Historic Function:
Domestic, Recreation And Culture
Historic Sub-function:
Village Site, Work Of Art (Sculpture, Carving, Rock Art)
Current Function:
Landscape
Current Sub-function:
Park
The Wishram Indian Village Site, historically known as Nixlidix, is a location of profound cultural and historical significance situated along the Columbia River in Klickitat County, Washington. For centuries prior to Euro-American contact, this site served as the principal winter village of the Wishram (Tlakluit) people, a Chinookan-speaking group. Positioned strategically at the head of the Fivemile Rapids (historically known as the Long Narrows), Nixlidix functioned as the premier trading hub of the Pacific Northwest. Here, the distinct cultures of the Pacific Coast and the Columbia Plateau converged to exchange goods, including dried salmon, dentalium shells, bear grass, roots, and obsidian. This bustling marketplace not only facilitated a vast regional economy but also fostered rich linguistic and cultural exchanges, making it one of the most densely populated and ethnologically vital areas in pre-contact North America.

The historical importance of the site is further underscored by its documentation by early explorers, most notably the Lewis and Clark Expedition, which visited the village in 1805 and detailed its thriving population and large wooden plank houses. Beyond its ethnohistoric record, the surrounding area is renowned for its extraordinary concentration of indigenous rock art, including the iconic "Tsagaglalal" (She Who Watches) petroglyph, which reflects the deep spiritual and artistic traditions of the Wishram people. Although the construction of The Dalles Dam in 1957 inundated the rapids and much of the physical village site, the Wishram Indian Village Site remains a sacred ancestral locus and an invaluable archaeological resource that continues to provide critical insights into thousands of years of Indigenous maritime adaptation, trade networks, and cultural resilience.
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