Clark County Washington has 42 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 7 places of National significance and 11 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Covington House, Fort Vancouver National Historic Site, House of Providence, Officers Row, Fort Vancouver Barracks and Pittock House.
Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Native American, Calaooia and Et.Al. dating back to 1499 BC.
Many famous people are associated with these Clark County historic places including Sisters of Providence, Ulysses S. Grant, Lowell M. Hidden, Columbia Lancaster, Erwin Charles Pomeroy and Silas Maxon.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Clark County places including Hudson's Bay Co., Richard Covington, Mother of the Sacred Heart Joseph, Hirsh & Watson Helfensteller, Oliver Hidden, Donald McKay, Mother Joseph McKay, Elliote & Hummel Tourt, A.E. Davis and Gilpin Construction Co.. Prominent architectural styles found in Clark Country are Classical Revival, Queen Anne and Bungalow/Craftsman.
Historic Significance:
Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Covington,Richard
Architectural Style:
Other
Area of Significance:
Architecture
Period of Significance:
1825-1849
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
Current Sub-function:
Meeting Hall
Erected circa 1848, the Covington House is widely recognized as one of the oldest surviving residential log structures in the state of Washington. Built by Richard and Charlotte Covington, English immigrants employed by the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Vancouver, the cabin originally stood at Fourth Plain, about five miles northeast of the fort. The Covingtons were highly educated and cultured pioneers who brought refinement to the Pacific Northwest wilderness, famously installing the region's first piano in their home. The cabin quickly became a vital social and educational hub for the early settlement, functioning as a boarding school where Charlotte taught local children, and hosting many notable historical figures of the era, including Ulysses S. Grant during his station at Vancouver Barracks.
Architecturally, the building is an exceptional surviving specimen of early pioneer hewn-log construction. To save the structure from decay and demolition, the Vancouver Women's Club undertook a major preservation effort in the late 1920s and early 1930s, relocating the cabin to its present site in Vancouver's Leverich Park. Reconstructed using its original timbers, the Covington House stands as a rare physical link to the transitional period between the Hudson's Bay Company's fur-trading hegemony and the establishment of American civil society in the Oregon Territory. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, honoring both its pioneering architectural merit and its profound social contributions to early Washington history.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Politics/Government, Transportation, Agriculture, Commerce, Military, Industry
Period of Significance:
1825-1849
Historic Function:
Defense
Historic Sub-function:
Fortification
Current Function:
Landscape
Current Sub-function:
Park
Established in 1824 by the Hudson's Bay Company, Fort Vancouver served as the premier fur trading post, agricultural hub, and political headquarters of the British Empire's Columbia Department in the Pacific Northwest. Under the leadership of Chief Factor Dr. John McLoughlin, the fort grew into a sprawling, self-sufficient mercantile empire that controlled a vast territory stretching from Spanish California to Russian Alaska. It played a pivotal role during the joint-occupancy era of the Oregon Country, acting as the primary point of contact, supply, and assistance for thousands of American emigrants arriving via the Oregon Trail. Its strategic economic dominance and cosmopolitan community of European, Native American, Hawaiian (Kanaka), and Mtis workers shaped the geopolitical boundaries and cultural landscape of the region, ultimately influencing the treaty that established the 49th parallel as the international boundary in 1846.
Following the resolution of the boundary dispute, the site transitioned into a vital American military installation with the establishment of the Vancouver Barracks in 1849, the first U.S. Army post in the Pacific Northwest. The barracks served as a major administrative and staging ground during the Indian Wars, the Civil War, and both World Wars, hosting prominent military figures such as Ulysses S. Grant, Philip Sheridan, and George C. Marshall. Designated as a National Historic Site in 1961, Fort Vancouver is also of exceptional archaeological significance. Decades of meticulous excavations have uncovered millions of artifacts that provide unparalleled insight into 19th-century colonial life, global trade networks, and the diverse, multi-ethnic communities that laid the foundations for the modern state of Washington.
Historic Significance:
Person, Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Joseph,Mother of the Sacred Heart
Architectural Style:
No Style Listed
Historic Person:
Sisters of Providence
Significant Year:
1874, 1873
Area of Significance:
Exploration/Settlement, Education, Architecture, Religion, Social History
Period of Significance:
1875-1899, 1850-1874
Historic Function:
Domestic, Religion
Historic Sub-function:
Church Related Residence, Church School, Institutional Housing, Secondary Structure
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade
Current Sub-function:
Professional, Specialty Store
The House of Providence, also known as Providence Academy, holds immense historical significance as the motherhouse of the Sisters of Charity of Providence in the Northwest and as a pioneering educational and social institution. Established in 1873 under the leadership of Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart, the facility served as an academy, orphanage, and the administrative headquarters for the Sisters' extensive network of hospitals and schools throughout the region. As the first permanent base of operations for the Sisters of Providence in the Oregon Territory, the site represents the profound impact of Catholic sisterhoods on the social, medical, and educational development of the Pacific Northwest during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Architecturally, the House of Providence is a monumental achievement, designed and constructed under the direct supervision of Mother Joseph, who is recognized as one of the region's first female architects. Constructed of over one million bricks baked on-site from local clay, the imposing four-story, Georgian and Classical Revival-influenced structure was the largest brick building north of San Francisco at the time of its completion in 1874. The building's preservation stands as a testament to pioneering craftsmanship, featuring a beautifully preserved chapel with intricate, hand-carved wooden altars, and it remains a prominent landmark of Vancouver's early history and the enduring legacy of Mother Joseph.
Historic Significance:
Person, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Unknown
Architectural Style:
No Style Listed
Historic Person:
Grant,Ulysses S.
Significant Year:
1904, 1849
Area of Significance:
Architecture, Military
Period of Significance:
1900-1924, 1850-1874, 1850-1874, 1825-1849
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Multiple Dwelling, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade, Domestic, Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Multiple Dwelling, Museum, Organizational, Single Dwelling
Officers' Row at the Vancouver Barracks represents a critical anchor of military and political history in the Pacific Northwest, serving as the residential core of the oldest continuous military post in the region. Established in 1849 as the Columbia Barracks, the post was created to assert American sovereignty, protect settlers, and maintain peace following the 1846 Oregon Treaty with Great Britain. Officers' Row signifies the physical transition of the Pacific Northwest from a fur-trading empire dominated by the Hudson's Bay Company to a formally organized territory of the United States. Throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the barracks served as a vital administrative and logistical headquarters for military campaigns, peacekeeping efforts, and infrastructural development across the vast Department of the Columbia, deeply influencing the settlement and economic development of the entire region.
Architecturally and biography-wise, the historic district comprises twenty-one beautifully preserved residences dating from 1849 to 1906, arranged along a grand, tree-lined promenade overlooking the Columbia River. These structures showcase an evolution of military residential architecture, ranging from the classic timber framing of the historic Grant House-the oldest standing building on the post, built in 1849-to the elaborate Queen Anne and Colonial Revival designs of the late Victorian era, such as the George C. Marshall House. The row is highly significant for its direct association with several of the nation's most illustrious military figures who lived and worked here, including Ulysses S. Grant, Philip H. Sheridan, and George C. Marshall. Together, these homes stand as an exceptional physical record of military domestic life and the evolving architectural tastes of the United States Army on the Western frontier.
Historic Significance:
Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Unknown
Architectural Style:
Queen Anne
Area of Significance:
Architecture
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Agriculture/Subsistence, Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Animal Facility, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Domestic
Current Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
Built in 1901, the Pittock House-often referred to as the Pittock-Leadbetter House-in Camas, Washington, is of outstanding historical significance for its direct association with Henry L. Pittock, the pioneering publisher of The Oregonian newspaper, and his son-in-law, Frederick W. Leadbetter. Pittock and Leadbetter were towering figures in the industrial development of the Pacific Northwest, most notably establishing the local paper mill that would drive the economy of Camas for over a century. Constructed as a grand lakeside country estate on the shores of Lacamas Lake, the home served as a prestigious seasonal retreat and residence that reflected the immense wealth, social status, and regional influence of the family during the turn of the twentieth century.
Architecturally, the residence is a premier and rare local representation of the Shingle Style, incorporating elements of Queen Anne and Colonial Revival design. Designed by the prominent Portland architect Emil Schacht, the sprawling two-and-a-half-story mansion features a rustic, shingled exterior designed to blend harmoniously with its natural, wooded surroundings, as well as expansive covered verandas and a complex roofline. Today, the Pittock House stands as an elegant monument to the Gilded Age in Clark County, embodying both the architectural sophistication of the era and the foundational industrial history of the city of Camas.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Social History
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Social
Historic Sub-function:
Civic
Current Function:
Domestic
Current Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
The Ridgefield American Women's League Chapter House, constructed in 1911, is historically significant for its direct association with the American Woman's League (AWL) and the broader women's civic and self-improvement movements of the early twentieth century. Founded by national publisher Edward Gardner Lewis, the AWL sought to empower women by providing educational opportunities, financial independence, and a collective voice. To foster local engagement, the national organization rewarded chapters that met specific magazine subscription sales quotas with standardized, architect-designed clubhouses. The Ridgefield chapter successfully met this challenge, erecting this building to serve as a vital local center for correspondence education, suffrage discussions, and cultural activities, making it a cornerstone of progressive-era women's activism in Clark County.
Architecturally, the chapter house is a rare and intact example of the "Class II" clubhouse design created by the prominent St. Louis architectural firm of Helfensteller, Hirsch & Watson. Reflecting the Prairie School and Craftsman styles popular at the time, the one-story stucco building features a low-pitched hip roof, wide overhanging eaves, and a symmetrical facade with a prominent central entrance. When the national AWL collapsed shortly after the building's completion, the local women retained ownership and deeded the property for community use. It subsequently served as Ridgefield's public library and a versatile civic meeting hall for decades. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, the building stands as a physical testament to the determination, organization, and enduring civic legacy of Ridgefield's early female leaders.
Historic Significance:
Information Potential, Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
et.al., Hudson's Bay Co.
Architectural Style:
Late Victorian, Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals
Area of Significance:
Commerce, Military, Industry, Exploration/Settlement, Historic - Non-Aboriginal, Historic - Aboriginal, Prehistoric, Architecture, Agriculture, Education
Cultural Affiliation:
Calaooia, Et.Al.
Period of Significance:
499-0 BC, 499-0 AD, 1950-1974, 1925-1949, 1900-1924, 1900-1750 AD, 1749-1500 AD, 1499-1000 AD, 1000-500 AD
Owner:
Local, Federal, Private
Historic Function:
Agriculture/Subsistence, Commerce/Trade, Defense, Domestic, Industry/Processing/Extraction, Religion, Transportation
Historic Sub-function:
Air-Related, Business, Fortification, Manufacturing Facility, Processing, Religious Structure, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade, Defense, Domestic, Government, Recreation And Culture, Transportation
Current Sub-function:
Air-Related, Business, Government Office, Military Facility, Museum, Professional, Single Dwelling
The Vancouver National Historic Reserve Historic District is a premier cultural landscape that spans over 360 years of history, representing the intersection of indigenous cultures, European fur trading, American military expansion, and early aviation in the Pacific Northwest. At the heart of the district lies the reconstructed Fort Vancouver, which served as the 19th-century headquarters of the Hudson's Bay Company's Columbia Department, acting as the political, economic, and social hub of the vast Oregon Country. The site is uniquely significant for its role in the global fur trade, its complex relationships with regional Native American tribes, and its status as the terminal point for many early overland emigrants traveling along the Oregon Trail.
Following the settlement of the boundary dispute between Great Britain and the United States, the site transitioned into the Vancouver Barracks, established in 1849 as the first U.S. Army post in the Pacific Northwest. The barracks played a vital role in regional settlement and national defense through World War II, hosting legendary military figures such as Ulysses S. Grant, Philip Sheridan, and George C. Marshall. The district also encompasses Pearson Airfield, one of the oldest continuously operating aviation fields in the United States, which played a critical role in the world's first round-the-world flight in 1924 and served as a major hub for the World War I-era Spruce Production Division. Together, these elements form an extraordinarily preserved historic corridor that documents the evolution of the American West from a remote frontier outpost into a modern industrial and military powerhouse.