
Palouse Falls State Park, dedicated in 1951, is a 94-acre park showcasing the dramatic Palouse Falls and its unique geological history. The park is a popular destination for viewing the falls, which were formed by Ice Age floods and are a key part of the Ice Age Floods National Geological Trail. The falls were designated as Washington’s state official waterfall in 2014, thanks to the advocacy of schoolchildren from Washtucna. Palouse Falls is one of four of the last remaining year-round waterfalls on the Palouse River that once stood in the path of the ice age floods. It is rich in both geological and human history.
The native Palouse Indians called it “Aput Aput” meaning “falling water.” They believed that it was created by the Great Spirit because of his displeasure with the wicked Indians who lived further upstream. This obstacle was a barrier that allowed the salmon to travel no further. Sam Fisher, a Palouse Indian, also tells the story of how four giant brothers and their giant sister used oil from beaver tails to keep their hair shiny. Needing more oil, they searched for the giant beaver and fought with him. All four falls on the river were made when the beaver slapped his tail. At the last battle at Palouse Falls, the beaver struck his tail one last time creating the falls and the bowl it falls into. The vertical cracks in the basalt were made by the claws of the beaver.

Palouse Falls has made a powerful impression on all who have visited. For example, one of the fall’s earliest visitors, Laurence L. Dodd in 1867, described the site he saw this way: “just before descending the Snake River hill your eye rests on the grateful green bottom of the Palouse with its clear and pure waters, flowing into the turbid Snake and after ascending the Snake River hill to the northward and eastward, the eye sweeps over a vast extent of country rarely surpassed in rugged desolation and wildness.…” Dodd was accompanied by a few local citizens from Starbuck on horseback to witness the scene he described. Early access to the falls was either by train (many passenger trains would stop here for their passengers to look at the falls) or by coming in from the east side.

Robert E. Strahorn, who built the railroad up the Palouse Canyon had the original idea of making Palouse Falls a State Park. But it was not until years later that Washtucna area resident and president of the Washtucna Community Service Club John H. Baumann really pushed the idea. In 1945, Palouse Falls State Park was created. It was dedicated on June 3rd, 1951. The 299 acres that make up the entirety of this vast park were donated by The Baker-Boyer National Bank of Walla Walla, J.M. McGregor of the McGregor Land and Livestock Company of Hooper, and Mrs. Agnes Sells, a resident of Washtucna.

Palouse Falls State Park is located off Highway 261, which branches off Highway 260 out of Washtucna. The most popular season for visiting is in the spring when the river is at its highest from winter snow melt. However, each season has its own story to tell as these pictures show.
Article by Lloyd Stoess, President IAFI Palouse Falls Chapter