Maligne Rafting

Maligne Rafting

Jasper Canada Rafting Trips - Raft the incredible Fraser River. Click here for advanced rafting bookings!

Yamnuska Hiking Tours

Yamnuska Hiking Tours

Book Banff, Canadian Rockies guided tours, mountaineering, trekking with Yamnuska Hiking Tours of Banff, Canada.

Golf Canada's West

Golf Canada's West

Book advanced tee times, BC, Canadian Rockies, the Jasper Fairmont Golf Course with Golf Canada's West.

Book Banff Activities

Book Banff Activities

From rafting to horseback riding, book Banff activities with Banff Travel.

Athabasca Hotel

Athabasca Hotel

Jasper's Heritage Hotel in Downtown, Jasper, Alberta. Jasper's oldest hotel. Click here!

Banff Rafting Guides

Banff Rafting Guides

Rafting Banff and the Kicking Horse River! Raft Alberta and BC's best rivers. Click here.

Jasper Tramway

Jasper Tramway

Jasper With an Altitude! Take the Jasper Tramway, mountain top dining. Book Here!.

Overlander Trekking

Overlander Trekking

Jasper Trekking, mountaineering, guided tours with Jasper's premier hiking company. Click here!

The Mountain of the Spiral Road

An introduction to some Jasper National Park history

By Jeff Waugh

Staff Writer

Rockies.com

The misty peak of Pocahontas Mountain in the Jasper National Park.

The misty peak of Pocahontas Mountain in Jasper National Park.

JASPER, Alberta (Rockies.com) – Yuh-hai-has-kun, or the Mountain of the Spiral Road (referring to its many layered appearance), was the name bestowed upon Mt. Robson by the Texqakallt, the earliest known inhabitants of the upper reaches of the Fraser River of Alberta. These Shuswap Indians of the Upper North Thompson Band were almost completely nomadic. They dressed only in marmot skins and slept on the open snow with their feet toward a central fire. At times, they constructed bark teepees. Lodges and fish drying racks were constructed in prime salmon fishing territory at the confluence of the McLennan and Fraser Rivers in the vicinity of what is now Tete Jaune Cache. As well as salmon from the Fraser, trout were reportedly taken from Yellowhead Lake. They hunted bighorn sheep, mountain goats, moose, marmots and other small mammals and birds, all inhabitants of the Canadian Rockies. They also relied on edible plants in the area, especially berries.

As the Shuswap Indians were extending their hunting territory eastwards through the Yellowhead Pass, the Cree, with the advance of the fur trade, were extending theirs from the east towards the Jasper area. Eventually the two territories overlapped and interbreeding occurred. As a result, both the Shuswap and Cree languages were spoken by the group of 30 families that frequented Jasper House.

The French language was introduced around 1817 by J.F. La Roque, a French-Canadian voyageur employed by the Northwest Company. La Roque was heading for New Caledonia’s Fort George accompanied by a group of expert Iroquois canoe men, greatly valued for their transport speed across the Canadian Rocky Mountain wilderness.

For more information on Canadian Rockies accommodations: Click here!

For more information on Canadian Rockies activities: Click here!

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