Former State Historian Merle Wells originated the Idaho State Historical Society Reference Series in the 1960s. Merle sought to have a handy series providing people with quick snapshots of different topics in Idaho history. Since Merle wrote many of the vignettes himself, it is no wonder that the series is particularly strong in topics such as territorial politics and Idaho mining history, some of his favorites.
But Merle also enlisted others to write; indeed, he encouraged virtually anyone he knew who was researching an Idaho topic particularly, but not limited to, Idaho State Historical Society staff to spin out a reference series summary. Under his enthusiastic leadership, the series grew rapidly in the 1960s and 1970s.
As technologies changed, providing new ways for the public to access information and as Merle retired new entries to the series virtually ceased. But it remains a rich repository of Idaho information.
For the most part, the series entries are unattributed. Few have bibliographies or endnotes. Most are undated. Certainly, these are frustrations to the serious scholar. But Merle did not aim this series at the scholar. Rather, he intended it as a means for people to get started in Idaho history. Find a topic here and whet your appetite. The idea was that those interested in more would move on to explore other research materials; the series was never intended to be the end-all of information available about any given topic.
Enjoy. Here you’ll find stories of famous Idahoans; of trappers and miners; of towns and counties; legends and battles; trails and historic sites. There are more than 1,000 topics to choose from.
And if you are interested in more information, be sure to check out the rich repositories of information about Idaho that we have available for researchers at the Idaho State Archives and at the State Historic Preservation Office. The Idaho State Historical Society helps people of all ages to explore and appreciate Idaho’s rich past. A good place to begin is right here, with our Reference Series.
How to Use the Reference Series
The number of pages in the article appears in parentheses. (Gaps in the numerical sequence are reserved for future titles.) The documents were created over a span of time and use a variety of fonts and layout schemes.
We offer (below) a thematic arrangement of our Reference Series but please note this is a partial list of the titles in the series. Our site’s Search feature–found at the top of the page–can help you find exact names or topics.
24. (2) The Sheepeater Indians
88. (1) Composite Shoshoni Bands of the Fur Trade Era
89. (1) Indians and Whites in the Nez Perce Country
122. (1) Coeur d’Alene Mission
249. (1) Idaho Prehistoric Culture Areas
250. (1) Petroglyphs and Pictographs
295. (2) Snake River Prehistory and Historical Summary
299. (1) Idaho’s Indian Population in 1800
361. (4) Hunting for Arrowheads and Other Indian Artifacts
484. (5) Shoshoni and Northern Paiute Indians in Idaho
485. (2) Lemhi Shoshoni Cultural Antecedents
486. (5) Lemhi In Early Nineteenth Century
487. (2) Northern Shoshoni Cultural Antecedents
488. (4) Eighteenth Century Northern Shoshoni
489. (5) Northern Shoshoni Family Organization And Culture
29. (2) Location of Fort Boise, 1834-1955 (Fur Trade)
49. (3) The Lewis & Clark Trail Across Idaho
59. (2) List of Army Battles & Military Events in Idaho
62. (4) Fur Trade Posts in Idaho
63. (4) Idaho Military Posts and Camps
86. (4) Route of Alexander Ross, 1824
91. (2) Text of the Treaty of Fort Boise, October 10, 1864
233. (28) Site of Utter Party Massacre
235. (2) Battle of Bear River, January 28, 1863
236. (3) The Snake War, 1864-1868
238. (2) Ruby and Silver City War Meetings February 14-15, 1866
239. (2) Battle of Three Forks and the Owyhee Cannon
242. (5) Exploration and Settlement of Salmon River
244. (3) The Early Bear River Fur Trade: Bear Lake and Cache Valley
246. (3) Lemhi-Lost River Fur Trade
281. (3) Alexander Ross’s 1824 Route Into Stanley Basin
356. (3) Fort Boise (United States Army)
367. (2) A Select Guide to Scholarly Works Relating to the Idaho Region Before 1860
428. (2) Jean Baptiste Charbonneau
450. (2) The Nez Perce War From Camas Meadows Through Targhee Pass
453. (1) Bibliography for Spokane House, 1810-1826
50. (2) The Oregon Trail In Idaho
52. (3) The California Trail in Idaho
78. (9) Boise-Idaho City Toll Road (Boise to Idaho City Toll Road)
79. (1) Route of the Oregon Trail in the Upper Boise Valley
94. (3) South Boise Wagon Road
95. (5) Rice and Porter Toll Road
96. (3) Mount Idaho-Salmon Meadows Wagon Road
115. (1) Kleinschmidt Grade and Seven Devils
126. (5) City of Rocks and Granite Pass
143. (15) North Idaho Stage Lines
144. (3) Stage Lines – Boise Basin
146. (2) Stage Lines – Overland and Kelton
147. (1) Stage Lines – Salt Lake – Montana
148. (3) Stage Lines – Yankee Fort, Wood River, and Salmon (Lemhi)
149. (4) Stage Lines – Southwestern Idaho
150. (4) Stage Coach Travel Times
184. (10) Salmon Falls and Thousand Springs
185. (4) Three Island Crossing
189. (3) Exploration of City of Rocks and Granite Pass
215. (3) Gilmore and Pittsburg Railroad
216. (2) Idaho Central Railroad
218. (1) Boise, Nampa, and Owyhee Railroad
220. (2) Boise Valley Electric Railroads
221. (2) Intermountain Railway
287. (4) The Mullan Road in Idaho
349. (2) Overland State Company Operations at City of Rocks
350. (3) Alexander Ross, Fur Hunters of the Far West (1956), Footnote Corrections
465. (19) South Boise Stage Lines
3. (1) The Boise City Assaying and Refining Works
4. (1) Four Stages in Idaho’s Mining Development
5. (1) Idaho’s Gold Production Compared to the US Total in 19th Century
6. (1) Idaho’s Gold Production, 1860-1866
Idaho’s Mining History JPG (small)
8. (2) Elias Davidson Pierce and the Founding of Pierce
19. (1) Rocky Bar Spanish Legend
92. (19) Caleb Lyon of Lyonsdale and The Boise Claim
160. (2) Silver Mountain Mines
161. (2) Idaho Silver Production
166. (3) Placer Mining in Idaho, 1862-1864
167. (4) Lode Mining in Idaho, 1864-1869
172. (4) The Effect of Mining in the Economy of the Boise Region
173. (4) Lumber in the Boise Region
176. (6) Agricultural History of Boise Valley, 1920-1945
177. (3) Markets for Boise Valley Crops
191. (1) Gold Silver Value Formula
194. (3) Site Report – Pierce-Weippe
195. (3) Site Report – Elk City Region
197. (5) Site Report – Warrens
198. (4) Site Report – Boise Basin
204. (8) Site Report – Yankee Fork-Robinson Bar
205. (10) Site Report – Cariboo Mountain-Tincup Creek
206. (7) Site Report – Wood River
207. (2) The Sawtooth & Vienna Mining Districts
208. (6) Mackay and Copper Basin
209. (3) Gilmore And The Viola Mining Region
210. (3) Coeur d’Alene Mining Wars
214. (2) The Idaho Farm Workers’ Service, incorporated
225. (1) Horse Combines In The Palouse Country
296. (2) Snake River Fine Gold
364. (1) Chinese Mining in Idaho
380. (3) Recovery Processes for Idaho Ores
385. (6) Yellow Jacket Mining District
394. (1) Salish Languages in North Idaho & Adjacent Washing and Montana
395. (1) The Name Coeur d’Alene and Pend d’Oreille
396. (3) Reference List of Articles on the Nez Perce Indians in Idaho Yesterdays
441. (2) The Chinese Massacre at Douglas Bar, Snake River
447. (2) The Coeur d’Alene Mine Labor Problem, 1892-1899
455. (2) J. Marion More: Idaho Mining Pioneer (1830-1868)
456. (1) Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mining and Concentrating Co.
2. (1) Date of the Creation of Idaho
11. (1) Counties Which No Longer Exist
12. (1) Territorial Political Conventions 1864-1890
15. (2) Territorial Governors of Idaho
39. (2) The Origin of the Name Nampa
42. (1) Total Votes of Counties in Territorial Elections
46. (2) Territorial Legislative Apportionment
48. (3) Territorial Government in Idaho, 1863-1969
69. (3) Origins of Idaho’s County Names
83. (4) Idaho Territorial Administration, 1869-1876
84. (3) Mason Brayman and the Boise Ring, 1876-1888
103. (2) List of Early Post Offices in Idaho
104. (3) Pacific Northwest Boundaries, 1848-1868
107. (7) Theatre in Idaho 100 Years Ago
108. (3) Idaho Before Statehood
123. (1) Early Idaho Secretaries in Government Offices
132. (4) Idaho’s Territorial Capitol
155. (1) Penitentiary and University Locations
156. (1) The Idaho-Mountain Boundary Legend
180. (2) Idaho Territorial Government
222. (3) Idaho Centennial Publications
226. (2) Idaho’s First Year, 1863-1864
251. (1) John Kelly And Willie The Snake Indian Boy
252. (1) Idaho Territorial Prison
255. (1) Meaning Of The Name Pahsimeroi
258. (1) How Idaho Got Its Name
264. (3) The Creation Of The Territory Of Idaho
265. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns October 31, 1863
266. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns October 10,1864
267. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns 1865
268. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns August 13,1866
269. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns August 10, 1868
270. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns June 6, 1870
271. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 5, 1872
272. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 3, 1874
273. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 7, 1876
274. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 5,1878
275. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns December 4, 1880
276. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 7, 1882
277. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 4, 1884
278. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 2, 1886
279. (1) Idaho Territorial Election Returns November 6,1888
334. (2) Early Nez Perce County
344. (2) Location Of Idaho’s Territorial Capital
348. (1) Delegates To The Idaho Constitutional Convention
359. (2) The Old Assay Office In Boise
369. (4) Caleb Lyon’s Bruneau Treaty April 12, 1866
371. (1) Arrival Of Territorial Officals In Idaho 1863
372. (1) The First Idaho Territorial Legislature
373. (2) Cochran, Daniels And The Golden Age
374. (1) Caleb Lyon On Lyonsdale
375. (1) S.D. Cochran’s Candidacy For Office
376. (2) Absence Of Idaho Territorial Officials 1864
377. (2) Caleb Lyon’s Statehood Scheme
379. (2) Organization Of The Idaho Territorial Supreme Court
425. (1) Idaho Centennial Series Published In Idaho Yesterdays
461. (1) Slaterville And The Founding Of Lewiston
467.(13) Legislative Investigation Of The Defalcations in the Secretary’s Office, January 31, 1866
479. (2) Meeting Places Of The Territorial Legislature
480. (5) Fur Trade Era Idaho Annotated Bibliography
481. (6) Founding And Construction Of The Penitentiary
16. (4) State Governors of Idaho
17. (11) United State Senators From Idaho
18. (11) United States Representatives From the State of Idaho
25. (2) Full Names of State Governors
61. (2) Description of the Idaho State Seal by Emma Edwards Green, the Designer
136. (3) W. E. Borah’s Oration at the Funeral of Frank Steunenberg, January 2, 1906
137. (1) Steunenberg Monument Inscription
138. (2) Regulations for Administration of the State Antiquities Act
139. (1) The Eagle on the Capitol
171. (5) Early Irrigation Canals Pre-Project Ventures
399. (1) State Purchasing Agents
429. (1) Idaho’s Congressional Election 1896
448. (2) Salmon Tract Irrigation
457. (1) Idaho Presidential Vote 1892 1896
476. (4) Constitutional Convention And Ratification
477. (2) Inaugural Balls Of The Governors Of Idaho Date And Location
494. (1) Atlanta Dam And Power Plant
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