The Sauvie Island Bridge. Credit: GarysFRP / Getty Images

Multnomah County commissioners voted Thursday to advance a plan to rename the Sauvie Island Bridge to more accurately reflect the indigenous population that first inhabited the area. Multnomah County owns the bridge connecting NW St. Helens Rd. to the island, while the island itself is owned by the state of Oregon.

โ€œAs white settlers forcibly stole the land and waterways, they used the languages and names of their choices to reflect the story that they wanted told,โ€ said Multnomah County Chair Deborah Kafoury. โ€œBut today, here in Multnomah County, we found ourselves with a historic opportunity to support indigenous efforts to heal, reflect the truth of the land, and reclaim both narrative and physical space for those who have always been here.โ€

The idea to rename the bridge was recommended earlier this year by the Advisory Committee on Sustainability and Innovation (ACSI)โ€”a group of volunteers appointed by the county board to advise on issues relating to the environment and sustainabilityโ€”as a way to โ€œdecolonize waterways and food sourcesโ€ in Multnomah County.

โ€œThe island, known as Wapato Island, is important as a usual and accustomed place for Native American Communities from time immemorial,โ€ the committee wrote in a January letter to the county board. โ€œThe Countyโ€™s bridge should celebrate their living history, and not the history of colonizers who took over the island only after decimating the Native inhabitants.โ€

Sauvie Island was originally home to thousands of Chinook people. When white colonizers began to settle in the area in the early 1800s, they introduced diseases like smallpox, measles, and tuberculosis that severely infected the indigenous people in the region. In 1829, a malaria epidemic decimated the indigenous population and, according to the National Parks Service, the island was โ€œuninhabitedโ€ by the mid-1830s.ย 

A series of colonizers came to the area to claim land and expand trade routes. The colonizers believed the racist idea that the mass death of the indigenous population was divine intervention, with one settler writing that “…a mortality has carried offโ€ฆ [Sauvie Island’s] inhabitants and there is nothing to attest that they ever existed except their decaying housesโ€ฆ So you see as the righteous people of New England say, providence has made room for me.” In the early 1840s, French Canadian dairyman Laurent Sauvรฉ arrived on the island to establish dairy production, and the island was eventually named after him.

โ€œThis island and the bridge are both named after a colonizer that did not respect the land or the people,โ€ Lukas Angus, an ACSI member and member of the Nez Perce tribe, told the board Thursday. โ€œThe changing of the name on this bridge is one small thing, but itโ€™s a big perspective change.โ€

The four Multnomah County commissioners present at Thursdayโ€™s board meeting voted unanimously in support of renaming the bridge.

โ€œThe naming, how we speak about things, how we refer to thingsโ€”itโ€™s important,โ€ Commissioner Lori Stegmann said. โ€œThatโ€™s how we tell our story, and for too long Native and Indigenous stories have not been told.โ€

The boardโ€™s approval kicks off a public engagement period, during which the countyโ€™s tribal affairs advisor will lead discussions with relevant stakeholders before returning to the board with a new name.

Correction: This article originally stated that the Chinook Indian Nation is federally recognized. The federal government rescinded its recognition of the nation in 2001, and the Chinook Indian Nation has been advocating for federal recognition since.

Isabella Garcia is the former News Editor for the Portland Mercury. She covered City Hall, transportation, the environment, breaking news, and more.