In the language of the Shoshone, Sacagawea's people, the Deer Lodge
Valley was it-soo-ke-en-carne. The name referred to a lodge-shaped
mound--a natural salt lick where deer gathered. By the early 1800s,
French-Canadian trappers and traders were exploring the valley's river
(now known as the Clark Fork River) and its tributaries. The Shoshone
name was translated into French as la loge du chevreuil. Soon, as
Montana's gold rush began, traders from Fort Hall in southern Idaho
settled here. The town became Spanish Fork, Cottonwood, La Barge City,
and finally the Shoshone name returned, now in English, as Deer Lodge.