Skykomish River, Washington
Used as an advertising postcard for Union Oil Company, this unused card features a view of the Skykomish River from a spot near Index, Washington. The card was part of the Natural Color Scenes of the West series in “Tour the West this year with 76 gasoline”. There is a information blurb at the upper left corner on the reverse. See is you can find the spelling error in the blurb: “Skyhomish River, Washington, wends its way from the Cascades to Puget Sound amid such scenic beauty as this. Take State Highway 15 from Monroe.” The card has a color photograph, a one cent stamp required, and names the highway as 15. This information can help place the date of publication to before 1954 because the postage rate for postcards increased from one cent to two cents in 1954. State Highway 15 was renamed and became U.S. Highway 2 in 1964.
The name, Skykomish, comes from the Lushootseed name for the Skykomish people and means “upriver people.” Nicknames for the river are Sky River and The Sky. The North and South Forks of the Skykomish merge near the town of Index. The snow-capped mountains seen in the background are part of the Wild Sky Wilderness. There are several tributaries that feed into the Skykomish, that later joins the Snoqualmie River then together they join to form the Snohomish River eventually emptying into Puget Sound.
The Skykomish is a large, wide, fast running river. Many of the smaller tributaries also are known to have rapids and rushing waters. When I was a girl, our family had friends who owned a dairy farm near Sultan. One tributary, called The Little Sky, ran through part of their land. All of us had been warned not to swim or play in the river because the water was cold, had a strong current, ran extremely fast and could be dangerous. My brother told me of a time when he was staying there during one summer that the farm dog went into the water and was swept away. One of the girls jumped in after the dog to save it and was almost also caught in the current. The kids on the bank watched with fear as she struggled to reach her dog. Somehow, she managed to save the dog and herself and they both ended up safe downstream. All the kids who witnessed this event were told by the girls who lived on the farm not to breathe a word of the incident to their parents. I don’t think anyone did. It is not uncommon during the summer months to learn of drownings in pools formed in the river that look deceptively inviting but can be treacherous. Watching that event probably was more a deterrent to the kids than the warnings of their parents.
For more information, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skykomish_River
The spelling error: Skykomish is spelled as Skyhomish in the blurb.