I was wondering about how Fremont Street was named. I assume that it is named in memory of John C. Fremont — explorer and politician. But his political background was as a senator from California, not Nevada (and an unsuccessful presidential candidate). I’m not sure that he had much to do with Nevada; apparently, his major accomplishment as an explorer was to map the Oregon Trail, which doesn’t pass through Nevada. Why was he selected for the honor of being remembered in Las Vegas?
We answered this question in 2018, but as evidenced, it comes up from time to time, so we're sure at least some of those who didn't see that QoD or have discovered us since then have wondered where the name Fremont Street originated.
Entire books have been written about John Charles Fremont, the American soldier, explorer, surveyor and mapmaker, politician, and namesake of downtown Las Vegas’ Fremont Street, along with many other geographical place names, many in California where he settled in his adult years (he was born in Savannah, Georgia).
During the 1840s, Fremont led five expeditions into the American West, earning him the media nickname, “The Pathfinder.” On his second expedition in 1843 and 1844, he led a party of 40, including trailblazer Kit Carson, from Missouri in search of a trail to the Pacific Ocean by way of the Columbia River.
Achieving his objective, Fremont determined to return to Missouri via a southern route. He followed the eastern Cascades through Oregon and into northern Nevada, where he “discovered” and named Pyramid Lake. From there, his party headed south, then turned west again, climbing the Sierra via the Carson River (which Fremont also named in honor of Kit, who did most of the trailblazing) and becoming among the first Americans to catch a glimpse of Lake Tahoe.
They descended into the central valley of California around present-day Sacramento, where they spent awhile at Sutter’s Fort. From there, they followed a trail blazed in 1827 by Jedidiah Smith to the Old Spanish Trail between Los Angeles and Santa Fe, which traversed Las Vegas Valley.
There, Fremont noted the Las Vegas Paiute tribe’s sunflower and pumpkin patches by what came to be known as the Big Springs and watched them fish lizards out of holes in the desert. In his journal of the expedition, Fremont called them “humanity in its lowest form and most elemental state,” and he couldn’t understand how they could live with no possessions, houses, or even much clothing.
Fremont had many further adventures, actually claiming control of California in 1846 as an Army major (for which he was court-martialed) and running for president of the United States 10 years later as the first candidate of the newly formed Republican Party. He was defeated by James Buchanan, who was defeated by Republican Abraham Lincoln in the next presidential election cycle of 1860. Fremont ran against Lincoln in 1864 as the candidate for the short-lived Radical Democracy Party.
Fremont was appointed Governor of Arizona Territory by President Rutherford B. Hayes. Though he served from 1878 to 1881, he spent so little time there that he was asked to resign.
John C. Fremont retired on New York's Staten Island and died at his home in lower Manhattan in 1890 at the age of 77.
When Las Vegas was laid out by the railroad in the early 1900s, the surveyors and cartographers honored John C. and his expeditions and mapmaking by naming the main drag Fremont Street. That wasn't particularly unusual at the time. Counties in four states -- Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, and Wyoming -- are named for him, while cities in California, Michigan, Nebraska, and New Hampshire likewise carry his name, along with two mountain peaks (Wyoming and California), a river (Utah), and a U.S. Army infantry division (inactive).
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Christopher Sterbenz
Feb-02-2022
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steve crouse
Feb-02-2022
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robert wolf
Feb-02-2022
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IdahoPat
Feb-05-2022
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