Illahe was the first of three post offices established in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the canyon of the lower Rogue River between Marial and Agness. After the Rogue River Wars of 1855-56 and the forced removal of most of the Takelma and other native people who lived along the river, a small number of newcomers began to settle along or near the canyon. These pioneers, some of whom were former gold miners married to Karok Indian women from the Klamath River basin, established gardens and orchards, kept horses, cows, and other livestock, and received occasional shipments of goods sent by pack mule over the mountains. Until the 1890s, the settlers remained relatively isolated from the outside world. In 1883, one of them, Elijah H. Price, proposed a permanent mail route by boat up the Rogue River from Ellensburg to Big Bend, about upstream. The route, Price told the government, would serve perhaps 11 families and no towns. Although the Post Office Department resisted the idea for many years, in early 1895 it agreed to a one-year trial of the water route, established a post office at Price's log cabin at Big Bend, and named Price postmaster. Price's job, for which he received no pay during the trial year, included running the post office and making sure that the mail boat made one round-trip a week. He named the new post office Illahe. The name derives from the Chinook Jargon word ilahekh or iliʼi, meaning "land", "earth" or "country". In 1897, the department established a post office near the confluence of the Rogue and the Illinois rivers, downriver from Illahe, at what became Agness. A third post office, established in 1903 about upriver from Illahe, was named Marial. To avoid difficult rapids, carriers delivered the mail by mule or horse between Illahe and Marial, and after 1908 most mail traveling beyond Agness went to both upriver communities by pack animal. The Illahe post office closed in 1943. Congress established the Wild Rogue Wilderness in 1978.
Works cited
Giordano, Pete. Soggy Sneakers: A Paddler's Guide to Oregon's Rivers, fourth edition. Seattle: The Mountaineers Books..
McArthur, Lewis A., and McArthur, Lewis L. Oregon Geographic Names, seventh edition. Portland: Oregon Historical Society Press..
Meier, Gary and Gloria. Whitewater Mailmen: The Story of the Rogue River Mail Boats. Bend, Oregon: Maverick Publications..