Pocatello, Idaho. City and Business guide.
Welcome to Pocatello, Idaho.Pocatello is the county seat and largest city of Bannock County, with a small portion on the Fort Hall Indian Reservation in neighboring Power County, in southeastern Idaho.
Historic downtown Pocatello, Idaho (taken Oct. 18. 2004) (c) 2004 Matthew Trump
Pocatello is home of Idaho State University. Founded as an important stop on the first railroad in Idaho during the gold rush, the city later became an important center for agriculture. It is located along the Portneuf River where it emerges from the mountains onto the Snake River Plain, along the route of the Oregon Trail. The name comes from Chief Pocatello, a chief of the Shoshoni who granted the right-of-way for the railroad across the Fort Hall Indian Reservation.The discovery of gold in Idaho in 1860 brought the first large wave of U.S. settlers to the region. The Portneuf Valley became an important conduit for transportation of goods and freight. In 1877, railroad magnate Jay Gould of the Union Pacific Railroad acquired and extended the Utah and Northern Railway, which had previously stopped at the Utah border, into Idaho through the Portneuf Canyon. "Pocatello Junction", as it was first called, was founded as stop along this route during the gold rush. After the gold rush subsided, the region began to attract ranchers and farmers. By 1882, the first residences and commercial development appeared in Pocatello.
In 1962 Pocatello absorbed nearby Alameda and became for a time the largest city in Idaho. Pocatello remains one of the state's largest cities.
Pocatello map:
Chubbuck, ID (3.5 miles), Fort Hall, ID (9.9 miles), Arbon Valley, ID (11.2 miles), Inkom, ID (14.6 miles), Blackfoot, ID (22.9 miles), McCammon, ID (23.4 miles), Aberdeen, ID (27.3 miles), American Falls, ID (28.8 miles).
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