WELCOME TO NEZ PERCE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK

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Nez Perce directory for accommodations that suit you! Choose from a complete list of hotels and lodging options in Nez Perce National Historical Park. Each listing offers information such as a general property description, amenities, services, prices, special deals and contact information. The Nez Perce Lodging room search allows you to view all hotels that have availability for your specific dates. All the hotels we offer have been rated and approved by AAA and the Mobil Travel Guide, the authorities in hotel inspection.

Most lodging options offer special rooms for families, including over-sized rooms and rollaway beds.

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Nez Perce National Historical Park

Since time immemorial, the Nimiipuu or Nez Perce have lived among the rivers, canyons and prairies of the inland northwest. Despite the cataclysmic change of the past two centuries, the Nez Perce are still here. Join us in exploring the park's thirty-eight sites and experiencing the story of a people who are still part of this landscape.

Early on the morning of August 9, 1877, soldiers under the command of Colonel John Gibbon unleashed an attack on the quiet camp of Nez Perce. Gibbon's attack was repulsed, but at a great cost to the Nez Perce, making the battle at Big Hole the bloodiest single day in the four month long struggle between certain bands of the Nez Perce, their allies, and the U.S. Army.

On September 29, 1877 800 men women and children made camp on Snake Creek, forty miles from the Canadian Border. At dawn the next day, the U.S. Army attacked the camp, beginning a siege that would last until October 5, when Chief Joseph ended the siege. This quiet and compelling site is sacred ground for all who fought here and looks much the way it did in 1877.

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