— Submitted by National Parks Service
The Pig War crisis of 1859 will get an airing out with San Juan Island National Historical Park’s historian, Mike Vouri, on KPLU Public Radio’s “Sound Effect” program, scheduled 10 a.m., Saturday April 11.
Vouri was interviewed Tuesday at American Camp by the program’s host, Gabriel Spitzer. KPLU is an FM channel at 88.5 on the dial. The program also can be streamed live by going to http://kplu.org/listen-live.
Recordings of the broadcast can be heard in the Sound Effect archive at http://www.kplu.org/programs/sound-effect, or by subscribing to the program’s Podcast at https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/sound-effect-from-kplu/id967132009?mt=2
“It is always a challenge to boil down the Pig War crisis and joint military occupation to about 15 minutes of programming, especially when you’ve been telling that story for more than 20 years,” said Vouri, who is also the park chief of interpretation. “The key is always returning to primary lesson of the story—that peace broke out instead of war here—because that’s what this park is all about.”
The seemingly innocuous act of shooting a pig that had strayed into a garden nearly escalated into hostilities between elements of the U.S. Army and the Royal Navy on San Juan Island, between July and October 1859. The crisis was quelled thanks to the restraint of Royal Navy officers on scene and the negotiating skills of Lt. Gen. Winfield Scott, commander of the U.S. Army, who made the six-week trip from New York City to the West Coast from Washington, D.C.
Shortly after Scott re-embarked for the East, the two nations agreed to a joint military occupation of the island. The Americans elected to remain at their camp on the island’s Cattle Point Peninsula while Royal Marines established their camp 13 miles north on Garrison Bay.
The incident led to the creation of San Juan island National Historical Park by Act of Congress in 1966. The park bill was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson. The park today is composed of 2,141 acres at its American Camp and English Camp units.
In addition to the respective parade grounds and historic structures, the park also has a significant natural resource, including eight miles of saltwater shoreline, native prairie, conifer forests and rocky uplands. More than 250,000 visit annually from throughout the nation and world.
Vouri is the author of The Pig War: Standoff at Griffin Bay (Discover Your Northwest/University of Washington Press, $18.95), a history of the incident now in second edition and its 16th year in print.
“The second edition has about 100 more pages of narrative and notes that contain much of what I’ve learned since the first edition went to press” Vouri said. “Just when you think you know it all another fact turns up. It happened after the second edition was published. But you’ll have to wait for the third edition to read that.”