Friday, January 9, 2026

Vikings In Washington??

 


Bet you'd never in a million years believe a newspaper story like this that appeared in the Spokane Daily Chronicle for July 6, 1926. I've transcribed the entire bit for your enjoyment:

RUNIC WRITINGS ON ROCK AT FIVE MILE TELLS OF BATTLE WITH INDIANS THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO

Spokane Daily Chronicle, 5 July 1926, page 1 and 2.

The discovery of a Viking grave or burial mount and the most remarkable Runic character record ever uncovered on the North American continent, telling of the visits of Norse Viking expeditions to this hemisphere many hundreds of years ago, has been make almost near the city limits of Spokane.

On a great boulder of lava rock just north of the city limits, below the cliffs that found Five Mile Prairie, and beside a flowing spring of cold water, Professor Oluf Opsjon of Dishman, an internationally known authority on Runic writings, has found the story told in indelible paint of the visit to that place in the year 1010 A.D. of a band of Norsemen and a terrific battle which took place there with the Indians.

Professor Opsjon, who, during the last few years has interpreted many of the Runic characters appearing on scattered “painted rocks” in the various parts of the North American continent announced today after a careful investigation of the new Norronna rock that never before has there told the actual details of a battle or great conflict as it was fought in those days hundreds of years before Columbus sailed the seas.

The paintings on the rock were called to the attention of Professor Upsjon by Margarete Amundsen Reynolds, N 3410 Milton street, who for years has been interested in Runic writings and the stories of the Vikings. The paintings had been seen by others before but had been considered only the marking of Indians, until Mrs. Reynolds found in them the characters typical of Runics as used by the early Norse.

Her interpretation was quickly verified by Professor Opsjon and by careful study the face of the big projecting rock he was able to translate the story of the expedition and locate where the victims of the battle with the Indians were buried.

“in all the Runic inscriptions I have been able to translate, as they are found on rocks from Labrador and the New England states, through Canada and the United States to Alaska and Puget Sound, some of them dating back in a period before the Christian era, I have never before found a record so filled with thrilling description of action as this one almost within the city limits of Spokane,” said Professor Opsjon today.

“The record left tells that the men of the party put the seven women and the baby on top of the boulder, where they could not be reached by the Indians, and the men stood about the base fighting the Indians.

“Twelve of the Norsemen were killed and the others escaped, after the women were taken prisoners and carried away by the Indians while the woman with the baby in her arms was thrown from the top of the boulder and killed.

“Later six of the survivors of the expedition returned to the spring and the scene of the battle. There they dug a grave near the rock and buried their dead, who had been stripped of everything they possessed by the Indians.

“I am developing further negatives showing the face of the rock and with a powerful magnifying glass will be able to make out further characters which will tell more of the story, I am certain.

For a thousand years at least and perhaps for two or three thousands, a well-defined and heavily traveled trail ran from the west to the east, skirting the base of the cliffs that form Five Mile prairie. At a point beside a huge boulder, standing 20 to 25 feet above the ground and perhaps 150 feet in circumference, a cold spring bubbled out of the ground. The Indians knew of this spring for it was the only water for miles.

The story as I read it from the Runic records left on this boulder and translated literally, reads:

“In the year 1010, A.D. or 916 years ago, a band of Norse Vikings, consisting of 24 men and seven women, one of the latter with a baby in arms, was following this old trail, traveling from the west toward the east. Exhausted and thirsty, the band came to the spring beside the trail and camped. The spring was not a large one and the water was drained from it.

“A party of Indians came along and they too were tired and thirsty. The found the spring empty and they immediately attacked the Norse party in an effort to drive it away.

As to the burial mound, it is plainly visible, but it would have nothing within it as the dead were stripped so no effort will be made to disturb it.

“The story here told is pained on small square surfaces of the cliff, owning to the broken up condition of the rock, and which necessitated the use of small characters. This makes it more difficult to translate the entire story but I am certain that I will be able to eventually to decipher characters which are now only partially revealed and which may be the records of a still earlier expedition of Norse there.”

Professor Opsjon makes a special request that any who may visit the paintings refrain from molesting the surface of the rocks in any way as scratching or chipping off of fragments would be certain to destroy the greatest Norse record so far discovered in this country.

“This record still further substantiates my previous claims that the Norse had been in America in numbers long before Columbus,” said Professor Opsjon, who first advanced his proofs of this through the Chronicle some two years before.

The small character drawings shown are copies of Runics taken from the rock and their meanings as translated by Professor Opsjon are, literally, “one man speaks,” and “colling (sic) now,” which fit into the story of the battle.

******

Richard Sola, Spokane historian and teller of this tale, said that Opsjon was an ordinary yokel  from Dishman in the Spokane Valley and not any sort of professor.

IS THE “TRUTH” IN THE NEWSPAPERS DIFFERENT TODAY FROM THEN????

 

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