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=Spukwush Creek.= Flowing from Chenuis Mountain to Carbon River in the northwestern portion of the Park. The name seems to be Indian, but its origin has not been ascertained.
=Squaw Lake.= On the southwestern slope of the mountain, near the entrance to Indian Henrys Hunting Ground. It is said that the Squaw camped there while her hunter husband went further up the slopes for his game.
=Starbo Camp.= In Glacier Basin, on the northern slope of the mountain. It is named for the miner who has maintained a camp there for a number of years. Further information is given under the head of Glacier Basin.
=Steamboat Prow.= On the north slope of the mountain. The appropriateness of this name is apparent to any who have visited the upper ice fields of the Winthrop and Emmons Glaciers. The pointed cliff seems to be buffeting a sea of ice. Elevation, 9,500 feet above sea level.
=Stevens Glacier.= On the southeastern slope, adjoining Paradise Glacier. The name is in honor of General Hazard Stevens who, with P.
B. Van Trump, made the first ascent of the mountain in 1870. The creek flowing from the glacier is called Stevens Creek; its deep bed is Stevens Canyon, and the overlooking crags are Stevens Ridge.
=Stevens Peak.= Near the southern boundary of the Park. The name is probably an additional honor for General Hazard Stevens. Elevation, 6,511 feet above sea level.
=Success Glacier.= On the southern slope of the mountain, flowing into Kautz Glacier. Between Success Glacier and South Tahoma Glacier lies a ridge called Success Cleaver. For the origin of the name see Peak Success.
=Summer Land.= One of the mountain's most beautiful parks, on the east-central slope, above Fryingpan Creek. It was named by Major E. S.
Ingraham in 1888.
=Sunbeam Falls.= On the southern slope of the mountain, in a tributary of Stevens Creek.
=Sunrise Ridge.= Appropriately named as being at the northeastern edge of the Park. A stream flowing from the ridge is called Sunrise Creek.
Elevation, about 6,000 feet above sea level.
=Sunset Amphitheatre.= A huge cirque extending up toward Liberty Cap on the western side of the mountain. From it flow the Puyallup and Tahoma Glaciers.
=Sunset Park.= So named because it extends to the west-central boundary of the Park.
=Sweet Peak.= In the northwestern corner of the Park. Origin of name not ascertained. Elevation, 4,500 feet above sea level.
=Sylvia Falls.= On the southeastern slope, in Stevens Creek. Ben Longmire, who is quite a wag, says: "Bill Stafford named some falls, Sylvia Falls, after his sweetheart, and she has not spoken to him since."
=Tahoma Glacier.= On the southwest slope of the mountain, beginning at Sunset Amphitheatre and draining into the South Fork of the Puyallup River. Just south of this glacier is another called South Tahoma Glacier, which drains into Tahoma Creek, which in turn flows into the Nisqually River at the southwestern corner of the Park. The name is one of the forms of the word Tacoma. Stevens and Van Trump gave the name to what is now known as Liberty Cap at the summit. The name is also applied to a most prominent peak on the eastern slope of the mountain. See Little Tahoma.
=Tamanos Mountain.= Near the east-central boundary of the Park. The name is apparently one way of spelling the Chinook jargon word meaning "spirit."
=Tato Falls.= On the southern slope, near the foot of Nisqually Glacier. The name was suggested by Superintendent Ethan Allen.
=Tatoosh Range.= Near the south-central boundary of the Park. The Indian word is said to mean "nouris.h.i.+ng breast." A stream from the mountains is called Tatoosh Creek. Highest elevation, at Unicorn Peak, 6,939 feet above sea level.
=Tenas Creek.= Flowing from Mount Wow across the boundary in the southwest corner of the Park. The name is from the Chinook jargon meaning "little."
=The Burn.= Near the southern boundary of the Park. The name is too suggestive of a departed forest.
=The Castle.= A part of the Tatoosh Range, in the southern portion of the Park.
=The Fan.= On the southeastern slope, just south of the lower part of Cowlitz Glacier. It is a lake whose name was suggested by its shape.
=The Palisades.= A ridge jutting northwestward from Sourdough Mountains, in the northeastern part of the Park.
=The Ramparts.= See Rampart Ridge.
=The Wedge.= On the north slope of the mountain, between the Winthrop and Emmons Glaciers. A large ma.s.s with Steamboat Prow at the upper or "sharpened" edge. Named by Prof. I. C. Russell and his party in 1896.
=Theosophy Ridge.= See Reese's Camp.
=Tilic.u.m Point.= On the northwestern slope of the mountain, a part of Ptarmigan Ridge. The name is from the Chinook jargon, meaning "friend." Elevation, 6,654 feet above sea level.
=Tirzah Peak.= A portion of Chenuis Mountain near the northwestern boundary of the Park. Origin of name not ascertained. Elevation, 5,212 feet above sea level.
=Tokaloo Rock.= On the western slope, at the lower end of Puyallup Cleaver. Origin of name not ascertained. Elevation, 7,675 feet above sea level.
=Tolmie Peak.= In the northwestern corner of the Park. It is named in honor of Dr. William Fraser Tolmie, the Hudson's Bay Company surgeon, who was the first white man to approach the mountain. It was in 1833 that he climbed this peak. In 1883, Bailey Willis wrote: "The point remained unvisited for fifty years; last summer I was able to identify it and named it Tolmie Peak." A near-by stream is called Tolmie Creek.
Elevation of the peak, 5,939 feet above sea level.
=Trixie Falls.= On the southeastern slope, in Cowlitz Park. The name was suggested by Superintendent Ethan Allen in honor of one of the daughters of former Superintendent E. S. Hall.
=Tumtum Peak.= In the southwestern corner of the Park, visible to all on the road to and from Longmire. The name is from the Chinook jargon, meaning "heart," and was suggested by the form of the mountain.
Elevation, 4,678 feet above sea level.
=Twin Falls.= On the southeastern slope of the mountain, in the lower part of Cowlitz Park.
=Tyee Peak.= A part of Chenuis Mountain in the northwestern portion of the Park. The name is from the Chinook jargon, meaning "chief."
Elevation, 6,030 feet above sea level.
=Unicorn Peak.= Where the Tatoosh Range approaches the south-central boundary of the Park, this peak rises to a height of 6,939 feet. On its western flank is an ice field called Unicorn Glacier.
=Van Horn Creek.= On the northern slope, toward the boundary of the Park. The name was suggested by Thomas E. O'Farrell, Park Ranger, in honor of Rev. F. J. Van Horn, one of The Mountaineers' party of 1909.
The beautiful falls in the creek received the same name. Elevation of the falls, about 4,400 feet above sea level.
=Van Trump Glacier.= On the southern slope. It is named in honor of P.
B. Van Trump who, with General Hazard Stevens, made the first ascent of the mountain in 1870. The creek flowing from the glacier has the same name, and the flower-strewn region above the creek is called Van Trump Park. Elevation of the park, about 5,500 feet above sea level.
=Vernal Park.= In the north-central portion of the Park, just south of Sluiskin Mountain.
=Virginia Peak.= Near the northwestern boundary of the Park. Origin of name not ascertained. Elevation, 4,934 feet above sea level.
=Wahpenayo Peak.= Between the Tatoosh Range and the south-central boundary of the Park. Origin of name not ascertained. Elevation, 6,234 feet above sea level.
=Wallace Peak.= A portion of Chenuis Mountain near the northwestern boundary of the Park. Origin of name not ascertained. Elevation, 5,800 feet above sea level.
=Wapowety Cleaver.= On the southern slope, overlooking Kautz Glacier.
Mr. Van Trump says that Wapowety was the Indian guide of Lieutenant A.
V. Kautz during his attempted ascent in 1857. Elevation, about 9,500 feet above sea level.
=Was.h.i.+ngton Cascades.= On the southern slope of the mountain, in the Paradise River above Narada Falls.
=Wauhaukaupauken Falls.= On the east slope, in Ohanapecosh Park. This is one of the remarkable features of the mountain streams. The meaning and origin of the Indian name have not been ascertained.
=Weer Rock.= On the western slope. The name does not appear on the map, but it is said to have been agreed upon as an honor to J. H.
Weer, of Tacoma, who has done extensive exploration work upon and around the mountain. He was leader of The Mountaineers, in 1915, when the first large party encircled the mountain at snow-line.