The city of Washougal has apparently solved one of its oldest mysteries.
Michelle Wright, the city’s public works administrator, recently announced the city’s cemetery board has discovered the body of Washougal founder Betsy “White Wing” Ough buried next to the body of her husband, Richard Ough, in the Washougal Memorial Cemetery.
Richard Ough (1798-1884) and Betsy Ough (1818-1911), the daughter of a Native American chief, were among Washougal’s earliest settlers. Richard built a log cabin on the Washougal River in 1849 and applied for a donation land claim in 1853. The couple eventually sold 20 acres of the claim to Joe Durgan and Lewis Love to plot out the new city.
Washougal historians have long grappled with the question of Betsy Ough’s exact burial place.
“We had not been able to actually find her body in the past, but with ground-penetrating radar, we were able to find what we assume is her body, right next to her husband’s,” Wright recently told Washouthegal City Council members.
In March 2021, the city’s cemetery board used funds donated by a former board member to hire C-N-I Locates, a Vancouver-based underground utility detection and inspection service, to help find Betsy Ough’s remains.