The Frenchman Hills are hills in Grant County, Washington, United States of America. The high point is 1,640 feet (500 m).[1] They are an anticlinal fold in the northeastern part of the larger Yakima Fold Belt.[2] They likely take their name for one of the first non-native residents in the area, who lived near Low Gap in the 1860s and 1870s and was known only as The Frenchman.[3]
| Frenchman Hills | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Country | United States |
| State | Washington |
| County | Grant County |
| Range coordinates | 46°58′29″N 119°49′20″W |
Frenchman Gap (47.0°N 120.0°W / 47.0; -120.0 (Frenchman Gap)) near Vantage, Washington is a water gap where the Columbia River carved a path through the Frenchman Hills.[4]
Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies, also known as the Wild Horse Monument, is located on a hillside overlooking the Columbia River on the east side of Frenchman Gap.
Washington hills and ridges | |||||||
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| Eastern Washington |
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| Western Washington |
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| Related | Olympic–Wallowa Lineament | ||||||
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