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HISTORY OF OREGON
1848-1888
HUBERT HOWE BANCROFT
CHAPTER I.
CONDITION OF AFFAIRS.
1848.
Population—
Products—Places of Settlement—The First Families of Oregon—Stock-raising and
Agriculture—Founding of Towns—Land Titles —Ocean Traffic—Ship-building and
Commerce—Domestic Matters: Food, Clotting, and Shelter—Society: Religion, Education,
and Morals—Benevolent Societies—Aids and Checks to Progress—Notable
Institutions—Character of the People
CHAPTER II. EFFECT OF
THE CALIFORNIA GOLD DISCOVERY. 1548-1849.
The Magic
Power of Gold—A New Oregon—Arrival of Newell—Sharp Traffic—The Discovery
Announced—The Stampede Southward- — Overland Companies—Lassen s
Immigrants—Hancock’s Manuscript —Character of the Oregonians in
California—Their General Sue- cess—Revolutions in Tra. le and Society —Arrival
of VesseU— Increase in the Prices of Products—Change of Currency—The Question
of a Mint—Prhato Coinage—Influx of Foreign Silver—Effect tm
Society—Legislation—Immigration .............. 42
CHAPTER III.ADMINISTRATION.
1849-1850.
Indian
Affairs—Troubles in Cowlitz Valley—Fort Nisqually Attacked—• Arrival of the
United States Ship Massachusetts—A Military Post Established near
Nisqually—Thornton as Sub Indian Agent—Meeting of the Legislative
Assembly—Measures Adopted—Judicial Districts—A Travelling Court of Justice—The
Mounted Ili’le Regiment —Establishment of Military Posts at Fort Hall,
Vancouver, Steil- acoom, and The Dalles- -The Vancouver Claim—General Pergifer
F. Smith—His Drunken Soldiers—Tha Dalles Claim--Tnal and Execution of the
Whitman Murderers
CHAPTER IV. A
DELEGATE TO CONGRESS. 1349-1830. .
. P.1!,F
The Absent uf
Judges—Island Mills—Arrival of William Strong—Opposition to the Hudson's Bay
Company—Arrest of British Ship Cap tains—George Gibbs—The Albion Affair—Samuel
R Thurston Chosen Delegate to Congress—His Life and Character—Proceeds to
Washington—Misrepresentations and Unprincipled Measures— Rink Injustice toward
MeLoughlin—Efficient Work tor Oregon—
The
Donation Land Bill—The Cayuse War Claim ana Other Appropriations Secured—The
People Lose Confidence in their Delegate— Death of Thurston................ 101
ADMINISTRATION OP
GATNES.
1850-1852.
An
Official Yanancy—Gaines Appointed Governor—His Reception in Oregon—The
Legislative Assembly in Session—Its Personnel—The Territorial Library—Location
of the Capital- -Oregon City or Salem— Warm and Prolonged Contest—Two
Legislatures--War between the Law-makers and the Federal Judges—Appeal to
Congress—Salem Declared the Capital—A Sow Session Called—Feuds of the Public
Press—Unpopularity of Gaines—Close of his Term—Lane Appointed his Successor 139
DIS0OVEIVX OP GOLD IN
OREGOS.
18^0-1852.
Politics and
Prospecting—Immigration—Ar Era of Discovery—Explorations on the Southern
Oregon Seaboard—The California Company—
The
Schooner Samuel Huberts at the Mouths of Rogue River and the Umpqua—
Meeting with the Oregon Party—Laying-out of Lands and Town Sites—Failure of the
Umpqua Company—The Finding of Gold in Various Localities—The Mail
Service—Efforts of Thurston in Congress—Settlement of Port Orford and Discovery
of Coos Bay —The Colony at Port Orford—Indian Attack —The T’Vault Expedition—Massacre—Government
Assistance 174
I5DIAN AFFAIRS.
1851.
Politics—Election of
a Delegate—Extinguishment of Indian Titles- -Ind- -in Stipe rintendents and
Agents Appointed—Kindness of the (3 re at Father at W ashington—Appropriations
of Congress—Frauds Arising
PaOS
from the
System- -Eaay Expenditure of Government, Money—Unpopularity of Human
Sympathy—Elficicncy of Superintendent Dart —Thirteen Treaties Effected—Lane
among the Rogue River Indiana and in the Mines—Divers Outrages and
.Retaliations—Military Affair? ~ Rogue River War- The Stronghold—Battle of
Table Rock —Death of Stuart—Kearney’s Prisoners
205
PIAlSiBLE
PACIFICATION.
1851-1852.
Officers and Indian
Agents at Port Orford- -Attitude of the Coquilles—
U. S.
Troops Ordered out—Soldiers as Indian-fighters—The Savages too Much for
Them—Something of Scarfa>e and the Shastas— Steele Secures a
Conference—Action of Superintendent Skinner—Much Ado about Nothing—Some
Fighting—An Insecure Peace— More Troops Ordered to Vancouver 233
SURVEYS AND TOWN -M
\KING.
1851-1853.
Proposed Territorial
Division—Coast Survey—Light-houses Established —James S. Lawsun-- His
Biography, Public Services, and Contribution to History —Progress North of the
Columbia—South of tha Columbia -Birth of Towns—Creation of Counties—Proposed
New
.
Territory—River Navigation—Improvements at the Claekamaa Rapids —On the
Tualatin River—La Creole River -Bridge-building — Work at the Falls of the
Willamette—Fruit Culture—The First Apples Sent to California:—Agricultural
Progress- -Imports and Exports—Society
247
'LANI' LAWS AKD LAND
TITLE'S,
1851-1855.
The Donation Law—Its
Provisions and Workings--Attitude of Congress —Powers of the Provisional
Government—Qualification of Voters—
Sun
eys—Rights of Women and Children—Amendments—Preemption Privileges- Duties of
the Surveyor-general—Claimants to Lands of the Hudson’s Bay and Puget Sound
Companies—Mission Claims—Methodists, Presbyterians, and Catholics—Prominent
Land Cases- -I itigation in Regard to the Site of Portland—The Rights of
Settlers—The Caruthers Claim—The Dalles Town-sito Claim—Pre tensions of the
Methodists—Claims of the Catholics—Advantages and Disadvantages of the Donation
System 260
POLITICS AND PROGRESS.
1853.
■ ' 1iGB
Legislative
Proceedings—Judicial Districts—Public Buildings—Tenor of
Legislation—Instructions to the Congressional Delegate—Harl-ors tnd Shipping-
Lane's Congressional Labors—Charges against Governor Gaines—Ocean Mail
Service—Protection of Overli.nd Immigrants —Military Roads- Division of the
Territory—Federal Appointments--New Judges and their Districts—Whigs and
Democrats— Lane as Governor and Delegate—Alonzo A. fskinner—An Able and Humane
Man—Sketch of his Life and Public Services......................
296
ROGUE P-IVBlt WAR.
1833--1854.
Impositions and
Retaliations -Outrages by Whitfi Men and Indians —
The
Military Called upon—War Declared —Suspension of Business-- Roads
Blockaded—Firing from Ambush—Aldeti at lable Bock— J<anp in Command—Battle—The
Savages Sue for Peace—Armistice —Preliminary Agreement—Hostages Given—Another
Treaty with the Rogue River People—Stipulations—Other Treaties—Cost of the War............................. 311
LEGISLATION, MINING,
AND SETTLEMENT.
1853-1854. .
John W.
Davis as Governor— Legislative Proceedings—Appropriations by Congress—Oregon
Acts and Resolutions—Affairs on the Umpqua—Light-house Building—Beach
Mining--Indian Disturbances — Palmer’s Superintendence—Settlement of C003
Bay—Explorations and Mountain-climbing—Politics of the Period—The Question of
State Organization—The People not Ready—Hard Times—Decadence of the Gold
Epoch- Rise of Farming Interest—Some First Things—Agricultural
Societies—Woollen Mills—Telegraphs—River and Ocean Shipping Interest ana
Disasters—Ward Massacre—Military Situation.................................... 322
GOVERNMENT A\D
GENERAL DEVELOPMENT.
18o4^1855.
Resijmation of
Governor Davis —Ilis Successor, George Law Curry—
Legi lative
Proceedings—Waste of Congressional Appropriations—
'-^ti
House—Penitentiary—Relocation of the Capital and Univer- Bity
Legislative and Congressional Acts Relative thereto—More
Counties
Made—linances—Territorial Convention—Newspapers—
Ihe
Slavery Sentiment—Politics of the Period—-Whigs, Democrats, and Know nothings—A
New Party—Indian Affairs—Treaties East of fie Cascade Mountains.. 313
FURTHER INDIAN W-lES.
1855-1856.
Indian
Affairs in Southern Oregon--The Rogue River People—Extermination
Advocated—Militia Companies—Surprises and Skirmishes— Reservation and Friendly
Indians Protected by tho U. S. Government against Miners and Settlers—More
Fighting—Volunteers and Regulars —Battle of Grave Creek—Formation of the
Northern and Southern Battalions—Affair at the Meadows—Ranging by the Volunteers—The
Ben Wright Massacre....................
369
EXTERMINATION OF THE
INDIANS.
1856-1857.
Grande
Ronde Military Post and Reservation—Driving in «nd Caging the Wild Men—More
Soldiers Required—Other Battalions—Down upon the Red Men—The Spring
Campaign—Affairs along the River— Humanity of the United States Officers and
Agents—Stubborn Bravery of Chief John—Councils and Surrenders—Battle of the
Meadows —Smith’s Tactics—Continued Skirmishin" —Giving-up and Coming- in
of the Indiana....................... 307
OREGON BECOMES A
STATE.
1856-1859. •
Legislature
of 1853-6—Measures and Memorials- Legislature of 1856-7 —No Slavei y in Free
Territory—Republican Convention—Election Results—Discussions concerning
Admission—Delegate to Congress—• Campaign Journalism—Constitutional
Convention—The Great Question of Slavery—No Black Men, Bond or Free—Adoption
of a State Constitution—Legislature of 1857-8—State and Territorial Bodies
—Passenger Service—Legislatures of 1858-9—Admission into the Union.................................... 413
POLITICS AND
PATEIuTISM.
1S59-1861.
Appaintment of
Officers of the United States Court—Extra Session of the Legislature—Act.) and
Reports—Statu Seal—Ddazon Smith—Re*
uu
publican
Convention—Nominations and Elections—Rupture, in the Democratic Party—Sheil
Elected to Congress -Scheme of a Pacific Republic—Legislative Session of
1860—Nesmith an l Baker Elected U. S. Senators—Influence of Southern
Secession—Thayer Elected to Congress—Lane's Disloyalty—Governor
Whiteaker—Stark, U. S. Senator—Oregon in the War—i\ow Oifi'-ials................................... 442
WAS iNP DEVELOPMENT.
1858-1862.
War
Departments and Commanders—Military 4/iministration of General Harney—Wallen’s
Road Expeditions—Troubles with the Shoshones —Emigration on the Northern and
Southern Routes—Expeditions of Steen and Smith—Campaign against the Shoshones-
-Snake River Massacre—Action of the Legislature—Protection of the Southern
Route—Discovery of the John Day and Powder River Mines—Floods and Cold of
1861-2- Progress of Eastern Oregon 460
MILITARY ORGANIZATION
AND' OPERATIONS
1861-1865.
Appropriation
A.sked for—General AVright—Six Companies Raised—Attitude toward
Secessionists—First Oregon Cavalry—Expeditions of Maury, Drake, and Curry—Fort
Bois^ Established—Reconnoissance of Drew—Treaty with the Klamaths and
Modocs--Action of the Legislature—First Infantry Oregon Volunteers ...............................
48S
SHE SHOSHONE WAR.
1806-1868.
Companies
and Camps—Steele’s Measures -Halleck Headstrong—-Battle of the Owyhee—Indian
Raids—Sufferings of the Settlers and Transportation Men—Movements of
Troops—Attitude of Governor Woods -Free Fighting—Enlistment of Indians to Fight
Indians—Militaiy Reorganization—Among the Lava-beds— Crook in Command—Extermination
or Confinement and Death in Reservations
512
THE MODOC WAR.
1864-1873.
Land of the Modoc*—
K.cintpoos, or Captain Jack—Agnnts, Superintendents, and Treaties—Keintpoos
Declines to (Jo on a Reservation—■ Raida Truops in
Pursuit—Jack Takes to the Lava-beds—Appoint-
Pies
ment of a
Peace Commissioner—Assassination of Canby, Thom?t, and Sherwood—Jack Invested
in his Stronghold—He Escapes— Crusning Defeat of Troops under Thomas—Captain
Jack Pursued, Caught, and Executed 535
POLITICAL,
INDUSTRIAL, AND INSTITUTIONAL.
1862-1887.
Republican
Loyalty—Legislature of 1832—Legal-tender and Specific Contract—Public
Buildings—Surveys and Boundaries—Military Road- - Swamp and Agricultural
Lands—Civil Code—The Negro Question —Later Legislation—Governors Gibbs, Woods,
Grover, Chadwick, Thayer, and AIoody—Members of Congress ........................ ••
027
LATER EVENTS.
1S87-1888.
Recent
Developments in Railways--Progress of Portland—Architecture and
Organizations—East Portland—IronWorks—Value of Property —Mining—Congressional
Appropriations—New Counties—Salmon Fisheries—Lumber—Political Affairs—Public
Lands—Legislature— Election .................................... 746
CHAPTER I.
CONDITION OF AFFAIRS.
1818.
Population'—1’eoducth—Places
of Settlement—The First Families os Oregon—Stock-raising and Agriculti
re--Founding of Towns— Land Titles—Ocean Traffic—Ship-building and Commerce—Domestic
Matters: Food, Clothing, and Shelter—Society: Religion, Education, and
Morals—Benevolent Societies—Aids and Checks to Progress—Notable
Institutions—Character of the People.
Fourteen
years
have now elapsed since Jason Lee began his missionary station on the east bank
of the Willamette, and five years since the first considerable settlement was
made by an agricultural population from the western states. It is well to pause
a moment in our historical progress and to take a general survey.
First as to
population, there are between ten and twelve thousand white inhabitants and
half-breeds scattered about the valley of the Willamette, with a few in the
valleys of the Columbia, the Cowlitz, and on Puget Sound. Most of these are
stock-raisers and grain-growers. The extent of land cultivated is not great,1
from twenty to fifty acres only being in cereals 011 single farms within reach
of warehouses of the fur
1ln
Hastings’ Or. and Gal., 55-6, the average size of farms is given at 500 acres,
which it- much too high an estimate. There was no need to fence bo much land,
and had it lieen cultivated the crops would have found no market.
Vol.. II. 1
company and the
American merchants. One writer estimated the company’s stock in 1845 at 20,00C
bushels, and that this was not half of the surplus. As many farmers reap from
sixty to sixty-five bushels of wheat to the acre,2 and the poorest
land returns twenty bushels, no great extent of sowing is required to furnish
the market with an amount equal to that named. Agricultural machinery to any
considerable extent is not yet known. Threshing is done by driving horses over
the sheaves strewn in an enclosure, first trodden hard by the hoofs of wild
cattle. In the summer of 1848 Wallace and Wilson of Oregon City construct two
threshing-machines with endless chains, which are henceforward much sought
after.3 The usual price of wheat, fixed by the Hudson’s Bay Company,
is sixty-two and a half cents; but at different times it has been higher, as in
1845, when it reached a dollar and a half a bushel,4 owing to the
inilux of population that year.
The flouring of wheat
is no longer difficult, for there are in 1848 nine grist-mills in the country.5
Nor is it any longer impossible to obtain sawed lumber in the lower parts of
the valley, or on the Columbia, for a larger number of mills furnish material
for building to those who can afford to purchase and provide the means of
transportation.6 The larger number of
2Hines’
Hist. Oregon, 2-12-0. Thornton, in his Or. and Cal., i. 379, gives the whole
production of 1840 at 141,803 bushels, the greatest amount raised in any county
being in Tualatin, and the least in Clatbop. Oats, pease, and potatoes were in
proportion. See also Or. Spectator, July 23, 1840; Howison’s Coast and Country,
29-30. The total wheat crop of 1847 was estimated at 180,COO bushels, £.nd the
surplus at 50,000.
’ Crawford's Nar.,
MS., 104; lions’ Nar., MS., 10.
4Elm's
Saddle-JIaker, MS., 4.
* The grist-mills were built by the
Hudson’s Bay Company near Vancouver; McLoughl:n and the Oregon Milling Company
at Oregon City; by Thomas McKay on French Prairie; by Thomas James O Neal on
the IticknaH in the Applegate Settlement in Polk County; by the Methodist
Mission at Salem; by Lot Whitcomb at Milwaukee, on the right bank of the
Willamette, between Portland and Oregon City; by Meek and Luelling at 1he same
place; and by Whitman at Waiilatpu. About this time a flouring-mill was begun oil Puget Sound. Thornton's Or. and
Cal., i. 330; & F. CaVfomian, April 10, 1848.
6 These
saw-mills were often in connection with the flom ing-mills, as at Oregon City,
Salem, and Vaneouver. But there were several others that were
separate, as the mill
established for saving lumber by Mr Hunsaker at tlie junction of the Willamette
with the Columbia; by Charles McKay on the Tualatin Plains, anti by Hunt near
Astoria. There were other* to the number of 15 in different parts of the
territory. Thornton’s (Jr. and CaL, i. 330; Crawford's Nar., MS.. 164.
’George Gay had a
brick dwelling, and Abemethv a brick store; and brick was also used in the
erection of the Catholic church at 8t Pauls. Crawford tells us a good deal
about where to look for settlers. Reason Read, he says, was located on Nathan
Crosby's land-claim, a mile below Pettygrove’s dwelling in Portland, on the
right bank of the Willamette, just below a high gravelly bluff, that is, in
what is now the north part of East Portland. Two of the Belknaps were making
brick at this place, assisted by Read. A bouse was being erected for Crosby by
a mechanic named Richardson. Daniel Lown.-,dale hail a tannery west of Portland
town-site. South of it on the same side of the river were the claims of Finice
Caruthcrs, William Johnson, Thomas Stevens, and James Terwilliger. On the
island in front of Stevens’ place lived Richard McCrary, celebrated for making
‘blue ruin’ whiskey out of molasses. James Stevens lived opposite Caruthers, on
the east bank of the Willamette, v. hore he had a cooper-shop, and William
Kilbori.e a warehouse. Three miles above Milwaukee, where Whitcomb, William
Meek, and Luelling were settled, was a German named Piper, attempting to make
pottery. Opposite Oregon City lived S. Thurston, R. Moore, Ii. Bums, and Judge
Lancaster. Philip Foster and other settlers lived cn the Clackamas River, east
of Oregon City. Turning back, and going north of Portland, John II. Couch
claimed the land adjoining that place. Below him were settled at intervals on
the same side of the river William Blackstone, Peter Gill, Doane, and Watts. At
Linntcn there were two settlers, William Dillon and Dick Richards. Opposite to
Watt’s on the east bank was James Loomis, and just abov« him James John. At the
head of Sauv6 Island lived John Miller. Near James Logie’s place, before
mentioned as a dairy-farm of the Hudson’s Bay Company, Alexander McQuinn was
settled, and on different parts of the island Jacob Cline, Joseph Charlton, James
Bybee, Malcolm Smith a Scotchman, Gilbau a Canadian, and an American named
Walker On the Scappoose plains south cf the island was settled McPherson, a
Scotchman; and during the summer Nelson Hoyt took a claim on the Scappoose. At
Plymouth Rock, now St Helen, lived H. M. Knighton who the year before had
succeeded to the claim of its first settler, Bartholomew White, who was a
cripple, and unable to make improvements. A town was already projected at this
place., though not surveyed till 1849, when a few lots were laid off by James
Brown of Canemah. The survey was subsequently completed by N. II. Tappan and P.
W. Crawford, and mapped by Joseph Trutch, in the spring of 18S1. A few miles
below Knighton were settled the Menill family ami a man named Tulitson. The
only settler in the region of the Dalles was Nathan Olney, who in 1847 took a
claim 3 miles below the present town, on the south side of the river. On the
north side of the Columbia, in the neighborhood of Vancouver, the land formerly
occupied by the fur company, after the settlement of the boundary was claimed
to a considerable extent by individuals, British subjects as well as Americans.
Above the fort, Forbes Barclay and Mr Lowe, members of the company, held claims
as individuals, as also Mr Covington, teacher at the fort. On the south side,
opposite Vancouver; John Switzler kept a ferry, which had been much in use
during the Cayuse war as well as in the season of immigrant arrivals. On
Cathlapootle, or Lewis, river there was also a settler. On the Kalan-a River
Jonathan Burpee had taken a claim; he afterward removed to the Cowlitz, where
Thibault, a Canadian,
Only a small portion
of the land being fenced, almost the whole Willamette Valley is open to travel,
and covered with the herds of the settlers, some of whom own between two and
three thousand cattle and horses. Though thus pastured the grass is knee-high
on the plains, and yet more luxuriant on the low lands; in summer the hilly
parts are incarnadine with strawberries.8 Besides the natural
increase of the first importations, not a year has passed since the venture of
the Willamette Cattle Company in 1837, without the introduction of cattle and
horses from California, to which are added those driven from the States annually
after 1842/ whence come likewise constantly increasing flocks of sheep. The
towns, as is too often the case, are out of proportion to the rural population.
Oregon City, with six or seven hundred inhabitants, is still the metropolis,
having the advantage of a central
■was living
in charge of the warehouse of tht Hudson's Bay Company, and where d'liing the
.spring and summer Peter W. Crawford, E. West, and one or t^ o others -settled.
Before the autumn of 1819 several families were located near the mouth of the
Cowlitz. H. D. Huntington, ^Nathaniel Stone, David Stone, Seth Catlin, James
Porter, and R. C. Smith were making shingles here for the California market.
Below the Cowlitz, at old Oak Point on the south side of the river, lived John
McLean, a Scotchman. Oak Point Mills on the north side were not built till the
following summer, when they were erected by a man named Dyer for Abemethy and
Clark of Oregon City. At Cathlamet on the north bank of the river lived James
Birnie, who had settled there in 1S4G. There was no settlement between
Cathlamet and Hunt’s Mill, and none between Hunt’s Mill, w here a man named
Spears was living, and Astoria, except the claim of Robert Shortess near Tongue
Point. At Astoria the old fur company’s post was in charge of Mr McKay; and
there were several Americans living there, namely, John McClure, James Welch,
John M. Shively, Van Duscn and family, and others; in all about 30 persons; but
the town was partially surveyed this year by P. W. Craw ford. There were about
a dozen settlers on Clatsop plains, and a town had been projected on Point
Adams by two brothers O’Brien, called New York, nhich never came to anything.
At Baker Bay lived Juhn Edmunds, though the claim belonged to Peter Skeen
Ogden. On Scarborough Hill, just above, a claim had been taken by au English
captain of that name in the service of the Hudson's Bay Company. The greater
number of these items have been taken from Crawford's Narrative, MS.; but other
authorities have contributed, namely: Minto’s Early Days, MS.; Weed’s Queen
Charlotte I. Heaped., MS.; Deady’s Hist. Or., MS.; Pettygrove’sOr., MS,;
Lovejoy’s Portland, MS.; Moss' Pioneer Times, MS.; Brown's Willamette Valley,
MS.; Or. Statutes; Victor’s Oregon and Wash.; Murphy’s Or. Directory, 1; 8.1.
Friend, Oct 15, 1849; Wilkes’ 1\ or.; Palmer’s Journal; Home Missionary Mag.,
Kxii. 63- 4.
” ’ Tlu moet
beautiful country I ever saw in my life.’ Weed’s Queen Char- loth I. Erped.,
MS., 2.
s etymon’s
Note Book, MS., 0; W.Ii, Idt’s Biog., 34.
THE
OIJEGOX INSTITUTE. 5
position between the
farming country above the falls and the deep-water navigation twelve miles
below; and more capital and improvements are found here than at any other
point.10 It is the only incorporated town as yet in Oregon, the
legislature of 1844 having granted it a charter;11 unimproved lots
are held at from §100 to $500. The canal round the falls which the same
legislature authorized is in progress of construction, a wing being thrown out
across the east shout of the river above the falls which form a basin, and is
of great benefit to navigation by affording quiut water for the landing of
boats, which without it were in danger of being carried over the cataract.12
Linn City and
Multnomah City just across the river from the metropolis, languish from
propinquity to a greatness in which they cannot share. Milwaukee, a few miles
below, is still in embryo. Linnton, the city founded during the winter of 1843
by Burnett and McCarver, has Lad but two adult male inhabitants, though it
boasts a warehouse for wheat. Hillsboro and Lafayette aspire to the dignity of
county- seats of Tualatin and Yamhill. Corvallis, Albany, and Eugene are
settled by claimants of the land, but do not yet rejoice in the distinction of
an urban appel
10 Thornton
counts in 1847 a Methodist and a Catholic church, St James, a day-school, a
private boarding-school for young ladies, kept by Mrs Thornton, a
printing-press, and a public library of 300 volumes. Or. and Cat., i. 329-30.
Crawford says there were 5 stores of general merchandise, the Hudson’s ISay
Company’s, Abernethy’s, Couch’s (Cushing & Co.), Moss’, and liobert
Canfield's; and adds that there were 3 ferries across the Willamette at this
place, one a horse ferry, and 2 pulled by hand, and that all were kept busy,
Oregon City being ‘ the great rendezvous for all up and down the river to get
flour.’ Narrative, MS., 154; S. I. Friend, Oct. 15, 1849. l’almer states in
addition that MeLoughlin’s grist-miil ran 3 sets of buhr-stones, and would compare
favorably with most mills in the States; but that the Island Mill, then owned
by Abernethy and Beers, -n as a smaller one, and that each had a saw-mill
attached which cut a great deal of plank for the new arrivals. Journal, 85-6.
Ihere were 2 hotels, the Oregon House, which was built in 1844, costing
§44,000, and which was tom down in Juno 1871. The other was called the City
Hotel. McLouglilin's residence, built about 1845, was a large building for
those times, and was later the I’innegas Hotel. Moss' Pioneer Times, MS., 30;
Pori laud Advocate, June 3, 1871; Paeon’s Mere. Life Or.City, MS., 18; Harvey’s
Life of McLaughlin, MS., 34; Niks1 Peg., lxx. 341.
"Abernethy was
the first mayor, and .Lovejoy the second; McLoughlin was also mayor.
12Niles’
Beg., lxviii. 84; Or. Spectator, Feb. 19, 1846.
lation. Champoeg had
been laid off as a town by Newell, but is so in name only. Close by is another
river town, of about equal importance, owned by Abernethy and Beers, which is
called Butte ville. Just above the falls Hedges has laid off the town of
Canemah. Besides these there are a number of settlements named after the chief
families, such as Hembree’s settlement in Yamhill County, Applegate’s and
Ford’s in Polk, and Waldo’s and Howell’s in Marion. Hamlets promising to be
towns are Salem, Portland, Vancouver, and Astoria.
I have already
mentioned the disposition made of the missionary claims and property at Salem,
and that 011 the dissolution of the Methodist Mission the Oregon Institute was
sold, with the land claimed as belonging to it, to the board of trustees. But
as there was no law under the provisional government for the incorporation of
such bodies, or any under which they could hold a mile square of land for the
use of the institute, W. H. Wilson, H. B. Brewer, D. Leslie, and L. H. Judson
resorted to the plan of extending their four land-claims in such a manner as to
make their corners meet in the centre of the institute claim, under that
provision in the land law allowing claims to be held by a partnership of two or
more persons; and by giving bonds to the trustees of the institute to perform
this act of trust for the benefit of the board, till it should become
incorporated and able to hold the land in its own right.
In March 1840 Wilson
was authorized to act as agent for the board, and was put in possession of the
premises. In May following lie was empowered to sell lots, and allowed a
compensation of seven per cent on all sales effected. During the summer a portion
of the claim was sold to J. L. Parrish, David Leslie, and C. Craft, at twelve
dollars an acre; and Wilson was further authorized to sell the water-power or
mill-site, and as much land with it as might be
thought advisable;
also to begin the sale by public auction of the town lots, as surveyed for that
purpose, the first sale to take place September 10, 1846. Only half a dozen
families were there previous to this time.13
In July 1847 a bond
was signed by YvT:lson, the conditions of which were the forfeiture
of $100,000, or the fulfilment of the following terms: That he should hold in
trust the six hundred and forty acres thrown off from the land-claims above
mentioned; that he should pay to the missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal
church of Oregon and to the Oregon Institute certain sums amounting to $6,000;
that he should use all diligence to perfect a title to the institute claim, and
when so perfected convey to the first annual conference of the Methodist
church, which should be established in Oregon by the general conference of the
United States, in trust, such title as he himself had obtained to sixty acres
known as the ‘institute reserve/ on which the institute building was situated—•
for which services he was to receive one tbird of the money derived from the
sale of town lots on the unreserved portion of the six hundred and forty acres
comprised in the Salem town-site and belonging to the several claimants. Under
this arrangement, in 1848, Wilson and his wife were residing in the institute
building on the reserved sixty acres, Mrs Wilson having charge of the school,
while the agency of the town property remained with her husband.
The subsequent
history of Salem town-site belongs to a later period, but may be briefly given
here. When the Oregon donation law was passed, which gave to the wife half of
the mile square of land embraced in the donation, Wilson had the dividing line
on his land run in such a manner as to throw the reserve with the institute
building, covered by his claim, upon the wife’s portion ; and Mrs Wilson being
13Davidson’s
Southern Route, MS., 5; Brown's Autobiography, MS., 31; RalLison'ts Growth of
Towns, MS., 27-8.
under no legal
obligation to make over anything to the Oregon conference, in trust for the
institute, refused to listen to the protests of the trustees so neatly tricked
out of their cherished educational enterprise. In this condition the institute
languished till 1854, when a settlement was effected by the restoration of the
reserved sixty acres to the trustees of the Willamette University, and two
thirds of the unsold remains of the south-west quarter of the Salem town- site
which Wilson was bound to hold for the use of that institution. Whether the
restoration was an act of honor or of necessity I will not here discuss; the
act of congress under which the territory was organized recognized as binding
all bonds and obligations entered into under the provisional government.14
In later years some important lawsuits grew out of the pretensions of Wilson’s
heirs, to an interest in lots sold by him while acting agent for the trustees
of the town-site.15
Portland in 1848 had
but two frame buildings, one the residence of F. W. Pettygrove, who had removed
from Oregon City to this hamlet on the river’s edge, and the other belonging to
Thomas Carter. Several log-houses had been erected, but the place had no trade
except a little from the Tualatin plains lying to the south, beyond the heavily
timbered highlands in that direction.
The first owner of
the Portland land-claim was William Overton, a Tennesseean, who came to Oregon
about 1843, and presently took possession of the place, where he made shingles
for a time, but being of a restless disposition went to the Sandwich Islands,
and returning dissatisfied and out of health, resolved to go to Texas. Meeting
with A. L. Lovejoy at Vancouver, and returning with him to Portland in a
canoe, he offered to resign the claim to him, but subsequently
14 Or. Laws,
1843-72, Cl; Hines’ Or. and Inst., 165-72.
1,1 Thornton’s Salem Titles, in Salem
Directory for 1874, 2-7. Wilson died suddenly of apoplexy, in 1856. Id22.
changed his mind,
thinking to remain, yet giving Lovejoy half, on condition that he would aid in
improving it; for the latter, as he says in his Founding of Portland, MS.,
30-34, observed the masts and booms of vessels which had been left there, and
it occurred to him that this was the place for a town. So rarely did shipping
come to Oregon in these days, and more rarely still into the Willamette River,
that the possibility or need of a seaport or harbor town away from the Columbia
does not appear to have been seriously entertained up to this time.
After some clearing,
preparatory to building a
house, Overton again
determined to leave Oregon,
and sold his half of
the land to F. W. Pettwrove for
. ^ . a small sum and
went to Texas, where it has been said
he was hanged.16
Lovejoy and Pettygrove then erected the first house in the winter of 1845, the
locality being on what is now Washington street at the corner of Front street,
it being built of logs covered with shingles. Into this building Pettygrove
moved half of his stock of goods in the spring of 1845, and with Lovejoy opened
a road to the farming lands of Tualatin County from which the traffic of the
imperial city was expected to come.
The town was
partially surveyed by H. X. A'. Short, the initial point being Washington
street and the survey extending down the river a short distance. The naming of
it was decided by the tossing of a copper coin, Pettygrove, who was from
Maine, gaining the right to call it Portland, against Lovejoy, who was from
Massachusetts and wished to name the new town Boston. A few stragglers gathered
there, and during the Cayuse war when the volunteer companies organized at
Portland, and crossing the river took the road to Switzler’s ferry opposite
Vancouver, it began to be apparent that it was a more convenient point of departure
and arrival in regard to the Columbia than
16Deady,
inOverland Monthly,!. 3(5; Nesmith, in Or. Pioneer Assoc., Trans., 1875, 57.
Oregon City. But it
made no material progress till a conjunction of remarkable events in 1848
called it into active life and permanent prosperity. Before this happened,
however, Lovejoyhad sold his interest to Benjamin Stark; and Daniel Lownsdale
in September of this year purchased Pettygrove’s share, paying for it 65,000
worth of leather which he had made at his tannery adjoining the town-site. The
two founders of Portland thus transferred their ownership, which fell at a
fortunate moment into the hands of Daniel Lownsdale, Stephen Coffin, and W. W.
Chapman.17
In 1848 Henry
Williamson, the same who claimed unsuccessfully near Fort Vancouver in 1845,
employed P. W. Crawford to lay out a town on the present site of Vancouver, and
about five hundred lots were surveyed, mapped, and recorded in the recorder’s
books at Oregon City, according to the law governing town- sites; the same
survey long ruling in laying out streets, blocks, and lots. But the prospects
for a city were blighted by the adverse claim of Ainas Short, an immigrant of
1847, who settled first at Linnton, then removed to Sauve Island where he was
engaged in slaughtering Spanish cattle, but who 'finally took six hundred and
forty acres below Fort Vancouver, Williamson who still claimed the land being
absent at the time, having gone to Indiana for a wife. The land law of Oregon,
in order to give young men this opportunity of fulfilling marriage engagements
without loss, provided that by paying into the treasury of the territory the
sum of five dollars a year, they could be absent from their claims for two
consecutive years, or long enough to go to the States and return.
In Williamson’s case
the law proved ineffectual.
17Lovejoy’8
Founding of Portland, MS., passim; Brigg’s Port Townsend, MS., 0; Sylvester’s
Olympia, MS., 4, 5; Ilancoch’s Thirteen Years, MS., 04. For an account of the
subsequent litigation, not important to this history, see Burke v. Lowntdale,
Appellee’s Brief, 12; Or. Laws, I860, 5-8; Deady'n Ilist. Or., MS., 12-13. Some
mention will be made of this in treating of the effects of the donation law on
town-sites.
She whom he was to
marry died before he reached Indiana, and on returning still unmarried, he
found Short in possession of his claim; and although he was at the expense of
surveying, and a house was put up by William Fellows, who left his property in
the keeping of one Kellogg, Short gave Williamson so much trouble that he
finally abandoned the claim and went to California to seek a fortune in the
mines. The cottonwood tree which Crawford made the starting-point of his
survey, and which was taken as the corner of the United States military post in
1850, was standing in 1878. The passage of the donation law brought up the
question of titles to Vancouver, but as these arguments and decisions were not
considered till after the territory of Washington was set off from Oregon, I
will leave them to be discussed in that portion of this work. Astoria, never
having been the seat of a mission, either Protestant or Catholic, and being on
soil acknowledged from the first settlement as American, had little or no
trouble about titles, and it was only necessary to settle with the government
when a place for a military post was temporarily required.
The practice of
jumping, as the act of trespassing on land claimed by another was called,
became more common as the time was supposed to approach when congress would
make the long-promised donation to actual settlers, and every man desired to be
upon the choicest spot within his reach. It did not matter to the intruder
whether the person displaced were English or American. Any slight flaw in the
proceedings or neglect in the customary observances rendered the claimant
liable to be crowded off his land. But when these intrusions became frequent
enough to attract the attention of the right-minded, their will was made known
at public meetings held in all parts of the territory, and all persons were
warned against violating the rights of others. They were told that if the
existing law would
not prevent trespass the legislature should make one that would prove
effectual.13 Thus warned, the envious and the grasping were generally
restrained, and claim-jumping never assumed alarming proportions in Oregon.
Considering the changes made every year in the population of the country,
public sentiment had much weight with the people, and self-government attained
a position of dignity.
Although no claimant
could sell the land he held, he could abandon possession and sell the improvements,
and the transaction vested in the purchaser all the rights of the former
occupant. In this manner the land changed occupants as freely as if the title
had been in the original possessor, and 110 serious inconvenience was
experienced19 for the want of it.
Few laws were enacted
at the session of 1847, as it was believed unnecessary in view of the expected
near approach of government by the United States. But the advancing settlement
of the country demanding that the county boundaries should be fixed, and new
ones created, the legislature of 1847 established the counties of Linn and
Benton, one extending east to the Rocky Mountains, the other west to the
Pacific Ocean, and both south to the latitude 42°.20
The construction of a
number of roads was also authorized, the longer ones being from Portland to
M&ry River, and from Multnomah City to the same place, and across the
Cascade Mountains by the way of the Santiam River to intercept the old emigrant
road in the valley of the Malheur, or east of there, from which it will be seen
that there was still a conviction in some minds that a pass existed which would
lead travellers into the heart of the valley. That no such pass was discovered
in 1848, or until long after annual caravans of wagons and cattle from the
States ceased
,B Or.
Spectator, Sept. 30, 1847.
19 Holden's Or. Pioneering, MS., 0.
20 Or. Laws, 1843-9, 50, 55-0; Beaton Covnty
Almanac, 1876, 1, 2; Or. Pioneer Atwoc., Trans., 1875, 59.
CURRENCY AND TRICES.
13
to demand it, is also
true.21 But it was a benefit to the country at large that a motive
existed for annual exploring expeditions, each one of which brought into notice
some new and favorable situations for settlements, besides promoting
discoveries of its mineral resources of importance to its future development.22
On account of the
unusual and late rains in the summer of 1847, the large immigration which
greatly increased the home consumption, and the Cayuse war which reduced the
number of producers, the colony experienced a depression in business and a rise
in prices which was the nearest approach to financial distress which the
country had yet sulfered. Farming utensils were scarce and dear, cast-iron
ploughs selling at forty-five dollars.® Other tools were equally scarce, often
requiring a man who needed an axe to travel a long distance to procure one
second-hand at a high price. This scarcity led to the manufacture of axes at
Vancouver, for the company’s own hunters and trappers, before spoken of as
exciting the suspicion of the Americans. Nails brought from twenty to
twenty-five cents per pound; iron twelve and a half. Groceries were high,
coffee bringing fifty cents a pound; tea a dollar and a half; coarse Sandwich
Island sugar twelve and fifteen cents; common molasses fifty cents a gallon.
Coarse cottons brought twenty and twenty-five cents a yard; four-point blankets
five dollars a single one; but ready-made common clothing for men could be
bought cheap. Flour was selling in the spring for four and five dollars a
barrel, and potatoes at fifty cents a bushel;
21 It was discovered ■within a
few years, anil is known as Minto’s Pass. A road leading from Albany to eastern
Oregon through this pass was opened about 1877.
22 Mention is madt at this early day of
aiscoveries of coal, iron, copper, plumbago, mineral paint, and valuable
building and lime stone. Thornton’s Or. and Gal., i. 331 17; S. /<’.
Californian, April 19, 1848.
23 Brown says: ‘Wereaped our wheat mostly
with sickles; we madt wooden mould-board3 with a piece of iron for the coulter.
’ Willamette Valley, MS., 6.
high prices for those
times, but destined to become higher.34
The evil of high
prices was aggravated by the nature of the currency, which was government
scrip, orders on merchants, and wheat; the former, though drawing interest,
being of uncertain value owing to the state of the colonial treasury which had
never contained money equal to the face of the government’s promises to pay.
The law making orders on merchants currency constituted the merchant a banker
without any security for his solvency, and the value of wheat was liable to fluctuation.
There were, besides, different kinds of orders. An Abernethy order was not
good for some articles. A Hudson’s Bay order might have a cash value, or a
beaver-skin value. In making a trade a man was paid in Couch, Abernethy, or
Hudson’s Bay currency, all differing in value.23 The legislature of
1847 so far amended the currency act as to make gold and silver the only lawful
tender for the payment of judgments rendered in the courts, where no special
contract existed to the contrary; but making treasury drafts lawful tender in
payment of taxes, or in compensation for the services of the officers or
agents of the territory, unless otherwise provided by law; and providing that
all costs of any suit at law should be paid in the same kind of money for which
judgment might be rendered.
This relief was
rather on the side of the litigants than the people at large. Merchants’ paper
was worth as much as the standing of the merchant. Nowhere in the country,
except at the Hudson’s Bay Company’s store, would an order pass at par.20
The inconvenience of paying for the simplest article by orders on wheat in
warehouse was annoying both to purchaser and seller. The first money brought
into the country in any quantity was a barrel of silver dollars received at
“S. F. California
Star, Juh 10, 1847; Crawford's Xar., MS., 110-20.
20 Lovejoy’s Portland, MS., 35-6.
Port
Townsend, MS., 11-13.
Vancouver to bo paid
in monthly sums to the crew of the Modeste.2T The subsequent
overland arrivals brought some coin, though not enough to remedy the evil.
One effect of the
condition of trade in the colony was to check credit, which in itself would not
have been injurious, perhaps,28 had it not also tended to discourage
labor. A mechanic who worked for a stated price was not willing to take
whatever might be given him in return for his labor.20
Another effect of
such a method was to prevent vessels coming to Oregon to trade.30
The number of
27 Roberts’ Recollections, MS., 21; Ebbert’s
Trapper's Life, MS., 40.
28 Ho wison relates that he found many
families who, rather than incur debt, had lived during their first year in the
cuuntry entirely on boiled wheat and salt salmon, the men going without hat or
shoes while putting in and harvesting their first crop. Coast and Country, 10.
59 Moss gives en illustration of this check
to industry. A man named Anderson was employed by A'uemethy in his saw-mill,
and labored night and day. Abemethy'3 stock of goods was not large or well
graded, and he would sell certain articles only for cash, even when his own
notes were presented. Anderson had purchased part of a beef, w hich he wished
to salt for family use, but salt being one of the articles for which cash was
the equivalent at Abernathy's store, he was refused it, though Abernethy was
owing him, and he was obliged to go to the fur company’s store for it. Pioneer
Times, MS., 40-3. _
30 Herewith I summarize the Oregon ocean
traffic for the 14 years since tho first American settlement, most of v, hich
occurrences are mentioned elsewhere. Tha Hudson’s Bay Company employed in that
period the barks Ganymede, Forager, Nereid, Columbia, Cowlitz, Diamond,
Vancouver, Wave, Brothers, Janet, Admiral Moorsoin, the brig Mary Dare, the
schooner Cadboro, and the steamer Beaver, several of them owned by the company.
The Beaver, after her first appcarance in the river in 1836, was used in the
coast trade north of the Columbia. The barks Cowlitz, Columbia, Vancouver, and
the schooner Cadboro crossed the bar of the Columbia more frequently than any
other vessels from 1836 to 1848. The captains engaged in the English service
wero Eales, Royal, Home, Thompson, McNeil, Duncan, Fowler, Brotchie, Mori
Darby, Heath, Dring, Flere, Weyington, Cooper, McKniglit, Scarborough and
Humphreys, who were not always in command of the same vessel. There was the
annual vessel to and from England, but the others were employed in trading
along the coast, and between the Columbia River and the Sandwich Islands, or
California, their voyages extending sometimes to Valparaiso, from which parts
they brought the few passengers coming to Oregon.
The first American
vessel to enter the Columbia after the arrh al of the missionaries was the brig
Loriot, Captain Bancroft, ’n Dec. 1836; the second the Diana, Captain W. S.
Hinckley, May 1837; the third the Lausanne, Captain Spaulding, May 1840. None
of these came for the purpose of trade. There is mention in the 25th Cong., 3d
Sees., U. S. Com. Eept. 101, 58, of the ship Joseph Peabody fitting out for the
Northwest Coast, but she did not enter the Cilumbia so far as I can learn. In
August 1840 the first American trader since Wyeth arrived. This was the brig
Maryland, Captain John H. Couch, from Newburyport, belonging to the house of
Cushing & Co. She took a few fish and left the river in the autunm never to
return. In April 1841
American vessels
which brought goods to the Columbia or carried away the products of the colony
was small. Since 1834 the bar of the Columbia had been crossed by American
vessels, coming in and going out, fifty-four times. The list of American
vessels entering during this period comprised twenty-two of
the second trader
appeared, the Thomas II Perkin’!, Captain Varney. She remained through the
summer, the Hudson’s Bay Company finally purchasing her cargo and chartering
the vessel to get rid of her. Then came the U. S. exploring expedition the same
year, whose vessels did not enter the Columbia owing to the loss of the P(acock
on the bar. After this disaster Wilkes bought the charter and the name of the
Perkins was changed to the Oregon, and she left the river ■with the
shipwrecked mariners for California. On the 2d of April 1842 Captain Couch
reappeared with a new vessel, the Qhencmus, named after the chief of the
Chinooks. He brought a cargo of goods -which he took to Oregon City, where he
established the first American trading-house in the Willamette Valley, and also
a small fishery on the Columbia. She sailed for Newburyport in the autumn. On
this vessel came Richard Ekin from Liverpool to Valparaiso, the Sandwich
Islands, and thence to Oregon. He settled near Salem and was the first
saddle-maker. From which circumstance I call his dictation The. Saddle-Maker.
Another American vessel whose name docs not appear, but whose captain's name
was Chapman, entered the river April 10th to trade and fish, and remained till
autumn. She sold liquor to the Clatsop and other savages, and occasioned much
discord and bloodshed in spite of tho protests of the missionaries. In May 1843
the ship Fama, Captain Nye, arrived withsupplies for the missions. She brought
several settlers, namely: Philip Foster, wife, and 4 children; F. W.
Pettygrove, wife, and child; Peter F. Hatch, wife and child; and Nathan I\
Mack. Pettygrove brought a stock of goods and began trade at Oregon City. In
August of the same year another vessel of the Newburyport Company arrived with
Indian goods, and some articles of tradp for settlers. This was the bark
Pallas, Captain Sylvester; she remained until November, when she sailed for the
Islands and was sold there, Sylvester returning to Oregon the following April
1844 in the Chenamus, Captain ('ouch, which had made a voyage to Ncnburypoit
and returned. She brought from Ilonolul i Horace Holden and family, ■who
settled in Oregon; also a Mr Cooper, wife and boy; Mr and Mrs Burton and 3
children, besides Griffin, Tidd, and Goodhue. The Chenamus seems to have made a
voyage to tht Islands in the spring of 1845, in command of Sylvester, and to
have left there June 12th to return to the Columbia This was the lirst direct
traue with the Islands. The Chenamus brought as passengers Hathaway, Weston,
Roberts, John Orank- liite, and Elon Fellows. She sailed for Newburyport in the
winter of 1845, and did not mum to Oregon. In the summer Of 1844 the British
sloop-of
31 odeste, Captain Baillie, entered the
Columbia and remained a short time at Vancouver. On the 31st of July the
Belgian ship L’Infatigable entered the Columbia by the before undiscovered
south channel, escaping wreck, to the sui prise of all beholders. She brought
De Smet and a Catholic reenforcement for the missions of Oregon. In April 1845
the Swedish brig full visited the Columbia; she was from China: Shilliber,
supercargo. Captain Worn- grew remained but a short time. On the 14th of
October the American bark, Toulon. Captain Nathaniel Crosby, from New York,
arrived with goods for Pettygrove’s trading-houses in Oregon City and Portland-
Benjamin Stark jun., supercargo. In September the British sloop-of-war Modeste.
returned to the Columbia, where she remained till June 1847. The British
ship-of-war America, Captain Gordon, was iu Puget Sound during the summer. In
the spring of IMG the Toulon made a voyage to the ifa waiian Islands, returning
June 24th with a cargo of sugar, molasses, coffee,
IMPORTS AND
PASSENGERS.
17
all classes. Of these
in the first six years not one was a trader; in the following six years seven
were traders, but only four brought cargoes to sell to the settlers, and these
of an ill-assorted hind. From March 1847 to August 1848 nine different American
vessels visited the Columbia, of which one brought a
cotton, woollen
goods, and hardware; also a number of passengers, viz.: Mrs Whitiaker and 3
children, and Shelly, Armstrong, Rogers, Overton, Norris, Brothers, Powell, and
French and 2 sons. The Toulon continued to run to the Islands for several
years. On the 26th of June 1S4G the American liark Mariposa, Captain Parsons,
arrived from New York with goods consigned to Benjamin Stark jun., with Mr and
Miss Wadsworth as passengers. The Mari- pona remained but a few weeks in the
river. On the 18th of July the U. S. schooner Shark, Captain Neil M. Ilowison,
entered the Columbia, narrowly escaping shipwreck on the Chinook Shoal. She
remained till Sept., and was wrecked going out of the mouth of the river.
During the summer the British frigate Fistjard, Captain Duntre, was stationed
in Puget Sound. Aboutthe lstof March 1847 the brig Henry, Captain William K.
Kilborne, arrived from New- bnryport for the purpose of establishing a. new
trading-liouse at Oregon City. The Henry brought as passengers Mrs Kilborne and
children; G. W. Lawton, a partner in the venture; D. Good, wife, and 2
children; Mrs Wilson and 2 children; H. Swasey and wife; R. Douglas, D.
Markwood, C. C. Shaw, B, R. Marcellus, a d S. C. Reeves, who became the first
pilot on the Columbia River bar. The goods brought by the Henry were of greater
variety then aijj itock before it; but they were also in great part second-hand
articles of furniture on which an enormous profit was made, but which sold
readily owing to the great need of stoves, crockery, cabinet-ware, mirrors, ind
other like conveniences of life. The Henry was placed under the com- Tiand of
Captain Bray, and was employed trading to California, and the Islands. On the
24th of March the brig (Jammodore Stockton, Captain Young, from San Francisco,
arrived, probably for lumber, as she returned in April. The Stockton w as the
old Pallas renamed. On the 14th of June the American ship Brutus, Captain
Adams, from Boston and San Francisco, arrived, and remained in the river
several weeks for a cargo. On the 22d of the same month tho American bark
Whiton, Captain Gelston, from Monterey, arrived, ilso for a cargo; and on the
27th the American ship Mount Vernon, Captain
0. J. Given, from Oahu, also entered the
river. By the Whiton there came' as settlers Rev. William Roberts, wife and 2
children, Rev. J. H. Wilbur, wife, and daughter, Edward F. Folger, Richard
Andrews, George Whitlock, md J. M. Stanley, the latter a painter seeking Indian
rtudies for pictures. The Whiton returned to California and made another visit
to the Columbia River in September. On the 13th of August there arrived from
Brest, France, the bark L’i'toile da Matin, Captain Menes, with Archbishop
Blanchet and a Catholic reenforcement of 21 persons, viz.: Three Jesuit
priests, Gaetz, Gazzoli, Menestrey, and 3 lay brothers; 5 secular priests, Le
Bas, McCormick, Deleveau, Pretot, and Veyret; 2 deacons, B. Delorme, and J. F.
Jayol; and one clcric, T. Mesplie; and 7 sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. Captain
Menes afterwards engaged in merchandising in Oregon. L’Etoile du Matin was
wrecked on the bar. On the 10th of March 1848 the U. S. transport Anita,
Midshipman Woodworth in command, arrived in the Columbia to recuit for the army
in Mexico, and remained until the 22d of April. About this time the American
brig Eveline, Captain Goodwin, entered the Columbia, for a cargo of lumber; she
left the river May 7th. The Hawaiian schooner Mary Ann, Captain Belcham, was
also in the river in April. The 8tli of May the Hudson's Bay Company’s bark
Vancouver, Captain Duncan, was lost after crossing the bar, with a cargo from
London valued at £30,000, and umn- H.bt. Oil., Vol. II. 2
stock of general
merchandise, and the rest had come for provisions and lumber, chiefly for California.
All the commerce of the country not carried on by these few vessels, most of
them arriving and departing but once, was enjoyed by the British fur company,
whose barks formed regular lines to the Sandwich Islands, California, and
Sitka.
It happened that
during 1846, the year following the incoming of three thousand persons, not a
single ship from the Atlantic ports arrived at Oregon with merchandise, and
that all the supplies for the year were brought from the Islands by the Toulon,
the sole American vessel owned by an Oregon company, the Chenamus having gone
home. This state of affairs occasioned much discontent, and an examination
into causes. The principal grievance presented was the rule of the Hudson’s Bay
Company, which prohibited their vessels from carrying goods for persons not
concerned with them. But the owners of the only two American vessels employed
in trausjK>r- tation between the Columbia and other ports had
sured. She mi in
cha”ge of the pilot, but missed stays when too near the south sands, and struck
where the Shark was wrecked 2 years before. On the 27th of July the American
schooner Honolulu, Cantain New ell, entered the Columbia for provisions; and
about the same time1 the British war-ship Constance, Uaptain
Courtenay, arrived in Puget Sound. The Hawaiian schooner Starling, Captain
Menzies, arrived the 10th of August in the river for a cargo of provisions. The
Henry returned from California at the same time, with the news of the
gold-discovery. which discovery opened a new era in the traffic of the
Columbia. The close of the period was maiked by the wreck of the whale- ship
Maine, Captain Netcher, w-ith 1,400 barrels of whale-oii, 150 of sperm-oil,
anil 14,000 pounds of bone. She hail been two years from Fairhaven, Mass., and
was a total loss. The American schooner ilaria, Captain De Witt, was in the
river at the pame time, for a cargo of flour for San Francisco; also the sloop
Peacock, Captain Gier; the biig&a&trce, Captain Crosby; and the
schooner Ann, Captain Melton; all for cargoes of flour and lumber for San
Francisco. Later in the summer the Harpooner, Captain Morice, was in the river.
The sources from which I have gleaned this information are McLovghlin’s Private
Papers, 2d ser., MS.; Douglas’ Private Papers, 2d ser., MS; a list male by
Joseph Ilardisty of the Hudson’s Bay Company, and published in the Or.
Spectator, Aug. 19, 1851; Parker’s Journal; Kelley’s Colonization of Or.;
Townsend’s Xar.; Lee and Front’s Or.; Hines’ Or. Hist.; 27th Cong., 3d Sess.,
II. Com. Itept. SI, 37; Niles’ Peg., lxi. 320;
Wilkes' Nar. U. S. Explor. Ex., iv. 312; Alhey’s Workshops, MS., 3; Honolulu
Friend; Monthly Shipping List; Petfyrjrove’s Or., MS., 10; Victor's River of
the T Vest, 392, 398; Honolulu News Shipping Lint, 184S; Sylvesttr’s Olympia,
MS., 1-4; Deady's Scrap-book, 140; Honolulu Gazette, Dec. 3, 1830, Honolulu
Polynesian, i. 10, 39, 51, 54; Mack’s Or., MS., 2; Blauchet's Hist. Cath.
Church la Or., 143, 158.
FLOUR,
SALT, AND SALMON.
19
adopted the same
rule, and refused to carry wheat, lumber, or any other productions of the
country, for private individuals, having freight enough of their own.
The granaries and
flouring-mills of the country were rapidly becoming overstocked; lumber, laths,
and shingles were being made much faster than they could be disposed of, and
there was no way to rid the colony of the over-production, while money was
absolutely required for certain classes of goods. As it was declared by one of
the leading colonists, “the best families in the country are eating their meals
and drinking their tea and coffee—when our merchants can afford it—from tin
plates and cups;31 many articles of clothing and other things
actually necessary for our consumption are not to be purchased in the country;
our children are growing up in ignorance for want of school-books to educate
them; and there has not been a plough-mould in the country for many months.”
In the autumn of 1845
salt became scarce, and was raised in price from sixty-two and a half cents a
bushel to two dollars at McLouglilin’s store in Oregon City. The American
merchants, Stark and Pettygrove, saw an opportunity of securing a monopoly of
the salmon trade by withholding their salt, a cash article, from market, at any
price, and many families were thereby compelled to dispense with this condiment
for month's. Such was the enmity of the people, however, toward McLoughlin as a
British trader, that it was seriously proposed in Yamhill County to take by
force the salt of the doctor, who was sell ng it, rather than to rob the
American merchants who refused to sell.32
It was deemed a
hardship while iiour brought from ten to fifteen dollars a barrel in the
Hawaiian Islands,
81 Me
Carver, in Or. Spectator, July 4, 1846. Thornton says Mr Waymire paid
Pettygrove, at Portland, $2.50 ‘for 6 very plain cups and saucers, which could
be had in the States for 25 cents; and the same for 6 very ordinary and plain
plates. Wheat at that time was worth $1 per bushel.’ Or. and Gal.t
ii. 52
52 Bacon's Merc. Life in Or. City, MS., 22,
and New York
merchants made a profit by shipping it from Atlantic ports where wheat was
worth more than twice its Oregon price, that for want of shipping, the fur
company and two or three American merchants should be privileged to enjoy all
the benefits of such a market, the farmers at the same time being kept in debt
to the merchants by the low price of wheat. Many long articles were published
in the Spectator exhibiting the enormous injury sustained on the one hand and
the extraordinary profits enjoyed on the other, some of which were answered by
James Douglas, who was annoyed by these attacks, for it was always the British
and not the American traders who were blamed for taking advantage of their
opportunity. The fur company had 110 right to avail themselves of the
circumstances causing fluctuation; only the Americans might fatten themselves
on the wants of the people. If the fur company kept down the price of wheat,
the American merchants forced up the price of merchandise, and if the former
occasionally made out a cargo by carrying the flour or lumber of their
neighbors to the Islands, they charged them as much as a vessel coming all the
way out from New York would do, and for a passage to Honolulu one hundred
dollars. In the summer of 18 4G the supercargo of the Toulon, Benjamin Stark,
jun., after carrying out flour for Abernethy, refused to take the return
freight except upon such terms as to make acceptance out of the question; his
object being to get his own goods first to market and obtain the price consequent
011 the scarcity of the supply.33 Palmer relates that the American
merchants petitioned the Hudson’s Bay Company to advance their prices; and that
it was agreed to sell to Americans at a higher price than that charged to their
own people, an arrangement that lasted for two years.84
83 Or.
Spectator, July 23. 1846; ITowuon’s Coast and Country, MS., 21; Waldo’s
Critiques, MS., 18.
Palmer's
Journal, 117-18; Roberts’ Recollections, MS., 67.
The colonists felt
that instead of being half-clad, and deprived of the customary conveniences of
living, they ought to be selling from the abundance of their farms to the
American fleet in the Pacific, and reaching out toward the islands of the ocean
aud to China with ships of their own. To remedy the evil and bring about the
result aspired to, a plan was proposed through the Spectator, whereby without
money a joint-stock company should be organized for carrying 011 the commerce
of the colony in opposition to the merchants, British or American. This plan
was to make the capital stock consist of six hundred thousand or eight hundred
thousand bushels of wheat divided into shares of one hundred bushels each. Wb«n
the stock should be taken and officers elected, bonds should be executed for as
much money as would buy or build a schooner and buy or erect a grist-mill.
A meeting was called
for the 16th of January 1847, to be held at the Methodist meeting-house in
Tualatin plains. Two meeting were held, but the conclusion arrived at was
adverse to a chartered company; the plan adopted for disposing of their surplus
wheat being to select anil authorize an agent at Oregon City to receive and
sell the grain, and import the goods desired by the owners. A committee was
chosen to consider proposals from persons bidding, and Governor Abernethy was
selected as miller, agent, and importer. Twenty-eight shares were taken at the
second meeting in Yamhill. An invitation was extended to other counties to
hold meetings, correspond, and fit themselves intelligently to carry forward
the project, which ultimately would bring about the formation of a chartered
company.35 The scheme appeared to be on the
35 The leaders in the movement seem to have
been E. Lennox, M. M. Mc- Carver, David Kill, J. L. Meek, Lawrence Ilall, .T.
S. Griffin, anil Oaffen- burg of Yamhill; David Leslie, L. H. Judson, A. A.
Robinson, J. S. Smith, Charles Bennett, J. B. MeClane, Robert Newell, T. J.
Hubbard, and E. Dupuis of Champoeg. Or. Spectator, March 4 and April 29, 1847;
S. F. California Star, Feb. 27, 1847.
way to success, wlicn
an unlooked-for check was received in the loss of a good portion of the year’s
crop, by late rains which damaged the grain in the fields. This deficiency was
followed by the large immigration of that year which raised the price of wheat
to double its former value, and rendered unnecessary the plan of exporting it;
while the Cayuse war, following closely upon these events, absorbed much of the
surplus means of the colony.
Previous to 1848 the
trade of Oregon was with the Hawaiian Islands principally, and the exports
amounted in 1847 to $54,784.99.3a This trade fell off in 1848 to
^14,986.57; not on account of a decrease in exports which had in fact been
largely augmented, as the increase in the shipping shows, but from being
diverted to California by the American conquest and settlement; the demand for
lumber and flour beginning some months before the discovery of gold.37
The colonial period
of Oregon, which may be likened to man’s infancy, and which had struggled
through numerous disorders peculiar to this phase of existence, had still to
contend against the constantly recurring nakedness. From the fact that down to
the close of 1848 only five ill-assorted cargoes of American goods had arrived
from Atlantic ports,3S which were partially
3f. Polynesian, iv.
135. I notice an advertisement in S. I. Friend, April 1345, where Albert E.
Wilson, at Astoria, offers his services as commission merchant to persons at
the Islands.
■7
Thornton's Or. and Cal., ii. 03.
36 The cargo of the Tonlon, the last and
largest supply down to the close of 1845, consisted of ‘20 cases wooden clocks,
20 bbls. dried apples, 3 small mills,
1 doz. crosscut-saws, mill-saws and
saw-sets, mill-cranks, ploughshares, and pitchforks, 1 winnowing-macliine, 100
casks of cut nails, 00 boxes saddler’s tae.ks, 6 boxes carpenter’s tools, 12
doz. hand-axes, 20 boxes manufactured tobacco, 5,000 cigars, 50 kegs white
lead, 100 kegs of paint, doz. medicine- chests, 50 bags Rio coffee, 25 bags
pepper, 200 boxes soap, 50 cases boots and shoes, 6 cases slippers, 50
cane-seat chairs, 40 doz. wooden-seat chairs, 50 doz. sarsaparilla, 10 bales
sheetings, 4 cases assorted prints, one bale damask tartan shawls, 5 pieces
striped jeans, 6 doz. satinet jackets, 12 doz. linen duck pants, 10 doz. cotton
duck pants, 12 doz. red flannel shirts, 200 dozen cotton handkerchiefs, 0
cases white cotton flannels, (i bales extra heavy indigo-blue cotton, 2 cases
negro prints, 1 case black velveteen, 4 bales Mackinaw blankets, 150 casks and
bbls. molasses, 450 bags sugar, etc., for sale at reduced priee3 for cash. ’
Or. Spectator, Feb. 5, 184G.
THE
COLONIAL PERIOD. 23
replenished by
purchases of groceries made in the Sandwich Islands, and that only the last
cargo, that of the Henry in 1847, brought out any assortment of goods for
women’s wear,39 it is strikingly apparent that the greatest want in
Oregon was the want of clothes.
The children of some
of the foremost men in the farming districts attended school with but a single
garment, which was made of coarse cotton sheeting dyed with copperas a tawny
yellow. During the Cayuse war some young house-keepers cut up their only pair
of sheets to make shirts for their husbands. Some women, as well as men,
dressed in buckskin, and instead of in ermine justice was forced to appear in
blue shirts and with bare feet.40 And this notwithstanding
« O
the annual ship-load
ot Hudson’s Bay goods. In 1848 not a single vessel loaded with goods for Oregon
entered the river, and to heighten the destitution the fur company’s bark Vancouver
was lost at the entrance to the river on the 8tli of May, with a valuable
cargo of the articles most in demand, which were agricultural implements and
dry-goods, in addition to the usual stock in trade. Instead of the wives anti
dans'll- # t ~ ters of the colonists being clad in garments becoming
their sex and position, the natives of the lower Columbia decked in damaged
English silks41 picked up along the beach, gathered in great glee
their summer crop of blackberries among the mountains. The wreck of the
Vancouver was a great shock to the colony. A large amount of grain had been
sown in anticipation of the
39 The Henry
brought ‘silks, mousseline de laines, cashemeres, d’^cosse, bals'arines,
muslins, lawns, brown and bleached cottons, cambrics, tartan anil net-wool
shawls, ladies and misses cotton hose, white and colored, cotton and silk
limdkerchiefs.’ Id., April 1, 184^
4,1 These facts I have gathered from
conversations with many of the pioneers. They have also been alluded to in
print by Burnett, Adams, Moss, Nesmith, and Mints, and in most of the
manuscript authorities, lloss tells an anecdote of Straight when he was elected
to the legislature in 1845. He had no coat, and was distressed on account of
the appearance he should make in. a striped shirt. Moss having just been so
fortunate as to have a coat made by a tailor sold it to him fur $40 in scrip,
which has never been redeemed. Pioneer Times, MS., 43-4.
* Crawford’s Nar., MS., 147; S. F.
Californian, May 24, 1848.
demand in California
for flour, which it would be impossible to harvest with the means at hand; and
although by some rude appliances the loss was partially overcome it could not
be wholly redeemed. To add to their misfortunes, the whale-ship Maine was
wrecked at the same place on the 23d of August, by which the gains of a two
years’ cruise were lost, together with the ship.
The disaster to this
second vessel was a severe blow to the colonists, who had always anticipated
great profits from making the Columbia Riv-er a rendezvous for the
whaling-fleet on the north-west coast. Some of the owners in the east had
recommended their sailing-masters to seek supplies in Oregon, out of a desire
to assist the colonists. But it was their ill-fortune to have the first whaler
attempting entrance broken up on the sands where two Tiiited States vessels,
the Peacock and Shark, had been lost.42 Ever since the wreck of the
Shark efforts had been made to inaugurate a proper system of pilotage on the
bar, and one of the constant petitions to congress was for a steam-tug. In the
absence of this benefit the Oregon legislature in the winter of 1846 passed an
act establishing pilotage on the bar of the Columbia, creating a board of
commissioners, of which the governor was one, with power to choose four others,
who should examine and appoint suitable persons as pilots.43
The first American
pilot was S. C. Reeves, who arrived in the brig Henry from Newbury port, in
March 1847, and was appointed in April,44 He went immediately to
Astoria to study the channel, and was believed to be competent.45
But the disaster of 1848
4! During
tlie winter nf 1845--6, 4 American whalers were ljing at Vancouver Island, the
ships Morrison of Mass., Louise of Conn., and 2 others. Six seamen deserted in
a whale-boat, but the Indians would not allow them to land, and being compelled
to put to sea a storm arose and 3 of them perished, Robert Church, Frederick
Smith, and Rice of New London. Aifei’ Beg., lxx. 341.
13 Or.
Spectator, Jan. 7, 1847; Or. Laws, 1843-9, 46.
,4The S. I
Friend of Feb. 1849 said that the first and third mates of the Hfc’ine had
determined to remain in Oregon as pilots.
“The Hudson’s Bay
Company had no pilots and no charts, and -wanted
THE COLUMBIA
ENTRANCE.
23
caused him to be
censured, and removed on the charge of conniving at the wreck of the Vancouver
for the sake of plunder; a puerile and ill-founded accusation, though his
services might well be dispensed with on the ground of incompetency.46
If the sands of the
bar shifted so much that there were six fathoms in the spring of 1847 where
there were but two and a half in 1846, as was stated by captains of vessels,471
see no reason for doubting that a sufficient change may have taken place in the
winter of 1847-8, to endanger a vessel depending upon the wind. But however
great the real dangers of the Columbia bar, and perhaps because they were
great,48 the
none, though they had
lost 2 vessels, the William and Ann, in 1828, and tlie Isabella in 1830, in
entering the river. Their captains learned the north channel and used it; and
one of their mates, Latta, often acted as pilot to new arrivals. Parrish says,
that in 1840 Captain Butler of the Sandwich Inlands, who came on board the
Lausanne to take her over the Columbia Bar, had not been in the Columbia for 27
years. Or. Anecdotes, MS., <>, 7. After coming into Baker Bay the ship
was taken in charge by Bimie as far as Astoria, end from there to Vancouver by
a Chinook Indian called George or ‘King George, ’ who knew the river tolerably
well. A great deal of time was lost waiting for this chance pilotage. See
Townsend's Nar., 180.
16 The. first account of the wreck in the
Spectator of May 18, 1848, fully exonerates the pilot; but subsequent published
statements in the same paper for July 27th, speak of the removal on charges
preferred against him and others, of secreting goods from the wreck. Reeves
went to California in the autumn in an open boat with two spars carried on the
sides as outriggers, as elsewhere mentioned. In Dec. he returned to Oregon in
charge of the Spanish bark J6ven Ouipuzcoana, which was loaded with lumber,
flour, and passengers, and sailed again for San Francisco in March. lie became
master of a small sloop, the Flora, which capsized in Suisun Bay, while
carrying a party to the mines, in May 1849, by v, hich he, a young man named
Loomis, from Oregon, and several others were drowned. Crawford's Nar., MS.,
101.
41 Howison
declared that the south channel was ‘almost closed up’ in 1846, yet in the
spring of 1847 Reeves took the brig Henry out through it, and continued to use
it during the summer. Or. Spectator, Oct. 14, 1847; Hunts Meroh. Mag., xxiii.
358, OGO-1.
48 Kelley and Slacum both advocated an
artificial moi1 th to the Columbia. 95th Cong., 3d Sens., H. Com.
Eept. 101, 41, 5G. Wilkes reported rather adversely than otherwise of its
safety. Howison charged that Wilkes’ charts were worthless, not because the
survey was not properly made, but because constant alterations were going on
which rendered frequent surveys necessary, and also the constant explorations
of resident pilots. Coast and Country, MS., 8-9. About the time of the
agitation of the Oregon Question in the United States and England, ruuch was
said of the Columbia bar. A w riter in the Edinburgh Review, July 1845,
declared the Columbia ‘inaccessible for 8 months of the year.’ Twiss, in his
Or. Ques., 370, represented the entrance to the Columbia as dangerous. A writer
in Niles’ Iieg., lxx. 284, remarked that from all that had been said and
printed on the subject for several years the impression was given that the
month of the Columbia ‘was so dangerous to navigate as to be nearly
inaccessible.’ Findlay’s Directory, i. 357-71; S. 1.
colonists objected to
having them magnified by rumor rather than alleviated by the means usual in
such cases, and while they discharged Reeves, they used the Spectator freely to
correct unfavorable impressions abroad. There were others who had been employed
as branch pilots, and who still exercised their vocation, and certain captains
who became pilots for their own or the vessels of others:49 but
there was a time following Reeves’ dismissal, when the shipping which soon
after formed a considerable Heet in the Columbia, ran risks enough to
vindicate the character of the harbor, even though as sometimes happened a
vessel was lost at the mouth of the river.
Friend,
Nov. 2,1846; Id., March 15, June 1,1847; Album Mexicana, i. 573 4; S. F.
Polynesian, iv. ] 10; S. F, Californian, Sept. 2,1848; Thornton'sOr. andCal.,
i. 305; Niles' Reg., lxix. 381 Senator Benton was the first to take up the
championship of the river, which he did in a speech delivered May 28, 1846. He
showed that while Wilkes’ narrative fostered a poor opinion of the entrance to
the Columbia, the chart accompanying the narrative showed it to be good; and
the questions he put in writing to James Blair, son of Francis P. Blair, one of
the midshipmen who surveyed it (the others were Reynolds and Knox), proved the
same. Further, he had consulted John Maginn, for 18 years pilot at New York,
and then president of the New York association of pilots, who had a bill on
pilotage before, congress, and had asked him to compare the entrance of New
York harbor with that of the Columbia, to which Maginn had distinctly returned
answer that the Columb:a had far the better
entrance in everything that constituted a good harbor. Cong. Globe., 1845-6,
915; Id., 921-2. When Vancouver surveyed the river in 1792 there existed but
one channel. In 1839 when Belcher surveyed it 2 channels existed, and Sand
Island was a mile and a half long, covering an area of 4 square miles, where in
Vancouver’s time there were 5 fathoms of water. In 1841 Wilkes found the soutli
channel closed with accretions from Clatsop Spit, and the middle sands had
changed their shape. In 1844, as we have seen, it was open, and in 1846 almost
closed again, but once more open in 1847. Subsequent government surveys have
noted many changes. In 1850 the south channel was in a new place, and ran in a
different direction from the old one; in 1852 the new channel was fully cut
out, and the bar had moved three fourths of a mile eastward with a wider
entrance, and 3 feet more water. The north channel had contracted to half its
width at the bar, with its northern line on the line of 1850. The depth was
reduced, but there was still one fathom more of water than on the south bar;
and other changes had taken place. In 1859 the south channel was again closed,
and again in 1868 discovered to be open, with a fathom more water than in the
north channel, which held pretty nearly its former position. Fror.1 these
observations it is manifest that the north channel maintains itself with but
slight changes, while the south chan nel is subject to variations, and the
middle sands and Clatsop and Chinook spits are constantly shifting. Report of
Bvt. Major Gillespie, Engineer Corps, U. S. A., Dec. 18, 1S78, in Daily
Astorian.
49 Captain N. Crosby is spoken of as taking
vessels in and out of the river. This gentleman became thoroughly identified
with the interests of Oregon, and especially of Portland, and of shipping, and
did much to establish a trade with China.
In the matter of
interior transportation there was not in 1848 much improvement over the Indian
canoe or the fur company’s barge and bateau. The maritime industries seem
rather to liavo been neglected in early times on the north-west coast
notwithstanding its natural features seemed to suggest the usefulness if not
the necessity of seamanship and nautical science. Since the building of the
little thirty-ton schooner Dolly at Astoria in 1811 for the Pacific Fur Company,
few vessels of any description had been constructed in Oregon. Kelley related
that he saw in 1834 a ship-yard at Vancouver where several vessels had been
built, and where ships were repaired/0 which is likely enough, but
they were small and clumsy affairs,61 and few probably ever went to
sea. Some barges and a sloop or two are mentioned by the earliest settlers as
on the rivers carrying wheat from Oregon City to Vancouver, which served also
to convey families of settlers down the Columbia.52 The Star of
Oregon built in the Willamette in 1841, was the second vessel belonging to
Americans constructed in these waters.
The first vessel constructed
by an individual owner, or for colonial trade, was a sloop of twenty-five tons,
built in 1845 by an Englishman named Cook, and called the Calapooya. I have
also mentioned that she proved of great service to the immigrants of that year
on the Columbia and Lower Willamette. The first keel- boats above the falls
were owned by Robert Newell, and built in the winter of 1845-6, to ply between
Ore
50 "Sth Cong., 3d Scss., II. Snp.
Rept. 101, 59.
slThe
schooner (not the bark) Vancouver was built at Vancouver in 1S29.
She was about 150
tons burden, and poorly constructed; and was lost on Rose
Spit at the north end
of the Queen Charlotte Island in 1834. Captain Dun
can ran her aground
in open day. The crew got ashore on the mainland, and reached Fort fiimpson,
Nass River, in June. Roberts’ Recollections, MS., 43.
62Mack's
Or., MS., 2; Ebberts’ Trapper's Life,, MS., 44; Or. Spectator, April 10, 1S4G.
There is mention in the Spectator of June 25, 1846, of the launching at
Vancouver of The Prince of Walt*, a vessel of 70 feet keel, 18 feet beam, 14
feet below, with a tonnage register of 74. She toj constructed
by the company's
ship-builder, Scarth, and christened by Miss Douglas,
escorted by Captain
Baillie of the Modtste, amidst a large concourse of people.
gon City and
Champoeg, the Mogul and the Ben Franklin. From the fact that the fare was one
dollar in orders, and fifty cents in cash, may be seen the estimation in which
the paper currency of the time was held. Other similar craft soon followed,63
and were esteemed important additions to the comfort of travellers, as well as
an aid to business. Other transportation than that by water there was none,
except the slow-moving ox-wagon.54 Stephen H. L. Meek advertised to
take freight or passengers from Oregon City to Tualatin plains by such a
conveyance, the wagon being a covered one, and the team consisting of eight
oaten.** Medorum Crawford transported goods or passengers around the falls at
Oregon City for a number of years with ox-teams.68
The men in the valley
from the constant habit of being so much on horseback became very good riders.
The Canadian young men and women were especially fine equestrians and sat their
lively and often vicious Cayuse horses as if part of the animal; and on Sunday,
when in gala dress, they made a striking appearance, being handsome in form as
well as graceful riders.67 The Americans also adopted the custom of
‘loping’ practised by the horsemen of the Pacific coast, which gave the rider
so long and easy a swing, and carried him so fast over the ground. They also
became skilful in throwing the lasso and catching wild cattle. Indeed, so
profitable was cattle-raising, and so
6JOr.
Spectator, May28,1846. TheGreat Western vaninoppositiontoNewell’s boatsinMay;
and two other clinker-built boats were launched in the same month to run
between Oregon City and Portland. In June following I notice mention of the
Salt liiver Packet, Captain Gray, plying between Oregon and Astoria with
jiassengers. Id., June 11, 1840; Brown's Will. Valley, MS., 30; Bacon's Merc.
Life Or. City, MS., 12; Weed’s Queen Charlotte I. Exped., MS., 3.
51 Brown, in his Willamette Valley, MS., 6,
says that before 184!) there was not a span of horses harnessed to a wagon in
the territory; and that the first set of harness he saw was brought from
California. On account of the roadless condition of the country at its first
settlement, horses were little used in harness, but it is certain that many
horse-teams eame across the plains whose harnesses may "having been hanging
unused, or made into gearing for riding-animala or for horses doing farm work
53 Or. Spectator, Oct. 29, 1840.
’6
Crawford’s Missionaries, MS., 13-15.
Early
Days, MS., 31.
agreeable the free
life of the herdsman or owner of
o '
stock, who flitted
over the endless green meadows, clad in fringed buckskin, with Spanish spurs
jingling on his heels, and a crimson silk scarf tied about the waist,58
that to aspiring lads the life of a vaquero offered attractions superior to
those of soil-stirring.
He who would a wooing
go, if unable to return the same day, carried his blankets, and at night threw
himself upon the floor and slept till morning, when he might breakfast before
leave-taking.
If there were none of
the usual means of travel, neither were there mail facilities till 1848.
Letters were carried by private persons, who received pay or not according to
circumstances. The legislature of 1845 in December enacted a law establishing a
general post-otfice at Oregon City, with W. Gr. TVault59 as
postmaster-general, but the funds of the provisional government were too scanty
and the settlements too scattered to make it possible to carry out the intention
of the act.00
S8 If we may
believe some of these same youths, no longer young, they werw not always so
gayly apparelled and mounted. Says one: ‘We rode with a raw hide saddle,
bridle, and lasso. The bit was Spanish, the stirrups wooden, the sinch
horse-hair, and over all these, rider and all, was a blanket with a hole in it
through which the head of the rider protruded.’ Quite a suitable costume
foriainy weather. McMinnville Reporter, Jan. 4, 1877.
\Y. G. T'Vault was
born in Arkansas, whence he removed to Illinois in 1843, and to Oregon in 1844.
lie was a lawyer, energetic and adventurous, foremost in many exploring
expeditions, and also a strong partisan with southem-democraey proclivities. He
possessed literary abilities and Lad something to do with early newspapers,
first with the Spectator, as president of the Oregon printing association, and
as its first editor; afterward as editor ot the Table Rock Sentinel, the first
newspaper in southern Oregon; and later of The fntellir/encer. lie was elected
to the legislature in 1846. After the establishment of the territory he was
again elected to the legislature, being speaker of the house in 1858. He was
twice prosecuting attorney of the 1st judicial district, comprising Jackson
County, to which he had xemoved after the discovery of gold in Rogue River
Valley, and held other public positions. When the mining excitement was at its
height in Idaho, he was practising his profession and editing the Index in
Silver City. Toward the close ot his life, he deteriorated through the
influence of his political associations, and lost casto among his
fellow-pioneers. He died of small-pox at Jacksonville in 18G9. Daily Salem
Unionist, Feb. I860; Deady's Scrap-hook, 122; Jacksonville, Or., Sentinel, Feb.
0, 18G9; Dallas Polk Co. Signal, Feb. 1G, 1869.
60 By the post-office act, postage on letters
of a single sheet conveyed for a distance not exceeding 30 miles was fixed at
15 cents; over and not exceeding
SO miles, 25 cents; over and not exceeding 200
miles, 30 cents; 200 miles, 50 cents. Newspapers, each 4 cents. The
postmaster-general was to receive 10
Tlie first contract
let was to Hugh Bums in the spring of 184G, who was to carry the mail once to
Weston, in Missouri, for fifty cents a single sheet. After a six months trial
the postmaster-general had become assured that the office was not remunerative,
the expense of sending a semi-monthly mail to each county south of the Columbia
having been borne chiefly by private subscription; and advertised that the mail
to the different points would be discontinued, but that should any important
news arrive at Oregon City, it would be despatched to the several offices. The
post-office law, however, remained in force as far as practicable but no
regular mail service was inaugurated until the autumn of 1847, when the United
States department gave Oregon a deputy-postmaster in John M. Shively, and a
special agent in Cornelius Gilliam. The latter immediately advertised for proposals
for carrying the mail from Oregon City to Astoria and back, from the same to
Mary River61 and back, including intermediate offices, and from the
same to Fort Vancouver, Nisqually, and Admiralty Inlet. From this time the
history of the mail service belongs to another period.
The social and
educational affairs of the colony had by 1848 begun to assume shape, after the
fashion of older communities. The first issue of the Spectator contained a
notice for a meeting of masons to be held the 21st of February 1846, to adopt
measures for obtaining a charter for a lodge. The notice was issued by Joseph
Hull, P. G. Stewart, and William P. Dougherty. A charter was issued by the grand
lodge of Missouri on the 19th of October 1846, to Multnomah lodge, No. 84, in
Oregon City. This charter
per cent of all
moneys by him received ami paid out. The act 'was made conformable to the
United States law's regulating the. post-office department, .so far as they
were applicable to the condition of Oregon. Or. Spectator, Feb, 5, 1846. See
T’Vault's, instructions to postinaoters, in Id., March 5, 1846.
fcl Marj
River signified to w litre Corvallis now stands. When that town was hrst laid
off it was called Marysville.
was brought across
the plains in an emigrant wagon in 1848, intrusted to the care of P. B.
Cornwall, who turning off to California placed it in charge of Orriu Kellogg,
who brought it safely to Oregon City and delivered it to Joseph Hull. Under
this authority Multnomah lodge was opened September 11, 1848, Joseph Hull, W.
M.; W. P. Dougherty, S. W., and T. C. Cason, J. W. J. C. Ainsworth was the
first worshipful master elected under this charter.62
A dispensation for
establishing an Odd Fellows lodge was also applied for in 1846, but not
obtained till 1852.63 The Multnomah circulating library was a
chartered institution, with branches in the different counties; and the members
of the Falls Association, a literary society which seems to have been a part of
the library scheme, contributed to the Spectator prose and verse of no mean
quality.
The small and
scattered population and the scarcity of school-books were serious drawbacks to
education. Continuous arrivals, and the printing of a large edition of
Webster's Elementary Spelling Booh by the Oregon printing association, removed
some of the obstacles to advancement04 in the common schools. Of
private schools and academies there were already several besides the Oregon
Institute and the Catholic schools. Of the latter there were St Joseph65
for
62 Address of Grand Master Chadwick, in
Yrehct Union, Jan. 17, 1874; Seattle Tribune, Aug. 27, 1875; Olympia
Transcript, Aug. 2, 1875.
6j This was
on account of the miscarriage of the warrant, which was sent to Oregon in 1847
by way of Honolulu, but which did not reach there, the person to whom it was
sent, Gilbert Watson, dying at the Wands in 1848. A. V. Fraser, who was sent
out by the government in the following year to supervise the revenue service on
the Pacific coast, was then appointed a special commissioner to establish the
order in California and Oregon; but the gold discoveries gave him so much to do
that he did not get to Oregon, and it was not until 3 years afterward that
Chemeketa lodge No. 1 was established at Salem. The first lodge at Portland was
instituted in 1853. E. M. Bamum’s Early Hist. Odd Fellowship in Or., in Jour,
of Proceedings of OramI Lodje
I. 0. 0. F. for 1877, 2075-84; H. H. Gilfrey
in same, 2085; C. I). Moore’s Historical Review of Odd Fellowship in Or., 25th
Anniversary of Chemeketa Lodge, Dec. 1877; S. F. Hew Age, Jan. 7, 1865;
Constitution, etc., l’ortland, 1871.
64 S. I. Friend, Sept. 1847, 140; Or.
Foectator, Feb. 18, 1847.
65 Named after Joseph La Roque of I’a^is who
furnished the funds for its erection. UeSmet’s Or. Miss., 41.
boys at St Paul on
French Prairie, and two schools for girls, one at Oregon City and one at St
Mary, taught by the sisters of Notre Dame. An academy known as Jefferson
Institute was located in La Creolo Valley near the residence of Nathaniel Ford,
who was one of the trustees. William Beagle and James Howard were the others,
and J. E. Lyle principal. On the Tualatin plains llev. Harvey Clark had opened
a school which in 1846 had attained to some promise of success, and in 1847 a
board of trustees was established. Out of this germ developed two years later
the Tualatin Academy, incorporated in September 1849, which developed into the
Pacific University in 1853-4.
The history of this
institution reflects credit upon its founders in more than an ordinary degree.
Ilar- vey Clark, it will be remembered, was one of the independent
missionaries, with no wealthy board at his back from whose funds he could
obtain a few hundred or thousand of dollars. When he failed to find missionary
work among the natives, he settled on the Tualatin plains upon a land-claim
where the academic town of Forest Grove now stands, and taught as early as 1842
a few children of the other settlers. In 1846 there came to Oregon, by the
southern route, enduring all the hardships of the belated immigration, a woman
sixty-eiglit years of age, with her children and grandchildren, Mrs Tabitha
Brown.66 Her kind heart was pained at the number of orphans left to
charity by the sickness among
Tal.itha Moffat Brown
was boru in the town of Brinfield, Mass., May 1, 1780. Her father was Dr Joseph
Moffat. At the age of i'j she mar- Rev. Clark Brown of Stonington, Conn., of
the Episcopal church, hi the changes of his ministerial life Brown removed to
Maryland, where he died early, leaving his widow with 3 children surronnded by
an illiterate people. She opened a school and for 8 years continued to teach,
supporting her children until the 2 boys were apprenticed to trades, and
assisting them to start in business. The family finally moved to Missouri. Here
her children prospered, but one of the sons. Orris Brown, visited Oregon in
1843, returning to Missouri in 1845 with Dr White and emigrating with his
mother and family in 1S46. His sister and brother-in-law, Virgil K. 1’iingle,
also accompanied him ; and it is from a letter of Mrs Pringle that this sketch
has been obtained.
BENEVOLENT
MEN AND WOMEN. 33
the immigrants of
1847, with no promise of proper care or training. She spoke of the matter to Harvey
Clark who asked her what she would do. “ If I had the means I would establish
myself in a comfortable home, receive all poor children, and be a mother to
them,” said Mrs Brown. “ Are you in earnest?” asked Clark. “Yes.” “Then I will
try with you, and see what can be done.”
There was a log
meeting-house on Clark’s land, and in this building Mrs Brown was placed, and
the work of charity began, the settlers contributing such articles of
furnishing as they could spare. The plan was to receive any children to be
taught; those whose parents could afford it, to pay at the rate of five dollars
a week for board, care, and tuition, and those who had nothing, to come free.
In 1848 there were about forty children in the school, of whom the greater part
were boarders;6, Mrs Clark teaching and Mrs Brown having charge of
the family, which was healthy and happy, and devoted to its guardian. In a
short time Rev. Cushing Eells was employed as teacher.
I’here came to Oregon
about this time Rev. George H. Atkinson, under the auspices of the Home Missionary
Society of Boston.63 He had in view the estab-
67‘In 1851,’
writes Mrs Brown, ‘I had 40 in my family at §2.50 per week; and mixed with my
own hands 3,423 pounds of flour in less than 5 months.’ Yet she was a small
woman, had been lame many years, and was nearly 70 years of age. She died m
1S57. See Or. Aryus, May 17, 1856; Portland Went Shore, Dec., 1879.
63Atkinson
was bom in Newbury, Vermont. He was related to Josiah Little of Massachusetts.
One of his aunts, bom in 17G0, Mrs Anne Harris, lived to within 4 months of the
age of 100 years, and remembered well the feeling caused in Newbury port one
Sunday morning by the tidings of the death of the great preacher Whitefield;
and also the events of the French empire and American revolution. Mr Atkinson
left Boston, with his wife, in October 1847, on board the bark Scimoset,
Captain Hollis, and reached the Hawaiian Islands in the following February, v,
hence he sailed again for the Columbia in the Hudson’s Bay Company’s bark C'ouiitz,
Captain Weying- ton, May 23d, arriving at Vancouver on the 20th of June 1848.
He at once entered upon the duties of his profession, organized the Oregon
association of Congregational ministers, also the Oregon tract society, and
joined in the effort to found a school at. Forest Grove. He corresponded for a
time with tne Home Missionary, a Boston publication, from which I have gathered
some fragments of the history of Oregon from 1848 to 1851, during the heightof
the gold excitement. Mr Atkinson became pastor of the Congregational chnrch in
Oregon City in 1853; and wasfor many years the pastorof therirst Congregational
Hisi. Ob., Vol. II. 3
lishment of a college
under the patronage of the Congregational church and finding his brethren in
Oregon about to erect a new building for the school at Tualatin plains, and to
organize a board of trustees, an arrangement was entered into by which the
orphan school wras placed in the hands of the trustees as the
foundation of the proposed college, which at first aspired only to be called
the Tualatin academy.
Clark gave two
hundred acres of his land-claim for a college and town-site, and Mrs Brown gave
a lot belonging to her, and five hundred dollars earned by herself.
Subsequently she presented a bell to the Congregational church erected on the
towu-site; and immediately before her death gave her own house and lot to the
Pacific University. She was indeed earnest and honest in her devotion to
Christian charity; may her name ever be held in holy remembrance.
Mr Clark also sold
one hundred and fifty acres of his remaining land for the benefit of the
institution of which he and Mrs Brown were the founders. It is said of Clark, “
he lived in poverty that he might do good to others.” He died March 24, 1858,
at Forest Grove, being still in the prime of life.69 What was so
well begun before 1848 continued to grow with the development of the country,
and under the fostering care of new friends as well as old, became one of the
leading independent educational institutions of the north-west coast.70
church in Portland.
Hi* health failing about 1866, he gave way to younger men; but he continued to
labor as a missionary of religion and temperance in newer fields as his
strength permitted. Nor did he neglect other fields of labor in the interest of
Oregon, contributing many valuable articles on the general features and
resources of the country . Added to all was an unspotted reputation, the
memory of which will be ever cherished by his descendants, 2 sons and a
daughter, the latter married to Frank Warren jun. of Portland.
_ m
Evans Hist. Or.,IIS., 341; Gray'* Hid. Or., 231; Veady’s Hist. Or.,'SIB., 54;
Or. Argus, April 10, 1858. Clark’s daughter married George II. Durham of
Portland.
70 The first board of trustees was composed
of Rev. Harvey Clark, Hiram Cla^k, Rev. Lewis Thompson, Vv. H. Gray, Alvin T.
Smith, James M. Moore, Osborne Russell, nd G. H. Atkinson. The land given by
Clark was laid out in blocks and lots, except 20 acres reserved for a campus,
the half of which was donated by Re\. E. AValker. A building was erected during
the reign of high prices, in 1850-1, which cost, unfinished, 87,000; §5,000 of
which
THE PACIFIC
UNIVERSITY.
33
A private school for
young ladies was kept at Oregon City by Mrs X. M. Thornton, wife of Judge
Thornton. It opened February 1, 1847. The pupils were taught “ all the branches
usually comprised in a thorough English education, together with plain and
fancy needle-work, drawing, and painting in mezzotints and water-colors.”71
Mrs Thornton’s school was patronized by Janies Douglas and other persons of
distinction in the country. The first effort made at establishing a
common-school board was early >n 1847 in
came from tie sale of
lota, and by contributions. In 1852 Mr Atkinson went east to solicit aid from
the college society, which had promised to endow to some extent a college in
Oregon. The Pacific University was placed the ninth on their list, with an
annual sum granted of §300 to support a permanent professor. From other
sources he received §S00 in money, and §700 in books for a library. Looking
about for a professor, a young theological student, S. H. Harsh, son of Rev. Dr
Marsh of Burlington College, was secured as principal, and with him, and the
funds and books, Mr Atkinson returned in 1853. In the mean time J. M. Keeler,
fresh from Union college, Schenectady, Xew York, had taken charge of the
academy as principal, and had formed a preparatory class before the arrival of
Marsh. The people began to take a lively interest in the university, and in
1854 subscribed in lands and money $0, 500, and partially pledged $3,500 more.
On the 13th of April 1854 Marsh was chosen president, but was not formally
inaugurated until August 21, 1855. This year Keeler went to Portland, and E.
1). Sliattuck took his place as principal of the academy which also embraced a
class of young ladies. The institution struggled on, but in 1856-7 some of its
most advanced students left it to go to the better endowed eastern colleges.
This led the trustees and president to make a special effort, and Marsh went to
Hew York to secure further aid, leaving the university department in the charge
of Rev. II. Lyman, professor of mathematics, who associated with him Rev. C.
Eells. Tlio help received from the college society and others in the east,
enabled the university to improve the general regime of the university. The
first graduate was Harvey W. Scott, who in 1863 took liis final degree. In 1SGG
there were
4 graduates. In Jane 1807 the president
having again visited the east for further aid, over §25,000 was subscribed and
2 additional professors sccured: G. H. Collier, professor of natural sciences,
and J. W. Marsh, professor of languages. In May 1808 there were £44,303.60
invested funds, and a library of 5,000 volumes. A third visit to the east in
1SG9 secured over $20,000 for a presidential endowment fund. The university had
in 1876, in funds and other property, $85,000 for its support. The buildings
are however cf a poor character for college purposes, being built of wood, and
not well constructed, and $100,000 would be required to put the university in
good condition. President Marsh died in 1S79, and was succeeded by J. 11.
Herrick. Though founded by Congregationalists, the Pacifio University was not
controlled by them in a sectarian spirit; and its professors were allowed full
liberty in their teaching. Forest Grove, the seat oi this institution, is a
pretty village nestled among groves of oaks and firs near the Coast Range
foot-hills. Centennial Year Hist. Pacific University, in Portland Oregonian,
Feb. 12, 1S7G; Victor's Or. and Wash., 189-90; Or. Argus, Sept. 1, 1855;
Deady's Hist. Or., MS., 54.
71 Mrs Thornton wrote to the S. I. Friend
that she was very comfortably settled in a log-house, walked a mile to her school
every morning, and was never more contented in her life.
Tualatin County, Rev.
.T. S. Griffin secretary;72 but no legislative action was taken
until a later period. Besides the spelling-book printed in 1847, Henry H.
Evarts printed an almanac calculated for Oregon and the Sandwich Islands.73
It was printed at the Spectator office by W. P. Hudson.
Professional men were
stid comparatively rare, preachers of different denominations outnumbering the
other professions.74 In every neighborhood there was preaching on
Sundays, the services being held in the most commodious dwellings, or in a
school-house if there was one. There were as yet few churches. Oregon City,
being the metropolis, had three, Catholic, Methodist, and Congregationalist.75
There was a Methodist church at Hillsboro, and another at Salem, and the
Catholic Church at St Paul’s, which completed the list in 1848.
The general condition
of society in the colony was, aside from the financial and Indian troubles
which I have fully explained, one of general contentment. Both Burnett and
Minto declare in their accounts of those times that notwithstanding the
hardships all
” Or. Spectator, Feb.
IS, 1847.
«.?. I. Friend, Feb.
1848; Thornton’s Hist. Or., MS., 27.
7JI find in
the S, I. Friend, Sept, 1847, the following computation: Inhabitants (white),
7,000. This, according to immigration statistics, was too small an estimate.
About 400 were Catholics. Methodist* were most numerous. There were 6
itinerating Methodist Episcopal preachers, and 8 or 10 local preachers, besides
2 Protestant Methodist clergymen. Baptist missionaries, 2; Congregational or
Presbyterian clergymen, 4; and several of tlie Christian denomination known as
Campbellites; regular physicians, 4; educated lawyers, 4; quacks in both profession-s
more numerous. 1 have already mentioned the accidental death of I)r Long by
drowning in the Willamette at Oregon City, lie being at the time territorial
secretary . He was succeeded in practice and in office by Dr Frederick Prigg,
elected by the legislature in December 1846. He also died an accidental death
by falling from the rocky bluff into the river, in October 1S49. He was said to
be a man if fine abilities and education, but intemperate in his habits. Or.
Spectator, Nov. 2, 1849; Johnson’s Cal. and Or., 274.
73Deady’s
Hist. Or., MS., 71. Harvey Clark first organized the Congregational church at
Oregon City in 1844. Atkinson’s Address, 3; Oregon City Enterprise, March 24,
1876. In 1848 Rev. Horace Lyman, with his wife, left Boston to join Atkinson in
Oregon. He did not arrive until late in 1849. He founded the first
Congregational church in Portland, but subsequently became a professor at the
Pacific University. Home, Mmmiary, xxii. 43-4; Or. Spectator, Nov. 1, 1849.
QUALITY OF THE
POPULATION.
37
endured, there were
few wlio did not rejoice sincerely that they had cast their lot in Oregon.’16
Hospitality and good-fellowship prevailed; the people were temperate77
and orderly; and crime was still rare.7'
Amusements were few
and simple, and hardly necessary in so free and unconventional a community,
except as a means of bringing the people together.
16Minto, in
Camp Fire Orations, MS., 17; Burnett's Recollections, MS., i. 170: White’s
Emigration to Or., MS., 11; Simpson’s Nar., i 170.
17 The missionaries, the women of Oregon
city, and friends of temperance generally, were still laboring to effect
prohibition of the traffic in spirituous liquors. The legislature of 1847
passed an amendment to the organic law, enacting that the word ‘prohibit’ should
be inserted in the place of ‘regulate’ in the Gth section, which read that the
legislature should have power to ‘regulate the introduction, manufacture, and
sale of ardent spirits.’ Or. Laws, 1843-9, 44. No cnange could be made in the
organic law without submitting it to the vote of the people at the ensuing
election, which being done, a majority were for prohibition, (f rover’s Or.
Archives, 273—4. When the matter again came before the colonial legislature at
its last session, that part of the governor’s message referring to prohibition
was laid on the table, on motion of Jesse Applegate. A bill to amend the
organic laws, as above provided, was subsequently introduced by Samuel It.
Thurston, but was rejected by vote, on motion of Applegate. Id., 293. Applegate’s
independent spirit revolted at prohibition, besides which he took a personal
gratification Irom securing the rejection of a measure emanating from a
missionary source. Surely all good people would be naturally averse to hearing
an uncultivated savage who was full of bad whiskey, singing in Chinook:
‘ N ah! six, potlach
blue lu (blue ruin),
Nika ticka, blue lu,
Hiyu blue lu,
Ilyas olo,
Potlach blue lu.1
Which freely
translated would run:
‘ Halli ■! friend,
frive me some whiskey;
I vant whiskey, plenty of whiskey;
Very thirsty; give mo
some whiskey.1
Moss’
Pioneer Times, MS., 5G-7.
,s In the
Spectator of July 9, 1846, there is mention of an encounter with knives between
Kd. Robinson and John Watson. Robinson was arrested and brought before Justice
Andrew Ilood, and bound over in the suui of $200. In the same paper of July 23d
is an item concerning the arrest of Duncan McLean on suspicion of having
murdered a Mr Owens. An affray occurred at Salem in August 1847 between John H.
Bosworrh and Ezekiel Popham, in which the latter was killed, or suddenly
dropped dead from a disease of the heart. Id., Sept. 2, 1847. In 184S a man
named Leonard who had pawned his rille to one Arim, on Sauv^ Island, went to
recover without redeeming it, when Arim pursued him with hostile intent.
Leonard ran until he came to a fallen tree too large for him to scale in haste,
and finding Arim close upon him he turned, and in his excitement fired, killing
Arim. Leonard was arrested and discharged, there being no witnesses to the
affair. Arim was a bully, and Leonard a- small and usually quiet man, who
declared he had no intention of killing Arim, but fired accidentally, not
knowing the rifle was loaded. Leonard left the country soon after for the
gold-mines and never returned. Crav ford's Nar., MS., 107. I cite these
examples rather to show the absence than the presence of crime.
Besides
eliurcli-going, attending singing-scliool,79 and visiting among the
neighbors there were few assemblages. There was occasionally a ball, which was
not regarded by the leading Protestant citizens as the most unquestionable mode
of cultivating social relations. The Canadian families loved dancing, and
balls were not the more respectable for that reason;80 but the
dancers cared little for the absence of the elite. Taking them all in all, says
Burnett, " I never saw so fine a population;” and other writers claimed
that though lacking in polish the Oregon people were at this period morally and
socially the equal of those of any frontier state.81 Prom the peculiar
conditions of an isolated colony like that of Oregon, early marriages became
the rule. Young men required homes, and young women were probably glad to
escape from the overfilled hive of the parental roof to a domicile of their
own. However that may have been, girls were married at any age from fourteen
upward, and in some instances earlier;82 while no widow, whether
79 .Tames Morris, in Camp Fire Orations,
MS., 20, says that the first sing- iug-sehool in the country was taught by a Mr
Johnson, and that he went to it dressed in a suit of buckskin dyed black, which
looked well, and did not stretch out over the knees like the uncolored skin.
80 Mots' Pioneer Times, MS., 32. In
Minto’s Early Days, MS., and Mrs Minto’s Female. Pioneering, MS., there are
many pictures of the social condition of the colony. The same in Camp Fire
Orations, MS., a report by my stenographer, of short speeches made at an
evening session of the pioneers at their annual meeting in 1878. All the
speakers except Mrs Minto declared they had enjoyed emigrating and pioneering.
She thought both very hard on females; though throughout all she conducted
herself as one of the noblest among women.
fI Home
Missionary, xx. 213-14.
P2 As a
guide to descent in the pioneer families I here affix a list of the marriages
published iu the Spectator from the beginning of 1S46 to the close of 1848.
Though these could not have been all, it may be presumed that people of social
standing would desire to publish this momentous event: 1840—Feb. 25, Samuel Campbell
to Miss Chellessa Chrisman; March 29, Henry Sewell to Miss Mary Ann Jones
Gerish; April 2, Stephen Staats to Miss Cordelia Forrest; April 12, Silas
Haight to Mrs Rebecca Ann Spalding; May 4, Pierre Bounin to Miss Louise
Rondeau; May 10, Isaac Staats to Miss Orlena Maria Williams; May 10, Henry
Marlin to Miss Emily Hipes; June 4, David Hill to Mrs Lucinda Wilson; June 14,
J. W. Nesmith to Miss Caroline Goff; June 17, Alanson Hinman to Miss Martha
Elizabeth Jones Gerish; June 28, Robert Newell to Miss Rebecca Newman; July 2,
Mitchel Whitlock to Miss Malvina Engle; July 4, William C. Dement to Miss
Olhia Johnson; .T. B. Jackson to Miss Sarah Parker; July 25, John G. Campbell
to Mis* Rothilda E. Buck; July 26, Joseph Watt to Miss Sarah Craft; Aug.
young or middle-aged,
long remained unmarried. This mutual dependence of the sexes was favorable to
the morals and the growth of the colony; and rich and poor alike had their
houses well tilled with children.
But what of the
diseases which made such havoc during the early missionary occupation?
Strangely enough they had disappeared as the natives died or were removed to a
distance from the white race. Notwithstanding the crowded state of the
settlers every winter after the arrival of another immigration, and notwithstanding
insufficient food and clothing in many instances, there was little sickness and
few deaths. Dr White, after six years of practice, pronounced the country to be
the healthiest and the climate one of the most salubrious in the world.83
As to the temperature, it seems to have varied with the different seasons and
years. Daniel Lee tells of plucking a strawberry-blossom on Cliristmas-day
1840, and the
2, Sidney Smith to Miss Miranda Bayley; Aug.
16, Jehu Davis to Miss Mar- garette Jane Moreland; Sept. 1, H. H. Kyde to Miss
Henrietta Holman; Oct. 26, Henry Buxton to Miss Rosaunah Woolly; Nov. 19,
William P. Dougherty to Miss Mary Jane Chambers; Nov. 24, John P. Brooks to
Miss Mary Ann Thiimas. 1847—Jan. 21, W. II. Rets to Miss Amanda M. E, Hall; Jan.
25, Erancis Topair to Miss Angelique Tontaine; Feb. 9, Peter H. Hatch to Miss
S. C. Locey (Mrs Charlotte Sophia Hatch, ■who came
to Oregon ■with her
husband by sea in 1843, died June 30, 1846); April 18, Absalom E. Hedges to
Miss Elizabeth Jane Barlow; April 21, Joseph B. Rogers to Miss Letitia Elett;
Henry Knowland to Mrs Sarah Knowland; April 22, N. K, Sitton to Miss Priscilla
A. Rogers; June 15, Jeremiah Rowland to Mrs Mary Ann Sappington; July 8, John
Minto to Miss Martha Vnn Morrison; Aug. 12, T. P. Powers to Mrs Mary M.
Newton—this was the 'Mrs Newton whoso husband was murdered by an Indian in the
Umpqua Valley in 1046; Oct. 14, W. J. Herren to Miss Eveline Hall; Oct. 24, 1).
H. Good to Mi's Mary E. Dunbar; Oct. 29, Owen M. Mills to Miss Priscilla Blair;
Dec. 2S, Charles Putnam to Miss Roselle Applegate. 184S-—Jan. 5, Caleb Rodgers
to Miss Mary Jane Courtney; Jan. 20, M. M. McCarver to Mrs .Julia Ann Buckalew:
Jan. 27, George M. Baker to MissNancy Duncan; Jan. 30, George Sigler to Miss
Lovir.a Dunlap; Feb. 19, R. V. Short to Miss Mary Geer; March 18, Moses K.
Kellogg to Mrs Elizabeth Sturges; April 16, John Jewett to Mrs Harriet
Kimball—Mrs Kimball was the widow of one of the victims of the Waiilatpu
massacre; May 4, John R. Jackson to Mrs Matilda N. Coonse; May 22, John H.
Bosworth to Miss Susan B. Looney; June 28, Andrew Smith to Mrs Sarah Elizabeth
rainier; July 2, Edward N. White to Miss Catherine Jane Burkhart; July 28,
William Meek to Miss Mary Luel- ling; Dec. 10, C. Davis to Miss Sarah Ann Johnson;
Dec. 26, William Logan to Miss Issa Chrisman. The absence of any marriage
notice for the 4 months from the last of July to the 10th of December may be
accounted for by tlio rush of tht unmarried men to the. gold-mines about this
time.
63 Ten Years in Or., 220.
weather continued
warm throughout the winter; but on the 12th of December 1842 the Columbia was
frozen over, and the ice remained in the river at the Dalles till the middle of
March, and the mercury was 6" below zero in that month, wh’le in the Willamette
Valley the cold was severe. On the other hand, in the winter of 1843 there was
a heavy rainfall, and a disastrous freshet in the Willamette in February. The
two succeeding winters were mild and rainy,84 fruit forming on the
trees in April; and again in the latter part of the winter of 1846-7 the
Columbia was frozen over at Vancouver so that the officers of the Modeste
played a curling match on the ice. The winter of 1848-9 was also cold, with ice
in the Columbia. The prevailing temperature was mild, however, when taken year
by year, and the soil being generally warm, the vegetables and fruits raised by
the first settlers surprised them by their size and quality.85 If
any fault was to be found with the climate it was on the score of too many
rainy or cloudy days; but when by comparison with the drier climate of
California it was found to ;nsure greater regularity of crops the
farming community at least were satisfied.86 The cattle- raisers
had most reason to dread the peculiarities of the Oregon climate, which by its
general mildness tlattered them into neglecting to provide winter food for
their stock, and when an occasional season of snow and ice came upon them they
died by hundreds; but this was partly the fault of the improvident owner.
The face of nature
here was beautiful; pure air from the ocean and the mountains; loveliness in
the
111 (Hyman's
2\ote Book, MS., 82-98; Palmer’s Journal, 119.
A potato is spoken of
which weighed 3j- lbs., and another lbs.; -while turnips sometimes weighed from
10 to 30 lbs. Blanchet raised one of 172 lba.
86 The term
‘web-foot’ had not yet been applied to the Oregonians. It became current in
mining times, anil is said to have originated in a sarcastic remark of a
commercial traveller, who had spent the night in a farm-house on the marshy
banks of the Long Tom, in what is now Lane County, that children should be
provided with webbed feet in that country. ‘We have thought of that,’ returned
the mistress of the house, at the same time displaying to the astonished visitor
her baby’n feet with webs between the toes. The story lost nothing in the
telling, and Web-foot became the pseudonjme for Oregonian.
THE
COMMONWEALTH ESTABLISHED. 41
valleys dignified by
grandeur in the purple ranges which bordered them, overtopped here and there by
snowy peaks whose nearly extinct craters occasionally threw out a puff of smoke
or ashy flame,87 to remind the beholder of the igneous building of
the dark cliffs overhanging the great river. The whole country was remarkably
free from poisonous reptiles and insects. Of all the serpent class the
rattlesnake alone was armed with deadly fangs, and these were seldom seen
except in certain localities in the western portion of Oregon. Even the
house-fly was imported,88 coming like many plants, and like the bee,
in the beaten trail of white men.
Such was the country
rescued from savagism by this virtuous and intelligent people; and such their
general condition with regard to improvement, trade, education, morals,
contentment, and health, at the period when, after having achieved so much
without aid from congress, that body took the colony under its wing and assumed
direction of its affairs.
81 Mount St Helen and Mount Baker were in a
state of eruption in March 1850, according to the Spectator of the 21st of that
month. The same paper of Oct. 18, 1840, records a startling explosion in the
region of Mount Hood, when the waters of Silver Creek stopped running for 24
hours, and also the destruction of all the fish in the stream by poisonous
gases.
hs McClane
says that when he came to Oregon there wax not a fly of any kind, but fleas
were plenty. First Wagon Train, MS., 14. W. H. Hector has said the same. Lewis
and Clarke, and 1’arker, expiate upon the fleas about the Indian camps. .
CHAPTER II.
EFFECT OF THE
CALIFORNIA GOLD DISCOVERY.
1848-1849.
The
Magic Tower of Gold—A New Oregon—Arrival of Newell— Sharp Traffic—The Discovert
Announced—The Stampede Southward—Overland Companies — Lassen’s Immigrants —
Hancock’s Manuscript--Character of the Oregonians in California—Tiieir General
Success—Revolutions in Trade and Society—Arrival of Vessels—Increase in the
Trices of Troducts—Change of Currency—Tub Question of a Mint—Private
Coinage—Influx of Foreign Silver—Effect on Society—Legislation—Immigration.
And now
begins Oregon’s age of gold, quite a different affair from Oregon’s golden
age, which we must look for at a later epoch. The Oregon to which Lane was
introduced as governor was not the same from which his companion Meek had
hurried in poverty and alarm one year before. Let us note the change, and the
cause, before recording the progress of the new government.
On the 31st of July
1848, the little schooner Honolulu, Captain Newell, from San Francisco,
arrived in the Columbia, and began to load not only with provisions, but with
shovels, picks, and pans, all that could be bought in the limited market. This
created no surprise, as it was known that Americans were emigrating to
California who would be in want of these things, and the captain of the schooner
was looked upon as a sharp trader who knew how to turn an honest penny. When he
had obtained everything to his purpose, he revealed the discovery made by
Marshall in California, and told the story how Ore-
(42)
gon men bad opened to
the world what appeared an inexhaustible store of golden treasure.1
The news was
confirmed by the arrival August 9tli of the brig Henry from San Francisco, and
on the 23d of the fur company’s brig Mary Dare from the Hawaiian Islands, by
the way of Victoria, with Chief Factor Douglas on board, who was not inclined
to believe the reports. But in a few days more the tidings had travelled
overland by letter, ex-Governor Boggs having written to some of liis former
Missouri friends in Oregon by certain men coming with horses to the Willamette
Valley for provisions, that much gold was found on the American lliver. No one
doubted longer; covetous desire quickly increased to a delirium of hope. The
late Indian disturbances were forgotten; and from the ripening harvests the
reapers without compunctions turned away. Even their beloved land-claims were
deserted; if a man did not go to California it was because he could not leave
his family or business. Some prudent persons at first, seeing that provisions
and lumber must greatly increase in price, concluded to stay at home and reap
the advantage without incurring the risk; but these were a small proportion of
the able-bodied men of the colony. Far more went to the gold mines than had
volunteered to fight the Cayuses;2 farmers, mechanics, professional
men, printers—every class. Tools were dropped and work left unfinished in the
shops. The farms were abandoned to women and boys. The two newspapers, the
Oregon Spectator and Free Press, held
1J. W.
Marshall was an immigrant to Oregon of 1844. He went to California in 1840,
and was employed by Sutter. In 1847 lie was followed by Charles Bennett and
Stephen Staats, all of whom were at Sutter’s mill when the discovery of gold
was made. Brown’s Will. Vol., MS., 7 s Parsons’ Life, of Marshall, 8-9.
2 Burnett says that at least two thirds of
the population capable of bearing arms left tor California in the summer and
autumn of 1848. Recollections, MS., i. 325. ‘About two thousand persons,’ says
the California Star ami Californian, Dec. 9, 184S. (July five old men were left
at Salem. Brown’s WiM Val, MS., 9. Anderson, in his Northwest Coast, MS., 37,
speaks of the great exodus. Compare Graicf rd’s Nar., MS., 106, and Victor’s
River of the West, 483-5. liames, Or. and Cal., MS., 8, says he found at Oregon
City only a few women and children and some Indians.
out, the one till
December, the other until the spring of 1849, when they were left without
compositors and suspended.3 ISTo one thought of the
outcome. It was not then known in Oregon that a treaty had been signed by the
United States and Mexico, but it was believed that such would be the result of
the war; hence the gold-fields of California were already regarded as the
property of Americans. Men of family expected to return; single men thought little
about it. To go, and at once, was the chief idea.4 Many who had not
the means were fitted out by others who took a share in the venture; and quite
different from those who took like risks at the east, the trusts imposed in
the men of Oregon were as a rule faithfully carried out.5
Pack-trains were
first employed by the Oregon gold- seekers; then in September a wagon company
was organized. A hundred and fifty robust, sober, and energetic men were soon
ready for the enterprise. The train consisted of fifty wagons loaded with
mining implements and provisions for the winter. Even planks for constructing
gold-rockers were carried in the bottom of some of the wagons. The teams were
strong oxen; the riding horses of the hardy native Cayuse stock, late worth but
ten dollars, now bringing thirty, and the men were armed. Barnett was elected
captain and Thomas McKay pilot.8 They went to Klamath Lake by the
Applegate route, and then turned south-east intending to get into the
California emigrant road before it crossed the Sierra. After travelling several
days over an elevated region, not well watered nor furnishing good grass, to
their surprise
3 The Spectator from February to October.
I do not think the Free Pre/m was revived after its stoppage, though it ran
long enough to print line’s proclamation. The Oregon American had expired in
the autumn of 1848.
4 Atkinson, in the Home Missionary, 22,
04; Bristow’s Rencounters, MS., 2-9; Ryan's Judges and Criminals, 79.
5 There was the usual doggerel perpetrated
here as elsewhere at the time. See Brown’s Or. Miscel., MS., 47.
6 Rvss’ Nar., MS., 11; Lovejoy’t Portland,
MS., 2G: Johnson's Cal. and
Or.,
1S5-6.
they came into a
newly opened wag-on-road, which proved to be that which Peter Lassen of
California had that season persuaded a small party immigrating into the
Sacramento Valley to take, through a pass which would bring them near his
rancho.7
The exodus thus begun
continued as long as weather permitted, and until several thousand had left
Oregon by land and sea. The second wagon company of twenty ox-teams and
twenty-five men was from Puget Sound, and but a few days behind the first,8
while the old fur-hunters’ trail west of the
7 After proceeding some distance on
Lassen's trail they found that others who had preceded them were as ignorant as
they of w hat lay before them; and after travelling westward for eight miles
they came to a sheer wall of rock, constituting a mountain ridge, instead of to
a view of the Sacramento Valley. On examination of the giound it was found that
Lassen and his company had been deceived as well as they, and had marched back
to within half a mile of the entrance to the valley before finding a way out of
it. After exploring for some distance in advance the wagons were allowed to
come on, and the summit of the sierra was reached the 20th of October. After
passing this and entering the pine forest on the wrestem slope, they
overtook Lassen and a portion of his party, unable to proceed. He had at first
but ten wagons in his company, and knewnothing more about the route than from a
generally correct idea of the country he could conjecture. They proceeded
without mishap until coming to the thick timber on the mountains; and not
having force enough to open the road, they were compelled to convert their wagons
into carts in order to make the short turns necessary in driving around fallen
timber. Progress in tliis manner was slow. Half of the immigrants, now fearfully
incensed against their leader, had abandoned their carts, and packing their
goods on their starving oxen, deserted the other half, without knowing how they
were to reach the settlements. When those behind were overtaken by the
Oregonians they were in a miserable condition, not having had bread for a
month. Their w ants were supplied, and they were assured that the road should
be opened for them, which was done. Sixty or eighty men went to the front w ith
axes, and the way was cleared for the wagons. When the forest was passed,
there were yet other difficulties which Lassen’s small and exhausted company
could never have removed. A tragedy like that of I)on- ner Lake was averted by
these gold-seekers, wlio arrived in the Sacramento Valley about the 1st of
November. Burnett's Recollections, MS., i. 32S-3G6; Lovejoy's Portland, MS.,
27; Barnes’ Or. and Cal., MS., 11-12; Palmer’s Wagon Trains, MS., 43.
8 Hancock's Thirteen, Years’ Residence on
the, Northwest Coast, a thick manuscript volume containing an account of the
immgratiun of 1S45, the settlement of the Puget Sound country by Americans, the
journey to California of the golil-hunters, and a long list of personal
adventures with Indians, and other matter of an interesting nature, is cne of
my authorities ot. this period. The manuscript was written at the dictation of
Samuel Hancock, of Whidbey Island, by Major Sewell. See Morse's Kotes of the
History atxl Resources of Washington Ter., ii. 19-30. It would seem from
Hancock’s MS. that the Puget Sound Company, like the Willamette people,
overtook and assisted a party of immigrants who had been forsaken by that pilot
in the Sierra Nevada, and brought them through to the Sacramento Valley.
sierra swarmed with
pack-trains9 all the autumn. Their first resort was Yuba River; but
in the spring ol‘ 1849 the forks of the American became their principal field
of operations, the town of Placerville, first called Hangtown, being founded by
them. They were not confined to any localities, however, and made many
discoveries, being for the tirst winter only more numerous in certain places
than other miners; and as they were accustomed to camp-life, Indian-fighting,
and self-defence generally, they obtained the reputation of being clannish and
aggressive. If one of them was killed or robbed, the others felt bound to
avenge the injury, and the rifle or the rope soon settled the account. Looking
upon them as interlopers, the Californians naturally resented these decided
measures. Cut as the Oregonians were honest, sober, and industrious, and could
be accused of nothing worse than being ill-dressed and unkempt and of knowing
how to protect themselves, the Californians manifested their prejudice by
applying to them the title ‘Lop-ears,’ which led to the retaliatory appellation
of ‘Tar-heads,’ which elegant terms long remained in use.10
It was a huge joke,
gold-mining and all, including even life and death. But as to rivalries they
signified nothing. Most of the Oregon and Washington adventurers who did not
lose their life were successful; opportunity was assuredly greater then in the
This may have been
the other division of Lassen’s company, though Hancock says there were 25
wagons, which does not agree with Burnett.
1 One of the first companies with
pack-animals w as under John E. Ross, an immigrant of 1847, and a lieutenant in
the Cayuse war, of whom I shall liave more to say hereafter. Buss states that
Levi Scott had already settled in the Umpqaa ^ alley, and was then the only
American south of the Cala- pooya Mountains. From Scott’a to the tirst house in
California, Reading’s, was 14 days’ travel. See Ross’ Nar., MS., passim.
l0Iloss’
Nar., MS., 15; Crawford's Nar., MS., 191, 204. The American pioneers of
California, looking for the origin of the word Oregon in a Spanish phrase
bignilying long-ears, as I have explained in vol. i. //ist. Or., hit upon this
delectable sobriquet for the settlers of that country. With equal justice,
admitting this theory to be correct, which it is not, the Oregonians called
them tar-htads, because the northern California Indians were observed to cover
their heads w ith tar as a sign of mourning.
Sierra Foothills than
in the Valley Willamette. Still they were not hard to satisfy; and they began
to return early in the spring of 1849, when every vessel that entered the
Columbia was crowded with homo- lovin<»- Oregonians.11 A few went
into business in California. The success of those that returned stimulated
others to go who at first had not been able.12
11 Among those ■who went
to California in 1848-9 are the following: Robert Henderson, James McBride,
William Carpenter, Joel Palmer, A. L. Lovejoy, F. W. Pettygrove, Barton Lee, W.
\\. Bristow, W. L. Au.uns, Christopher Taylor, John E. Ross, P. B. Cornwall,
Walter Monteith, Horace Burnett, 1’. II. Burnett, Jolm P. Rogers, A. A.
Skinner, M. M. McCarver, Frederick Ramsey, William Dement, Peter Crawford,
Henry Williamson, Thomas McKay, William Fellows, S. C. Reeves, James Porter, I.
W. Alderman, William Moalton, Aaron Stanton, J. R. Robb, Aaron Payne, J. Math-
eney, George Gay, Samuel Hancock, Robert Alexander, Niniwon Everman, John Byrd,
Elisha Byrd, William Byrd, Sr, William Byrd, Jr, T. R. Hill, Ira Patterson,
William Patterson, Stephen Bonser, Sari Richards, W. II. Gray, Stephen Staats,
J W. Nesmith, J. S. Snooks, W. D. Canfield, Alanson Husted, John M. Shively,
Edmund Sylvester, James O’Neal, Benjamin Wood, William Whitney, W. I’.
Dougherty, Allen McLeod, John Edmonds, Charles Adams, John Inyard, Miriam Poe,
Joseph Williams, Hilt. Bonser, William Shaw, Thomas Carter, Jefferson Carte*-,
P^alph Wilcox, Benjamin Burch, William H. Rector, Hamilton Campbell, Robert
Newell, John E. Bradley, J. Curtis, H. Brown, Jeremiah McKay. Priest, Tmney,
Leonard, Suurtzer, Loomis, Samuel Cozine, Columbia Lancaster Pool, English,
Thompson, Johnson, Robinson, and others.
12 P. W. Crawford gives the following account
of his efforts to raise tL6 means to go to California: He was an immigrant of
1847, and had not yet acquired property that could be converted into money.
Being a surveyor he spent most of his time in laying out town sites and claims,
for which he received lots in payment, and in some cases wheat, and often
nothing. Ha had a claim on the Cowlitz which he managed to get planted in
potatoes. Owning a little skiff called the E. Went, he traded i t to Geer for a
hundred seedling apple-trees, but not being able to return to his claim, he
planted them on the land of Wilson Blain, opposite Oregon City. Having
considerable wheat at MeLoughlin’s mill he had a portion of it ground, and sold
the flour for cash. He gave some -wheat to newly arrived emigrants, and traded
the rest for a fat ox, which he sold to a butcher at Oregon City for
twenty-five dollars cash. Winter coming on he assisted his friend P^eed in the
pioneer bakery of Portland. In February he traded a Durham bull which he purchased
ot an Indian at Fort Laramie and drove to Oregon, for a good s-ailing boat,
with which he took a load of hoop-poles down the Columbia to Hunt’s mill, where
salmou barrels were made, and brought back some passengers, and a few goods for
Capt. Crosbv, having a rough hard time working his way through the floating
ice. On getting back to Portland, Crawford ami Williams, the former mate of
the b'tarlimj, engaged of the supercargo Gray, sixty dollars each, steerage
passage on the Undine then lying ?t Hunt’s mill. The next thing was to get
supplies and tools, such as were needed to go to the mines. For these it was
necessary to make a visit to Vancouver, which could not be done in a boat, as
the river was still full of ice, above the mouth of the Williamette. He
succeeded in crossing the Columbia opposite the head of Sauv6 Island, and
walked from the landing to Vancouver, a distance ot about six miles. This
business accomplished, he rejoined his companion in the boat, and set out for
Hunt’s mill, still endangered by floating ice, but
There was a complete
revolution in trade, as remarkable as it was unlooked for two years before,
when the farmers were trying to form a cooperative ship-building association to
carry the products of their farms to a market where cash could be obtained for
wheat. No need longer to complain of the absence of vessels, or the terrible
bar of the Columbia. I have mentioned in the preceding chapter that the Henry
and the Toulon were the only two American vessels trading regularly to the
Columbia River in the spring of 1848. Hitherto only an occasional vessel from
California had entered the river for lumber and flour; but now they came in
fleets, taking besides these articles vegetables, butter, eggs, and other
products needed by the thousands arriving at the mines, the traffic at first
yielding enormous profits. Instead of from three to eight arrivals and
departures in a year, there were more than fifty in 1849, of which twenty were
in the river in October awaiting cargoes at one time.13 They were
from sixty to six or or seven hundred tons burden, and three of them were built
in Oregon.11 Whether it was due to their
amving in time to
take passage. Such were the common incidents 01 life in Oregon before the gold
products of the ('alifomia mines came into circulation. Narrative, MS.,
179—1ST.
13About the
last of December 1848 the Spanish bark Jdven Guipuzcoana, S. C. Reeves captain,
arrived from San Francisco to load with Oregon productions for the California
markets She was fastened in the ice a few miles below the mouth of the
Willamette until February, and did not get out of the river until about the
middle of March. Crawford's Nar., MS., 173 -91. The brig Maleck Adhel, Hall
master, left the river with a cargo Feb. 7, 1849. Following are pome of the
other arrivals of the year: January 5th, so.lir. Starling, Captain Menzies;
7th, bk Anita, Hall; brig Undine, Brum; May Sth, bks. Anita, Hall: Janet,
Dring; ship Mercedes; schrs. Milwaukie; Fid dora; 28tli, bk. J. W. Carter; hrig
Mary and Ellen; June 16th, schr. Pioneer; bk. Undine; 23d, bk. Columbia; brigs
Ilenry, Sacramento, El Placer; July 2d, t-hip Walpole; 10th, brigs Belfast,
L'Etoile du Matin; ship Silvie de Grasse; schr. O. C. Raymond; biig Quito;
2Sth. ship Huntress; bk. Louisiana; schr. Gen. Lane; Aug. 7th, bk. Carib;
11th, bkx. Harpooner, Madonna; sh’p Aurora; brig Forrest; bks. Ocean Bird,
Diamond, Helen M. Leidler; Oct. 17th, brigs Quito, Hawkes; 0. C. Raymond,
Menzies; Josephine, Melton; Jno. Petit; Mary and Ellen, Gier; bks. Toulon,
Hoyt; Azim, McKenzie; 22d, brig Sara/i McFarland, Brooks; 24th, brig Wolcott,
Kennedy; Nov. 12th, bk. Louisiana, William*; brigs Mary Wilder; North Bend,
Bartlett; 13th, ship Huntress, Upton; 15th, bks. Diamond, Madonna; 25th, brig
Sacramento; bk. Seyuin, Norton; brig Due de Lorflunes, Travillot.
11 The
schooner Milwaukie, built at Milwaukie l>> Lot Witcomb anil Joseph
general light draft,
or to an increased knowledge of the channels of the mouth of the river, few
accidents occurred, and only one American vessel was wrecked at or near the
entrance this year;15 though two French ships were lost during the
summer, one on the bar in attempting to enter by the south channel, then
changed in its direction from the shifting of the
o o
sands, and the other,
by carelessness, in the river between Astoria and Tongue Point.16
That all this sudden
influx of shipping, where so little had ventured before, meant prosperity to
Oregon tradesmen is unquestionable. Portland, which Petty - grove had turned
his back upon with seventy-five thousand dollars, was now a thriving port,
whose
Kelly, was of
planking put on diagonally in several thicknesses, 'with a few- temporary sawed
timbers aid natural crooks, and mis sold in San Francisco for §4,000. The
General Lane was built at Oregon City by John McClellan, aided by MeLoughlin,
and ran to San Francisco. Her captain -was Gilman, afterward a bar pilot at
Astoria. She went directly to Sacramcnto with a cargo of lumber and faun
products. The Pioneer was put together by a company at Astoria. Honolulu Frieml,
Sept. 1, 1849.
15 The brig Josephine was becalmed,
whereupon her anchor was let down; but a gale blowing up in the night she was
driven on the sand and dashed to pieces ir the breakers. She was loaded with
lumber from the Oregon City Mills, which was a total loss to the Island Milling
Company. Or. Spectator, Jan. 10, 1850.
16 This latter wreck was of the Silvie de
Grasse which brought Thornton home from Boston. She was formerly a packet of
'2,@00 tons, built of live- oak, and running between New York anil Havre. She
loaded with lumber for San Francisco, but in descending the river ran upon a
rock and split. Eighteen years afterward her figure-head and a part of her hull
stood above the water. What wa3 left was then sold to A. S. Mercer, the iron
being still in good order, and the locust and oak kners and timbers perfectly
sound. * Oregonian, in Puget Sound Gazette, April 15, 1867. The wreck on the
bar was cf L'Etoile da. Matin, before mentioned in connection with the return
to Oregon ef Archbishop lilancliet, and the arrival of the Catholic reenforcement
in 1847. Returning to Oregon in 1849, the captain not finding a pilot outside
undertook to run in by the south channel, in which attempt he was formerly so
successful, but its conrse having shifted, he soon found his ship fast on the
sands, while an American bark that had followed hirn, but drew
10 feet less water, passed safely in. The
small life-boats were all lost in lowering, but after passing through great
dangers the ship was worked into Baker Bay without a rudder, with a loosened
keel and most of the pumps broken, aid having been rendered by Latta of the
Hudson’s Bay Company and some Indians. A box rudder was constructed, and the
vessel taken to Portland, and landed where the warehouse of Allen and Lewis
later stood. The cargo belonged to Francis Menes, who saved most of it, and who
opened a store in Oregon City, where he resided four years, finally settling at
St Louis on French Prairie. He died December 1807. The hull of the Morning Star
was sold to Couch and Flanders, and by them to Charles Hutchins, and was burned
for the iron and copper. Eugene La Forrest, in Portland Oregonian, March 28,
1868.
Hist. Ob.,
Vol. II. 1
shore was lined with
a fleet of barks, brigs, and ships, and where wharves and warehouses were in
great demand.17 In Oregon City the mills were kept busy making flour
and lumber,18 and new saw-mills were erected on the Columbia.19
The farmers did not
at first derive much benefit from the change in affairs, as labor was so high
and scarce, and there was a partial loss of crops in consequence. Furthermore
their wheat was already in store with the merchants and millers at a fixed
price, or contracted for to pay debts. They therefore could not demand the
advanced price of wheat till the crop of 1849 was harvested, while the
mercliant-millers had almost a whole year in which to make flour out of wheat
costing them not more than five eighths of a dollar a bushel in goods, and
which they sold at ten and twelve dollars a barrel at the mills. If able to
send it to San Francisco, they realized double that price. As with wheat so
with other things,20 the speculators had the best of it.
17Couch
returned in August from the cast, in the bark Madonna, with G. A. Flanders as
mate, in the service of the Shermans, shipping merchants of New York. They
built a wharf and warehouse, and had soon laid the foundation of a handsome
fortune. Eugene La Forrest, in Portland Oregonian, Jan. 29, 1870; Deady, in
Trans. Or. Pioneer ylssor., 1876, 33-4. Nathaniel Crosby, also of l’ortland,
was owner of the 0. C. Raymond, which carried on so profitable a trade that he
could afford to pay the master §300 a month, the mate !?200, and ordinary
seamen $100. lie had built himself a residence costing $5,000 before the gold discovery.
Honolulu Friend, Oct. 15, 1S49.
18 McLoughlin's miller was -Tames Bachan, a
Scotchman. The island gristmill was in charge of Robert Pentland, an
Englishman, miller for Abemethy. Crawford's Nar., MS.
19 A mill was erected ir. 1S48 on Milton
Creek, which falls into Scappoose Bay, an inlet of the lower Willamette at its
junction with the Columbia, wliero the town of Milton was subsequently laid off
and had a brief existence. It was owned by T. II. Ilemsaker, and built by
Joseph Cunningham. It began running in 1849, and was subsequently sold to
Captain N. Crosbey and Thomas W. Smith, who employed the bark Louisiana,
Captain Williams, carrying lumber to San Francisco. Crawford's Nar., MS., 217.
By the bark Diamond, which arrived from Boston in August, Iliram Clark
supercargo, Abernethy received a lot of goods and took Clark as partner.
Together they built a saw and planing mill on the Columbia at Oak I’oint,
opposite the original Oak Point of the Winship brothers, a more convenient
place for getting timber or loading vessels than Oregon City. The island mill
at the latter place was rented to W alter Pomeroy, and subsequently sold, a* I
shall relate hereafter. Another mill was erected above and back of Tongue Point
by Henry Marland in 1849. Id. ; Honolulu Friend, Oct. 3, 1849.
2’ In the
Spectator of Oct. IS, 1849, the price of beef on foot is given at
6 and b cents; in market, 10 and 12 cents
per pound; pork, 1G and 20 cents;
When the General Lane
sailed from Oregon City with lumber and provisions, there were several tons of
eggs on board which had been purchased at the market price, and which were sold
by the captain at thirty cents a dozen to a passenger who obtained for them at
Sacramento a dollar each. The lanro increase
t _ o
of home productions,
with the influx of gold by the return of fortunate miners, soon enabled the
farmers to pay oft’ their debts and improve their places, a labor upon which
they entered with ardor in anticipation of the donation law. Some of those who
could arrange their affairs, went a second time to California in 1849; among
the new companies being one of several hundred Canadians and half-breeds,
under the charge of Father Delorme, few of whom ever returned alive, owing to
one of those mysterious epidemics, developed under certain not well understood
conditions, attacking their camp.21
On the whole the
effect of the California gold discovery was to unsettle the minds of the
people and change their habits. To the Hudson’s Bay Company it was in some
respects a damage, and in others a benefit. The fur-trade fell off, and this,
together with the operation of the treaty of 184G, compelling them to pay
duties on goods from English ports, soon effected the abandonment of their
business in United States territory. For a time they had a profitable' trade in
gold-dust, but when coined gold and American and Mexican money came into free
circulation, there was an end of that speculation.22 Every
circumstance now conspired to drive British trade out of Oregon
butter, 62 anil 75
cents; cheese, 50 cents; flour, 914 per barrel; wheat, $1.50 and £2 ptr bushel,
and oats the same. Potatoes were worth !?2.50 per bushel; apples, i?10. These
were the articles produced in the country, and these prices were good. On the
other hand, groceries and dry goods, which were imported, cost less than
formerly, because, while consumption was less, more cargoes were arriving. Iron
and nails, glass and paint were still high, and cooking-stoves brought from £70
to §130.
• F. X. Matthieu, who
was one of the company, says that out of GOO only 150 remained alive, and that
Delorme narrowly escaped. Refugee, IIS., 15; lilanchct’s Hist. Cath. Ch. in
(Jr., ISO.
22 Roberts’ Recollections, MS., 81;
Anderson’s Northwest Cocmt, MS., 38.
as fast as the
country could get along independently of it; and inasmuch as the fur company
had, through the dependence of the American community upon them, been enabled
to make a fair profit on a large amount of goods, it was scarcely to be
regretted that they should now be forced to give way, and retire to new
territory where only fur companies properly belong.
Among the events of
1849 which were directly due to the mining episode was the minting of about
fifty thousand dollars at Oregon City, under an act of the colonial legislature
passed at its last session, without license from the United States. The reasons
for this act, which were recited in the preamble, were that in use as currency
was a large amount of gold-dust which was mixed with base metals and impurities
of other kinds, and that great irregularities in weighing existed, to the
injury of the community. Two members only, Medorum Crawford and W. .1. Martin,
voted against the bill, and these entered on the records a formal protest on
the ground that the measure was unconstitutional and inexpedient.23
The
23 Grover’s Or. Archives, 311, 315.
The act was approved by the governor Fell. 1G, 1810. According to its
provisions the mint was to be established at Oregon City; its officers, elected
annually by the house of representatives, were to give cach $30,0()0 bonds, and
draw a salary of $1,999 each perannum, to be paid out o£ proceeds of the
institution. The director was empowered to pledge tlie faith of the territory
for means to put the mint in operation; and vas required to publish in some
newspaper in the territorj a quarterly statement, or by sending such a report
to the county clerk of each county. The act provided for an assayer ami melter
and coiner, the latter being forbidden to use any alloys whatever. The weight
of the pieces was to be live pennyweights and ten pennyweights respectively,
no more and no less. The dies for stamping were required to have on one side
the Roman figure five, for the pieces of live pennyweights, and the Roman
figure ten, for the pieces of ten pennyweights, the reverse sides to be stamped
with the words Oregon Territory, and the date of the year around the face, with
the ‘arms of Oregon’ in the centre. What then constituted the ‘ arms of Oregon
’ is a question. Drown, Will. Valley, MS., 13, says that only parts of the
impression remain in the Oregon archives, and that it has gone out of the
memory of everybody, including Holderness, secretary of state in 1848. Thornton
says that the auditor’s seal of the provisional government consisted of a star
in the centre of a figure so arranged as to represent a larger star, containing
the letters Auditor 0. T., and that it is still preserved in the Oregon
archives. Htlics, MS., 6. But as the law plainly described the coins as having
the arms of Oregon on the same side with the date and the name of the
territory, then
ii the idea of the legislators was carried
out, as it seems to have been, a beaver
reason for the
passage of the act was, really, the low price of gold-dust, the merchants
having the power to fix the rate of gold as well as of wheat, receiving it for
goods at twelve dollars an ounce, the Hudson’s Bay Company buying it at ten
dollars and paying in coin procured for the purpose.24
The effect of the law
was to prevent the circulation of gold-dust altogether, as it forbade weighing.
No steps were taken toward building a mint, which would have been impossible
had not the erection of a territorial government intervened. But as there was
henceforth considerable coin coming into the country to exchange at high prices
for every available product, there was no serious lack of money.25
On the contrary there was a disadvantage in the readiness with which silver
was introduced from California, barrels of Mexican and Peruvian dollars being
thrown upon the market, which had been sent to California to pay for gold-dust.
The Hudson’s Bay Company allowed only fifty cents for a Peruvian dollar, while
the American merchants took them at one hundred cents. Some of the Oregon
miners were shrewd enough to buy up Mexican silver dollars, and even less
valuable coins, with gold-dust at sixteen dollars an ounce, and take
must have been the
design on the territorial seal, as it was on the coins. All disbursements of
the mint, together with the pay of officers, must be made in the stamped pieces
authorized by the act; and whatever remained of profits, sifter deducting
expenses, was to be applied to pay the Caytwe war expenses. Penalties were
provided for the punishment of any private person who should coin gold or
attempt to pass unstamped gold. The officers appointed v ero James Taylor,
director; Truman P. Powers, treasurer; W. H. Willson, melter und coiner, and G.
L. Curry, assayei. Or. Spectator, ]'eb. 22, 1849.
2iBarnes’
Or. and Cat., MS., 9; Buck’s Enterprises, MS., 8; Brown’s Will. Val., MS., 14.
This condition of the currency caused a petition to be drawn up and numerously
signed, setting forth that in consequence of the ncglcct of the United States
government the colonists must combine against the greed of the merchants in
this matter. There was gold-dust in the territory, tin y declared, to the value
of two millions of dollars, and more anrh iog. 15esides the losses they were
forced to bear by the depreciation of gold-dust, there was the inconvenience of
handling it in its original state, and also the loss attending its frequent
division. These objections to a gold-dust currency being likely to exist for
some time, or as long as mining was followed, they prayed the legislature to
pass a coinage act, which was done as I have said. Or. Archives, MS., 188.
'a
Deady s Hist. Or., MS. .
them to Oregon where
dust could be readily obtained at twelve or fourteen dollars an ounce.26
The gold coins in general circulation were Spanish doubloons, halves, and
quarters. Such was the scarcity of convenient currency previous to this
overplus that silver coin had been at a premium of ten per cent,27
but fell rapidly to one per cent.
The act of the
legislature did not escape criticism.28 But before the law could be
carried into effect Governor Lane had issued his proclamation placing the
territory under the government of the United States, and it became ineffectual,
as well as illegal. The want, however, remaining the same, a partnership was
formed called the Oregon Exchange Company, which proceeded to coin money after
its own fashion, and on its own responsibility. The members were W. K.
Kilborne, Theophilus Magruder, James Taylor, George Abernethv, W. H. WiUson,
W. H. Hector, J. G. Campbell, and Noyes Smith. Rector “beingthe only member
with any mechanical skill ” was deputized to furnish the stamps and dies,
which he did,
usinff a small
machine for turning iron. The enyrav- * -i . •
ing was done by
Campbell. When all was in readiness, Hector was employed as coiner, no
assaying being done or attempt made to part the silver from the gold. Indeed,
it was not then known in Oregon that there was any silver in the crude metal,
and all the pieces of the same denomination Avere made of the same weight,
though the color varied considerably. About thirty thousand dollars were made
into five** W. H. Rector’s Oregon Exchange Company, in Or. Archives, MS., 193.
Moss'
Pioneer Times, MS., 59.
28 Some severe strictures were passed upon
it by A. E. Wait, a lawyer, and at that time editor of the Spectator, who declared
with emphasis that thu people of Oregon desired no law which conflicted with
the laws of the United States; but only asked for the temporary privilege under
the provisional government of coining gold to meet the requirements of
business for the present; r.nd that if this act was to be numbered among those
which congress was asked to confirm, it was a direct insult to the United
States. Wait may have been right as to the general sentiment of the people, or
of the best and most patriotic men of the American party, but it is plain from
the language of the memorial to the legislature that its framers were in a mood
to defy the government v, liich had so long appeared to be unmindful of them.
dollar pieces; and
not quite the same amount into ten- dollar coins.29 This coinage
raised the price of dust from twelve to sixteen dollars an ounce, and caused a
great saving to the territory. Being thrown into circulation, and quickly
followed by an abundance of money from California, the intended check on the avarice
uf the merchants was effected.30 The Oregon Exchange coinage went by
the name ‘beaver money,’ and was eventually all called in by the United States
mint in San Francisco, a premium being paid upon it, as it was of greater value
than the denominations on the coins indicated.31
I have said that the
effect of the gold discovery was to change the habits of the people. Where all
29 The ten-dollar pieces differed from the
fives by having over the beaver only the letters 1K. M. T.
li. 0. S,5 underneath which were seven stars. Be
neath the beaver was
‘0. T., 1849.’ On the reverse was ‘Oregon Exchange Company * around the margin,
and ‘ 10 L). 20 G. Native Gold’ with ‘Ten D.’ in the centre. Thornton’s Or.
Relics, MS., 5.
'60
Or. Archives, MS., 192-5; Buck’s Enterprises, MS., 9-10. Rector says: ‘I
afterward learned that Kilborne took the rolling-mill to Umpqua. John
G. Campbell had the dies the last I knew of
them. He promised to destroy them;’ to which J. Henry Brown adds that they were
placed in the custody of the secretary of state, together with a $10 piece, and
that he had made several impressions of the dies in block tin. A set of these
impressions was presented to me in 1878 by Mr Brown, and is in my collection.
SJ Or.
Arcfiives, MS., 191, 196. Other mention of the ‘beaver money’ is made in Or.
Pioneer Asso. Trans., 1875y 72, and Portland
Oregonian, Dee. 8, 1866.
was economy and
thrift before, there was now a tendency to profligacy and waste. This was
natural. They had suffered so long the oppression of a want that could not be
relieved, and the restraint of desires that could not be gratified without
money, that when money came, and with such ease, it was like a draught of
brandy upon an empty stomach. There was intoxication, sometimes delirium. Such
was especially the case with the Canadians,32 some of whom brought
home thirty or forty thousand dollars, but W'ere unable to keep it. The same
was true of others. The pleasure of spending, and of buying such articles of
luxury as now began to find their way to Oregon from an overstocked California
market, was too great to be resisted, if they could not keep their money, however,
they put it into circulation, and so contributed to supply a want in the
community, and enable those who could not go to the mines, through fear of
losing their land claims, or other cause, to share in the golden harvest.33
It has been held by
some that the discovery of gold at this time seriously retarded the progress of
Oregon.This was not the case in general, though it may have been so in
particular instances. It took agriculturists temporarily from their farms and
mechanics from their shops, thereby checking the steady if slow march of improvement.
But it found a market for agricultural products, raising prices several hundred
per cent, and enabled the farmer to get gold for his produce, instead of a poor
class of goods at exorbitant prices. It checked for two or three years the
progress of building. While mill-' owners obtained enormous prices for their
lumber, the wages of mechanics advanced from a dollar and a half a day to eight
dollars, and the day laborer was able to demand and obtain four dollars per day35
s-Anderson’s
Northwest Coast, MS., 37-9; Johnson’s Cal. and Or., 200-7.
-J
Say ward's Pioneer firmin., MS., 7.
84 Dtwly, in
Overland Monthly, i. 36; Honolulu Friend, May 3, 1851.
81 Brown's
Autobiography, MS., 37; Strong’s Hist. Or., MS., 15.
where he had received
but one. Men who before were almost hopelessly in debt were enabled to pay. By
the amended currency law, all debts that had to be collected by law were
payable in gold instead of wheat. Many persons were in debt, and their creditors
hesitated to sell their farms and thus ruin them; but all the same the dread of
ruin hung over them, crushing their spirits. Six months in the gold mines
changed all, and lifted the burden from their hearts. Another good effect was
that it drew to the country a class, not agriculturists, nor mechanics, nor
professional men, but projectors of various enterprises beneficial to the
public, and who in a short time built steamboats in place of sloops and
flatboats, and established inland transportation for passengers and goods,
which gradually displaced the pack-train and the universal horseback travel.
These new men enabled the United States government to carry out some of its
proposed measures of relief in favor of the people of Oregon, in the matter of
a mail service, to open trade with foreign ports, to establish telegraphic communication
with California, and eventually to introduce railroads. These were certainly no
light benefits, and were in a measure the result of the gold discovery. Without
it, though the country had continued to fill up with the same class of people
who first settled it, several generations must have passed before so much could
have been effected as was now quickly accomplished. Even with the aid of
government the country must have progressed slowly, owing to its distance from
business and progressional centres, and the expense of maintaining intercourse
with the parent government. Moreover, during this period of slow growth the
average condition of the people with respect to intellectual progress would
have retrograded. The adult population, having to labor for the support of
families, and being deprived through distance and the want of money from
keeping up their former intellectual pursuits, would have ccased to feel their
former interest in
learning and literature. Their children, with but poor educational facilities
and w ithout the example, would have grown up with acquirements inferior to
those of their parents before emigrating. Reared in poor houses, without any
of the elegancies of life,36 and with but few of the ordinary
conveniences, they would have missed the refining influences of healthy
environment, and have fallen below the level of their time in regard to the
higher enjoyments of living. The people being chiefly agricultural and pastoral,
from their isolation would have become fixed in their ideas and prejudices. As
the means of living became plenty and little exertion was required, they would
become attached to an easy, careless, unthinking mode of existence, with a tendency
even to resent innovations in their habits to which a higher degree of
civilization might invite them. Such is the tendency of poverty and isolation,
or of isolation and rude physical comforts, without some constant refining
agency at band.
One of the immediate
effects of the mining exodus of 1848 was the suspension of the legislature.37
On the day appointed by law for the assembling of the legislative body only
nine members were present, representing four counties; and this notwithstanding
the governor had issued proclamations to fill vacancies occurring through the
resignation of members- elect.3'* Even after the sergeant-at-arms
had compelled the appearance of four members from Cham-
MStrong’t
IlUt. Or., MS., 21.
s’ The
members elect of the legislature were: from Clackamas, A. L. I ove- joy, G. L.
Curry, J. L. Snook; Tualatin, Samuel II. Thurston, P. H. Burnett, Ralph
Wilcox; Champoeg, Albert Gains, Robert Newell, W. J. Bailey, William Porter;
Yamhill, A. J. Hembree, L. A. Rice, William Martin; Polk, Ilarriaon Linville,
J. W. Nesmith, 0. Russell; Linn, Henry J. Peterson, Anderson Cox; Lewis, Levi
L. Smith; Clatsop, A. H. Thompson; Vancouver, Adolphus L. Lewis. Grover’s Or.
Archives, ‘258.
3“ The
members elected to fill vacancies were Samuel Parker, in t ham- poeg County; D.
Hill, in Tualatin; A. F. Hedges and M. Crawford, in Cla<k- ama», Id., 2G0.
Two other substitutes were elected—Thomas J. Lovulady of Polk county, and A. M.
Locke of Benton, neither of whom served.
poeg, Polk, and Linn
counties, tliere were still but. thirteen out of twenty-three allowed hy the
apportionment. After organizing by choosing Ralph Wilcox speaker, W. G.
T’Yault chief clerk, and William Holmes sergeant-at-arms and door-keeper, the
house adjourned till the first Monday in February, to give time for special
elections to fill the numerous vacancies.
The governor having
again issued proclamations to the vacant districts to elect, on the 5th of
February 1849 there convened at Oregon City the last session of the provisional
legislature of the Oregon colony. It consisted of eighteen members, namely:
Jesse Applegate, W. J. Bailey, A. Cox, M. Crawford, G. L. Curry, A. F. Hedges,
A. J. Hembree, David Hill, John Hudson, A. L. Lewis, W. J. Martin, S. Parker,
H. J. Peterson, William Portius, L. A. Rice, S. R. Thurston, J. C. Avery, and
Ralph Wilcox.33
Lewis County remained
unrepresented, nor did Avery of Benton appear until brought with a warrant, an
organization being effected with seventeen members. Wilcox declining to act as
speaker, Levi A. Rice was chosen in his place, and sworn into office by S. M.
Holderness, secretary of state. T’Yault was reelected chief clerk; James Cluse
enrolling clerk;
39 Kalph
Wilcox was born in Ontario county, New York, July 9, 1S18. He graduated at
Geneva medical college in that state, soon after which he removed to Missouri,
where on the 11th of October 1845 he married, emigrating to Oregon the
following year. In January 1847 he was appointed by Abemethy county judge of
Tualatin vice W. Burris resigned, and the same year was elected to the
legislature from the same county, and re-elected in
1848. Besides being chosen speaker at this session,
he was elected speaker of the lower house of the territorial legislature in
1850-1, and president of the council in 1853-4. During the years 1856-8 he was
register of the U. S. land office at Oregon City, and was elected in the latter
year county judge of "Washington (formerly Tualatin) county, an office
which he held till 1862, when he was again elected to the house of representatives
for two years. In July 1865 he was appointed clerk of the U. S. district court
for the district of Oregon, and U. S. commissioner for the same district, which
office he continued to hold down to the time of his death, which occurred by
suicide, April 18, 1877, having shot himself in a state of mental depression
caused by paralysis. Notwithstanding his somewhat free living he had continued
to enjoy the confidence of the public for thirty years. The Portland bar passed
the usual eulogistic resolutions. Oregon City Enterprise, April 26, 1877; S. F.
Alta, April 19, 1877; Cal. Christian Advocate, May 3, 1877; Portland Oregonian,
April 21, 1877; Deady, in Or. Pioneer Asso. Trans., 1875, 37-8.
Stephen H. L. Meek
sergeant-at-arms, and "Wilson Blain chaplain.
Aberuetliy in his
message to the legislature informed them that his proclamation had called them
together for the purpose of transacting the business which should have been
done at the regular session, relating chiefly to the adjustment of the expenses
of the Cayuse war, which it was expected the United States government would
assume; and also to act upon the amendments to the organic law concerning the
oath of office, the prohibition of the sale and manufacture of ardent spirits,
and to make the clerks of the several counties recorders of land claims, which
amendments had been sanctioned by the vote of the people at the regular
election. Information had been received, he said, that the officers necessary
to establish and carry on the territorial government, for which they had so
long hoped, were on their way and would soon arrive;40 and he
plainly indicated that he expected the matters pointed out to be settled in a
certain way, before the new government should be established, confirming the
acts of the retiring organization.41
The laws passed
relating to the Cayuse war were an act to provide for the pay of the
commissioned olfi-
:0Tiiis
information seems to have 1)6611 brought to Oregon in January
1849, by 0. C. I'ratt, one of the associate judges,
who happened to be in California, whither he had gone in pursuit of health.
His commission met him at Monterey about the last of Nov., and in Dec. he left
for Oregon on the bark Undine which after a lung voyage, and being carried into
Shoal water Bay, finally got into the Columbia in Jan. Saltm Or. Statesman,
Aug. 7,1852; Or. Spectator, Jan. 25, 1849.
41 He submitted the report of the
adjutant-general, by which it appeared that the amount duo to privates and
non-commissioned officers was §109,311.50, besides the pay of the officers and
those persons employed in the different departments. He recommended that a law
should be passed authorizing scrip to be issued for that amount, redeemable at
an early date, and bearing interest until paid. The belief that the general
government would become responsible would, he said, make the scrip salable, and
enable the holders to whom it should be issued to realize something immediately
for their services. Grover’s Or, Archives, 273. This was the beginning of speculation
in Oregon war scrip. As to the report of the commissary and quartermaster-general,
the governor left that for the legislature to examine into, and the accounts so
far as presented in these departments amounted to something like $57,000,
making the cost of the war without the salaries of the commissioned officers
over §1GO,000. This was subsequently much reduced by a commission, aa I shall
show in the proper place.
eers employed in the
service of the territory during the hostilities, and an act regulating the
issuing and
• • «
© O O
redemption of scrip,42
making it payable to the person to whom first issued, or bearer, the treasurer
being authorized to exchange or redeem it whenever offered, with interest.
Another act provided for the manner of exchange, and interest payments. An act
was passed making a change in the oath of office, and making county clerks
recorders of land claims, to which the governor refused his signature on the
plea that the United States laws would provide for the manner of recording
claims. On the other hand the legislature refused to amend the organic law by
putting in the word ‘prohibit’ in place of 'regulate/ but passed an act making
it necessary for every person applying for a license to sell or manufacture
ardent spirits, to take an oath not to sell, barter, or give liquor to any
Indian, fixing the penalty at one hundred dollars; and no distilleries were to
be allowed beyond the limits of the white settlements. With this poor
substitute for the entire interdiction he had so long desired, the governor was
compelled to be so far satisfied as to append his signature.
Besides the act
providing for weighing and stamping gold, of which I have spoken, little more
was done than is here mentioned. Some contests took place between members over
proposed enactments, and Jesse Applegate,4a as customary with him,
offered
“The first act
mentioned here I have been unable to find. I quote the Or. Spectator, Feb. 22,
1849. la place of it I find in the Or. Lawn, 180-9, 5(>-8, an act providing
for ‘the final settlement of claims against the Oregon government for and on
account of the Cayuse -war,’ by which a board of commissioners was appointed
to settle and adjust those claims; said commissioners being Thomas Magruder,
Samuel Burch, and Wesley Shannon, whose duty was to exhibit in detail a
statement of all accounts, whether for money or property furnished the
government, or for services rendered, ‘either as a citizen, soldier, or officer
of the army. ’ This might be construed as an act to provide for the pay of
commissioned officers.
*3 Kver
since first passing through southern Oregon on his exploring expedition, he
had entertained * high opinion of the country; and he brought in a bill to
charter an association called the Klamath Company, which was to hive power to
treat with the natives and purchase lands from them. Mr Hedges opposed the
bill, and offered a resolution, 'that it was not in the power of the house to
grant a charter to an} individual, or company, for
resolutions and
protests ad arbitrium et proposition. Another man, Samuel R. Thurston, an
emigrant of 1847, displayed indications of a purpose to make his talents
recognized. In the course of proceedings A. L. Lewis, of Vancouver county,
offered a resolution that the superintendent of Indian affairs be required to
report,44 presently asking if there were an Indian superintendent in
Oregon at all.
The governor replied
that II. A. Gr. Lee had resigned the superintendency because the compensation
bore no proportion to the services required, and that since Lee’s resignation
he had performed the duties of superintendent, not being able to find any
competent person who would accept the office. In a second communication he
reported on Indian affairs that the course pursued had been conciliatory, and
that the Indians had seemingly become quiet, and had ceased their clamor for
pay for their lands, waiting for the United States to move in the matter; and
the Cayuse murderers had not been secured. With regard to the confiscation of
Indian lands, he returned for answer
treating for wild
lands in the territory, or for holding treaties w ith the Indian tribes for the
purchase of lands,’all of which was very apparent. But Mr Applegate introduced
the counter resolution ‘ that if the doctrine in the resolution last passed be
true, then the powers of the Oregon government are unequal to the wants of the
people,’ which was of course equally true, as it was only provisional.
44 He wished
to know, he said, whether the superintendent had upon his own or the authority
of any other officer of the government confiscated to the use of the people of
Oregon any Indian country, and if so, why; if any grant or charter had been
given by him to any citizen or citizens for the settlement of any Indian
country, and if so, by what authority; and whether he had enforced the lavs
prohibiting the sale of liquor to Indians. ‘A. Lee Lewis,' says Applegate, ‘ a
bright young man, the son of a chief factor, afterward superintendent of Indian
ailairs, waa the first representative of Vancouver district.’ Views of Hist.,
MS., 45. Another British subject, who took a part in the provisional
government, ■was
Richard Lane, appointed by Abernethy county judge of Vanconver in 1S47, vice
Dugald MeTavish resigned. Or. Spectator, Jan. 21, 1817. Lane came to Oregon in
1837 as a clerk to the Hudson’s Bay Company. He was a ripe scholar and a good
lawyer. He lived for some time at Oregon City, and afterward at Olympia,
holding various offices, among others those of clerk of one branch of the territorial
legislature o* Washington, clerk of the supreme and district courts, county
auditor, and clerk of the city corporation of Olympia. He died at The Dalles in
the Bpring of 1877, from an overdose of morphine, apparently taken with suicidal
intent. He was then about sixty years of age. Italics Mountaineer, in Seattle
Pacific Tribune, March 2, 1877.
that he believed Lee
had invited the settlement of Americans in the Cayuse country, but that he knew
nothing of any charter having been granted to any one, and that he presumed the
settlement would have been made by each person locating a claim of six hundred
and forty acres. He reiterated the opinion expressed to Lee, when the
superintendent sought his advice, that the Cay uses having been engaged in war
with the Americans the appropriation of their lands was justifiable, and would
be so regarded by the neighboring tribes. As to liquor being sold to the
Indians, though he believed it was done, he had never yet been able to prove it
in a single instance, and recommended admitting Indian testimony.
The legislature
adjourned February 16th, having put, so far as could be done, the provisional
government in order, to be confirmed by act of congress, •even to passing an
act providing for the payment of the several departments—a necessary but
hitherto much neglected duty of the organization45—and also to the
election of territorial officers for another term.4/3 These were
never permitted to exercise official functions, as but two weeks elapsed
between the close of the session and the arrival of Lane with the new order of
things.
Xote finally the
effect of the gold discovery on immigration. California in 1849 of course
offered
15Th<
salary of the governor was. nominally $v>00, hut really nothing, as the
condition of the treasury was such as to make drafts upon it worthless except
in a few cases. Abemothy did nut receive his pay from the provisional
government, and as the territorial act did not confirm the statutes passed by
the several colonial legislatures, he had no redress. After Oregon had become a
state, and when by a series of misfortunes he had lost nearly all bis possessions,
after more than 20 years’ waiting Abcrnethy received his salary as governor of
the Oregon colony by an appropriation of the Oregon legislature Oct. 1S72. The
amount was §2,986.21. which congress was asked to make good to the state. _
“A. L. Lovejoy was
elected supreme judge in place of Columbia Lancaster, appointed by the
governor in place of Thornton, mho resigned in 1847. W. S. Mattock was chosen
circuit judge; Samuel Parker, prosecuting attorney; Theophilus Magruder,
secretary of the territory; W. K. Kilborne, treasurer; John G. Campbell,
auditor; W. II. Bennett, marshal, and A. Lee Lewis, superintendent of Indian
affairs. Or. Spectator, Feb. 22, 1849.
the great attraction.
The four or five hundred who were not dazzled with the visions of immediate
wealth that beckoned southward the great army of gold-seekers, but who suffered
with them the common discomforts of the way, were glad to part company at the
place where their roads divided on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains.
()n the Oregon part
of the road no particular discouragement or distress befell the travellers
until they reached The Dalles and began the passage of the mountains or the
river. As no emigration had ever passed over the last ninety miles of their
journey to the Willamette Valley without accident or loss, so these had their
trials with floods and mountain declivities/7 arriving, however, in
good time, after having been detained in the mountains by forest fires which
blocked the road with fallen timber. This was another form of the inevitable
hardship which year after year fell upon travellers in some shape on this part
of their journey. The fires were an evidence that the rains came later than
usual, and that the former trials from this source of discomfort were thus
absent.43 Such was the general absorption of the public mind in
other affairs that the immigration received little notice.
Before gold was
discovered it was land that drew men to the Pacific, land seen afar off through
a rosy mist which made it seem many times more valuable and beautiful than the
prolific valleys of the middle and western states. And now, even before the
donation law had passed, the tide had turned, and gold was the magnet more
potent than acres to attract. How far population was diverted from the
north-west, and to what extent California contributed to the develop
47 Gen. Smith in his report to the secretary
of war said that the roads to Oregon were made to come iato it, but not to go
out of it, referring to the steep descents of the western declivities uf the
Cascade Mountains.
48 A long dry autumn in 1849 was followed by
freshets in the Willamette Valley in Dec. and Jan., which carried off between
$10,01)0 and &K),000 worth of property. Or. Spectator, Jun. 10, 1330.
ment of the resources
of Oregon,4a the progress of this history will show. Then, perhaps,
after all it will be seen that the distance of Oregon from the Sierra Foothills
proved at this time the greatest of blessings, being near enough for commercial
communication, and yet so far away as to escape the more evil consequences
attending the mad scramble for wealth, such as social dissolution, the rapine
of intellect and principle, an overruling spirit of gambling—a delirium of
development, attended by robbery, murder, and all uncleanness, and followed by
reaction and death.
w When J.
Q. Thornton was in Washington in 1848, he had made a seal for the territory,
the design of which was appropriate. In the centre a shield, two compartments.
Lower compartment, in !-he foreground a plough; in the distance, mountains. In
thu upper compartment, a ship under fu!1 sail. The crest a beaver;
the sinister supporter an Indian with bow and arrow, ami a mantle of skins over
his shoulders; the dexter supporter an eagle with w ing-; displayed; the
motto—alie vokt propriti—I fly with my own wing. Field of the lower compartment
argent; of tlie upper blue. This seal was presented to the governor and
secretary in 1850, and by them adopted. By act of Jan. 1854, it was directed to
be deposited, and recorded in the office of the secretary, to remain a public
record; but so far as can be ascertained it was never done. Or. Otn. Laws,
1845-1864, p. 627. For fac-similu of seal see p. 487, this vol.
IIist.
Or., Vol. II. 5
CHAPTER III
LANE’S
ADMINISTRATION.
1849-lSjO.
Indian
Affairs—Troubles in Cowlitz Valley—Fort Nisqually Attacked—Arrival of the United States Ship
‘Massachusetts’—A Military Post Established near Nisqually—Thornton as Sub-
Indian Agent—Meeting of the Legislative Assembly—Measures Adopted—Judicial
Districts—A Travelling Court op Justice— The Mounted Rule Regiment—Establishment op Military Posts at Fort Hall,
Vancouver, Stklaoqom, and The Dalles—The Vancouver Claim—General Persiper F.
Smith—His Drunken Soldiers—The Dalles Claim—TuiiL and Execution of the Whitman
Murderers.
Governor
Lane lost no time in starting the political wheels of the territory. First a
census must be taken in order to make the proper apportionment before ordering
an election ; and this duty the marshal and his deputies quickly performed.1 Meanwhile
the governor applied himself to that branch of his office which made him
superintendent of Indian affairs, the Indians themselves—those that were left
of them—being prompt to remind him of the many years they had been living on
promises, and the crumbs which were dropped from the tables of their white
brothers. The result was more promises, more fair words, and further assurances
of the intentions of the great chief of the Americans toward his naked and
hungry red children. Nevertheless the superintendent did decide a case
1 The census returns Bhowed a total of
8,785 Americans of all ages and both sexes and 298 foreigners. From this
enumeration may be gathered some idea of the great exodaa to the gold mines of
both Americans and Jirit- uh subjects. Indians and Ilawaiians were not
enumerated. Honolulu Friend, Oct. 1849, 51.
against some white
men of Linn City who had possessed themselves of the site of a native fishing
village on the west bank of the Willamette near the falls, after maliciously
setting fire to the wretched habitations and consuming the poor stock of
supplies contained therein. The Indians were restored to their original
freehold, and quieted with a promise of indemnification, which, on the arrival
of the first ten thousand dollar appropriation for the Indian service iu
April, was redeemed by a few presents of small value, the money being required
for other purposes, none having been forwarded for the use of the territory.2
In order to allay a
growing feeling of uneasiness among the remoter settlements, occasioned by the
insolent demeanor of the Ivliketats, who frequently visited the Willamette and
perpetrated minor offences, from demanding a prepared meal to stealing an ox or
a horse, as the Molallas had done on previous occasions, Lane visited the
tribes near The Dalles and along the north side of the Columbia, including the
Kliketats, all of whom at the sight of the new white chief professed
unalterable friendship, thinking that now surely something besides words would
be forthcoming. A few trifling gifts were bestowed.3 Presently a
messenger arrived from Puget Sound with information of the killing of an American,
Leander C. Wallace, of Cowlitz Valley, and the wounding of two others, by the
Snoqualimichs. It was said that they had concocted a plan for capturing Fort
Nisqually by fomenting a quarrel with a small and inoffensive tribe living near
the fort, and whom they employed sometimes as herdsmen. They reckoned upon the
company’s interference, which was to furnish the opportunity. As they had
expected, when they began the
2Honolulu
Friend, Oct. 1849, 58; Lane's Sept. in 31st Cong., 2d Sess.,
H. Ex. Doc. 1, 156.
3 Lane says the amount expended on
presents was about $200; and that Vie made peace between the Walla, Wallas and
Yakiniaa who were about to gu to war.
affray, the Indians
attacked ran to the fort, and Tolmie, who was in charge, ordered the gates
opened to give them refuge. At this moment, when the Snoquali- miehs were
making a dash to crowd into the fort on the pretence of following their
enemies, Wallace, Charles Wren, and a Mr Lewis were riding toward it, having
come from the Cowlitz to trade. On seeing their danger, they also made all
haste to get inside, but were a moment too late, 'when, the gates being closed,
the disappointed savages fired upon them, as I have said, besides killing one
of the friendly Indians who did not gain the shelter of the fort.4
Thibault, a Canadian, then bewail firino1 on the assailants from
7 O O _
one of the bastions.
The Indians finding they had failed retreated before the company could attack
them in full force. There was no doubt that had the Sno- qualimichs succeeded in
capturing the fort, they would have massacred every white person on the Sound.
Finding that they had committed themselves, they sent word to the American
settlers, numbering about a dozen families, that they were at liberty to go out
of the country, leaving their property behind. But to this offer the settlers
returned answer that they intended to stay, and if their property was
threatened should fight. Instead of fleeing, they built block houses at
Tumwater and Cowlitz prairie, to which they could retire in case of alarm, and
sent a messenger to the governor to inform him of their situation.
There were then at
Oregon City neither armies nor organized courts. Lieutenant Hawkins and five
men
4 This is according to the account of the
afeir given by several authorities. See Tolmie in the Feb. 3d issue of Truth
Teller, a small sheet published at Fort Steilacoom in 1838; also in Hint. Puget
Sound, MS., 33-5. A -writer in the Olympia Standard of April 11, 1868, says
that Wren had his back against the wall irnd was edging in. feet was shat out
by Walter Ross, the clerk, who with one of the Nis<[uallies was on guard.
This writer also says that Patkanim, a chief of the Siioqaalirmcbs, afterward
famous in the Indian wars, was inside the fort talking with Tolmie, while the
chief’s brother shot at and killed Wallace. These statements, while not
intentionally false, were colored by rumor, and by the prejudice against the
fur company, which had its origin with the first settlers of the 1’uget Sound
region, aa it had had in the region south of the Columbia. See al»o Roberta’
Recollections, MS., 35; Rabbison's Growth of Towns, MS., 17.
who had not deserted
constituted the military force at Lane’s command. Acting with characteristic
promptness, he set out at once for Puget Sound, accompanied by these, taking
with him a supply of arms and ammunition, and leaving George L. Curry acting
secretary by his appointment, Pritchett not yet having arrived. At Tumwater he
was overtaken by an express from Vancouver, notifying him of the arrival of
the propeller Massachusetts, Captain Wood, from Boston, by way of Valparaiso
and the Hawaiian Islands, having on board two companies of artillery under
Brevet-Major Hathaway, who sent Lane word that if he so desired, a part of his
force should be moved at once to the Sound.5
Lane returned to the
Columbia, at the same time despatching a letter to Tolmie at Fort Ni,squally,
requesting him to inform the hostile Indians that should they commit any
further outrages they would be visited with chastisement, for now he had
fighting men
7 t O ©
enough to destroy
them; also making a request that no ammunition should be furnished to the
Indians.6 His plan, lie informed the secretary of war afterward,
was, in the event of a military post being established on the Sound, to secure
the cooperation of Major Hathaway in arresting and punishing the Indians
according to law for the murder of American citizens.
On reaching
Vancouver, about the middle of June, he found the Massachusetts ready to
depart,7 and Hathaway encamped in the rear of the Hudson’s Bay
Company’s fort with one company of artillery, the other, under Captain B. H.
Hill, having been left at Astoria, quartered in the buildings erected by the
5 The
transport Massachusetts entered the Columbia May 7th, by the sailing
directions of Captain Gelston, without difficulty. Honolulu Friend, Nov.
1, 1849. This was the first government
vessel to get safely into the river.
6Lane's
llept. to the Sec. War., in31 si Cong., 2d Sess., 11. Ex. Doc. 1, 157.
7 The Massachusetts went to Portland,
where she was loaded with lumber for the use of the government in California in
building army quarters at Benicia; the U. S. transport Anita was likewise
employed* Ingall's llept., in 31st Cong., 2d Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 1, 284.
Shark’s
crew in 184G.3 It was soon arranged
between Hathaway and Lane that Hill’s company should establish a post near
Nisqually, when the Indians would bo called upon to surrender the murderer of
Wallace. The troops were removed from Astoria about the mid-^ die of July,
proceeding by the English vessel Ilar- pooner to Nisqually.
On the 13th of May
the governor’s proclamation was issued dividing the territory into judicial
districts; the first district, to which Bryant, who arrived 011 the 9th of
April, was assigned, consisting of Vancouver and several counties immediately
south of the Columbia; the second, consisting of the remaining counties in the
Willamette Valley, to which Pratt was assigned; and the third the county of
Lewis, or all the country north of the Columbia and west of Vancouver county,
including the Puget Sound territory, for which there was no judge then
appointed.9 The June election gave Oregon a bona fide delegate to
congress, chosen by the people, of whom we shall know more presently.
When the governor
reached his capital lie found that several commissions, which had been intended
to overtake him at St Louis or Leavenworth, but which failed, had been
forwarded by Lieutenant Beale to California, and thence to Oregon City. These
related to the Indian department, appointing as sub-Indian agents J. Q.
Thornton, George C. Preston, and Robert Newell,10 the Abernethy
delegate being rewarded at last with this unjudicial office by a relenting
president. As Preston did not arrive with his commission, the territory was
divided into two districts,
8 The whole
force consisted of 161 TM'k and file. They were comjwmiea L and M of the 1st
regiment of U. S. artillery, end officered as follows: Major J. S. Hathaway
commanding; Captain B. H. Hill, commanding company M; 1st lieut., J. B. Gibson,
1st lieut., T. Talbot, 2d lieut., G. Tallmadge, company M; 2d lieut., J.
Dement, company L; 2d lieut., J. J Woods, quartermaster and commissary; 2d
lieut., J. B. Fry, adjutant. Honolulu Polynesian, April 14, 1849.
8E'-ans, in
New Tacoma Ledger, July 9, 18S0.
10American
Almanac, 1850, 108-9; Or. Spectator, Oct. 4, 1849.
and Thornton assigned
by the governor to the north of the Columbia, while Nowell was given the
country south of the river as his district. ' This arrangement sent Thornton to
the disaffected region of Puget Sound. On the 30th of July he proceeded to Nis-
qually, where he was absent for several weeks, obtaining the information which
was embodied in the report of the superintendent, concerning the numbers and
dispositions of the different tribes, furnished to him by Tolmie.11
While on this mission, during which he visited some of the Indians and made
them small presents, he conceived it his duty to offer a reward for the
apprehension of the principal actors in the affair at Nisqually, nearly equal
to the amount paid by Ogden for the ransom of all the captives after the
W&iilatpu massacre, amounting to nearly five hundred dollars. This
assumption of authority roused the ire of the governor, who probably expressed
himself somewhat strongly, for Thornton resigned, and as Newell shortly after
went to the gold mines the business of conciliating and punishing the Indians
again devolved upon the governor.
On the lGtli of July
the first territorial legislative assembly met at Oregon City. According to the
act establishing the government, the legislature was organized with nine
councilmen, of three classes, whose terms should expire with the first, second,
and third years respectively; and eighteen members of the house of
representatives, who should serve for one year; the law, however, providing for
an increase in the number of representatives from time to time, in proportion
to the number of qualified voters, until the maximum of thirty should be
reached.12 After the
nSlst
Cong., 2d Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 1, 161.
12 The nauts of the councilmen were: W. U.
Buck, of Clackamas; AVilpon T>lain, of Tualatin; Samuel l’arker and Wesley
Shannon, of Champoeg; J. Graves, of Yamhill; W. B. Healey, of Linn; Nathaniel
Ford, of Polk; Norrid Humphrey, of Benton; S. T. McKean, of Clatsop, Lewis, and
Vancouver counties. The members of the house elected were: A. L. Lovejoy, W.
I). Holman,
usual congratulations
Lane, in his message to the legislature,, alluded briefly to the Cayuses, who,
lie promised, should be brought to justice as soon as the rifle regiment then
on its way should arrive. Congress would probably appropriate money to pay the
debt, amounting to about one hundred and ninety thousand dollars. He also spoke
of the Wallace affair, and said the murderers should be punished.
His suggestions as to
the wants of the territory were practical, and related to the advantages of
good roads; to a judicious system of revenues; to the revision of the loose
and defective condition of the statute laws, declared by the organic act to be
operative in the territory;1* to education and common schools; to
the organization of the militia; to election matters and providing for
apportioning the representation of counties and districts to the council and
house of representatives, and defining the qualification of voters, with other
matters appertaining to government. He left the question of the seat of government
to their choice, to decide whether it should be fixed by them or at some future
session. He referred with pleasure to the return of many .absentees from the
mines, and hoped they would resume the cultivation of their farms, which from
lying idle would give the country only a short crop, though there was still
enough for home consumption.11 lie
and (t. Walling, of
Clackamas; I). Hill ami W. \\. Eng, of Tualatin; W. W. Chapman, W. S. Matlock,
anil John Grim, of Champoeg; A. J. Hembree, R. Kinney, and J. B. Walling, of
Yamliill; Jacob Conser and J. S. Dunlap, of Linn, H. N. V. Holmes end S.
Eureli, of l’olk: J. Mulkey and <3. B. Smith, of Benton; and M. T. Simmons
from Clatsop, Lewis, and Vancouver counties. Honolulu Friend, Nov. 1, 1810;
American A lmanac, 1849, 312. The president of the council was Samuel i’arker;
the clerk, A. A. Robinson; sergeant-at-arms, C. Davis; door-keeper, S. Kinney;
chaplain, David Leslie. Speaker of the house, A. L. Lovejoy; chief clerk,
William I^orter; assistant clerk, E. Gendis; sergeant-at-arms, William Holmes;
door-keeper, D. D. Bailey; chaplain, II. Johnson. Honolulu Friend, Nov. 1,
1849; Or. Spectator, Oct. 18, 1849.
13 Lane’s remarks on the law? of the
provisional government were more truthful than flattering, considering what a
number had been simply adopted fi'om the Iowa code. Message i Or. Spectator,
Oct. 4, 1849; 31st Cong., 1st Sets., S. Doc. 52, xiii. 7-12; Tribune Almanac,
1830-51.
11 Patent
Office Mept., 1849, ii. 511-12,
predicted that the
great migration to California would benefit Oregon, as many of the gold-seekers
would remain on the Pacific coast, and look for homes in the fertile and
lovely valleys of the new territory. And last, but by no means least in
importance, was the reference to the expected donation of land for which the
people were waiting, and all the more anxiously that there was much doubt
entertained of the tenure by which their claims were now held, since the only
part of the old organic law repealed Was that which granted a title to lands.15
He advised them to call the attention of congress to this subject without
delay. In short, if Lane had been a pioneer of 1843 he could not have touched
upon all the topics nearest the public heart more successfully. Hence his immediate
popularity was assured, and whatever he might propose was likely to receive
respectful consideration.
The territorial act
allowed the first legislative assembly one hundred days, at three dollars a
day, in which to perform its work. A memorial to congress occupied it two
weeks; still, the assembly closed its labors in seventy-sis days,18
having enacted what the Spectator described as a “ fair and respectable code of
laws,” and adopted one hundred acts of the Iowa statutes. The memorial set
forth the loyalty of the people, and the natural advantages of the country,
not forgetting the oft-repeated request that congress, would grant six hundred
and forty acres of land to each actual settler, including widows and orphans;
and that the donations should be made to conform to the claims and improvements
of the settlers; but if congress decided to have the lands surveyed, and to
make grants by subdivisions, that the settler might be permitted to take his
land in subdivisions as low as twenty acres, so as to include his improvements,
without regard to section or township lines. The govern-
15 Or. Gen. Laws, 1S43-9, 60.
16 The final adjournment was on the 29th of
September, a recess having been taken to attend to gathering the ripened wheat
in August, there being no other hands to employ in this labor. Deady's Hist.
Or,, MS., 3-5.
ment was reminded
that such a grant had been long expected; that, indeed, congress was
responsible for the expectation, which had caused the removal to Oregon of so
large a number of people at a great cost to themselves; that they were happy to
have effected by such emigration the objects which the government had in view,
and to have been prospective!}7 the promoters of the happiness of
millions yet unborn, and that a section of land to each would 110 more than pay
them for their trouble. The memorial asked payment for the cost of the Cayuse
war, and also for an appropriation of ten thousand dollars to pay the debt of
the late government, which, adopted as a necessity, and weak and inefficient as
it had been, still sufficed to regulate society and promote the growth of wholesome
institutions.17 A further appropriation of twenty thousand dollars
was asked for the erection of public buildings at the seat of government
suitable for the transaction of the public business, which was no more than had
been appropriated to the other territories for the same purpose. A sum
sufficient for the erection of a penitentiary was also wanted, and declared to
be as much in the interest of the United States as of the territory of Oregon.
With regard to the
school lands, sections sixteen and thirty-six, which would fall upon the claims
of some settlers, it was earnestly recommended that congress should pass a law
authorizing the township authorities, if the settlers so disturbed should
desire, to select other lands in their places. At the same time congress was
reminded that under the distribution act, live hundred thousand acres of land
were given to each new state on coming into the union; and the people of Oregon
asked that the territory be allowed to select such lands immediately on the
public
17 Congress never paid this debt. In 1862
the state- legislature passed an act constituting the secretary commissioner of
the provincial government debt, and register of the claims of scrip holders. A
report made in 18G4 shows that claims to the amount of $4,574.02 only hail been
proven. Many were never presented.
surveys being made,
and also that a law be passed authorizing the appropriation of said lands to
the support of the common schools.
A military road from
some point on the Columbia below the cascades to Puget Sound was asked for;
also one from the sound to a point on the Columbia, near Walla Walla;18
also one from The Dalles to the Willamette Valley; also that explorations be
made for a road from Bear River to the Humboldt, crossing the Blue Mountains
north of Klamath Lake, and entering the Willamette Valley near Mount Jefferson
and the Santiam Liver. Other territorial and post roads were asked for, and an
appropriation to make improvements at the falls of the Willamette. The usual
official robbery under form of the extinguishment of the Indian title, and
their removal from the neighborhood of the white settlements, was unblushingly
urged. The propriety of making letters to Oregon subject to the same postage as
letters within the States was suggested. Attention was called to the
difficulties between American citizens and the Puget Sound Agricultural Company
with regard to the extent of the company’s claim, which was a large tract of
country enclosed within undefined and imaginary lines. They denied the right of
citizens of the United States to locate on said lands, while the people
contended that the company had no right to any lands except such as they
actually occupied at the time of the Oregon treaty of 184G. The government ■was
requested to purchase the lands rightfully held by treaty in order to put an
end to disputes. The memorial closed by coolly asking for a railroad and
telegraph to the Pacific, though there were not people enough in all Oregon to
make a good-sized country town.19
This document framed,
the business of laying out
18 l’ierre C. Pam!mm and Com<;liu= Rogers
explored the Nuqu&lly Pass as early as 1S39, going from Fort Walla Walla to
Fort Nioqually by that route. Or. Spectator, Maj 13, 1.H47.
19 Oregon Archives, MS., 176-lbG; Slst
Cong., 2d Sens., Sen. Mis. Doc. 5, G.
the judicial
districts was attended to. Having first changed the names of several counties,20
it was decreed that the first judicial district should consist of Clackamas,
Marion, and Linn; the second district of Benton, Polk, Yamhill, and
Washington; and the third of Clarke, Clatsop, and Lewis. The time for holding
court was also fixed.21
While awating a
donation law an act was passed declaring the late land law in force, and that
any person who had complied or should thereafter comply with its provisions
should be deemed in possession to every part of the land within his recorded
boundary, not exceeding six hundred and forty acres. But the same act provided
that no foreigner should be entitled to the benefits of the law, who should
not have, within six months thereafter, filed his declaration of intention to
become a citizen of the United States.22
The new land law
amended the old to make it conform to the territorial act, declaring that none
but white male citizens of the United States, over eighteen years of age,
should be entitled to take claims under the act revived. The privilege of
holding claims during absence from the territory by paying five dollars
annually was repealed; but it was declared not necessary to reside upon the
laud, if the claimant continued to improve it, provided the claimant should not
be absent more than six months. It was also de-
25 The first
territorial legislature changed the name of Champoeg county to Marion; of
Tualatin to Washington, and of Vancouver to Clarke. Or. Spectator, Oct. 18th.
21 As there wag yet no judge for the third
judicial district, and the time for holding the court in Lewis county had been
appointed for the second Monday in May and November, Governor Lone prevailed
upon th'; legislature to attach the county of Lewis to the first judicial
district which was to hold its first session on the first Monday in September,
and to appoint the first Monday in October for holding the district court at
Steilacoom in the county of Lewis. This change was made in order to bring the
trial of the Snoqua limichs in a season of the year when it would be possible
for the court to travel to l’uget Sound.
22 ‘ During the month of May several hundred
foreigners w'ere naturalized. ’ Honolulu Friend, Oct. 1, 1840. There was a
doubt in the mind of Judge Bryant whether Hawaiian ! could become naturalized,
the law of congrcss being explicit as to negroes and liidians, but not
mentioning Sandwich Islanders.
dared that land
claims should descend to heirs at law as personal property.
An act was passed at
this session which made it unlawful for any negro or mulatto to come Into or
reside in the territory; that masters of vessels bringing them should be held
responsible for their conduct, and they should not be permitted to leave the
port where the vessel was lying except with the consent of the master of the
vessel, who should cause them to depart with the vessel that brought them, or
some other, within forty days after the time of their arrival. Masters or owners
of vessels failing to observe this law were made subject to fine not less than
five hundred dollars, and imprisonment. If a negro or mulatto should be found
in the territory, it became the duty of any judge to issue a warrant for his
arrest, and cause his removal; and if the same negro or mulatto were twice
found in the territory, he should be fined and imprisoned at the discretion of
the court. This law, however, did not apply to the negroes already in the
territory. The act was ordered published in the newspapers of California.23
The next most
interesting action of the legislative assembly was the enactment of a school
law, which provided for the establishment of a permanent irreducible fund, the
interest on which should be divided annually among the districts; but as the
school landtf could not be made immediately available, a tax of two mills was
levied for the support of common schools in the interim. The act in its several
chapters created the offices of school commissioner and directors for each county
and defined their duties; also the duties of teachers. The eighth chapter
relating to the powers of district meetings provided that until the counties
were districted the people in any neighborhood, on ten days’ notice, giveu by
any two legal voters, might call a meeting and organize a district; and the
district
13 Or.
Statutes, I80OSI, 181-2, 246-7; Dix. Speeches, i. 309-43, 372, 377-8.
meeting might impose
an ad valorem tax on all taxable property in the district for tlie erection of
school houses, and to defray the incidental expenses of the districts, and for
the support of teachers. All children between the ages of four and twenty-one
years were entitled to the benefits of public education.24
It is unnecessary to
the purposes of this history to follow the legislature of the first territorial
assembly further. Xo money having been received25 for the payment of
the legislators or the printing of the laws, the legislators magnanimously
waived their right to take the remaining thirty days allowed them, and thus
left some work for the next assembly to do.58
On the 21st of
September the assembly was notified, by a special message from the governor,
of the death of ex-President James K. Polk, the friend of Oregon, and the
revered of the western democracy. As a personal friend of Lane, also, his death
created a profound sensation. The legislature after draping both houses in
mourning adjourned for a week. Public obsequies were celebrated, and Lane
delivered a highly eulogistic address. Perhaps the admirers of Polk’s
administration and political principles were all the more earnest to do him
honor that his successor
51 Says Buck
in his Enterprise*, MS. 11-12: ‘They had to make the first beginning in schools
in Oregon City, and got up the present school law at the fiisst session in
lh49. It was drawn mostly after the Ohio law, and subsequently amended. F. C.
Beatty taught the first (common) school at Oregon City in
1850.’
Besides chartering the Tualatin Academj and Pacific University, a charter was
granted to the Clackamas Counvy Female Seminary, with G. Abernethy, A. L.
Lovejoy, James Taylor, Hiram Clark, G. II. Atkinson, Hezekiah Johnson, and
Wilson Blain as trustees.
25Lane's
Rept. in 31st Cong., 2d Sess., II. Ex. Doe., i.
23One of the
members tells us something about the legislators: ‘I have heard somt people say
that the first legislature was better than any one wo have had since. I think
it was as good. It was composed of more substantia! men than they have had in
since; men who represented the people better. The second one was probably as
good. The third one met in Salem. It is my impression they had deteriorated a
little; but 1 would not like to say bo, because I waa in the first one. I know
there were no such men in it as go to the legislature new.’ Buck's Enterprises,
MS., 11 ‘ The only difference among members was that each one was ruust partial
to the utate from which he had emigrated, and with the operations of which he
was familiar. This difficulty proved a serious one, and retarded the progress of
business throughout. ’ Or. Spectator, Oct. 18, 1849.
in office was a whig,
with whose appointments they were predetermined not to be pleased. The officers
elected by the legislature were: A. A. Skinner, commissioner to settle the
Cayuse war debt; Bernard Genoise, territorial auditor; James Taylor, treasurer;
Wm. T. Matlock, librarian; James McBride, superintendent of schools; C. M.
Walker, prosecuting attorney first judicial district; David Stone, prosecuting
attorney second judicial district; Wilson Blain, public printer; A. L. Lovejoy
and W. W. Buck, commissioners to let the printing of the laws and journals.
Other offices being still vacant, an act was passed providing for a special
election to bo held in each of the several counties on the third Monday in
October for the election of probate judges, clerks, sheriffs, assessors,
treasurers, school commissioners, and justices of the peace.
As by the territorial
act the governs had no veto power, congress having reserved this right, there
was nothing for him to do at Oregon City; and being accustomed of late to the
stir and incident of military camps he longed for activity, and employed his
time visiting the Indians on the coast, and sending couriers to the Cayuses, to
endeavor to prevail upon them to give up the Waiilatpu murderers.'27
The legislative assembly having in the mean time passed a special act to enable
liim to bring to trial the Snoqualiinichs, and Thornton’s munificent offer of
reward having prompted the avaricious savages to give up to Captain Hill at
Steilacoom certain of their number to be dealt with according to the white
man’s law, Lane had tho satisfaction oi seeing, about the last of September,
the first district court, marshal and jurymen, grand and petit, on the way to
Puget Sound,'28 where the
v Lane’s
Autobiography, MS., 55; 31st Cong., IstSess., Sen. Due. Jfl, viii. pt. iii.
112.
28 There was
a good deal of feeling op the part of the Hudson's Bay Company concerning
Lane’s course, though according to Tolmie's account, it Truth Telh r, the
Indians were committing hostilities against them aa well as
American population
was still so small that travelling courts were obliged to bring their own
juries.
Judge Bryant provided
for the decent administration of justice by the appointment of A. A. Skinner,
district attorney, for the prosecution, and David Stone for the defence. The
whole company proceeded by canoes and horses to Steilacoom carrying with them
their provisions and camping utensils. Several Indians had been arrested, but
two only,Quallawort, brother of Patkanim, head chief of the Snoqualimichs, and
Kas- sas, another Snoqualimich chief, were found guilty. On the day following
then- conviction they were hanged in the presence of the troops and many of
their own and other tribes, Bryant expressing himself satisfied with the
finding of the jury, and also with the opinion that the attacking party of
Snoqualimichs had designed to take Fort Xisqually, in which attempt, had they
succeeded, many lives would have been lost-.29 The cost of this
trial was §1,899.54, besides eighty blankets, the promised reward for the
arrest and delivery of the guilty parties, which amounted to $480 more. Many
of the jurymen wTere obliged to travel two hundred miles, and the
attorneys also, each of whom received two hundred and fifty dollars for his
services. Notwithstanding this expensive lesson the same savages made away in
some mysterious manner with one or the artillerymen from Fort Stoilacoom the
following winter.30
against the
Americans. Roberts says that v. hen Lane was returning from the Sound in June,
he, Roberts, being at the Cowlitz farm, rode out tu meet him, and answered his
inquiries concerning the best way of preserving the peace of the country, then
changing from the old regime to the new. I -was astonished,’ says Roberts, to
hear him remark “Damn them ! (the Indians) it would do my soul good to be after
them.'’ This ■would
never have, escaped the lips of Dr McLoughlin or Douglas.’
Recollections, MS., 15. There was always this rasping of the rude outspoken
western sentiment on the feelings of the studiously trained Hudson’s Lay
Company. But an Indian to them was a different creature from the Indian toward
whom the settlers were hostile. In the one cast) he was a means of making w
ealth; in the other o* destroying property and life. Could the Hudson’s Bay
Company have ciianged places with the settlers they might have changed feelings
too
'■* Brya.nt
t Kept. to Gov. Lane in iilst Cong., i2d Sew., 11. Ex, Uoc., i. 1G6- 7; Hayes'
Scraps, 22; Or. Spectator, Oct. 18, lb-19.
8U TolmitU
Puget Souivl, MS., tfG.
The arrest of the
Cayuse murderers could not proceed until the arrival of the mounted rille
regiment then en route, under the command of Brevet-Colonel W. W. Loring.31
This regiment which was provided expressly for service in Oregon and to
garrison posts upon the emigrant road, by authority of a congressional act
passed May 19, 184G, was not raised till the spring of 1847, and was then
ordered to Mexico, although the secretary of war in his instructions to the governor
of Missouri, in which state the regiment was formed, had said that a part if
not the whole of it would be employed in establishing posts on the route to
Oregon.32 Its numbers beiug greatly reduced during the Mexican
campaign, it was recruited at Fort Leavenworth, and at length set out upon its
march to the Columbia in the spring of 1849. On the 10th of May the regiment
left Fort Leavenworth with about COO men, thirty-one commissioned officers,
several women and children, the usual train agents, guides, and teamsters, 160
wagons, 1,200 mules, 700 horses, and subsistence for the march to the Pacific.83
Two posts were
established on the way, one at Fort
Sl TIic
command was iirst given to Fremont, who resigned.
32 See letter of W. L. Marey, secretary of
war, in Or. Spectator, Nov. 11, 1847.
33 The officers were Bvt. Lieut. Col. A.
Porter, Col. Benj. S. Roberts, Bvt. Major C. F. Ruff, Major George B.
Crittenden, Bvt. Major J. S. Simonson, . Bvt. Major S. S. Tucker, Bvt. Lieut.
Col. J. B. Backenstos, Bvt. Major Kearney, Captains M. E. Van Buren, George
McLane, Noah Newton, Llewellyn Jones, l!vt. Captain J. P. Hatch, R. Ajt., Bvt.
Captains Thos. Claiborne Jr., Gordon Granger, James Stuart, and Thos. G. Rhett;
1st Lieuts Charles L. Denman, A. J. Lindsay, Julian May, F. S. Iv. Russell; 2d
Lieuts D. M. Frost, R. Q. M., I. N. Palmer, J. McL. Addison, W. B. Lane, W. E.
Jones, George W. Howland, C. E. Ervine; surgeons I Moses, Charles H. Smith, and
W. F. Edgar. The following were persons travelling with the regiment in \arious
capacities: George Gibbs, deputy collector at Astoria; Alden H. Steele, who
settled in Oregon City, where he practised medicine till 18(33, when he became
a surgeon in the army, finally settling at Olympia in 18G8, where in 1S7S I met
him, and he furnished a brief but pithy account in manuscript of the march o;
the Oregon Mounted Rifle Regiment; W. Frost, Prew, Wilcox, Leach, Bishop,
Kitchen, Dudley, ami Raymond. Present also was J D. Haines, a native of Xenia,
Ohio, born in 1828. After a residence in Portland, and removal to Jacksonville,
he was elected to the house of representatives from Jackson county in 18G2, and
from Baker county in 1870, and to the state senate in 1878. He married in 1871
and has several children. Saltm Statesman, Nov. 13, 1878; U. S. Off. Beg.,
1819, 1G0, 107.
Ill-r.
on., Vol. II. 6
Laramie, with, two
companies, under Colonel Benjamin Roberts; and another at Cantonment Loring,
three miles above Fort Hall,31 on Snake River, with an equal number
of men under Major Simonson, the command being transferred soon after to
Colonel Porter.85 The report made by the quartermaster is an account
of discomforts from rains which lasted to the Rocky Mountains; of a great
migration to the California gold mines36 where large numbers died of
cholera, which dread disease invaded the military camps also to some extent ;
of the almost entire worthlessness of the teamsters and men engaged at Fort
Leavenworth, who had no knowledge of their duties, and were anxious only to
reach California; of the loss by death and desertion of seventy of the late recruits
to the regiment;37 and of the loss of property and life in no way
different from the usual experience of the annual emigrations.33
It was designed to
meet the rifle regiment at Fort Hall, with a supply train, under Lieutenant G.
W. Hawkins who was ordered to that post/9 but Hawkins
5*
Cantonment Loring was soon abandoned, being too far from a base of supplies,
and forage being scarce in the neighborhood. Brackett’s Cavalry, 120—T; 31st
Cong,, 1st Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 5, pt. i. 182, 185-6, 188.
35 Steele says that Simonson was arrested
for some dereliction of duty, and came to Vancouver in this situation; also
that Major Crittenden was arrested on the way for drunkenness. Rifle Regiment,
MS., 2.
36 Major Cross computed the overland
emigration to the Pacific coast at 35,00.1; 20,000 of whom travelled the route
by the Platte with 50,COO cattle. 31st Cong., Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 1, 149.
37 Or. Spectator, Oct. 18, 1849; Weed’s
Queen Charlotte Island Exped., MS.. 4.
3,1 On
reaching The Dalles, the means of transportation to Vancouver was found to be ‘
3 Mackinaw boats, 1 yawl, 4 canoes, and 1 whale-boat.’ A raft was constructed
to carry 4 or 5 tons, and loaded with goods chiefly private,
8 men being placed on board to manage the
craft. They attempted to run the cascades and six of them were drowned. Or.
Spectator, Oct. 18, 1849. A part of the command with wagons, teams, and riding
horses crossed the Cascade Mountains by the Mount Hood road, losing ‘ nearly
two thirds ’ of the broken-down horses on the way. The los» on the journey
amounted to 45 wagons, 1 ambulance, 30 horses, and 295 mules.
39
Applegate’s Views, MS., 49. There were fifteen freight wagons and a herd of
beef cattle in the train. Gen. Joel ralmer acted as guide, the company taking
the southern route. Palmer went to within a few days of Fort Ilall, where
another government train was encountered escorting the customs officer of
California, Gen. Wilson and family, to Sacramento. The gras3 having been eaten
along the Humboldt route by the cattle of the immigration,
missed Loring’s
command, lie having already left Fort Hall when Hawkins arrived. As the
supplies were needed by the companies at the new post they were left there, in
consequence of which those destined to Oregon w~ere in want of certain
articles, and many of the men wrere barefoot and unable to walk, as
their horses were too wTeak to carry them when they arrived at The
Dalles.
On reaching their
destination, and finding no accommodations at Fort Vancouver, the regiment wTas
quartered in Oregon City, at a great expense, and to the disturbance of the
peace and order of that moral and temperate community; the material from which
companies had been recruited being below the usual standard of enlisted men.'10
The history of the
establishment of the Oregon military posts is not without interest. Under
orders to take command of the Pacific division, General Per- sifer F. Smith
left Baltimore the 24th of November, and New Orleans on the 18th of December
1848, proceeding by the isthmus of Panama, and arriving on the 23d of February
following at Monterey, where wTas Colonel Mason’s liead-quarters.
Smith remained in California arranging the distribution of posts, and the
aftairs of the division generally.
In May Captain Pufus
Ingalls, assistant quartermaster, was directed by Major H. P. Vinton, chief
Palmer was engaged to
conduct this company by the new route from Pit River, opened the previous
autumn by the Oregon gold-seekers. At the crossing of a stream flowing from the
Sierra, one of the party named Brow n shot himself through the arm by accident,
and the limb was amputated by two surgeons of an emigrant company. This
incident detained I'almer in the mountains several weeks at a cabin supposed to
ha\ e been built by some of Lassen's party the year before. A son of Gen.
Wilson and three men remained with him until the snow and ice made it
dangerous getting down to the Sacramento Valley, when Brown was left with his
attendants and Palmer went home to Oregon by sea. The unlucky invalid, long
familiarly known as ‘one-armed Brown,’has for many years resided in Oregon, and
has been connected with the Indian department and other branches of the public
service. 1‘almer's Wagon Train, MS., 43-8.
*° This is what
Steele says, and also that one of them who deserted, named Riley, was hanged in
San Francisco. Itifie Regiment, MS., 7.
of the
quartermaster’s department of the Pacific division, to proceed to Oregon and
make preparations for the establishment of posts in that territory. Taking
passage on the United States transport Anita, Captain Ingalls arrived at
Vancouver soon after Hathaway landed the artilleymen and stores at that place.
The Anita was followed by the Walpole with two years’ supplies; but the vessel
having been chartered for Astoria only, and the stores landed at that place, a
difficulty arose as to the means of removing them to Vancouver, the transfer
being accomplished at great labor and expense in small river craft. When the
quatermaster began to look about for material and men to construct barracks for
the troops already in the territory and those expected overland in the autumn,
he found himself at a loss. Mechanics and laboring men were not to be found in
Oregon, and Captain Ingalls employed soldiers, paying them a dollar a day extra
to prepare timber from the woods and raft lumber from the fur-company’s mill to
build quarters. Put even with the assistance of Chief Factor Ogden in procuring
for him Indian labor, and placing at his disposal horses, bateaux, and sloops,
at moderate charges, he was able to make but slow progress.41 Of the
buildings occupied by the artillery two belonged to the fur company, having
received alterations to adapt them to the purposes of barracks and mess-rooms,
while a few small tenements also owned by the company42 were hired
for offices and for servants of the quarter-master’s department.
It was undoubtedly
believed at this time by both
11 Vinton, in 31st Cong., ZdSess., S. Doc.
1, pt. ii. 263. Congress passed in September I860 an act appropriating £325,854
to meet the unexpected outlay occasioned by the rise in prices of labor and
army subsistence in California and Oregon, as well as extra pay demanded by
military officers.
8oeU. S.
ids and Res., 1800, 122-3.
42 lu the testimony taken in the settlement
of the Hudson's Bay Company’s claims, page 186, U. S. Ev., II. B. Co. Claims,
Gray deposed that the U. S. troops did not occupy the buildings of the company
but remained in camp until they had erected buildings for their own use. This
is a misstatement, as the reports of the quarter-masters Vinton and Ingalls
show, in Slut Cony., 2d Sess., S. Doc. 1., pt. ii. 123, 285.
tlic Hudson’s Bay
Compay and the officers of the United States in Oregon, that the government
would soon purchase the possessory right of the company, which was a reason, in
addition to the eligibility of the situation, for beginning an establishment at
Vancouver. This view was entertained by both Vinton43 and Ogden.
There being at that time no title to land in any part of the country except the
possessory title of the fur company under the treaty of 1846, and the mission
lands under the territorial act, Vancouver was in a safer condition, it might
be thought, with regard to rights, than any other point ; rights which Hathaway
respected by leasing the company’s lands for a military establishment, while
the subject of purchase by the United States government was in abeyance. And
Ogden, by inviting him to take possession of the lands claimed by the company,
not inclosed, may have believed this the better manner of preventing the
encroachments of squatters. At all events, matters proceeded amicably between
Hathaway and Ogden during the residence of the former at Vancouver.
The same state of
tenancy existed at Fort Steila- coom where Captain Hill established himself
August 27th, on the claim of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company, at a place
formerly occupied by a farmer or herdsman of the company named Heath.14
Tolmie pointed out this location, perhaps with the same views entertained by
Ogden, being more willing to deal with the officers of the government than with
squatters.
On the 28th of
September General Smith arrived in Oregon, accompanied by Vinton, with the
purpose of examining the country with reference to the location of military
posts; Theodore Talbot being ordered to examine the coast south of the
Columbia, looking
“Vinton said n hi*
report: ‘It ia peculiarly desirable that we should become owners of their
property at Fort Vancouver.’ 31st Cong., 2d Sess., S. Doc. 1, pt. ii. 263.
11 Sylvester’s Olympia, MS., 20; Morse’s
Notes on Hist, and Resources, IrosA. Ter., IIS., i. 109; Olympia IVas/t.
Standard, April 11, 1868.
for harbors and
suitable places for light-houses and defences.45 The result of these
examinations was the approval of the selections of Vancouver and Steila- coom.
Of the ■“
acquisition of the rights and property reserved, and guaranteed by the terms
of the treaty,” Smith spoke with the utmost respect
for the claims of the companies, saying they were specially confirmed by the
treaty, and that the public interest demanded that the government should
purchase them,46 a sentiment which the reader is aware was not in
accord with the ideas of a large class in Oregon.
It had been
contemplated establishing a post on the upper Willamette for the protection of
companies travelling to California, but the danger that every soldier would
desert, if placed directly on the road to the gold mines, caused Smith to
abandon that idea. He made arrangements, instead, for Hathaway’s command to
remove to Astoria as early in the spring as the men could work in the forest,
cutting timber for the erection of the required buildings, and for stationing
the riflemen, at Vancouver and The Dalles, as well as recommending the
abandonment of Fort Hall, or Cantonment Loring, owing to the climate and unproductive
nature of the soil, and the fact that *mmi- grants Avere taking a more
southerly route than formerly. Smith seemed to have the welfare of the
territory at heart, and recommended to the government many things which the
people desired, among others fortifications at the mouth of the Columbia, in
preparation for which he marked off reservations at Cape Disappointment and
Point Adams. He also suggested the survey of the Iloguo, Umpqua, Alseya,
Yaquina, and Siletz rivers, and Shoal water Bay; and the erection of
light-houses at Cape Disappointment, Cape Flattery, and Protection Island,
representing that it was a military as well as commercial necessity,
i!>31st
Cong., 1st Sens., S. Doc. 47, viii. 108-16; Rep. Com. Ind. Aff., 1865, 107-9.
1631st Cong.
1st Seas., S. Doc. 47, viii. 104.
the safety of troops
and stores which must usually be transported by sea requiring these guides to
navigation. He recommended the survey of a railroad to the Pacific, or at
least of a wagon road, and that it should cross the Rocky Mountains about
latitude 38°, deflect to the Humboldt Valley, and follow that direction until
it should send off a branch to Oregon by way of the Willamette Valley, and
another by way of the Sacramento Valley to the bay of San Francisco.47
Before the plans of
General Smith for the distribution of troops could be carried out, one hundred
and twenty of the riflemen deserted in a body, with the intention of going to
the mines in California. Governor Lane immediately issued a proclamation forbidding
the citizens to harbor or in any way assist the runaways, which caused much
uneasiness, as it was said the people along their route were placed in a
serious dilemma, for if they did not sell them provisions they would be
robbed, and if they did, they would be punished. The deserters, however, having
organized with a full complement of officers, travelled faster than the
proclamation, and conducted themselves in so discreet a manner as to escape
suspicion, imposing themselves upon the farmers as a company sent out on an
expedition by the government, getting beef cattle on credit, and receiving
willing aid instead of having to resort to force.
Before leaving
California Smith had ordered an exploration of the country on the southern
lioundary of Oregon for a practicable emigrant and military road, and also for
a railroad pass about that latitude, detailing Captain W. II. Warner of the
topographical engineers, with an escort of the second infantry under
Lieutenant-Colonel Casey. They left Sacramento in August, and examined the
country for several weeks to the east of the head-waters of the Sacramento,
coming upon a pass in t.ie Sierra Nevada with an elevation of not more than 38
feet to the mile. Warner explored the country east and north of Goose Lake, but
in returning through the mountains by another route was killed by the Indians
before completing ht work. His name was given to a mountain range from this
circumstance. Francis Bercier, the guide, and George Cave were also killed.
Lieut. R. S. Williamson of the expedition made a report in favor of the Pit
River route. See 81st Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Doe, 2, 17-22, 47.
Stiele’s
Iiijle Regiment, MS., 7; Brackett's U. S. Cax'alry, 127; Or. Spectator, May 2,
1S50.
But tlieir
success,like their organization, was of brief duration. Colonel Loring and the
governor went in pursuit and overtook one division in the Umpqua Valley, whence
Lane returned to Oregon City about the middle of April with seventy of them in
charge. Loring pursued the remainder as far as the Klamath Biver, where
thirty-five escaped by making a canoe and crossing that stream before they were
overtaken. He returned two weeks after Lane, with only seventeen of the
deserters, having suffered much hardship in the pursuit. He found the fugitives
in a miserable plight, the snow on the Cascade Mountains being still deep, and
their supplies entirely inadequate to such an expedition, for which reason some
had already started on their return. Indeed, it was rumored that several of
those not accounted for had already died of starvation.43 How many
lived to reach the mines was never known.
Great discontent
prevailed among all the troops, many of whom had probably enlisted with no
other intention than of deserting when they reached the Pacific coast. Several
civil suits were brought by them in the district court attempting to prove that
they had been enlisted under false promises, which were decided against them by
Judge Pratt, vice Bryant, who was absent from the territory when the suits
came on.50
Later in the spring
Hathaway removed his artillery company to Astoria, and went into encampment at
Fort George, the place being no longer occupied by the fur company. A reserve
was declared of certain lands covered by the improvements of settlers, among
whom were Shively, McClure, Hensill, Ingalls, and Marlin, for which a price was
agreed upon or allowed.51
-9 Or.
Spectator, April 18, 1850,
“See case of John Curtin
vs. James S. Hathaway, Pratt, Justice, in Or. Spectator, April IS, 1850.
51 Ingalls remarked concerning this
purchase: ‘I do not believe that any of them had the slightest right to a foot
of the soil, consequently no right to have erected improvements' there.’
Whether he meant to day that no one
Here the troops had a
free and easy life, seeing mucli of the gold hunters as they went and came in
the numerous vessels trading betweeu San Francisco and the Columbia River, and
much too of the most degraded population in Oregon, both Indian and white. A
more ill-selected point for troops, even for artillery, could not have been hit
upon, except in the event of an invasion by a foreign power, in which case they
were still too far inside the capes to prevent the enemy’s vessels from
entering the river. They were so far from the real enemy dreaded by the people
it was intended they should defend—the interior tribes of Indians—that much
time and money would bo required to bring them where they could be of service
in case of an outbreak, and after two years the place was abandoned.
The mounted riflemen,
being transferred to Vancouver, whither the citizens of the Willamette saw
them depart with a deep sense of satisfaction,62 celebrated their
removal by burning their old quarters.53 At their new station they
were employed in building barracks on the ground afterward adopted as a military
reservation by the government.
The first reservation
declared was that of Miller Island, lying in the Columbia6* about
five miles above Vancouver. It contained about four square miles, and was used
for haymaking and grazing purposes, in connection with the post at that place.
This reserve was made in February 1850. No reservation was declared
hail a-right to build
houses in Oregon except military officers, or that the ground belonged to the
Hudson’s Bay Company, I am unable to determine from the record. See SSd Cong.,
Sid Sess., 11. Ex. Doc. 1, i. pt. ii. 123.
52 Says the Spectator, Nov. L, 1849, ‘the
abounding drunkenness in our streets is something new under the sun,’and
suggests that the officers do something to abate the evil. But the officers
were seldom sober themselves, Hathaway even attempting suicide while suffering
from mania a yotu. Id., April 18, 1850.
yi Strong's Hist.
Or., MS., 3.
64 Much
trouble had been experienced in procuring grain for the horses of the mounted
troops; only 0,000 buslielsof oats being obtainable, and 100 tons of hay, owing
to the neglect of farming this year. It was only by putting the soldiers to
haymaking on the lowlands of the Columbia that the stock of the regiment was
provided for; hence, no doubt, the reservation of Miller Island.
at Vancouver til!
October 31st of that year, or until it was ascertained that the government was
not prepared to purchase without examining the claims of the Hudson’s Bay
Company. On the date mentioned Colonel Loring, i'i command of the department,
published a notice that a military reservation had been made for the
government of four miles square, “commencing where a meridian line two miles
west from the ilag-staff at the military post near Vancouver, 0. T., strikes
the north bank of the Columbia River, thence due north on said meridian four
miles, thence due east four miles, thence south to the bank of the Columbia
River, thence down said bank to the place of beginning.5’®5
The notice declared that the reserve was made subject alone to the lawful
claims of the Hudson’s Bay Company, as guaranteed under the treaty of 1846, but
promised payments for improvements made by resident settlers within the
described limits, a board of officers to appraise the property.
This large reserve
was, as I have before indicated, favorable to the British company’s claims, as
the oidy American squatter on the land was Amos M. Short, the history of whose
settlement at Vancouver is given in the first volume of my History of Oregon.
[Short took no notice of the declaration of reserve/8 thinking
perhaps, and with a show of justice, that in this case he was trespassed upon,
inasmuch as there was plenty of land for government reservations, which did not
include improvements, or deprive a citizen of his choice of a home. He remained
upon the laud, continuing to improve it, until in 1853 the government
restricted the military reservations to one mile square, which left him outside
the limits of this one.
55 Or.
Spectator, Oct. 31, 1850; SSd Cong., 2d Se»s., II. Ex. Doc. 1, pt. ii. 121.
"''Short had
“hot and killed Dr D. Gardner, and a Hawaiian in hia service, for treapass, i
the Hpring of 1850. He was examined and acquitted, of all of which Colonel
Loring must have lieen aware. Or. Spectator, April 18, 1850; Id., May 2, 1S50.
He was himself regarded as a, trespasser by the fur company. U. S. Ev.
Hudson’s Bay Company Claims, 90.
The
probate court of Clarke county made an application for an injunction against
Loring and Ingalls at the first term of the United States district court held
at Vancouver, beginning the 29th of October 1850, to stop the further erection
of buildings for military purposes on land that was claimed as the county
seat. The attorney for the United States denied that the legislative assembly
had the power to give lands for county seats, did the territorial act permit
it, or that the land could be taken before it was surveyed; and declared that
the premises were reserved by order of the war department, which none might
gainsay.57 The court sustained the opinion. At a later
period a legal contest arose between the heirs of A. M. Short and the Catholic
missionaries. The military reservation, however, of one mile square, remains
to-day the same as in 1853.
On the 13th of May
Major Tucker left Vancouver with two companies of riflemen to establish a
supply post at The Dalles.63 The officers detached for that station
were Captain Claiborne, Lieutenants Lindsay, May, and Ervine, and Surgeon C. H.
Smith. A reservation of ten miles square was made at this place, and the troops
employed in erecting suitable store-houses and garrison accommodations to make
this the head-quarters for the Indian country in the event of hostilities. Both
the Protestant and Catholic missions were found to be abandoned,59
though the claims of both were subsequently revived, which together with the
claim of the county seat of Wasco county occasioned lengthy litigation. The
military reservation became a fourth factor in an imbroglio out of which the
Methodist missionary society, through
67 The
solicitor for the complanants in this case was W. W. Chapman; the attorney for
the U. S., Amory Holbrook. The decision was rendered by Judge AVillia .n Strong
in favor of the defendants Or. Spectator, Nov. 7, 1850.
58Steel’s
li'Jle Regiment, MS., 5; Cardwell's Emigrant Company, MS., 2; Coke's Hide, 313;
31st Cong., 2d Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 1, pt. ii. 123.
53 Deculy’s Hist. Or., MS., 6.
its agents
in Oregon and in Washington, continued to extort money from the government and
individuals for many years. Of The Dalles claim, as a case in chancery, I shall
speak further on in my work.
As if Astoria,
Vancouver, and The Dalles were not enough of Oregon’s eligible town sites to
condemn for military purposes, Loring declared another reservation in the
spring of 1850 upon the land claims of Meek and Duelling at Milwaukie, for the
site of an arsenal. This land was devoted to the raising of fruit trees, a most
important industry in a new country, and one which was progressing well. The
appropriation of property which the claimants felt the government was pledged
to confirm to them if they desired, was an encroachment upon the rights of the
founders of American Oregon which they were quick to resent, and for which the
Oregon delegate in congress was instructed to find a remedy. And he did find a
remedy. The complainants held that they preferred fighting their own Indian
wars to submitting to military usurption, and the government might withdraw
the ritle regiment at its earliest convenience. All of which was a sad ending
of the long prayer for the military protection of the parent government.
And all
the while the Cayuse murderers went unpunished. Lane was enough of a military
man to understand the delays incident to the circumstances under which Loring
found himself in a new country with undisciplined and deserting troops, but he
was also possessed of the fire and energy of half a dozen regular army
colonels. But before he had received any assistance in procuring the arrest of
the Indians, he had unofficial information of his removal by the whig
administration, which succeeded the one by which he was appointed.
This
change, though eagerly seized upon by some as a means of gaining places for
themselves and securing the control of public affairs, was not by any moans
INDIAN AGENT.
03
agreeable
to tlie majority of the Oregon people. No sooner liad the news been received
than a meeting was held in Yamhill precinct for the purpose of expressing
regret at the removal of General Lane from the office of governor.61
The manner in which Lane had discharged his duties as Indian agent, as well as
executive, had won for him the confidence of the people, with whom the dash,
energy, and democratic frankness of his character were a power and a charm.
There was nothing that was of importance to any individual of the community
too insignificant for his attention; and whether the interest lie exhibited was
genuine, whether it was the suavity of the politician, or the irrepressible
activity of a true nature, it was equally effective to make him popular with
all but the conservative element to be found in any community, and which was
represented principally in Oregon by the Protestant religious societies. Lane
being a Catholic could not be expected to represent them.61
As no
official notice of his removal had been received, Governor Lane proceeded
actively to carry into execution his plans concerning the suppression of Indian
hostilities, which were interrupted temporarily by the pursuit of. the
deserting riflemen.
J
>aring his absence on this self-imposed duty a difficulty occurred with the
Chinooks at the mouth of the, Columbia, in which, in the absence of established
courts in that district, the military authorities were called upon to act. It
grew out of the murder of William Stevens, one of four passengers lost from
the brig Forrest while crossing the bar of the Columbia. Three of the men were
drowned. Stevens escaped alive but
6nThe
principal movers in this demonstration were: Matthew I’. Deady, J. McBride, A.
S. Watt, J. Wailing, A. J. Hembree, S. M. Gilmore, and N. M. Creighton. Or.
Spectator, March 7, 1850.
61 It is told to me by the person in ■w hose
interest it was done, that Lane, while governor, permitted himself to be chosen
arbitrator in a land-jumping ease, and rode a long distance in the rain, having
to cross swollen streams on horseback, to help a woman whose husband was absent
in the mines to resist the attempt of an unprincipled tenant to hold the claim
of her husband. Ilia influence was sufficient with the jury to get the
obnoxious tenant removed.
exhausted
to the shore, where the Chinooks murdered him, Jones, of' the rifles, who was
at Astoria with a small company, hearing of it wrote to the governor and his
colonel, saying that if he had men enough he would take the matter in hand at
once; hut that the Indians were excited over the arrest of one of the
murderers, and he feared to make matters worse by attempting without a
sufficient force to apprehend all the guilty Indians. On receiving the
information, Secretary Pritchett called for aid on Hathaway, who sent a company
to Astoria to make the arrest of all persons suspected of being concerned in
the murder;62 but by this time the criminals had escaped.
Negotiations
had been in progress ever since the arrival of Lane for the voluntary delivery
of the guilty Cayuses by their tribe, it beiug shown them that the only means
by which peace and friendship could ever be restored to their people, or they
be permitted to occupy their lands and treat with the United States government,
was the delivery of the Whitman murderers to the authorities of Oregon for
trial.e3 At length word was received that the guilty members of the
tribe, who were not already dead, would be surrendered at The Dalles. Lane
went in person to receive them, escorted by Lieutenant Addison with a guard of
ten men. Five of the murderers, Tiloukaikt, Tamahas, Klokamas, Isaiachalakis,
and Kiamasump- kin, were found to be there with others of their people. They
consented to go to Oregon City to be tried, offering fifty horses'for their
successful defence.04
The
journey of the prisoners, who took leave of their friends with marked emotion,
was not without interest to their escort, who, anxious to understand the
62 Or. Spectator, March 21, ancl April
i. 1850.
t;; Lane’s
Autobiography, MS., OG.
64 Blanchet
assorts that the Cayuses consented only to come down and have a talk with the
white authorities, anil denies that they were the actual criminals, who he Raja
were all dead, having been killed by the volunteers. C'ath. Oh. in Or., 180.
There appears to bo nothing to justify such a statement, except that tho
murderers submitted to receive the consolations of the church in their last
moments.
tnotives
which had actuated the Indians in surrendering themselves, plied them with
questions at every opportunity. Tiloukaikt answered with a singular mingling of
savage pride and Christian humility. When offered food by the guard from their
own mess he regarded it with scorn. '‘What hearts have you,” he demanded, “to
offer to eat with me, whose hands are red with your brother’s blood?” When
asked why he gave himself up, he replied: “Did not your missionaries teach us
that Christ died to save his people? So die we to save our people.”
This
apparent magnanimity produced a deep impression on some minds, who, not well
versed in Indian or in any human character, could not divest themselves of awe
in the presence of such evidences of moral greatness as these mocking answers
evinced.
The facts
are these: The Cayuses, weary of wandering, with the prospect before them of
another war with white men, had prevailed upon those who among themselves had
done most to bring so much wretchedness upon them, to risk their lives in
restoring them to their former peace and prosperity. Doubtless the
representations which had been made, that they would be defended by white
counsel, had had its influence in inducing them to take the risk. At all events
it was a case requiring a desperate remedy. They were not ignorant that between
twenty and thirty thousand Americans, chiefly men, and several government expeditions
had traversed the road to the Pacific the year previous; nor that their attempt
to expel the few white people from the Walla Walla valley had been an ignominious
failure. There was scarcely a chance that white men’s laws would acquit them;
but on the other hand there was the apparent certainty that unless the few gave
up their lives, all must perish. Could a chief face his people whom he had
ruined without an effort to save them ? All that was courageous or manly in the
savage breast was roused by the emergency; and who shall say that this pride,
which doggedly accepted
a terrible
alternative, did not make a moral hero, or present an example equivalent to
the. average Christian self-sacrifice?
The trial
was set for the 22d of May. The prisoners in the meantime were confined on
Abemethy island, in the midst of the falls, the bridge connecting it with the
mainland being guarded by Lieutenant Lane, of the rifles, who was assigned to
that duty.65 The prosecution was conducted by Amory Holbrook,
district attorney, who had arrived in the territory in March previous, and the
defense by Secretary Pritchett, P. B. Reynolds, of Tennessee, paymaster of the
rifle regiment, and Captain Claiborne, also of the rifle, whom Judge Pratt
assigned to this duty.
On
arraignment, the defendants, through Knitzing Pritchett, secretary of the
territory, one of their counsel, entered a special plea to the jurisdiction of
the court, alleging that at the date of the massacre the laws of the United
States had not been extended over Oregon. The ruling of the court was that the
act of congress, June 30, 1834. regulating trade and intercourse with the
Indian tribes and to preserve peace on the frontiers, having declared ail the
territory of the United States west of the Mississippi and not within any
state, to be within the Indian country; and the treaty of June 15, 1846, with
Great Britain having settled that, all of Oregon south of the 49th parallel
belonged exclusively to the United States, it followed that offenses committed
therein, after such treaty, against the laws of the United States, were triable
and punishable in the proper United States courts irrespective of the date of
their establishment. The indictment stated facts sufficient to show that a
crime had been committed under the laws in force at the place of its
commission, and therefore the subsequent creation of a court in which a
determination of the question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence could
a Lanf's
Autolioyraphy, MS., 139,
be had was
immaterial, and could not affect its jurisdiction. Exception to the ruling was
taken.
The trial proceeded
and the defendants were convicted, sentenced, and ordered by a warrant, signed
by the j udge, to be hung ; the day set for the execution being June the 3d. A
new trial was asked for and denied. Between the time of conviction and the day
fixed for execution, the governor being absent from the capital, it was rumored
that he was at the mines near Yreka, in California, and acting upon this rumor,
Pritchett, counsel for the Indians and secretary of the territory, announced
that he should, as governor, reprieve the Indians from execution until an
appeal could be taken and heard by the supreme court at Washington. The people
generally expressed great indignation at even the suggestion of such a course.
While the excitement was at its height, Meek, United States marshal, called
upon the judge for instructions how to act in the event that Pritchett should
interfere to prevent the execution. Judge Pratt promptly answered that as there
was no actual or official evidence that Governor Lane Avas outside of the
territorial limits, all assumptions of Pritchett to that effect and acts based
upon them could be disregarded, The secretary having learned of these views of
the judge did not interfere, the execution took place, and general rejoicing
followed.66
The solemnity and
quiet of religious services characterized the entire trial, at which between
four and five hundred persons were present, who watched the proceedings with
intense anxiety. Counsel appointed by- the judge made vigorous effort to clear
their clients. No one unfamiliar with the condition of
C5General
Lucius II. Allen, a graduate of the United States military academy, and early
identified with Oregon, and later with California, who deceasetl in the latter
state in 1888, and a ram of high character, dictated to Col George H. Morrison
for my use the full particulars of this interesting trial. General Allen said,
if by any chance the Indians had escaped execution, the people would
undoubtedly have hung them, which act on the part of the people would have
caused retaliation by the Indians, and the situation would have been dreadful,
and beyond the power of language to describe.
His* Ob., Vol. II. 7
affairs in
the territory of Oregon at the time of which I am writing, can realize the
interest displayed by the people of the entire country in this important and
never-to-be-forgotten trial. The bare thought that the five wretches that had
assassinated Doctor Whitman, Mrs Whitman, Mr Saunders, and a large number of
emigrants, might, bjr any technicality of the law, be allowed to go
unpunished, was sufficient to disturb every man, woman, and child throughout
the length and breadth of the territorial limits.67
The judge
appreciated, in all its seriousness, the responsibility of his position. He
seemed to realize that upon his decision hung the lives of thousands of the
whites inhabiting the Willamette valley. He proved, however, equal to the
emergency. His knowledge of the law was not only thorough, but during his early
Lfe, and before having been called to the bench in Oregon he had become
familiar with all the questions Involving territorial boundaries and treaty
stipulations. His position was dignified, firm, and fearless. His charge was
full, logical, and concise.
His
judicial action in this and many other trials of a criminal and civil nature in
the territory during his judgeship, made it manifest to the great body of the
early settlers that he was not only thoroughly versed in all the needed learning
required m his position, but, in addition, his unswerving determination that
the law should be upheld and enforced created general confidence and reliance
that he would be equal to his position in all emergencies.
The result
of the conviction of the Indians was felt throughout the territory, and gave
satisfaction to all classes. It was said by many that the Catholics68
were privy to this dastardly and dreadful massacre ; this, 1 do not believe,
nor have I found in my researches evidence upon which to base such an
assertion. C'J It was
Q Oregon
Sptctntor.
“ Blanche t'» attempt
to excuse his neophytes 13 open to rcproach.
69 Meek
seems to have had the erroneous impression that the gov signed the death
warrant, and id quoted as having said, ‘I have in
even feared that a
rescue might be attempted by the Indians 011 the day of execution, and men
coming in from the country round brought their rifles, hiding them in the
outskirts of the town, not to create alarm.70 Nothing occurred,
however, to cause excitement. The Catholic priests took charge of the spiritual
affairs of the condemned savages, administering the sacraments of baptism and
confirmation, Father "Veyret attending them to the scaffold, where prayers
for the dying were offered. “ Touching words of encouragement,” says Blanchet,
“ were addressed to them on the moment of being swung into the air: ‘Onward,
onward to heaven, children; into thy hands, 0 Lord Jesus, I commend my
spirit.’”71 Oh loving and consistent Christians! While the Avorld of
Protestantism regarded the victims slain at Waiilatpu as martyrs, the priests
of Catholicism made martyrs of the murderers, and wafted their spirits straight
to heaven. So far as the sectarian quarrel is concerned it matters nothing, in
my opinion, and I care not whose converts these heathen may have been, if of
either; but sure I am that these Cayuses were martyrs to a destiny too strong
for them, to the Juggernaut of an incompressible civilization, before whose
wheels they were compelled to prostrate themselves, to that relentless law',
the survival of the fittest, before which, in spite of religion or science, we
all in turn go down.
With the consummation
of the last act of the Cayuse tragedy Lane’s administration may be said to have
closed, though he was for several weeks occupied with his duties as Indian
agent in the south, a full account of which I shall give later. Having made a
tny pocket the
death-warrant of them Indians, signed by Governor Lpno. The marshal will
execute them men as curtain as the day arrives. ’ Pritchett looked surprised
and remarked: ‘That is not what you just said, that you would do anything fur
me.’ ‘ You were talking then to Meek,’ Joe returned, ‘not to the marshal, who
always does his duty.’ Victor's River of the ) Vest, 496. The marshal's honor
was less corrupt than his grammar.
,c Bacon’s
Merc. Life Or., MS., 25.
71 Cath. Ch.
in Or., 182.
treaty with the Rogue
River people, he went to California and busied himself with gold mining until
the spring of 185], when liis friends and admirers recalled him to Oregon to
run for delegate to congress. About the time of his return the rifle regiment
departed to return by sea to Jefferson barracks, near St Louis, having been
reduced to a mere remnant by desertions,72 and never having rendered
any service of importance to the territory.
T”Brach'ti’s
V. »9. Cavalry, 129-30. J’ was recruited afterward and seri to Texas under its
colonel, Brevet General P. F. Smith.
A DELEGATE
TO CONGRESS.
1849-1850.
The Early
Judiciary—Island Mills—Arrival of William Strong— Opposition to the Hudson’s
Bat Company—Arrest of British Ship Captains—George Gibbs—The ‘Albion’
Affair—Samuel R. Tiiurs- ton Chosen Delegate to Congress—His Life and
Character—Proceeds to Washington—Misrepresentations and Unprincipled
Measures—Rank Injustice toward McLoughlin—Efficient Work for Oregon—The
Donation Land Bili.—The Cayuse War Claim and Other Appropriations Secured—The
People Lose Confidence in their Delegate—Death of Thurston.
During the transition period through which the
territory was passing, complaint was made that the judges devoted time to
personal enterprises which was demanded for the public service. I am disposed
to think that those who criticised the judges of the United States courts
caviled because they overlooked the conditions then existing.
The
members of the territorial supreme court were Chief Justice Bryant and
Associate Justice Pratt.1 Within a few months, the chief justice’s
health
1 O. C. Pratt was torn April 24, 1819, in
Ontario County, New York. Ho entered West Point, in the class of 1837, and took
two years of the course. His stand during this time was good, but he did not
iind technical military training congenial to his tastes, excepting the higher
mathematics, and ho obtaintd tho consent of his parents to resign liis
cadetship, in order to complete his study of law, to which he had devoted two
years previous to entering the Military Academy. He passed his examination
before the supremo court of New York in 1840, and was admitted to the bar.
During this year he took an active part in the presidential campaign a3 an
advocate of the election of Martin Van Buren. In 1843 he moved to Galena,
Illinois, and established himself as an attorney at law. In 1841 he entered
heartily into politics, as a friend of Polk, ami attracted attention by his
cogent discussion of the issues then uppermost, the annexation of Texas, and
the Oregon question. In 1847 he was a member of the convention to make tho
first revision
(101)
having
become impaired, he left Oregon, returned to Indiana, resigned, and soon after
died. Associate Justice Burnett, being in California, and very lucratively
employed at the time that he learned of his appointment, declined it; and as
their successors, Thomas Nelson and William Strong,2 were not soon
appointed, and came ultimately to their field of duty around Cape Horn, Judge
Pratt was left uuaided nearly two years in the judicial labors of the
territory.
By act of
congress, March 3,1859, it was provided, in the absence of I nitcd States
courts in California, violations of the revenue laws might be prosecuted
before the judges of the supreme court of Oregon. U nder this statute, Judge
Pratt went to San Francisco, by request of the secretary of the treasury, in
1849, and assisted in the adjustment of several important admiralty cases.
Also, about the same time, in his own district, at Portland, Oregon, as
district judge of the United States for the territory of Oregon, he held the
first court of admiralty jurisdiction within the limits of the region now
covered by the states of Oregon and California.
Another
evil to the peace and quiet of the community, and to the security of property,
arose soon after the advent of the new justices—Strong,3 in August
of tlie constitution,
of Illinois. In the service of the government he crossed the plains to Santa
Fe; thence to California. In 1848 he became a member of the supreme court of
Oregon, as noted. He was a man of striking and distinguished personnel, fine
sensibilities, analytic intelligence, eloquent, learned in the law, and
honorable.
2 William Strong was born in St Albans,
Vermont, in 1817, where he resided in early childhood, afterward removing to
Connecticut and New York. He was educated at Yale college, began life as
principal of an academy at Ithaca, New York, and followed this occupation while
studying law, removing to Cleveland, Ohio, in the mean time. On being
appointed to Oregon he took passage with his wife on the United States
store-ship Supply in November 1849 for San Francisco, and thence proceeded to
the Columbia by the sloop of war Falmouth. Judge Strong resided for a few years
on the north side of the Columbia, but finally made Portland his home, where he
has long practised law in company with his sons. During my visit to Oregon in
1878 Judge Strong, among others, dictated to my stenographer his varied experiences,
and important facts concerning the history of Oregon. The manuscript thus made
I entitled Strowfs History of Oregon. It contains a long series of events,
beginning Augusi 1850, and running down to the time when it was given, and is
enlivened by many anecdotes, amusing and curious, of early times, Indiau
characteristics, political affairs, and court notes.
3 Strong, who seems to have had an eye to
speculation as well as other of$-
1850, and Nelson, in
April 1, 1851—from the interference of one district court with the processes
of another. Thus it was impossible, for a time, to maintain order in Judge
Pratt’s district (the second) in two instances, sentences for contempt passed
by him being practically nullified by the interference of the judge of the
first district.
Among the changes
occurring at this time none were more perceptible than the diminishing importance
of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s business in Oregon. Not only the gold mania
carried off their servants, but the naturalization act did likewise, and also
the prospect of a title to six hundred and forty acres of land. And not only
did their servants desert them, but the United States revenue officers and Indian
agents pursued them at every turn.4 When Thornton was at Puget
Sound in 1849 he caused the arrest of Captain Morris, of the Ilarpooner, an
English vessel which had transported Hill’s artillery company to Nisqually,
for giving the customary grog to the Indians and half-breeds hired to
discharge the vessel in the absence of white labor. Captain Morris was held to
bail in five hundred dollars by Judge Bryant, to appear before him at the next
term of court. What the decision would have been can only be conjectured, as in
the absence of the judges the case never came to trial. Morris was released on
a promise never to return to those waters.5
But these annoyances
were light compared to those which arose out of the establishment of a port of
cials, had purchased
a lot of side-saddles before leaving New York, and other goods at auction, for
sale in Oregon. His saddles cost him $7.50 and $13, and he sold them to women
whose husbands had been to the gold mines for $50, $60, and $75. A gross of
playing cards, purchased for a cent a pack at auc> tion, sold to the
soldiers for $1.50 a pack. Brown sugar purchased for 5c. a pound by the barrel
brought ten times that amount; and so on, the goods being sold for him at the
fur company’s store. Stronjs Hist. Or., MS , 27-30.
^Roberts says, in his
Recollections, MS., that Douglas left Vancouver just in time to save his peace
of mind; and it was perhaps partly with that object, for he was a strict
disciplinarian, and could never have bent to the new order of things.
5 Roberts'1 Recollections,
MS., 1C.
entry, and the
extension of the revenue laws of the United States over the country. In
the'spring of 1849 arrived Oregon’s tirst United States revenue ofiicer, John
Adair, of Kentucky; and in the autumn George Gibbs, deputy-collector.6
No trouble seems to have arisen for the first few months, though the company
was subjected to much inconvenience by having to go from Fort Victoria to
Astoria, a distance of over two hundred miles, to enter the goods designed for
the American side of the strait, or for Fort Nis- qually to which they must
travel back three hundred miles.
About the last of
December 1849 the British ship Albion, Captain Richard O. Hinderwell, William
Brotchie, supercargo, entered the strait of Fuca without being aware of the i
nited States revenue laws on that part of the coast, and proceeded to cut a
cargo of spars at New Duugeness, at the same time trading with the natives, for
which they were prepared, by permission of the Hudson’s Bay Company in London, with
certain Indian goods, though not allowed to buy furs. The owners of the Albion,
who had a government contract, had instructed the captain and supercargo to
take the spars wherever they found the best timber, but if upon the American
side of the strait, to pay for them if they could be bought cheap. But during a
stay of about four months at Dungeness, as
s Gibbs, ho
came with the rifle regiment, was employed in various posi tions on tlie
l’acific coast for several years. He became interested in philology and
published a Dictionary of the Chinook Jargon, and other matter concerning the
native races, as well as the geography and geology of the west coast. In
Suckley and Cooper’s Natural History it is said that he spent two years in
southern Oregon, near the Klamath; that in 1853 he joined McClellan’s surveying
party, and afterward made, explorations with 1. 1. Stevens in Washington. In
1859 he was still employed as geologist of the north-west boundary survey with
Kennerly. He was for a short time collector of customs at Astoria. He went from
there to Puget Sound, where he applied himself to the study of the habits,
languages, and traditions of the natives, which study enabled him to make some
valuable contributions to the Smithsonian Institution Mr Gibbs died at New
Haven, Conn., May 11, 1873. ‘He was a man of fine scholarly attainments, ’ says
the Olympia Pacific Tribune, May 17, 1873, ‘ and ardently devoted to science
and polite literature. He was something of a wag withal, and on several
occasions, in conjunction with the late Lieut. Derby (John I'licenix) and
others, perpetrated “sells” that obtained a world wide publicity. His friends
were many, warm, and earnest.’
ho one had appeared
of whom the timber could be purchased, the wood-cutters continued their work uninterruptedly.
In the mean time the United States surveying schooner Ewing being in the sound,
Lieutenant McArthur informed the officers of the Albion that they had no right
to cut timber on American soil. When this came to the ears of deputy-collector
Gibbs, Adair being absent in California, he appointed Eben May Dorr a special
inspector of customs, with authority to seize the Albion for violation of the
revenue laws. United States district attorney Holbrook, and United States
marshal Meek, were duly informed.
The marshal, wTith
Inspector Dorr, repaired to Steilacoom, where a requisition was made on Captain
Hill for a detachment of men, and Lieutenant Gibson, five soldiers, and several
citizens proceeded down the sound to Dungeness, and made a formal seizure of
the ship anil stores on the 22d of April. The vessel was placed in charge of
Charles Kinney, the English sailors willingly obeying him, and navigating the
ship to Steilacoom. Arrived here every man, even to the cook, deserted, and the
captain and supercargo were ordered ashore where they found succor at the
hospitable hands of Tolmie, at Fort Xisqually.
It was not a very
magnanimous proceeding on the part of officers of the great American republic,
but was about what might have been expected from Indian fighters like Joe Meek
raised to new dignities.7 We smile at the simple savage demanding
pay from navigators for wood and water; but here were officers of the United
States government seizing and confiscating a British vessel for cutting a few
small trees from
’ See 31st Conq., 2d
Sese., S. Doc., 30, 15-10. ‘We have met before,’ said Brotchie to Meek as the
latter presented himself. ‘You did meet me at Vancouver several years ago, but
I was then nothing but Joe Meek, and you ordered me ashore. Circumstances arc
changed since then. I am Colonel Joseph L. Meek, United States marshal for
Oregon Territory, and you, sir, are only a damned smuggler I Go ashore, sir!’
Victor's Itiver of the West, 505.
land lately stolen
from the Indians, relinquished by Great Britain as much through a desire for
peace as from any other cause, and which the United States government afterward
sold for a dollar and a quarter an acre, at which rate the present damage could
not possibly have reached the sum of three cents!
Kinney proved a
thief, and not only stole the goods intrusted to his care, but allowed others
to do so,8 and was finally placed under bonds for his appearance to
answer the charge of embezzlement. The ship and spars were condemned and sold
at Steilacoom November 23d, bringing about forty thousand dollars, which was
considerably less than she was worth; the money, according to common report,
never reaching the treasury.9 A formal protest was entered by the
captain and supercargo immediately on the seizure of the Albion, and the whole
correspondence finally came before congress on the matter being brought to the
attention of the secretary of state by the British minister at Washington.
In the mean time
congress had passed an act September 28, 1850, relating to collection matters
on the Pacific coast, and containing a proviso intended to meet such cases as
this of the Albion,10 and by virtue of which the owners and officers
of the vessel were indemnified for their losses.
This high-handed
proceeding against the Albion, as we may well imagine, produced much bitterness
of feeling on the part of the British residents north of the Columbia/1
and the more so that the vessels
8 Or.
Spectator, Deo. 10, 1850.
9Thi* money
fell into bad hands and was not accounted foe. According to Meek ‘the officers
of the court’ found a private use for it. Victor’s River of the. West, 506.
10 That where any ship or goods may have
been subjected to seizure by any officer of the customs in the collection
district of Upper California or the district of Oregon prior to the passage of
this act, and it shall be mado to appear to the satisfaction of the secretary
of the treasury that the owner sustained loss by reason of any improper
seizure, the said secretary is authorized to extend such relief as he may deem
just and proper. 31st Cony., l*t Sess., United States Acts and Res., 128-9.
11 * 1 fancy I am pretty cool about it
now,’ says Roberts, ‘but then it did rather damp my democracy.’ Rtcollectiuns,
MS., 17.
of the Hudson’s Bay Company
were not exempt from these exactions. When the troops were to be removed from
Nisqually to Stcilacoom on the establishment of that post, Captain Hi1!
employed the Forager, one of the company’s vessels, to transport the men and
stores, and the settlers also having some shingles and other insignificant
freight, which they wished carried down the sound, it was put on board the
Forager. For this violation of the United States revenue laws the vessel was
seized. But the secretary of the treasury decided that Hill and the
artillerymen were not goods in the meaning of the statute, and that therefore
the laws had not been violated.12
Soon after the
seizure of the Albion, the company’s schooner Cadboro was seized for carrying
goods direct from Victoria to Nisqually, and that notwithstanding the duties
were paid, though under protest. The Cadboro was released on Ogden reminding
the collector that he had given notice of the desire of the company to
continue the importation of goods direct from Victoria, their readiness to pay
duties, and also that their business would be broken up at Nisqually and other
posts in Oregon if they were compelled to import by the way of the Columbia
River.13
In January 1850
President Taylor declared Portland and Nisqually ports of delivery; but
subsequently the office was removed at the instance of the ( regon delegate
from Nisqually to Olympia, when there followed other seizures, namely, of the
Mary Dare, and the Beaver, the latter for landing Miss Rose
• • • . O, _
Birme, sister of
James Bii'iiie formerly of Fort George, at Fort Nisqually, without first having
landed her at Olympia.14 The cases were tried before .1 udge Strong,
who very justly released the vessels. Strong was accused of bribery by the
collector; but the friends of the judge held a public meeting at Olympia sus-
la Letter of
N. M. Meridrth to S. li. Thurston, in Or. Spectator, May 2, 1850,
13 31th
Com,]., 2d Sess., Sen. Jioc. 30, 7.
uI!obcrts’
Recollections, MS., 16.
taining him. The
seizure cost the government twenty thousand dollars, and caused much
ill-feeling. This was after the appointment of a collector for Puget Sound in
1851, whose construction of the revenue laws was even more strict than that of
other Oregon officials.15
Thus we see that the
position of the Hudson’s Pay Company in Oregon after the passage of the act
establishing the territory was ever increasingly precarious and disagreeable.
The treaty of 1846 had proven altogether insufficient to protect the assumed
rights of the company, and was liable to different interpretations even by the
ablest jurists. The company claimed their lands in the nature of a grant, and
as actually alienated to the British government. Before the passage of the
territorial act, they had taken warning by the well known temper of the
American occupants of Oregon toward them, and had offered their rights for sale
to the government at one million of dollars; using, as I have previously intimated,
the well known democratic editor and politician, George N. Sanders, as their
agent in Washington.
As early as January
1848 Sir George Simpson addressed a confidential letter to Sanders, whom he had
previously met in Montreal, in which he defined his view of the rights
confirmed by the treaty, as the right to “cultivate the soil, to cut down and
export the timber, to carry on the fisheries, to trade for furs with the
natives, and all other rights we enjoyed at the time of framing the treaty.” As
to the free navigation of the Columbia, he held that this right like the
others was salable and transferable. “ Our possessions,” he said, “embrace the
very best situations in the whole country for offensive and defensive
operations, towns and villages.” These were all in*
15 S. P. Moses was tho first collector on
Puget Sound. Robert1! says concerning him that he ‘ took almost
every British ship that came. His conduct was beneath the government, and
probably was from beneath, also.’ Itecol- kcttciha, MS., 16.
eluded in the offer
of sale, as well as the lands of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company, together
with their flocks and herds; the reason urged for making the offer being that
the company in England were apprehensive that their possession of the country
might lead to “endless disputes, which might be productive of difficulties
between the two nations,” to avoid which they were willing to make a sacrifice,
and to withdraw within the territory north of 49. 18
Sanders laid this
proposition before Secretary Buchanan in July, and a correspondence ensued
between the officers and agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company and the ministers
of both governments, in the course of which it transpired that the United
States government on learning the construction put upon the company’s right to
transfer the navigation of the Columbia, was dissatisfied with the terms of the
treaty and wished to make a now one in which this right was surrendered, but
that Great Britain declined to relinquish the right w ithout. a consideration.
“Her Majesty’s government,” said Addington, “have no proposal to make, they
being quite content to leave things as they are.”
The operation of the
revenue laws, however, which had not been anticipated by the British companies
or government, considerably modified their tone as to the importance of their
right of navigation on the Columbia, and their privileges generally. Instead of
being in a position to dictate terms, they were at the mercy of the United
States, which could well afford to allow them to navigate Oregon waters so long
as they paid duties. Under this pressure, in the spring of 1849, a contract was
drawn up conveying the rights of the company under their charter and the
treaty, and appertaining to forts Disappointment, George, Vancouver, Umpqua,
Walla Walla, Boise, Okanagan, Colville, Kootenai, Flat Head, Nisqually,
Cowlitz, and all other posts belonging to said com-
3lit
Cony., 2d Sess., Sen. Doc. SO, 4-5.
panics, together with
their wild lands, reserving only their shipping, merchandise, provisions, and
stores of every description, and their enclosed lands, except such portions of
them as the United States government might wish to appropriate for military
reserves, which were included in the schedule offered, for the sum of seven
hundred thousand dollars. The agreement further offered all their farms and
real property not before conveyed, for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars,
if purchased within one year by the government; or if the government should not
elect to purchase, the companies bound themselves to sell all their farming
lands to private citizens of the United States within two years, so that at the
end of that time they would have no property rights whatever in the territories
of the United States.
Surely it could not
be said that the British companies were not as anxious to get out of Oregon as
the Americans were to have them. It is more than likely, also, that had it not
been for the persistent animosity of certain persons influencing the' heads of
the government and senators, some arrangement might have been effected; the
reason given for rejecting the offer, however, was that no purchase could be
made until the exact limits of the company’s possessions could be determined.
In October 1850, Sir John Henry Pelly addressed a letter to Webster, then
secretary of state, on the subject, in which he referred to the seizure of the
Albion, and in which he said that the price in the disposal of their property
was but a secondary consideration, that they were more concerned to avoid the
repetition of occurrences which might endanger the peace of the two governments,
and proposed to leave the matter of valuation to be decided by two
commissioners, one from each government, who should bo at liberty to call an
umpire. But at this time the same objections existed in the indefinite limits
of the territory claimed which would require to be settled before commissioners
could bo prepared to
decide, and nothing was done then, nor for twenty years afterward,17
toward the purchase of Hudson’s Bay Company claims, during which time their
forts, never of much value except for the purposes of the company, went to
decay, and the lands of the Puget Sound Company were covered with American
squatters, who, holding that the rights of the company under the treaty of 1846
were not in the nature of an actual grant, but merely possessory so far as the
company required the land for use until their charter expired, looked upon
their pretensions as unfounded, and treated them as trespassers,18
at the same time that they were compelled to pay taxes as proprietors.19
Gradually the
different posts were abandoned. The land at Fort Umpqua was let in 1853 to W.
W, Chapman, who purchased the cattle belonging to it,20 which
travellers were in the habit of shooting as
17 33d Gong., 1st Se,ss., H. Ex. Doc. 2, pt.
iii 473—1
18Roberts,
who was a stockholder in the Puget Sound Company, took charge of the Cowlitz
farm in 1846. Matters went on very well for two years. Then came the gold
excitement and demoralization of the company’s servants consequent upon it, and
the expectation of a donation land law. He left tlio farm which he found it
impossible to carry on, and took up a land claim as a settler outside its
limits, becoming a naturalized citizen of the United States. But pioneer
farming was not either agreeable or profitable to him, and was besides
interrupted by an Indian war, when he became clerk to the quartermaster
general. When the Frazer River mining excitement came on he thought he might
possibly make something at the Cowlitz by raising provisions. But when his hay
as cut and put up in cocks it was taken away by armed men who had squatted on
the land; and when the case oamo into court the jury decided that they knew
nothing about treaties, but did understand the rights of American citizens
under the land law. Then followed arson and other troubles with the squatters,
who took away his crops year after year. The lawyers to whom he appealed could
do nothing for him, and it was only by the interference of other people who
became ashamed of seeing . good man persecuted in this manner, that the
squatters on the Cowlitz farm were linally compelled to desist from these acts,
and Roberts was left in peace until the Washington delegate, Garfield, secured
patents for his clients the squatters, and Roberts was evicted. There certainly
should have been some way of preventing outrages of this kind, and the
government should have seen to it that its treaties were respected by the
people. But the peo pie’s representatives, to win favor with their
constituents, persistently helped to instigate a feeling of opposition to the
claims of the British companies, or to create a doubt of their \alidity. See
Roberts’ Recollections, MS., 75.
19 The Puget
Sound Company paid in one year §7,000 in taxes. They were astute enough, says
Roberts, not to refuse, as the records couid be used to show the value of their
property. Recollections, MS., 91.
"A.
O. Gibbs, in U. S. Ev. II. V. C. Claims, 29; W. T. Tvlmie, Id., 104; W. W.
Chapman, Id,,, 11.
game wl ile they
belonged to tlie company. Tlio stockade and buildings were burned in 1851. The
land was finally taken as a donation claim. Walla Walla was abandoned in
1S55-G, during the Indian war, in obedience to an order from Indian Agent
Olney, and was afterward claimed by an American for a town site. Fort Boise was
abandoned in 1856 on account of Indian hostilities, and Fort Hall about the
same time on account of the statute against selling
• • __ _. m _
O o
ammunition to
Indians, without which the Indian trade was worthless. Okanagan was kept up
until 1861 or 18G2, when it wTas left in charge of an Indian chief.
Vancouver was abandoned about I860, the land about it being covered with
squatters, English and American.21 Fort George went out of use
before any of the others, Colville holding out longest. At length in 1871,
after a tedious and expensive examination of the claims of the Hudson’s Bay
and Puget Sound companies by a commission appointed for the purpose, an award
of seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars Avas made and accepted, there being
nothing left which the United States could confirm to any one except a dozen
dilapidated forts. The United States gained nothing by the purchase, unless it
were the military reserves at Vancouver, Steila- coom, and Cape Disappointment;
for the broad acres of the companies had been donated to squatters who applied
for them as United States land. As to the justice of the cause of the American
people against the companies, or the companies against the United States, there
will be always tw7o opinions, as there have always been two opinions
concerning the Oregon boundary question. Sentiment on the American side as
enunciated by the Oregon pioneers was as follows: They held that Great Britain
had no rights on the west shore of the American continent; in which opinion, if
they would include the United States in the same category, I would concur. As I
think I
=>/. L.
Male, in V. S. Ev. II. Ii. C. Claims, 90.
liave clearly shown
in the History of the Northwest Coast, whether on the ground of inherent
rights, or rights of discovery or occupation, there was little to choose
between the two nations. The people of Oregon further held that the convention
of 1818 conferred 110 title, in which they were correct. They held that the
Hudson’s Bay Company, under its charter, could acquire 110 title to land—only
to the occupancy of it for a limited time; in which position they were
undoubtedly right. They denied that the Puget Sound Company, which derived its
existence from the Hudson’s Bay Company, could have any title to land, which
was evident. They were quick to perceive the intentions of the parent company
in laying claim to large bodies of land on the north side of the Columbia, and
covering them with settlers and herds. They had no thought that when the
boundary was settled these ■claims would be
respected, and felt that not only they but the government had been cheated— the
latter through its ignorance of the actual facts in the case. So far I cannot
fail to sympathize with their sound sense and patriotism.
But I find also that
they forgot to be just, and to realize that British subjects on the north side
of the Columbia were disappointed at the settlement of the boundary on the 49th
parallel; that they naturally sought indemnity for the distraction it would be
to their business to move their property out of the territory, the cost of
building new forts, opening new farms, and laying out new roads. But above all
they forgot that as good citizens they were bound to respect the engagements
entered into by the government whether or not they approved them; and while
they were using doubtful means to force the British companies out of Oregon,
were guilty of ingratitude both to the corporation and individuals.
The issue on which
the first delegate to congress elected m Oregon, Samuel R. Thurston, received
his
Hisx. Ob-, Vol. II. 8
majority, was that of
the anti-Hudson’s Bay Company sentiment, which was industriously worked up by
the missionary element, in the absence of a large number of the voters of the
territory, notably of the Canadians, and the young and independent western men.22
Thurston was besides a democrat, to which party the greater part of the
population belonged; but it is the testimony of those who knew best that it was
not as a democrat that he was elected.® As a member of the legislature at its
last session under the provisional government, he displayed some of those
traits which made him a powerful and useful champion, or a. dreaded and hated
foe.
Much has been said
about the rude and violent manners of western men in pursuit of an object, but
Thurston was not a western man; he w’as supposed to be something more elevated
and refined, more cool and logical, more moral and Christian than the people
beyond the Alleglianies; he was born and bred an eastern man, educated at an
eastern college, was a good Methodist, and yet in the canvass of
12 I Jiurston received 470 vote*; C.
Lancaster, 321; Meek and 0 riffin, 4(3; J. W. Nesmith, 106. Thurston was a
democrat and Nesmith a whig. Tribune Almanac, 1850, 51.
28 Mrs E. }'
Odell, ntn McClench, who came to Oregon as Thurston’s wife, and v. ho cherishes
a high regard for his talents and memory, has furnished to my library a
biographical sketch of her iirst husband Though strongly tinctured by personal
and partisan feeling, it is valuable as a view from her standpoint of the
character and services of the ambitious young man who lirst represented Oregon
in congress—how worthily, the record will determine. Mr Thurston -w as bom in
Monmouth, Maine, in 1818, and reared in tne little town of Peru, subject to
many toils and privations commmi to the Yankee youth of that day. He possessed
a thirst for knowledge also common in New England, and became a hard student at
the Wesleyan seminary at PveadSeld, from which he entered liowdoin college,
graduating in the class of 1843. He then entered on the study of law in
Brunswick, where he was soon admitted to jjractice. A natural partisan, he
became an ardent democrat, and was not only fearless but aggressive i« his
leadership oi the politicians of the school. Having married Miss Elizabeth P.
McClench, of Fayette, he removed with her to Burlington, Iowa, in 1845, where
he edited the Burlington Gazette till 1847, when he emigrated to Oregon. From
his education as a Methodist, his talents, and readiness to become a partisan,
he naturally affiliated with the Mission party. Mrs Odell remarks ill her Biography
of Thurston, MS., £, that he was ‘not elected as a partisan, though liis
political views were well understood;’ but L. F. Grover, who knew him well in
college days and afterward, says that ‘he ran on tho issue of the missionary
settlers againat the Hudson’s Bay Company.’ Public. Life in Or., MS., 95.
1849 he introduced
into Oregon the vituperative and invective style of debate, and mingled with it
a species of coarse blackguardism such as no Kentucky ox- driver orMissouii
flat-boatman might hope to excel.24 Were it more effective, he could
be simply eloquent and impressive; where the tire-eating style seemed likely to
win, he could hurl epithets and denunciations until his adversaries withered
before them.23
And where so pregnant
a theme on which to rouse the feelings of a people unduly jealous, as that of
the aggressiveness of a foreign monoply? And what easier than to make promises
of accomplishing great things for Oregon? And yet I am bound to say that what
this scurrilous and unprincipled demagogue promised, as a rule he performed. He
believed that to be the best course, and he was strong enough to pursue it. Had
he never done more than he engaged to do, or had he not pi ivately engaged to
carry out a scheme of the Methodist missionaries, whose sentiments he mistook
for those of the majority, being himself a Methodist, and having been but
eighteen months in Oregon when he left it for Washington, his success as a
politician would have been assured.
Barnes, in his
manuscript entitled Oregon and California, relates that Thurston was prepared
to go to California with him when Lane issued his proclamation to elect a
delegate to congress. He immediately
24 ‘ I have heard an old settler give an
account of a discussion in Polls county between Nesmith and Thurston during the
canvass for the election of delegate to congress. He said Nesmith had been
accustomed to browbeat every man that came about him, and drive him off either
by ridicule or fear. In both these capacities Nesmith was a strong man, and
they all thought Nesmith had the field. But when Thurston got up they were
astonished at his eloquence, and particularly at his bold manner. .My informant
says that at one stage Nesmith jumped up and began to move toward Thurston; and
Thurston pointed his linger straight at him, after putting it on his side, and
said: “ Don’t you take another step, or a button-hole will bfi seen through
you,” and Nesmith stopped. But the discussion proved that Thurston was a full
match for any man in the practices in which his antagonist was distinguished,
and the result wah that Thurston carried the election by a large majority.’
Grover’s Pub. Life, MS., 9G-7.
25 ‘ He was a man of such impulsive, harsh
traits, that he would often carry college feuds to extremities. I have known
him to get so excited in recounting some of his struggles, that he would take
a chair and smash it ill to pieee3 over the table, evidently to exhaust the
extra amount of vitality.’ Id., (J4.
decided to take liis
chance among the candidates, with what result we know.26
The first we hear of
Thurston in his character of delegate is on the 24th of January 1850, when he
rose in the house and insisted upon being allowed to make an explanation of his
position. When he left Oregon, be said, he bore a memorial from the legislative
assembly to congress which he could not produce on account of the loss of his
baggage on the Isthmus. But since he had not the memorial, lie had drawn up a
set of resolutions upon the subjects embraced in the memorial, which he wished
to offer and have referred to their appropriate committees, in order that while
the house might be engaged in other matters he might attend to his before the
committees. He had waited, he said, nearly two months for an opportunity to
present his resolutions, and his territory had not yet been reached in the call
for resolutions. He would detain the house but a few minutes, if he might be
allowed to read what he had drawn up. On leave being granted, he proceeded to
present, not an abstract of the memorial, which has been given elsewhere, but a
series of questions for the judiciary committee to answer, in reference to the
rights of the Hudson’s Bay Company, and Puget Sound Agricultural Association.27
This first utterance of the Oregon delegate, when time was so precious and so
short in which to labor for the accomplishment of high designs, gives us the
key to his plan, which was first to raise the question of any rights of British
subjects to Oregon lands in fee simple under the treaty, and then to exclude
them if possible from the privileges of the donation law when it should be
framed.*8
16 Thurston was in ill-health when he left
Oregon. He travelled in a small boat to Astoria, taking six days for the trip;
by sailing vessel to San Francisco, and to I’anamii by the steamer Carolina,
being ill at the last place, yet having to ride across the Isthn.-us, losing
his baggage because he was not able to luuk ifter the thieving carriers. His
determination and ambition were remarkable. Odell’s Biography of Thurston, MS.,
5(5.
21 For the resolutions complete, see Cong.
Globe, 18Ifi-50, 21, pt. i. -20.
28 That
Thurston exceeded the instructions of the legislative assembly there is no
question. See Or. Archives, MS., lbo-6.
The two months which
intervened between Thurston’s arrival in Washington and the day when he introduced
his resolutions had not been lost. He had studied congressional methods and
proved himself an apt scholar. He attempted nothing without first having tried
his ground with the committees, and prepared the way, often with great labor,
to final success. On the 6th of February, further resolutions were introduced
inquiring into the rights of the Hudson’s Bay Company to cut and manufacture
timber growing on the public lands of Oregon, and particuarly on lands not
inclosed or cultivated by them at the time of the ratification of the Oregon
treaty; into the right of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company to any more land
than they had under inclosure, or in a state of actual cultivation at that
time; and into the right of the Hudson’s Bay Company, under the second article
of the treaty, or of British subjects trading with the company, to introduce
through the port of Astoria foreign goods for consumption in the territory
free of duty,® which resolutions were referred to the judiciary committee. On
the same day he introduced a resolution that the committee on public lands
should be instructed to inquire into the expediency of reporting a bill for
the establishment of a land office in Oregon, and to provide for the survey of
a portion of the public lands in that territory, containing such other
provisions and restrictions as the committee might deem necessary for the
proper management and protection of the public lands.80
Iu the mean time a
bill was before the senate for the extinguishment of the Indian title to land
west of the Cascade Mountains. This was an important preliminary step to the
passage of a donation act.31
•9 Cong.
Globe, lSIft-50, 295.
30Id., 295.
A correspondent of the New York Tribune remarks on Thurston’s resolutions: ‘
There are squalls ahead for the Hudson's Bay Company.’ Or. Spectator, May 2,
1830.
31 See Or.
Spectator, April 18, 1850; 31st Cong., 1st Seat., U. S. Acts and Res., 26-7;
Johnson’s Cat. and (Jr., 332; Cong. Globe, 1849-50, 1070-7; Id., 1010; Or.
Spectator, Aug. 8, 1850.
It was chiefly
suggested by Mr Thurston, and was passed April 22d without opposition. Having
secured this measure, as he believed, he next brought up the topics embraced
in the last memorial on which he expected to found his advocacy of a donation
law, and embodied them in another series of resolutions, so artfully drawn up32
as to compel the committee to take that view of the subject most likely to
promote the success of the measure. Not that there was reason to fear serious
opposition to a law donating a liberal amount of land to Oregon settlers. It
had for years been tacitly agreed to by every congress, and could only fail on
some technicality. But to get up a sympathetic feeling for such a bill, to
secure to Oregon all and more than was asked for through that feeling, and to
thereby so deserve the approval of the Oregon people as to be reelected to congress,
was the desire of Thurston’s active and ardent mind. And toward this aim he
worked with a persistency that was admirable, though some of the means resorted
to, to bring it about, and to retain the favor of the party that elected him,
were as unsuccessful as they were reprehensible.
From the first day of
his labors at Washington this relentless demagogue acted in ceaseless and open
hostility to every interest of the Hudson’s Bay Company in Oregon, and to
every individual in any way connected with it.33
Thurston, like
Thornton, claimed to have been the author of the donation land law. I have
shown in a
,2 Cong.
Globe, 1849-50, 413; Or. Riatesman, May 9, 1851.
33 Here id a
sample of the ignorance or mendacity of the rnan, w hichever you will. A circular
issued by Thurston while in Washington to save letter- writing, says, speaking
of the country in which Vancouver is located: ‘It was formerly called Clarke
county; but at a time when British sway was ill its palmy days in Oregon, the
county was changed from Clarke to Vancouver, in honor of the celebrated
navigator, and no less celebiated slanderer of our government and people. Now
that American influence rules in Oregon, it is due to the hardy, wayworn
American explorer to realter the name of this county, and grace it again with
the name of him whose history is interwoven with that of Oregon. So our
legislature thought, and so I have no doubt they spoke and acted at their
recent session.’ Johnson'sCal. and Or., 267. It was certainly peculiar to hear
this intelligent legislator talk of counties
previous chapter that
a bill creating the office of surveyor-general in Oregon, and to grant
donation rights to settlers, and for other purposes, was before congress in
both houses in January 1848, and {hat it failed through lack of time, having to
await the territorial bill which passed at the last moment. Having been crowded
out, and other affairs pressing at the next session, the only trace of it in
the proceedings of congress is a resolution by Collamer, of Vermont, on the
25tli of January 1849, that it should be made the special order of the house
for the first Tuesday of February, when, however, it appears to have been
forgotten; and it was not until the 22d of April 1850 that Mr Fitch, chairman
of the committee on territories, again reported a bill on this subject. That
the bill brought up at this session was but a copy of the previous one is
according to usage; but that Thurston had been at work with the committee some
peculiar features of the bill show.34
There was tact and
diplomacy in Thurston’s character, which he displayed in his short
congressional
in Oregon before the
palmy days of British swuy, ’nd of British residents naming counties at all
While Thurston was in Washington, tho postmaster- general changed the name of
the postotiice at Vancouver to Columbia City. Or. Statesman, May 28, 1851.
31 Thornton
alleges that he presented Thurston before leaving Oregon with a copy of his
bill, Or. Hist., MS., 13, and further that ‘ tho donation law we now have,
except the 11th section and one or two unimportant amendments, is an exact copy
of the bill I prepared.’ Or. Pioneer jlsso. Trans. 1874, 94. Yet when Thurston
lost his luggage on tho Isthmus he lost all his papers, and could not have made
an ‘exact copy’ from memory. In another place he says that before leaving
Washington he drew up a land bill which he sent to Collamer in Vermont, and
would have us believe that this was the identical bill which finally passed.
Not knowing further of the bill than w hat was stated by Thornton himself, I
would only remark upon the evidence that Collamer’s term expired before lb50,
though that might not have prevented him from introducing any suggestions of
Thornton’s into the bill reported in January 1849. But now comes Thornton of
his own accord, and admits he has claimed too much. Ho did, he says, prepare a
territorial and also a land bill, but on ‘further reliction, and after
consulting others, I deemed it not well to have these new bills offered, it
having been suggested that the bills already pending in both houses of congress
could be amended by incorporating into them whatever there was in my bills not
already provided for in the bills which in virtue of their being already on
the calendar Would be reached before any bills subsequently introduced.’ From a
letter dated August 8, 1882, which is intended as an addendum to the Or. Hist.,
MS., of Thornton.
career. He allowed
the land bill to drift along, making only some practical suggestions, until
his resolutions had had time to sink into the minds of members of both houses.
When the bill was well on its way lie proposed amendments, such as to strike
out of the fourth section that portion which gave every settler or occupant of
the public lands above the age of eighteen a donation of three hundred and
twenty acres of land if a single man, and if married, or becoming married
within a given time, sis. hundred and forty acres, one half to himself in his
own right, and the other half to his wife in her own right, the surveyor-
general to designate the part muring to each;35 and to make it read
“ that there shall be, and hereby is granted to every white male settler, or
occupant of the public lands, American half-breeds included, members and
servants of the Hudson’s Bay and Puget Sound companies excepted,” etc.
He proposed further a
proviso “that every foreigner making claim to lands by virtue of this act,
before lie shall receive a title to the same, shall prove to the
surveyor-general that he has commenced and completed his naturalization and
become an American citizen.” The proviso was not objected to, but the previous
amendment was declared by Bowlin, of Missouri, unjust to the retired servants
of the fur company, who had long lived on and cultivated farms. The debate upon
this part of the bill became warm, and Thurston, being pressed, gave utterance
to the following infamous lies:
“This company has
been warring against our government these forty years. Dr McLoughlin has been
their chief fugleman, first to cheat our government out of the whole country,
and next to prevent its settlement. He has driven men from claims and from
35 This was the principle of the donation
law as passed. The surveyor- general usually inquired of the wife her choice,
and was gallant enough to give it her; hence it usually happened that the
portion lia\ingthe dwelling and improvements upon it went to the wife.
the country to stifle
the efforts at settlement. In 1845 he sent an express to Fort Hall, eight
hundred miles, to warn the American emigrants that if they attempted to come to
Willamette they would all be cut off; they went, and none were cut off. ..I was
instructed by my legislature to ask donations of land to American citizens
only. The memorial of the Oregon legislature was reported so as to ask donations
to settlers, and the word was stricken out, and citizens inserted. This, sir, I
consider fully bears me out in insisting that our public lands shall not be
thrown into the hands of foreigners, who will not become citizens, and who
sympathize with us with crocodile tears only.26...I can refer you to
the supreme judge of our territory37 for proof that this Dr
McLoughlin refuses to file his intention to become an American citizen.88
If a foreigner would bona fide file his intentions I would not object to give
him land. There are many Englishmen, members of the Hudson’s
36 The assertion contained in this paragraph
that the word ‘ settler’ was altered to ‘ citizen ’ in the memorial was also
untrue. I have a copy of the memorial signed by the chief cherk of both the
house and council, and inscribed, ‘Passed July 2G, 1849,’ in which congress is
asked to make a grant of 640 acres of land ‘ to each actual settler, including
widows and orphans. ’ Or. Archives, J1S., 177.
37 Bryant was then in Washington to assist
in the missionary scheme, of which, as the assignees of Abemethy, both he and
Lane were abettors.
s"
Thurston also knew this to be untrue. William J. Berry, writing in the
Spectator, Dec. 2G, 1850, says: ‘Now, I assert that Mr Thurston knew, previous
to the election, that Dr McLoughlin had filed his intentions. I heard him say,
in a stump speech at the City Hotel, that he expected his (the doctor’s) vote.
At the election I happened to be one of the judges. Dr McLoughlin came up to
vote; the question was asked by myself, if he had filed his intentions. The
clerk of tlie court, George L. Curry, Esq., who was standing near the window,
said that he had. He voted.’ Says McLoughlin: ‘I declared my intention to
become an American citizen on the 30th of May, 1849, as any one may see who
will examine the records of the court.’ Or. Spectator, Sept. 12, 1850. Waldo,
testifies: ‘Thurston lied on the doctor. He did it because the doctor would not
vote for him. He lied in congress, and got others to write lies from here about
him—men who knew nothing about it. Tliey falsified about the old doctor
cheating the people, setting the Indians on them, and treating them badly.’
Critiques, MS., 15. Says Applegate: ‘ Thurston asserted among many other
falsehoods, that the doctor utterly refused to become an American citizen, and
Judge Bryant endorsed the assertion.’ Historical Correspondence, MS., 14. Says
Grover: ‘The old doctor was looking to becoming a leading American citizen
until this difficulty occurred in regard to his land. He hail taken out
naturalization papers. All his life from young manhood had been spent in the
north-west; and he was not going to leave the country.’ Public Life in Or.,
MS., 91.
Bay Company, who
would file their intention merely to get the land, and then tell you to
whistle. Now, sir, I hope this house, this congress, this country, will not
allow that company to stealthily get possession of all the good land in Oregon,
and thus keep it out of the hands of those who would become good and worthy
citizens.” 39
Having prepared the
way by a letter to the house of representatives for introducing into the land
bill a section depriving McLouglilin of his Oregon City claim, which he had the
audacity to declare was first taken by the Methodist mission, section eleventh
of the law as it finally passed, and as it now stands upon the sixty-eighth
page of the General Laws of Oregon, was introduced and passed without
opposition. Judge Bryant receiving his bribe for falsehood, by the reservation
of Abernethv Island, which, was “confirmed to the legal assigns of the
Willamette Milling and Trading Company,” while the remainder, except lots sold
or given away by McLoughlin previous to the 4th of March 1849, should be at the
disposal of the legislative assembly of Oregon for the establishment and
endowment of a university, to be located not at Oregon City, but at such place
in the territory as the legislature might designate. Thus artfully did the
servant of the Methodist mission strive for the ruin of McLoughlin and the
approbation of his constituents, well knowing that they would not feel so much
at liberty to reject a bounty to the cause of education, as a gift of any other
kind.41'
” Cong. Globe,
1840-50, 1079.
40 In Thurston’s letter to the house of
representatives he appealed to them to pass the land bill without delay, on the
ground that Oregon was becoming depopulated through the neglect of congress to
keep its engagement. Tlu people of the States had, he declared, lost all
confidence in their previous belief that a donation law would be passed; and
the people in the territory were ceasing to improve, were going to California,
and when they were fortunate enough ti> make any money, were returning to
the Atlantic States. ‘ Our population,’he said, ‘is dwindling away, and our
anxieties and fears can easily be perceived.’ Of the high water of 1849-50,
which carried away property and damaged mills to the amount of about £300,0C0,
hesaid: The owners who have means dare not rebuild because they have no title.
Each mail is collecting hi* means in anticipation that he may leave the
country. ’ And this, although
To his endeavor to
accomplish so much villany the delegate failed. The senate struck out a clause
in the fourth section which required a foreigner to emigrate from the United
States, and which lie had persuaded the house to adopt by his assertions that
without it the British fur company would secure to themselves all the best
lands in Oregon. Another clause insisted on by Thurston when he found he could
not exclude British subjects entirely, was that a foreigner could not become
entitled to any land notwithstanding his intentions were declared, until he had
completed his naturalization, which would require two years; and this was
allowed to stand, to the annoyance of the Canadian settlers who had been twenty
years 011 their claims.41 But the great point gained in Thurston’s
estimation by the Oregon land bill was the taking- away from the former head of
the Hudson’s Bay Company of his dearly bought claim at the falls of the
Willamette, where a large portion of his fortune was invested in improvements.
The last proviso of the fourth section forbade any one claiming under the land
law to claim under the treaty of 184G. McLough- lin, having declared his intention
to become an American citizen was no longer qualified to claim under the
treaty, and congress having, on the representations of Thurston, taken from
McLoughliu what he claimed under the land law there was left 110 recourse whatever.42
he had told Johnson,
California and Oregon, which see, page 252, exactly the contrary. See Or.
Spectator, Sept. 12th, and compare with the following: There were 38 mill* in
Oregon at the taking of the census of 1850, and a fair proportion of them
ground wheat. They were scattered through all the counties from the sound to
the head of the Willamette Valley. Or. Statesman, April 25, 1851; and with
this: ‘The census of 1849 showed a population of over 9,000, about 2,000 being
absent in the mines. The census of 1850 showed over 13,000, without counting
the large immigration of that year or the few settlers in the most southern
part of Oregon.’ Or. Statesman, April 10th and 25, 1851
11 Cong.
Globe, 1840-50, 1853.
<2Says
Applegate: ‘It must, have excited a kind of fiendish merriment in the hearts of
Bryant end Thurston; for notwithstanding their assertions to the contrary, both
well knew that the doctor by renouncing hi« allegiance to Great Britain had
forfeited all claims as a British subject.’ Historical Correspondence, MS.,
15.
I have said that
Thurston claimed the Oregon land bill as his own. It was his own so far as
concerned the amendments which damaged the interests of men in the country w
hom he designated as foreigners, but who really were the first white persons to
maintain a settlement in the country, and who as individuals, were in every way
entitled to the same privileges as the citizens of the United States, and Avho
had at the first opportunity offered themselves as such. In no other sense was
it his bill. There was not an important clause in it which had not been in
contemplation for years, or which was not suggested by the frequent memorials
of the legislature on the subject. He worked earnestly to have it pass, for on
it, he believed, hung Ids reelection. So earnestly did he labor for the
settlement of this great measure, and for all other measures which he knew to
be most desired, that though they knew he was a most selfish and unprincipled
politician, the people gave him their gratitude.43
A frequent mistake of
young, strong, talented, but inexperienced and unprincipled politicians, is
that of going too fast and too far. Thurston was an exceedingly clever fellow;
the measures which he took upon himself to champion, though in some respects
unjust and infamous, were in other respects matters which lay very near the
heart of the Oregon settler. But like Jason Lee, Thurston overreached himself.
The good that he did was dimmed by a sinister shadow. In September a printed
copy of the bill, containing the obnoxious eleventh section, with a copy of his
letter to the house of representatives, and other like matter, was received by
his confidants, together with an injunction of secrecy until sufficient time
should have
43 Grover,
Public Life in Oregon, MS., 98-9, calls the land bill ‘Thurston’s work, based
upon Linn’s bill;’ but Grover simply took Thurston’s word for it, he being then
a young nian; whom Thurston persuaded into going to Oregon.
Johnson’s Cal. and Or,, which is, as to the Oregon part, merely a reprint of Thurston’s
papers, calls it Thurston’s bill. Hines, Or, and Institution«, does the same;
but any one conversant with the congressional and legislative history of Oregon
knows better.
passed for the bill
to become a law.4* When the vile injustice to John McLoughlin became
known, those of Thurston’s friends who were not in the conspiracy met the
charge with scornful denial They would not believe it.45 And when
time had passed, and the matter became understood, the feeling was intense. McLoughlin,
as he had before been driven by the thrusts of his enemies to do, replied
through the Spectator to the numerous falsehoods contained in the letter.46
He knew that although many of the older settlers
‘ Keep this still,’
~v,rites the arch schemer, ‘till next mail, when I shall send them generally.
The debate on the California bill closes next Tuesday, when I hope to get
passed my land bill; keep dark 'til next mail. Thurston. June 9, 1850.’ Or.
Spectator, Sept. 12, 1S50.
41 Wilson Blain, who was at that time editor
of the Spectator, as Robert Moore was proprietor, found himself unable to
credit the rumor. ‘ We venture the assertion,' he says, ‘ that the story was
started by some malicious or mischief-making person for the purpose of
preventing the improvement of Clackamas rapids.’ Or. Specta'or, Aug. 22, 1850.
18 1 lie says that I have
realized, up to the 4th of March 1849, ^200,000 from sale of lots; this is also
wholly untrue. I have given away lots to the Methodists, Catholics,
Presbyterians, Congregationalists, and Baptists. I have given eight lots to a
Homan Catholic nunnery, and eight lots to the Clackamas Female Protestant
seminary, incorporated by the Oregon legislature. The trustees are all
l’rotestants, though it is well known I am a, Itoman Catholic. In short, in one
way and another I have donated to the county, to schools, to churches, and
private individuals, more than three hundred town lots, and I never realized in
cash $20,000 from all the original sales I ever made.. .1 was a chief factor in
the Hudson’s Bay Company service, and by the rules of the company enjoy a
retired interest, as a matter of right. Capt. McXei', f native-born citizen of
the United States of America, holds the same rank that I held in the Hudson’s
Bay Company’s service. He never was required to become a British subject; he
will be entitled, by the laws of the company, to the same retired interest, no
matter to what country he may owe allegiance. ’ After declaring that he liad
taken out naturalization papers, and that Thurston was aware of it, and had
asked him for his vote and influence, but that he had voted against him, he
says: ‘ But he proceeds to refer to Judge Bryant for the truth of his
statement, in which he affirms that I assigned to J udge Bryant as a reason why
1 still refused to declare my intention to become an American citizen, that I
could not do it without prejudicing my standing in England. I am astonished
how the supreme judge could have made such a statement, as he had a letter from
me pointing out that I hail declared my intention of becoming an American
citizen. The cause which led to my writing this letter is that the island,
called Abernethy’s Island by Mr Thuiston, and tv
hich he proposes to donate to Mr Abernethy, his heirs and assigns, is the same
island which Mr Hathaway and others jumped in 1841, and formed themselves into
a joint stock company, and erected a saw and grist-mill on it, as already
stated. From a desire to preserve the peace of the country. 1 deferred
bringing the case to a trial ’til the government extended its jurisdiction over
the country; but when it had done so, a few days after the arrival of Judge
Bryant, and before the courts were organized, Judge Bryant bought the island of
George Abemethy, Esq., who had bought the stock of the other associates, and as
the island was in Judge Bryant’s district, and as there were only two judges in
the territory I
understood the merits
of the ease, all classes were to be appealed to. There were those who had no
regard for truth or justice; those who cared more for party than principle;
those who had ignorantly believed the charges made against him; and those ■w ho, from
national, religious, or jealous feelings, were united in a crusade against the
man who represented in their eyes everything hateful in the British character
and unholy in the Catholic religion, as well as the few who were wilfully
conspiring to complete the overthrow of this British Roman Catholic aristocrat.
There were others
besides McLouglilin who felt themselves injured; those who had purchased lots
in Oregon City since the 4tli of March 1849. Notice was issued to these
property-holders to meet for the purpose of asking congress to confirm their
lots to them also. Such a meeting was held on the 19th of September, in Oregon
City, Andrew Hood being chairman, and Noyes Smith secretary. The meeting was
addressed by Thornton and Pritchett, and a memorial to congress prepared, which
set forth that the Oregon City claim was taken and had been held in accordance
with the laws of the provisional and territorial governments of Oregon; and
that the memorialists considered it as fully entitled to protection as any
other claim; no intimation to the contrary ever having been made up to that
time. That under this impression, both before and since the 4tli of March 1849,
large portions of it, in lots and blocks, had been purchased in good faith by
many citizens of Oregon, who had erected valuable buildings thereon, in the
expectation of having a complete and sufficient title when congress should
grant a title to
thought I could not
at the time bring the case to a satisfactory decision. I therefore deferred
bringing tlie case to a time when the bench wonld be full... Cau the people of
Oregon City believe that Mr Thurston did not know, some months before he left
this, that Mr Abemethy had sold his rights, whatever they were, to Judge
Bryant, and therefore proposing to congress to donate this island to Mr
Abemethy, his heirs and assigns, was in fact, proposing to donate it to Judge
Bryant, his heirs and assigns.’ Or. Spectator, Sept. 12,
isr.o.
the original
occupant. That since the date mentioned, the occupant of the claim had donated
for county, educational, charitable, and religious purposes more than two
hundred lots, which, if the bill pending should pass, would be lost to the
public, as well as a great loss sustained by private individuals who had
purchased property in good faith. They therefore prayed that the bill might not
pass in its present form, believing that it would work a “severe, inequitable,
unnecessary, and irremediable injustice.” The memorial was signed by tif’ty-six
persons,47 and a resolution declaring the selection of the Oregon
City claim for reservation uncalled for by any considerable portion of the
citizens of the territory, and as invidious and unjust to McLoughlin, was
offered by Wait and adopted, followed by another by Thornton declaring that
the gratitude of multitudes of people in Oregon was due to John McLoughlin for
assistance rendered them. In some preliminary remarks, Thornton referred to
the ingratitude shown their benefactor, by certain persons who had not paid
their debts to McLoughlin, but who had secretly signed a petition to take away
his property. McLoughlin also refers to this petition in his newspaper
defence; but if there was such a petition circulated or sent it does not appear
in any of the public documents, and must have been carefully suppressed by
Thurston himself, and only used in the committee rooms of members of congress.4*
47 The names
of the signers wo-e: Andrew Flood, Noyes Smith, Forbes Barclay, A. A. Skinner,
Jtmes I). Holman, W. C. Holman, J. Quinn Thornton, Walter Pomeroy, A. E. Wait,
Joseph C. Lewis, James M. Moore, Robert Moore, R. R. Thompson, George H.
Atkinson, M. Crawford, Wm. Hood, Thomas Lowe, Wm. B. Campbell, John Fleming, G.
Hanan, Robert Canfield, Alex. Brisser, Samuel Welch,
Gustavus A. Cone, Vlbert Gaines, W. H. Tucker, Arch. MeKinlay, Richard McMahon,
David Burnsides, Hezekiah Johnson, 1*. II. Hatch, J. L. Morrison, Joseph
Parrott, Ezra Fisher, Geo. T. Allen. L. D. C. Latourette, I). D. Tompkins,
Wm. Barlow, Amory Holbrook, Matthew Richardson, John McClosky, Wm. Holmes, H.
Bums. Wm. Chapman. Wm. K. Kilborn, R. Ralston, B. 35. Rogers, (’has.
Friedenberg, Abraham Wolfe, Samuel Vance, J. B. Backenstos, John J. Chandler.
S. W. Mosb, James Winston Jr.,
Septimus Huelot, Milton Elliott. Or. S’peci-alor, Sept. ‘26, 1850.
’s
Considering the fact that Thornton had been in the first instance the
Not long after the
meeting at Oregon City, a public gathering of about two hundred was convened
at Salem for the purpose of expressing disapproval of the resolutions passed at
the Oregon City meeting, and commendation of the cause of the Oregon delegate.19
In November a meeting
was held in Linn county at which resolutions were passed endorsing Thurston and
denouncing McLoughlin. Nor were there wanting those who upheld the delegate
privately, and who wrote approving letters to him, assuring him that he was
losing no friends, but gaining them by the score, and that his course with
regard to the Oregon City claim would be sustained.50
Mr Thurston has been
since condemned for his action in the matter of the Oregon City claims. But
even while the honest historian must join in reprobat-
unsuccessful agent of
the leading missionaries in an effort to take away the claim of MoLoughlin, it
might bo difficult to understand how he could appear in the role of the dot
tor's defender. But ever since the failure of that secret mission there had
been a coolness between Abernethy and his private delegate, who, now that he
had been superseded by a bolder and more fortunate though no less unscrupulous
mau, had publicly espoused the canse of the victim of all this plotting, who
still, it was supposed, had means enough left to pay for the legal advice he
was likely to need, if ever he was extricated from the anomalous position into
which he would be thrown by the passage of the Oregon land bill. His
affectation of proper sentiment imposed upon McLoughlin, who gave him
employment for a considerable time. As late as 1870, however, thi.: doughty
defender of the just, on the appearance in print of Mrs Victor’s Hirer of the
I Vest, in which the author gives a brief
statement of the Oregon City claim case, taring occasion at that time to court
the patronage of the Methodist church, made a violent attack through its organ,
the Pacific Christian Advocate, upon the author of that book for taking the
same view of the case v. hich is announced in the resolution published under
his own name in the Spectator of September 26, 1850. But not having ever been
able to regain in the church a standing which could be made profitable, and
finding that history would vindicate the right, he has made a request in his
autobiography that the fact of his having been MeLoughlin’s attorney should be
mentioned, ‘ in justice to the doctor! It will be left for posterity to judge
whether Thornton or McLoughlin was honored by the association.
49 William
Shaw, a member of the committee framing these resolutions, Bays, in his Pioneer
Life, MS., 11-15: ‘I came here, to Oregon City, ami spent what money I had for
flour, coffee, and one thing anti another, and I went back to the Hudson’s Bay
Company and bought 1,000 poundj of flour from Douglass. I was to pay him for it
after I came into the Valley. He trusted me for it, although he had never seen
me before. I took it up to the Dalles and distributed it among the emigrants. ’
W. C. Rector has, in later years, declared that McLoughlin was the father of
Oregon. McLoughlin little understood the manner in which public sentiment is
manufactured for party or even for individual purposes, when he exclaimed
indignantly: ‘ No man could be found to assert ’ that he had done the things
alleged.
wOdtll's
liiog. of Thurxton, MS., 2G.
ing his unscrupulous
sacrifice of truth to secure his object, the people then in Oregon should be
held as deserving of a share in the censure which has attached to him. His
course had been marked out for him by those who stood high in society, and who
were leaders of the largest religious body in Oregon. He had been elected by a
majority of the people. The people had been pleased and more than pleased with
what he had done. When the alternative had been presented to them of condemning
or endorsing him for this single action, their first impulse was to sustain the
man who had shown himself their faithful servant, even in the wrong, rather
than have his usefulness impaired. Almost the only persons to protest against
the robbery of McLoughlin were those who were made to suffer with him. All
others either remained silent, or wrote encouraging letters to Thurston, and as
Washington was far distant from Oregon he was liable to be deceived.51
When the memorial and
petition of the owners of lots in Oregon City, purchased since the 4th of March
1849, came before congress, there was a stir, because Thurston had given
assurances that he was acting in accordance with the will of the people. But
the memorialists, with a contemptible selfishness not unusual in mankind, had
not asked that McLoughlin’s claim might be confirmed to him, but only that
their lots might not he sacrificed.
Thurston sought
everywhere for support. While in Washington he wrote to Wyeth for testimony
against McLoughin, but received from that gentleman only the warmest praise of
the chief factor. Suspecting Thurston’s sinister design Wyeth even wrote
E- Thornton
wrote several articles in vindication of McLoughlin’s rights; but he was
employed by the doctor as an attorney. A. E. Wait also denounced Thurston’s
course; but he also was at one time employed by the doctor. Wait said: I
believed him (Thurston) to be Btrangely wanting in discretion; morally and
politically corrupt; towering in ambition, and unscrupulous oj; the means by
which to obtain it; fickle and suspicious in friendship; implauar ble and
revengeful l'atred, vulgar in speech, and prone to falsehood.’ Or. Spectator,
March 20. 1831.
His’ Ob., Vol. II, U
to Winthrop, of
Massachusetts, cautioning him against Thurston’s misrepresentations. Then Thurston
prepared an address to the people of Oregon, covering sixteen closely printed
octavo pages, in 'which he recounts his services and artifices.
With no small cunning
he declared that his reason for not asking congress to confirm to the owners
lots purchased or obtained of McLoughlin after the 4th of March, 1849, was
because he had confidence that the legislative assembly would do so; adding
that the bill was purposely so worded in order that McLoughlin would have no
opportunity of transferring the property to others who would hold it for him.
Thus careful had he been to leave no possible means by which the man who had
founded and fostered Oregon City could retain an interest in it. And having
openly advocated educating the youth of Oregon with the property wrested from
the venerable benefactor of their fathers and mothers, he submitted himself fur
reelection,32 while the victim of missionary and personal malice
began the painful and useless struggle to free himself from the toils by which
his enemies had surrounded him, and from which he never escaped during the few
remaining years of his life.53
52 Address
to the Electors, 12.
63
McLoughlin (lied September 3, 1857, aged 73 years. He was buried in the
enclosure of the Catholic church at Oregon City; and on liis tombstone, a plain
slab, is ungraved the legend: ‘The Pioneer and Friend of Oregon; also The
Founder of this City.’ He laid his case before congress in a memorial, with all
the evidence, but in vain. Lane, who was then >n that body as a delegate from
Oregon, and who was personally interested in defeating the memorial, succeeded
in doing so by assertions as unfounded as those of Thurston. This blunt old
soldier, the pride of the people, the brave killer of Indians, turned demagogue
could deceive and cheat with the best of them. See Cong. Globe, 1853-4,
1080-82, ami Letter vf Dr McLoughlin, in Portland Oregonian, July 22, 1854.
Toward the close of his life McLoughlin yielded to the tortures of disease and
ingratitude, and betrayed, as he had never done before, the unhappiness liis
enemies had brought upon him. Shortly before his death he said to Grover, then
a young man: ‘I shall live but a little while longer; and this is the reason
that I sent for you. I am an old man and just dying, and you are a young man
and will live many years in this country. As for me, I might better have been
shot’—and he brought it out harshly — •like t bull; I might better have been
.shot forty years ago!’ After a silence, for I did not say anything, he
concluded, ‘than to have lived here, and tried to build up a family and an
estate in this government. 1 became a citizen of the United States in good
faith. I planted all X had here, and the govern-
When the legislative
assembly met in the autumn of 1850 it complied, with the suggestion of
Thurston, so far as to confirm the lots purchased since March
1849 to their owners, by passing an act for that purpose,
certain members of the council protesting.54 This act was of some
slight benefit to McLoughlin, as it stopped the demand upon him, by people who
had purchased property, to have their money returned.55 Further than
this they refused to go, not having a clear idea of their duty in the matter.
They neither accepted the gift nor returned it to its proper owner, and it was
not until 1852, after McLoughlin had completed his naturalization, that the
legislature passed an act accepting the donation of his property for the
purposes of a university.58 Before it was given back to the heirs of
McLoughlin, that political party to which Thurston belonged, and which felt
bound to justify his acts, had gone out of power in Oregon. Since that time
many persons have, like an army in a wilderness building a monument over a dead
comrade by casting each a stone upon his grave, placed their tribute of praise
m my hands to be built into
ment has confiscated
my property Now what I want to ask of yon is, that you will give your
influence, after I am dead, to have this property go to my children. I have
earned it, as cither settlers have earned theirs, and it ought to be mine and
my heirs’.’ ‘I told him,’ said Grover, ‘I would favor his request, ami I always
diil favor it; and the legislature finally surrendered the property to his
heirs.’ Pub. Life, MS., 88-90.
°* Waymire and Miller
protested, saying that it was not in accordance with the object of the
donation, and was robbing the university; that the assembly were only agents in
trust, and had no right to dispose of the prop erty without a consideration.
Or. Spectator, Feb. 13, 1851.
65 ‘My father
paid back thousands of dollars,’ says Mrs Harvey. Life of McLaughlin, MS., 38.
“6 The
legislature of 1852 accepted the donation, [n 1853^ a resolution was offered by
Orlando Humason thanking McLoughlin for his generous conduct toward the early
settlers; but as it was not in very good taste wrongfully to keep a man’s
property while thanking him for previous favors, the reso
li tion was indefinitely postponed. In
1855-6 a memorial wa- dr »wn up by the legislature asking that certain school
lands in Oregon City should ba restored to John McLoughlin, and two townships
of land in lieu thereof should be granted to the university. Salem, Or.
Statesman, .Tan 29th and Feb. 5, 1856. Nothing was done, however, for the
relief of McLoughlin or hia heirs until 1862, ■«
hen the legislature conveyed to the latter fur the. sum of $1,000 the Oregon
City claim; but the long suspension of the title had driven money seeking
investment away from the place and materially lessened its value.
the monument of
history testifying one after another to the virtues, magnanimity, and wrongs of
John Mc- Loughlin.67
Meanwhile, and though
reproved by the public prints, by the memorial spoken of, and by the act of the
legislature in refusing to sanction so patent an iniquity® the Oregon delegate
never abated his industry, but toiled on, leaving no stone unturned to secure
his reelection. He would compel the approbation and gratitude of his
constituency, to whom he was ever pointing out his achievements in their behalf.69
The appropriations for Oregon, besides one hundred thousand dollars for the
Cayuse war expenses, amounted in all to one hundred and ninety thousand
dollars.6J
67 MeKinlay, his friend of many years,
comparing him with Douglas, remarks that McLoughlin's umf will go down from
generation to generation when Sir James Douglas’ will be forgotten, as the
maker of Oregon, and one of the best of men. Compton’s Forts and Fort Life,
MS., 2. Finlayson says identically the same in Vane. Isl. and N. W. Coast, MS.,
28-30. There are similar observations m Minto’s Early Days, MS., and in Waldo’s
Critiques, MS.; Brown’s Willamette Valley, MS.; Parrish’s Or. Anecdotes, MS.;
Joseph Watt, in Palmer's Wagon Trains, MS.; Rev. Geo. H. Atkinson, in Oregon
Colonis*, 5; M. P. Deady, in Or. Pioneer Assoc., Trans., 1875, 18; W. II. I
lee.', Id., 1879, 31; Grover’s Public Lift in Or., MS., 86-92; Ford’s Road
makers, MS.; Crawford’s Missionaries, MS.; Moss’ Pioneer 1’imes, MS.; Burnett's
Recollections, MS., i. 91-4, 273-4, 298, 301-3; Mrs E. M. Wilson, in Oregon ■Sketches,
MS., 19-21; Blanchet’s (!ath.
Ch. in Or., 71; Chadwick’s Pub. Records, MS., 4-5; H. II. Spalding, in 27th
Cong., SdSess., 830, 57; Ebbert’s Trapper’s Life, MS., 30- 7; Pettygrove’s
Oregon, MS., 1-2, 5-6; Lovejoy’s Portlan l, MS., 37; Anderson’s Hist. N. W.
Coast., MtS., 15-10; Applegate’s Views of Hist., MS.. 12, 15-10; Id., in
Saxon's Or. Ter., 131-41; C. Lancaster, m Cony. Globe, 1853-4, 1080, and others
already quoted
68 On Spectator, Dee. 19 and 20, 1850.
159 VV. W.
Buck, who was i member of the council, repudiated the idea that Oregon was
indebted to Thurston for the donation law, which Linn and Bentun had labored
lor long before, and asserted that he hail found congress ready and «illing to
bestow the long promised bounty. And as to the appropriations obtained, they
were no more than other territories east of the moun- tair s had received.
MThe
several amounts were, 820,000 for public buildings; §20,000 for a penitentiary;
$53,140 for lighthouses at Cape Disappointment, Cape Flattery, and New
Dungeness, and for buoys at the mouth of the Columbia River; $25,000 for the
purposes of the Indian bill; $24,000 pay for legislature, clerks’ hire, office
rents, etc; $15,000 additional Indian fund; $10,000 deficiency /und to make,
up the intended appropriation of 1848, which had nierely paid the expenses of
the messengers, Thornton and Meek; $10,000 for the pay of llie superintendent
of Indian affairs, his clerks, office rent, etc.; §10,500, salaries for the
governor, secretary, and judges; $1,500 for taking
Mr Thurston set an
example, which his immediate successors were compelled to imitate, of complete
conformity to the demands of the people. He aspired to please all Oregon, and
he made it necessary for those who came after him to labor for the same end. It
was a worthy effort when not carried too far; but no man ever yet succeeded for
any length of time in acting upon that policy; though there have been a few
who have pleased all by a wise independence of all. In his ardor and
inexperience he went too far. He not only published a great deal of matter in
the east to draw attention to Oregon, much of which was correct, and some of
which was false, but he wrote letters to the people of Oregon through the
Spectator,61 showing forth his services from month to month, and
giving them advice which, while good in itself, was akin to impudence on the
part of a young man whose acquaintance with the country was of recent date. But
this was a part of the man’s temperament and character.
Congress passed a
bounty land bill, giving one hundred and sixty acres to any officer or private
who had served one year in any Indian war since 1790, or eighty acres to those
who had served six months. This bill might be made to apply to those who had
served in the Cayuse war, and a bill to that effect was introduced by
Thurston’s successor; but Thurstou had already thought of doing something for
the old soldiers of 1812 and later, many of whom were settlers in Oregon, by
procuring the passage of a bill establishing a pension agency.62
He kept himself
informed as well as he could of everything passing in Oregon, and expressed his
approval whenever he could. He complimented the
the census; $1,500
contingent fund; and a copy of the exploring expedition for the territorial
library. 31st Cong., 1st Sess., U. S. Acts and Res., 13, 27, 28, 31, 72, 111,
159-60, 192, 198; Or. Spectator, Aug. 8th and 22d, <»nd Oct. 24, 1850.
61 Or.
Spectator, from Sept. 26th to Oct. 17, 1S50.
02 Cong. Globe, lS4rJ-o0, 564.
Theophilus Magruder was appointed pension agent. Or. spectator, J uly 2,5,
1850.
school
superintendent, McBride, on the sentiments uttered in his report. He wrote to
William Meek of Milwaukie that he was fighting hard to save his land claim from
being reserved for an ordnance depot. He procured, unasked, the prolongation of
the legislative session of 1850 from sixt}T to ninety (lays, for
the purpose of giving the assembly time to perfect a good code, and also
secured an appropriation sufficient to meet the expense of the long session.63
He secured, when the cheap postage bill was passed, the right of the Pacific
coast to a rate uniform with the Atlantic states, whereas before the rate had
been four times as high ; and introduced a bill providing a revenue cutter for
the district of Oregon, and for the establishment of a marine hospital at
Astoria; presented a memorial from the citizens of that place asking for an
appropriation of ten thousand dollars for a custom-house; and a bill to create
an additional district, besides application for additional ports of entry 011
the southern coast of Oregon.
In regard
to the appropriation secured of $100,000 for the Cayuse war, instead of
$150,000 asked for, Thurston said he had to take that or nothing. No money was
to be paid, however, until the evidence should be presented to the secretary of
the treasuiy that the amount claimed had been expended.61
This
practically finished Mr Thurston’s work for the session, and he so wrote to his
constituents. The last of the great measures for Oregon, he said, had been
consummated; but they had cost him dearly, as his impaired health fearfully
admonished him. But he declared before God and his conscience he had done all
that he could do for Oregon, and with an eye single to her interests. He
rejoiced in his success;
6'Id., Oct.
10, 1850; 31st Cong., 1st Sess., U. S. Acts and Res., 31.
04 A memorial was received from the Oregon
legislature after the passage of the l)ill dated Dec, 3. 1850, giving the
report of A. E. Wait, commissioner, stating that he had investigated and
allowed 340 claims, amounting in all to $87,230.53; and giving it as his
opinion that the entire indebtedness would amount to about §150,000. 31st
Cong., 2d Sess., Sen. Misc. Doc. 29, 3-11
and though
slander might seek to destroy him, it could not touch the destiny of the
territory.61
Between
the time of the receipt of the first copy of the land bill and the writing of
this letter partisan feeling had run high in Oregon, and the newspapers were
filled with correspondence on the subject. M uch of this newspaper writing
would have wounded the delegate deeply, but he was spared from seeing it by the
irregularity and insufficiency of the mail transportation,66 which
brought him no Oregon papers for several months.
It soon
became evident, notwithstanding the first impulse of the people to stand by
their delegate, that a reaction wTas taking place, and the more
generous- minded were ashamed of the position in which the eleventh section of
the laud bill placed them in the eyes of the world; that with the whole vast
territory of Oregon wherein to pick and choose they must needs force an old man
of venerable character from his just possessions for the un-American reason
that he was a foreigner born, or had formerly been the honored head of a foreign
company. It was well understood, too, whence came the direction of this vindictive
action, and easily seen that it would operate against the real welfare of the
territory.
The more
time the people had in which to think over the matter, the more easily were
they convinced that there were others who could fill Thurston’s place without
detriment to the public interests. An informal canvass then began, in which
the names67 of
65 Or.
Spectator, April 3, 1851. The appropriations made at the second session of the
31 st Congress for Oregon were for the expenses of the territory §30,000; for
running base and meridian lines, §9,000; for surveying in Oregon, $51,840; for
a custom-house, $10,000; for a light-house and fog-signal at Umpqua River,
$15,000; for fog-signals at the lighthouses to be erected at Disappointment,
Flattery, and New Kungeness, $3,000.
“Writing Jan. 8tli,
hesays: ‘September is the latest date of a paper I have seen. I am uninformed
as yet what the cause is, only from what I expe^ rienced once before, that the
steamer left San Francisco before the arrival of, or -without taking the Oregon
mail.' Or. Spectator, April 10, 1850.
67‘There are
many very worthy and meritorious citizens who migrated to thi3 country at an
early day to choose from. I would mention the names of Eome of the number,
leaving the door open, however, to suggestions trom
several well known
citizens and early settlers were mentioned; but public sentiment took no form
before March, when the Star, published at Milwaukie, proclaimed as its
candidate Thurston’s opponent in the election of 1849, Columbia Lancaster. In
the mean time R. R. Thompson had been corresponding with Lane, who was still
mining in southern Oregon, and had obtained his consent to run if his friends
wished it.63 The Star then put- the name of Lane in place of that of
Lancaster; the Spectator, nowr managed by I). J. Sclmebley, and a
new democratic paper, the Oregon Statesman, withholding their announcements of
candidates until Thurston, at that moment on his way to Oregon, should arrive
and satisfy his friends of his eligibility.
But when everything
was preparing to realize or to give the lie to Thurston’s fondest hopes of the
future, there suddenly interposed that kindest of our enemies, death, and saved
him from humiliation. He expired on board the steamer California, at sea off
Acapulco on the 9th of April 1851, at the age of thirty-live years. His health
had long been delicate, and he had not spared himself, so that the heat and
discomfort of the voyage through the tropics, with the anxiety of mind
attending his political career, sapped the low- burning lamp of life, and its
flickering flame was extinguished. Yet he died not alone or unattended. He had
in his charge a company of young women, teachers whom Governor Slade of Vermont
was sending to Oregon,69 who now became his tender nurses,
others, namely, Jesse
Applegate, J. W. Nesmith, Joel Palmer, I laniel Waldo, Rev. Wm Roberts, the
venerable Robert Moore, James M. Moore, Gen. Joseph Lane and Gen. Lovejoy, and
many others who have recently arrived in the country.’ Cor. of the Or.
Spectator, March ‘27, 1851.
thOr.
Spectator, March 6, 1851; Lane's Autobiography, MS., 57.
19 Five
young women were sent out by the national board of education, at the request
of Abemethy and others, under contract to teach two years, or refund the money
for their passage. They were all soon married, as a matter of course -Miss
Wands to Governor Gaines; Miss Smith to Mr Beers; Miss Gray to Mr MeLeach; Miss
Lincoln to Judge Skinner; and Miss Millar to Judge Wilson. Or. Sketches, MS.,
15; Grovers Pub. Life in Or., MS., 100; Or. Spectator, March 13, 1851.
and when
they had closed his eyes forever, treasured up every word that could be of
interest to his bereaved wife and friends.70 Thus while preparing
boldly to vindicate his acts and do battle with his adversaries, he was forced
to surrender the sword which was too sharp for its scabbard, and not even his
mortal remains were permitted to reach Oregon for two years.71
The
reverence we entertain for one on whom the gods have laid their hands, caused a
revulsion of feeling and an outburst of sympathy. Had he lived to make war in
his own defence, perhaps McLoughlin would have been sooner righted; but the
people, who as a majority blamed him for the disgraceful eleventh section of
the land law, could not touch the dead lion with disdainful feet, and his party
who honored his talents72 and felt under obligations for his
industry, protected his memory from even the implied censure
70 Mrs E. M. AVilson, daughter of Rev. James
P. Millar of Albany, New York who soon followed his daughter to Oregon, gives
some notes of TLur stou’s last days. ‘He wan positive enough,’ she says, ‘to
make a vivid impression on my memory. Strikingly good-looking, direct in his
speech, with a supreme will, used to overcoming obstacles.. “Just wait 'til I
get there,” he would say, “I will show those fellows!”’ Or. Sketches, MS., IIS.
71 The legislature in 1853 voted to remove
his dust from foreign soil, and it was deposited in the cemetery at Salem; and
in 1856 a monument was erected over it by the ’same authority, [t is a plain
shaft of Italian marble, 12 feet high. On its eastern face is inscribed:
‘Thurston: erected by the People of Oregon,’ and a fac-simile of the seal of
the territory; on the north side, name, age, and death; on the south: ‘Here
rests Oregon’s first delegate: a man of genius and learning; a lawysr and
statesman, his Christian virtues equalled by his wide philanthropy, his public
acts are his best eulo- giiun.' Salem Or. Statesman, May 20, 1850; Odell’s
Biog. of Thurston, MS., 37; S. F. D. Alta, April 25, 1831.
72 Thurston made his first high mark in
congress by his speech on the admission of California. See Gong. Globe,
J8//9-60, app. 345. His remarks on the appropriations for Indian affairs were
so instructive and interesting that his amendments were unanimously agreed to.
A great many members shook him heartily by the hand after he had closed; and he
was assured that if he had asked for §50,000 after such a speech he would have,
received it. Or. Spectator, Aug. 22, 1850. With that tendency to see something
peculiar in a man who has identified himself with the west, the N. Y. Sun of
March 20, 1850, remarked: ‘Comingfrom the extreme west’—he was not two years
from Maine—‘where, it is taken for granted, the people are in a more primitive
condition than elsewhere under this government, and looking, as Mr Thurston
does, like a fair specimen of the frontier man, little v as expected of him in
an oratorical way. But he has proved to be one. of the most effective speakers
in the hall, which has created no little surprise.’ A Massachusetts paper also
commented in a similar strain: ‘Mr Thurston is a young man, an eloquent and
effective debater, and a bold and active man, auch as are found only in the
west.’
of undoing
liis work. And all felt that not he alone, but bis secret advisers were
likewise responsible.
In view of all the
circumstances of Thurston’s career, it is certainly to be regretted, first,
that he fell under the influence of, or into alliance with, the missionary
party; and secondly, that he had adopted as a part of bis political creed the
maxim that the end sanctifies the means, by which he missed obtaining that high
place in the estimation of posterity to which he aspired, and to which he could
easily have attained by a more honest use of his abilities. Associated as he is
with the donation law, which gave thousands of persons free farms a mile square
in Oregon, his name is engraved upon the foundation stones of the state beside
those of Floyd, Linn, and Benton, and of Graham 1ST. Fitch, the actual author
of the bill before congress in 1850.73 No other compensation had
he;74 and of that even the severest truth cannot deprive him.
Thurston
had accomplished nothing toward securing a fortune in a financial sense, and he
left bis widow with scanty means of support. The mileage of the Oregon delegate
was fixed by the organic act at $2,500. It was afterward raised to about double
that amount; and when in 185G-7 on this ground a bill for the relief of his
heirs was brought before congress, the secretary of the treasury was
authorized to make up the difference in the mileage for that purpose.
nOong.
Globe, 1850-,ji, a pp. xtx^iii.
Or.
Statesman, April 14, 1857; Grover’s Puh. Life, MS., 101.
ADMINISTRATION OF
GAINES.
1850-1852.
An
Official
Vacancy—Gaines Appointed Governor—His Reception is Oregon—The Legislative
Assembly in Session—Its Personnel-— The Territorial Lier\ry—Location of the Capital—Oregon
City or Salem—Warm and Prolonged Contest—Two Legislatures— War between the
Law-makers and the Federal Judges—Appeal to Congress — Salem Declared the
Capital—A New Session Called—Feuds of the Public Press—Unpopularity of Gaines—
Close or his Term—Lane Appointed his Successor.
From the
first of May to the middle of August
1850 there was neither governor nor district judge
in the territory; the secretary and prosecuting attorney, with the United
States marshal, administered the government. On the 15th of August the United
States sloop of war Falmouth arrived from San Francisco, having on board
General John P. Gaines,1 newly appointed governor of Oregon, with
his family, and other federal officers, namely: General Edward Hamilton of
Ohio,2 territorial secretary, and Judge Strong of the third
district, as before mentioned.3
’According to A.
Bush, 01 the Oregon Statesman, Marshall of Indiana was the first choice of
President Taylor; but according to Grover, Pub. Life in (Jr., MS., Abraham
Lincoln was first appointed, and declined. Which of these authorities is
correct ia immaterial; it shows, however, that Oregon was considered too far
off to be desirable.
2 Hamilton was bom in Culpeper Co., Va. He
was a lawyer by profession; removed to Portsmouth, Ohio, where he edited the
Portsmouth Tribune. He was a captain in the Mexican ■war, his
title of general being obtained in the militia service. Elis wife was Miss
Catherine Royer.
3 The other members of the party were
Archibald Gaines, A. Kinney, James E. Strong, Mrs Gaines, three daughters and
two sons, Mrs Hamilton and daughter, and Mrs Strong and daughter. Gaines lost
two daughters, 17 and 19 years of age, of yellow fever, at St Catherine’s, en
route; and Judge Strong a son of five years. They all left New York in the
United States
(139)
Coming in
greater state than his predecessor, the new governor was more royally welcomed,4
by the firing of cannon, speeches, and a public dinner. In return for these
courtesies Gaines presented the territory with a handsome silk flag, a gift
which Thurston, m one of his eloquent encomiums upon the pioneers of Oregon
and their deeds, reminded congress had never yet been offered by the
government to that people. But Governor Gaines was not sincerely welcomed by
the democracy, who resented the removal of Lane, and who on other grounds
disliked the appointment. They would not have mourned if when he, like Lane,
was compelled to make proclamation of the death of the president by whom lie
was appointed,5 there had been the prospect of a removal in
consequence. The grief for President Taylor was not profound with the Oregon
democracy. He was accused of treating them in a cold indifferent manner, and
of lacking the cordial interest displayed in their affairs by previous rulers.
Nor was the difference wholly imaginary. There was not the same incentive to
interest which the boundary question, and the contest over free or slave
territory, had inspired before the establishment of the territory. Oregon was
now on a plane with other territories, which could not have the national
legislature at their beck and call, as she had done formerly, and the change
could not occur without an affront to her feelings or her pride. Gaines was
wholly unlike the energetic; and debonair Lane, being phlegmatic in
store-ship Supply, in
November 1849, arriving at San Francisco in July 1 850, where they were
transferred to the Falmouth. California Conner, July 21, 1850; Or. Spectator,
Aug. 22, 1850; Strong’s Hist. Or., MS., 1, 2, 13.
1 The Or. Statesman of March 28, 1851,
remarks that Gaines came around Cape Horn in a government vessel, with his
family and furniture, arriving at Oregon City nine months after his
appointment, and drawing salary all the time, while Lane being removed, drew no
pay, but performed the labor of his office.
5 President Taylor died July 9, 1850. The
intelligence was received in Oregon on the 1st of September. Friday the 20th
was set for the observance of religious funeral ceremonies by proclamation of
Gaines. Or. Spectator, Sept. 5, 1850.
temperament,
fastidious as to his personal surroundings, pretentious, pompous, and jealous
of his dignity.6 The spirit iu which the democracy, who were more
than satisfied with Lane and Thurston, received the whig governor, was ominous
of what soon followed, a bitter partisan warfare.
There had
been a short session of the legislative assembly in May, under its privilege
granted in the territorial act to sit fur one hundred days, twenty- seven clays
yet remaining. No time or place of meeting of the next legislature had been
fixed upon, nor without this provision could there be another session without a
special act of congress, which omission rendered necessary the May term in
order that this matter might be attended to. The first Monday in December was
the time named for the convening of the next legislative body, and Oregon City
the place. The assembly remained in session about two weeks, calling for a
special session of the district court at Oregon City for the trial of the
Cayuse murderers, giving the governor power to fill vacancies in certain
offices by appointment, and providing for the printing of the laws, with a few
other enactments.
The
subject of submitting the question of a state constitution to the people at the
election in June was being discussed. The measure was favored by many who were
restive under presidential appointments, and who thought Oregon could more
safely furnish the material for executive and judicial officers than depend on
the ability of such as might be sent them. The legislature, however, did not
entertain the idea at its May term, on the ground that there was not time to
put the question fairly before the people. Looking at the condition and
population of the territory at this time, and its unfitness to assume the
'Lane hunself ha-1 a
kind of contempt for Gaines, on acrount of his sur render at Encuinacion. ‘He
was a prisoner during the remainder of the war,’ nays Lane; which was not
altogether true. Autobmjrctphy, MS., 50-7.
expenses
and responsibilities of a state, the conclusion is irresistible that jealousy
of the lead taken in this matter by California, and the aspirations of politicians,
rather than the good of the people, prompted a suggestion which could not have
been entertained by the tax-payers.
On the 2d
of December the legislative assembly chosen in June met at Oregon City. It
consisted of nine members in the council and eighteen in the lower house.7
W. W. Buck of Clackamas county was chosen president of the council, and Ralph
Wilcox of Washington county speaker of the house.8 George
7R. P.
Boise, in an address before the pioneer association in 1876, says that there
were 25 members in the house; but he probably confounds this session with that
of 1851-2. The assembly of 1850-1 provided for the increase of representatives
to twenty-two. See list of Acts in Or. Statesman, March 28, 1851; Gen. Laws
Or., 1850-1, 225.
8 The names of the councilmen and
representatives are given in the first number of the Oregon Statesman. W. W.
Buck, Samuel T. McKean, Samuel Parker, and W, B. Mealey were of the class which
held over from 1849. I have already given some account of Buck and McKean.
Parker and Mealey were both of the immigration of 1845. Parker was a Virginian,
a farmer and carpenter, but a. man who interested himself in public affairs. He
was a good man. Mealey was a Pennsylvanian; a farmer and physician.
Of the newly elected
councilmen, James McBride has been mentioned as one of the immigrants of 1847.
Richard .Miller of
Marion county was born in Queen Anne’s county, Maryland, in 1800. He came to
Oregon in 1847, and was a fanner.
A. L. Humphrey of Benton county was born in
Litchfield, Connecticut, in 1796 and emigrated to Oregon in 1847. He was a
farmer and merchant.
Lawrence Hall, a
farmer of Washington county, was born in Bourbon county, Kentucky, March 10,
1800, and came to Oregon in 1845.
Frederick Wayinire,
of Polk county, a millwright, was born in Montgomery county, Ohio, March 15,
1807. Ho married Fanny Oochagan, of Indiana, by whom he had 17 children. He came
to Oregon in 1845 and soon became known as an energetic, firm, strong, rough
man, ami an uncompromising partisan. ‘The old apostle of democracy’ and
‘watchdog of the treasury’ were favorite terms used by his friends in
destribing Waymire. He became prominent in the politics of the territory, and
was much respected for his honesty and earnestness, though not always in the
right. His home in Polk county, on the little liver Luckianmte, was called
Hayden Hall. He had been brought up a Methodist, and in the latter part of hi*
life returned to his allegiance, having a library well stocked with historical
and religious works. lie died in April 28, 1873, honored as » true man and a
patriotic citizen, hoping with faith that he should live again beyond the grav e.
II. P. Boise, in Trans. Or. Pioneer Assoc.. 1876, 27-8. His wife survived until
Oct. 15, 1878, when she died in her 09th year. Three only of their children are
living. All the members of the council were married men with families, except
Humphrey who wa» a widower.
The members of the
house were Ralph Wilcox, William M. King of Washington cuunty, William Shaw,
William Parker, and Benjamin F. Harding of Marion, the latter elected to fill
a % acancy created by the. death of K.
L. Curry
was elected chief clerk of the council, assisted by James D. Turner. Herman
Buck was serjeant-at-arms. Asahel Bush was chosen chief clerk of the house,
assisted by B. Genois. William Holmes was sergeant-at-arms, and Septimus Heulat
doorkeeper.
The
assembly being organized, tho governor was invited to make any suggestions; and
appearing before
II. Bellinger, who
died after election; W. T. Matlock, Beniamin Simpson, Hector Campbell, of
Clackamas; William McAlphin, E. L. Walter*, of Linn; John Thorp, H. N. V.
Holmes, of Polk; J C. Avery, W, St Clair, of Benton; Aaron Payne, S. M.
Gilmore, Matthew P. Deady, of Yamhill; Truman I’. Powers, of Clatsop, Lewis,
and Clarku counties.
Of Wilcox I have
spoken in .mother place; also of Shaw, Walter, Payne, and McAlphin. William M.
King was nom and bred in Litchfield, Ccnn., whence he moved to Onondaga county,
New York, and subsequently to Pennsylvania and Missouri. Ho came to Oregon in
1818 and engaged in business in Portland, soon becoming known as a talented and
unscrupulous politician, as well as a cunning debater and successful tastieian.
He is much censured in the early territorial newspapers, partly for real
faults, and partly, 110 doubt, from partisan feeling. He is described by one
who laiew him as a firm friend and bitter enemy. He died at Portland, after
r.eeing it grow to 1 'a place of wealth and importance, November 8, 1809, aged
G!) years. II. X. V. Holmes was born in Wythe county, Ya., in 1812, but removed
in childhood to Pulaski county, emigrating to Oregon in 1848. He settled in a
picturesque district of Polk county, in the gap between the Yamhill and La
Creolo v_l leys. He was a gentleman, of the old Kentucky school, was several
times a member of the Oregon legislature, and a prosperous farmer.
B. F. Harding, a native of Wyoming county,
Penn., was born in 1822, ard came to Oregon in 18-19. He was a lawyer by
profession, and sett’ed at Salem, for tho interests of which place he
faithfully labored, and for Marion county, which rewarded him by keeping him in
a position of prominence for many years. He mairicd Eliza Cox of Salem in 1851.
He lived later rn a line farm in the enjoyment of abundance and independence.
John Thcrp was captain of a company in the immigration of 1844. He was from
Mt'di3on county, Ky, and settled in Polk county, Oregon, where he followed farming.
Truman P. Powers was born in 1807, and brought up in Chittenden county, Vt,
coming to Oregon in 1840. He settled on the Colombia near Astoria. William
Parker wan a native of Derby county, England, born in 1813, but removed when a
child to New York. He was a farmer and sur veyor. Benjamin Simpson, bom in
W’arren county, Term., in 1810, was raised in Howard county, Mo., and came to
Oregon in 184G, and engaged in merchandising. Hector Campbell was born in
Hampden county, Mass., in 1793, removed to Oregon in 1849, anil settled on a
farm in Clackamas county. William T. Matlock, a lawyer, was born in Rhone
county, Tennessee, i& 1802, removed when a child to Ind’.ana, and to Oregon
in 1847. Samuel M. Gilmore, bom in Bedford county, Tenn., in 1814, removed
lirst to Clay and then to Buchanan county, Missouri, whence he emigrated in
1843, settling in Yamhill county. W. St Clair was an immigrant of 1840.
Joseph C. Avery was
burn in Lucerne county, Penn., June 9. 1817, and was educated at Wilkesbarre,
the county seat. He removed to III. in 1CC9, where he married Martha Marsh in
1841. Four years afterward lie came to Oregon, spending the winter of 1845 at
Oregon City In the following snring he settled on a land claim at tho mouth of
Mary s River, where in 1850 he laid out ■i town,
calling it Marysville, but asking the legislature afterward to change the name
to Corvallis, which was done.
Matthew Paul Deady
was born in Talbot co., Md, May 12,1824, of Irish and English ancestry. His
father, Daniel Deady, was a native of Kauturk, Ireland, and was a teacher by
profession. When a young man he came to Baltimore, Md, where he soon married.
After a few years residence in the city he removed to Wheeling, Va, and again
in 1837 to Belmont co., Ohio. Here the son worked on a farm until 1S41. For
four year3 afterward he learned black- smithing, and attended school at the
Barnesville academy. From 1845 to 1848 he taught school and read law with Judge
William Kennon, of St Clairs- ville, where ho was admitted to the bar of the
supreme court of Ohio, Oct. 26, 1847. In 1840 he came to Oregon, settling at
Lafayette, in Yamhill co., and teaching school until tho spring of 1830, when
he commenced the practice of the law, and in June of the same year was elected
a member of the legislature, and served on the judiciary committee. In 1851 he
wa3 elected to the council for two years, serving as chairman of the judiciary
committee and president of the council. In 1853 he was appointed judge of the
territorial supreme court, and held the position until Oregon was admitted into
the Union, February 14, 1859, and in the mean time performed the duties of district
judge in the southern district. He was a member of the constitutional
convention of 1857, being president of that body. His influence was strongly
felt in forming the constitution, some of its marked features being chiefly his
work; while in preventing the adoption of other measures he was equally
serviceable. On the admission of Oregon to statehood he was elected a judge of
the supreme coart from the southern district without opposition, and also
received the appointment of U. S. district judge. He accepted the latter
position and removed to Portland, where he has resided down to the present
time, enjoying the confidence and respect paid to integrity and ability in
office.
During the years
18G2-4, Judge Deady prepared the codes of civil and criminal procedure and tho
penal code, and procured their passage by the Legislature ai they camo from his
hand, besides much other legislation, including tho general incorporation act
of 1862, which for the first time in the U. S. made incorporation free to any
three or more persons wishing to engage in any iawrul enterprise or occupation.
In 1884 and 1874 he made and published a general compilations of the laws of
Oregon.
11a v/as one of the
organizers of tho University of Oregon, and for over twelve years has been an
active member of the board of regents and president of that body. For twenty
years he has been president of the Library Association of Portland, which under
his fostering care has grown to be one of the most creditable institutions of
the state.
On various occasions
Judge Deady ha3 sat in the U. S. circuit court in San Francisco, %vhere lie has
given judgment in some celebrated cases; among them arc McCall v. McDowell, 1
Deady, 233, in which he held that tho president could not suspend the habeas
corpus act, the power to do so being vested in congress; Martiuetti v. McGuire,
1 Deady, 216, commonly called the Black Crook case, in which he held that this
spectacular exhibition was not a dramatic composition, and therefore not
entitled to copy right; Woodruff??. N. B. Gravel Co., 9 Sawyer, 441, commonly
called the Debris case, in which it was held that the hydraulic miners had no
right to deposit the waste of the mines in the watercourses of the state to the
injury of the riparian owners; and Sharon v. Hill, 11 Sawyer, 290, in which it
was determined that the so-called marriage contract between these parties was a
forgery.
On the 24th of June,
1852, Judge Deady wag married to Miss Lucy A. Henderson, a daughter of Robert
and Rhoda Henderson, of Yamhill co., who came to Oregon by the southern route
in 184G. Mr Henderson was born in Green co., Tenn., Feb. 14, 1809, and removed
to Kentucky in 1831, and to Missouri in 1834. Mrs Deady i3 possessed of many
charms of person and character, and ia distinguished for that taet which
renders her at ease in all stations of life. Her children are three sons,
Edward Nesmith, Paul Robert, and Henderson Brooke. The first two have been
admitted to the bar, the third is a physician.
of
information on the progress of the territory toward securing its congressional
appropriations. The five thousand dollars granted in the organic act for erecting
public buildings was in his hands, he said, to which would be added the forty
thousand dollars appropriated at the last session; and he recommended that
some action be taken with regard to a penitentiary, no prison having existed
in Oregon since the burning of the jail at Oregon City. The five thousand
dollars for a territorial library, he informed the assembly, had been
expended, and the books placed in a room furnished for the purpose, the custody
of which was placed in their hands.9
The legislative
session of 1850-1 was not harmonious. There were quarrels over the expenditure
of the appropriations for public buildings and the location of the capital.
Although the former assembly had called a session in May, ostensibly to fix
upon a place as well as a time for convening its successor, it had not fixed
the place, and the present legislature had come together by common consent at Oregon
City. Conceiving it to be proper at this session to establish the seat of government,
according to the fifteenth section of the organic act, which authorized the
legislature at its first session, or as soon thereafter as might be expedient,
to locate and establish the capital of the territory, the legislature proceeded
to this duty. The only places put in competition with any chance of success
were Oregon City and Salem. Between these there was a lively contest, the
majority of the assembly, backed by the missionary interest, being in favor of
Salem, while a minority, and many Oregon City lobbyists, were for keeping the
seat of government at that place. In the heat of the contest Governor Gaines unwisely
interfered by a special message, in which, while
Scattered throughout
this history, and elsewhere, are the evidences of the manner in which Judge
Deady ha* impressed himself upon the institutions of Portland aj»d the state,
aad always for their benefit He possesses, with marked ability, a genial disposition,
and a distinguished personal appearance, rather added to than detracted from
by increasing years.
9 Judge Bryant selected and purchased
$‘2,OUO worth of the books for th* public library, and Gov. Gaines the
remainder.
IIitT. Ok., Vol. II. 10
he did not deny the
right of the legislative assembly to locate and establish the seat of
government, he felt it his duty to call their attention to the wording of the
act, which distinctly said that the money there appropriated should be applied
by the governor; and also, that the act of June 11, 1850, making a further
appropriation of twenty thousand dollars for the erection of public buildings
in Oregon, declared that the money was to be applied by the governor and the
legislative assembly. He further called their attention to the wording of the
sixth section of the act, which declared that every law should have but one
object, which should be expressed in the title, while the act passed by the
legislative assembly embraced several objects. He gave it as his opinion that
the law in that form was unconstitutional; but expressed a hope that, they
would not adjourn without taking effectual steps to carry out the
recommendation he had made in his message at the beginning of the session, that
they would cause the public buildings to be erected.
The location bill,
which on account of its embracing several objects received the name of the
omnibus bill,10 passed the assembly by a vote of six to three in the
council and ten to eight in the house, Salem getting the capital, Portland the
penitentiary,11 Corvallis the university, and Oregon City nothing.
The mat-
luThe Gaines
clique also denominated the Iowa code, adopted in 1849, the steamboat codc, and
invalid because it contained more than one subject.
u It named three
commissioners, each for the state-house and penitentiary, authorizing them to
select one of their number to be acting commissioner and give bonds in the sum
of 8-0,000. The state-house board consisted of John Force, H. M. Waller, and E.
O. Geer; the penitentiary board, D. H. Lowns- dale, Hugh I). O’Bryant, and
Lucius B. Hastings. The prison was to be of sufficient capacity to receive,
secure, and employ 100 convicts, to be con fined in separate cells. Or.
Spectator, March 27, 1851; Or. Statutes, 1863-4, 509. That Oregon City should
get nothing under the embarrassment of the Uth section of the donation law was
natural, but the whigs and the prop- erty-owners there may have hoped to change
the action of congress in the event of securing the capital. Salem, looking to
the future, was a better location. But the assembly were not, I judge, looking
to anything so much as having their own way. The friends of Salem were accused
of bribery, and there were the usual mutual recriminations. Or. Spectator, Oct.
7 and Nov. 18, 1831.
ter rapidly took
shape as a political issue, the democrats going for Salem and the whigs for
Oregon City, the question being still considered by many as an open one on
account of the alleged unconstitutionality of the act.12 At the same
time two newspapers were started to take sides in territorial politics; the Oregonian,
whig, at Portland in December 1850, and the Oregon Statesman, democratic, at
Oregon City in March following.13 A third paper, called the Times,
was published at Portland, beginning in May 1851, which changed its politics
according to patronage and circumstances.
12 Id., July 29, 1851; Or. Statesman, Aug.
5, 1851; $2d Cong., 1st Sess., II. Ex. Doe. 94, 2-32; Id., 96, vol. ix. 1-8;
Id., 10If., vol. xii. 1-24; 32d Cong., 1st Sess., II. Misc. Doc. 9, 4-5.
13 The Oregonian was founded by T. J. Dryer,
who had been previously engaged upon the California Courier as city editor,
and was a weekly journal. I)ryer brought an old Ramage press from San
Francisco, with some secondhand material, which answered his purpose for a few
months, when a new Washington press and new material came out by sea from New
York, and the old one was sent to Olympia to start the first paper published on
Puget Sound, called the Columbian. In time the Washington press was displaced
by a power press, and was sold in 1S62 to go to Walla Walla, and afterward to
Idaho. Dryer conducted the Oregonian with energy for ten years, when the paper
passed into the hands of H. L. Pittock, who first began work upon it as a
printer in 1853. It has since become a daily, and is edited and partly owned by
Harvey W. Scott.
The Statesman was
founded by A. W. Stockwell and Henry Russel of Massachusetts, with Asahel Bush
as editor. It was published at Oregon City till June 1853, when it was removed
to Salem, and being and remaining the official paper of the territory, followed
the legislature to Corvallis in 1855, when the capital was removed to that
place and back again to Salem, when the seat of government was relocated there
a few months later. As a party paper it was conducted with greater ability than
any journal on the Pacific coast for a period of about a dozen years. Bush was
assisted at various times by men of talent. On retiring from political life in
1863 he engaged in banking at Salem. Crandall and Wait then conducted the
paper for a short time; but it was finally sold in November 1863 to the Oregon
Printing and Publishing Company. In 1866 it was again sold to the proprietors
01 the Unionist, and ceased to exist as the Oregon Statesman. During the first
eight years of its existence it was the ruling power in Oregon, wielding an
influence that made and unmade officials at pleasure. ‘The number of those who
were connected with the paper as contributors to its columns, who have risen to
distinguished positions, is reckoned by the dozen.’ Salem Direetoiy, 1871; Or.
Statesman, March 28, 1851; Id., July 25, 1854; Brown's Will. Val., MS., 34;
Portland Oregonian, April 15, 1876. Before either of these papers was started
there was established at Milwaukie, a few miles below Oregon City, the
Milwaukee Star, the first number of which was issued on the 21st of November
1850. It was owned principally by Lot Whitcomb, the proprietor of the town of
Milwaukie. The prospectus stated that Carter and Waterman were the printers,
and Orvis Waterman editor. The paper ran for three months under its first
management, then was purchased by tho
The result of the
interference of the governor with legislation was to bring down upon him bitter
denunciations from that body, and to make the feud a personal as well as
political one. When the assembly provided for the printing of the public
documents, it voted to print neither the governor’s annual nor his special
message, as an exhibition of disapprobation at his presumption in offering the
latter,14 assuming that he was not called upon to address them
unless invited to do so, they being invested by congress with power to conduct
the public business and spend the public money without consulting him. But while
the legislators quarrelled with the executive they went on with the business
of the commonwealth.
The hurried sessions
of the territorial legislature had effected little improvement in the statutes
which were still in great part in manuscript, consisting in many instances of
mere reference to certain Iowa laws adopted without change. An act was passed
for the printing of the laws and journals, and Asahel Bush elected printer, to
the disappointment of Dryer of the Oregonian, who had built hopes on his political
views which were the same as those of the new appointees of the federal
government. But the territorial secretary, Hamilton, literally took the law
into his own hands and sent the printing to a New York contractor. Thus the war
went on, and the laws were as far as ever from being in an intelligible state,15
printers, and in May
1851 Waterman purchased the entire interpat, when he removed the paper to
Portland, calling it the Times. It survived several subsequent changes and
continued to be published till 18G4, recording in the mean time many of Ihe
early incidents in the history of the country. Portland Oregonian, April 15,
1876.
4 The Spectator o+ Feb. 20, 1851, rebuked
the assembly for its discour tesy, saying it knew of no other instance where
the annual message of the governor had been treated with such contempt.
15 The
Spectator of August 8, 1850, remarked that there existed no law in the
territory regulating marriages. If that were true, there could have existed
none since 1845, w hen the las* change in the provisional code was made. There
is a report of a debate on ‘a bill concerning marriages,’ in the Spectator of
Jan. 2, 1851, but the list of laws passed at the session of 1850-1 contains
none on marriage. A marriage law was enacted by the legislature of 1851-2.
although the most
important, or latest acts were published in the newspapers, and a volume of
statutes was printed and bound at Oregon City in 1851. It was not until January
1853 that the assembly provided for the compilation of the laws, and appointed
L. F. Grover commissioner to prepare for publication the statutes of the
colonial and territorial governments from 1843 to 1849 inclusive. The result of
the commissioner’s labors is a small book often quoted in these pages as Or.
Laws, 1843-0, of much value to the historian, but which, nevertheless, needs
to be confirmed by a close comparison with the archives compiled and printed at
the same time, and with corroborative events; the dates appended to the laws
being often several sessions out of time, either guessed at by the compiler, or
mistaken by the printer and not corrected. In many cases the laws themselves
are mere abstracts or abbreviations of the acts published in the Spectator.™
ISTor were the
archives collected any more complete, as boxes of loose papers, as late as
1878, to my knowledge, were lying unprinted in the costly state-house- at
Salem. Many of them have been copied for my
Among men inclined
from the condition of society to early marriages, as I have before mentioned,
the wording of the donation law stimulated the desire to marry in order to
become lord of a mile square of land, while it influenced women to the same
measure, as it was only a wife or widow who was entitled to 320 acres. Many
unhappy unions were the consequence, and numerous divorces. Deady’* Hist. Or.,
MS., 33; Victor's New Penelope, 19-20.
14 Public Life in Oregon is one of the most
scholarly and analytical contributions to history which I was able to gather
during my many interviews of 1878. Besides being in a measure a political
history of the country, it abounds with life-like sketches of the public men of
the day, given in a clear and fluent style, and without apparent bias. L. F.
Grover, the author, was born at Bethel, Maine, Nov. 29, 1823. He came to
California in the winter of 1850, and to Oregon early in 1851. He was almost
immediately appointed clerk of the first judicial district by Judge Nelson. He
soon afterward received the appointment of prosecuting attorney of the second
judicial district, and became deputy United States district attorney, through
his law partner, B. F. Harding, who held that office. Thereafter for a long
period he was in public life in Oregon. Grover was a protegg of Thurston, who
had known him in Maine, and advised him when admitted to the bar in
Philadelphia to go to Oregon, where he would take him into his own office as a
law-partner; but Thurston dying, Grover was left to introduce himself to the
new commonwealth, which he did most successfully. Grover’s Pub. Life in Or.,
MS., 100-3; Yreka Union, April 1, 1870.
work, and constitute
the manuscript entitled Oregon Archives, from which I have quoted more widely
than I should have done had they been in print, thinking thus to preserve the
most important information in them. The same legislature which authorized
Grover’s work, passed an act creating a board of commissioners to prepare a
code of laws for the territory,11, and elected J. K. Kelly, JD. R.
Bigelow, and R. P. Boise, who were to meet at Salem in February, and proceed to
the discharge of their duties, for which they were to receive a per diem of
six dollars.15 In 1862 a new code of civil procedure was prepared by
Matthew P. Deady, then United States district judge, A. C. Gibbs, and J. K.
Kelly, and passed by the legislature. The work was performed by Judge Deady,
who attended the session of the legislature and secured its passage. The same
legislature authorized him to prepare a penal code and code of criminal
procedure, which he did. This was enacted by the legislature of 1864, which
also authoiized him to prepare a compilation of all the laws of Oregon then in
force, includ-'ng the codes, in the order and method of a code, which he did,
and enriched it with notes containing a history of Oregon legislation. This
compilation he repeated in 1874, by authority of the legislature, aided by
Lafayette Lane.
Meanwhile the work of
organization and nation- making went on, all being conducted by these early
legislators with fully as much honesty and intelligence as have been generally
displayed by their successors. Three new counties were established and
organized at the session of 1850-1, namely: Pacific, on the north side of the
Columbia, on the coast; Lane, including
17 A. C. Gibbs in bis notes on Or. Hist.,
MS., 13, says that he urged the measure and succeeded in getting it through the
house. It w as supported by Deady, then president of the council; and thus the
code system was begun in Oregon w ith reformed practice and proceedings. At the
same time, Thurston, it is said, when in Washington, advised the appointment
of commissioners for this purpose, or that the assembly should remain in
session long enough to do the work, and promised to secure from congress the
money, $6,000, to pay the cost.
18 Or. Statutes, 1852-3, 57-8; Or.
Statesman, Feb. 5, 1853.
19 See Or. Gen. Laws, 1843-72.
all tliat
portion of the Willamette Yalley south of Benton and Linn;20 and
Umpqua, comprising all the country south of the Calapooya mountains and headwaters
of the Willamette. County seats were located in Linn, Polk, and Clatsop, the
county seats of Clackamas and Washington having been established at the
previous sessions of the legislature.21
The act passed by the
tirst legislature for collecting the county and territorial revenues was
amended; and a law passed legalizing the acts of the sheriff of Linn county,
and the probate court of Yamhill county, in the collection of taxes, and to
legalize the judicial proceedings of Polk county; these being cases where the
laws of the previous sessions were found to be in conflict with the organic
act. Some difficulty had been encountered in collecting taxes on land to which
the occupants had as yet 110 tangible title. The same feeling existed after the
passage of the donation law, though some legal authorities contended, and it
has since been held that the donation act gave the occupant his land in fee
simple, and that a patent was only evidence of his ownership.22 But
it took more time to settle these questions of law than the people or the legislature
had at their command in 1850; hence conflicts arose which neither the judicial
nor
wEugene
City Guard, July 8. 1870; Eugene. Ciiy State Journal, July 8, 1870.
It is difficult
determining the value of these enactments, when for several sessions one after
the other acts with the same titles appear—instance the county seat uf Polk,
county, which was located in 1849 and again in 1850.
22 Deadly's Scrap Book, 5. For some years
Matthew P. Deady employed his leisure moments as a correspondent of the San Francisco
Bulletin, his subjects often being historical and biographical matter, in which
he was, from his liabit of comparing evidence, very correct, and in which he
sometimes enunciated a legal opinion. His letters, collected in the form of a
scrap-book, were kindly loaned to me. From these Scraps I have drawn largely;
and still more frequently from his History of Oregon, a thick manuscript volume
given to me from his ovm lips in the form of a dictation while I was in Portland
in 1878, and taken down by my stenographer. Never in the course of my life have
I encountered in one mind so vast, well arranged, and well digested a store of
tacts, the recital of which to me was a never failing source of wonder and
admiration. His legal decisions and public addresses have also been of great
assistance to me, being free from the injudicial bias of many authors, and
hence most substantial material for history to rest upon. Further than this,
Judge Deady is a graceful writer, and always interesting. As a man, he is one
to whom Oregon owes much.
tlie legislative
branches of the government could at once satisfactorily terminate.
The legislature
amended the act laying out the judicial districts by attaching the county of
Lane to the first and Umpqda to the second districts. This distribution made
the first district to consist of Clackamas, Marion, Linn, and Lane; the second
of Washington, Yamhill, Benton, Polk, and Umpqua; and the third of Clarke,
Lewis, and Clatsop. Pacific county was not provided for in the amendment. The
judges were required to hold sessions of their courts twice annually in each
county of their districts. But lest in the future it might happen as in the
past, any one of the judges was authorized to hold special terms in any of the
districts; other laws regulating the practice of the courts were passed,23
and also laws regulating the? general elections, and ordering the erection of
court-houses and jails in each county of the territory.
They amended the
common school law, abolishing the office of superintendent, and ordered the
election of school examiners; incorporated the Young Ladies’ Academy of Oregon
City, St Paul’s Mission Female Seminary, the First Congregational Society of
Portland, the First Presbyterian Society of Clatsop plains; incorporated
Oregon City and Portland; located a number of roads, notably one from Astoria
to the Willamette Valley,24 and a planlc-road from Portland to
Yamhill county; and also the Yamhill Bridge Company, which budt the first great
bridge in the country. These, with many other less important acts, occupied
the assembly for sixty days. Thurston’s advice concerning memorializing
congress
"3
Or. Gen. Laws, 1850-1, 15&-164.
24 This was
a scheme of Thurston’s, who, on the. citizens of Astoria petitioning congress
to open a road to the Willamette, proposed to accept $10,000 to build the
bridges, promising that the people would build the road. He then advised the
legislature to go oil with the location, leaving it to him to manage the
appropriations. Lane finished his work in congress, and a government officer
expended the appropriation without benefiting the Astorians beyond disbursing
the money in their midst. See Slut Cong., 1st Sens., II Com. Ilept., 343, 3.
to pay tlie remaining
expenses of ilie Cayuse war was acted upon, the committee consisting of
McBride, Parker, and Hall, of the council, and Deady, Simpson, and Hardin^ of
the house.25 Nothing further of ini-
o t € O
portance was done at
this session.
When the legislative
assembly adjourned in February, it was known that Thurston was returning to
Oregon as a candidate for reelection, and it was expected that there would be
a heated canvass, but that liis party would probably carry him through in spite
of the feeling which his course with regard to the Oregon City claim had
created. But the unlooked for death of Thurston, and the popularity of Lane,
who, being of the same political sentiments, and generously willing to condone
a fault in a rival who had confirmed to him as the purchaser of Abernetliy Island
a part of the contested land claim, made the ex-governor the most fitting
substitute even with Thurston’s personal friends, for the position of delegate
from Oregon. Some efforts had been made to injure Lane by anonymous
letter-writers, who sent to the Keiv York Tribune allegations of intemperance
and improper associations,20 but which wTere sturdily
repelled by his democratic friends in public meetings, and which could not have
affected his position, as Gaines was appointed in the usual round of office-giving
at the beginning of a new presidential and party administration. That these
attacks did not seriously injure him in Oregon was shown by the enthusiasm
'with which his nomination was accepted by the majority, and the result of the
election, as well as by the fact of a county having been named after him
between his removal as governor and nomination as delegate. The only objection
to Lane, which seemed to carry any weight, was the one of being in the
territory
25 32(1 Cong., 1st SessIf. Jour., 1050,
1224.
26 The writer signed himself ‘Lansdale,’ but
was probably J. Quinn Thornton, who admits writing such letters to get Lane
removed, but gives a different sobriquet as I have already mentioned —that of ‘
Achilles de Harley.*
without liis family,
which gave a transient sir to his patriotism, to which people objected. They
felt that their representative should be one of themselves in fact as well as
by election, and this Lane declared his intention of becoming, and did in fact
take a claim on the Umpqua River to show his willingness to become a citizen of
Oregon. The opposing candidate was W. H. Willson, who was beaten by eighteen
hundred or two thousand votes. As soon as the election was over, Lane returned
to the lately discovered mining districts in southern Oregon, taking with him a
strong party, intending to chastise the Indians of that section, who were
becoming more and more aggressive as travel in that direction increased, and
their profits from robbery and murder became more important. That he should
take it upon himself to do this, when there was a regularly appointed
superintendent of Indian affairs—for Thurston had persuaded congress to give
Oregon a general superintendent for this work alone—surprised no one, but on
the contrary appeared to be what was expected of him from his aptitude in such
matters, which became before he reached Rogue River Valley wholly a military
affair. The delegate- elect was certainly a good butcher of Indians, who, as we
have seen, cursed them as a mistake or damnable infliction of the Almighty. And
at this noble occupation I shall leave him, while I return to the history of
the executive and judicial branches of the Oregon government.
Obviously the
tendency of office by appointment instead of by popular election is to make men
indifferent to the opinions of those they serve, so long as they are in favor
with or can excuse their acts to the appointing power. The distance of Oregon
from the seat of general government and the lack of adequate * mail service
made the Gaines faction more than usually independent of censure, as it also
rendered its critics more impatient of what they looked upon as an
exhibition of petty
tyranny on the part of those who were present, and of culpable neglect on the
part of those who remained absent. From the date of Judge Bryant’s arrival in
the territory in April 1849, to the 1st of January 1851, when he resigned, he
had spent but five months in his district. From December 1848 to August 1850
Pratt had been the only judge in Oregon—excepting Bryant’s brief sojourn. Then
he went east for his family, and Strong was the only judge for the eight months
following, and till the return about the last of April 1851 of Pratt, accompanied
by Chief Justice Thomas Nelson, appointed in the place of Bryant,27
and J. R. Preston, surveyor- general of Oregon.
The judges found
their several dockets in a condition hardly to justify Thurston’s encomiums in
congress upon their excellence of character. The freedom enjoyed under the
provisional government, due in part to the absence of temptation, when all men
were laborers, and when the necessity for mutual help and protection deprived
them of a motive for violence, had ceased to be the boast and the security of
the country. The presence of lawless adventurers, the abundance of money, and
the absence of courts, had tended to develop the criminal element, till in 1851
it became notorious that the causes on trial were ofteuer of a criminal than a
civil nature.28
27 Memorial af the. Legislative Assembly of
1851-2, in 32d Cong., 1st- fiess., II. Misc. Doc., ix. 2-3. Thomas Nelson was
born at Peekskill, New York, January 23, 1819. Ho was the third son of William
Nelson, a representative in congress, a lawyer by profession, and a man of
worth and public spirit. Thomas graduated at Williams college at the age of 17.
Being still very young he was placed under a private tutor of ability in New
York city, that he might study literature and the French language. He also
attended medical lectures, acquiring in various ways thorough culture and
scholarship, after which he added European travel to his other sources of
knowledge, finally adopting law as a profession. Advancing in the practice of
the law, he became an attorney and counsellor of tho supreme court of the
United States, and was practising with his father in Westchester county, New
York, when he was appointed chief justice of Oregon. Judge Nelson’s private,
character was faultless, his manners courteous, and Ids bearing modest and
refined. Livingston's Biotj. Sketches, 69-72; S. It. Thurston, in Or.
Spectator, April 10, 1851.
'*Strong's
Ilist. Or., MS., 14. On the 7th of -January 1S51 William Hamilton was shot and
killed near Salem by William Kendall on whose, land claim
This condition of
society encouraged the expression 6f public indignation pleasing to party
prejudices and to the political aspirations of party leaders. At a meeting held
in Portland April 1st, it was resolved that the president of the United States
should be informed of the neglect of the judges of the first and second
districts, no court having been held in Washington county since the previous
spring; nor had any judge resided in the district to whom application
he w as living. A
special term of court was held on the 28th of March to try Kendall, who was defended
by W, G. T’Vault and B. I'. Harding, convicted, sentenced by Judge Strong, and
executed on the 18th of April, there being at the time no jail in which to
coniine criminals in Marion county. About the same time a sailor named Cook was
shot by William Keene, a gambler, in a dispute about a game of ten-pins. Keene
was also tried before Judge Strong, convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to
six years in the penitentiary. As the jury had decided that he ought not to
hang, and he could not be confined in an imaginary penitentiary, he was
pardoned by the governor. Or. Statesman, May 10, 1851. Creed Turner a few
months after stabbed and killed Edward A. Bradbury from Cincinnati, Ohio, out
of jealousy, both being in love with a Miss Bonser of Sauv£ Island. Deady
defended Lim before Judge Pratt, but he was convicted and hanged in the autumn.
Id.,' Oct. 28, 1851; Deady’i Hut. Or., MS., 59. In Feb. 1852 William Evennan, a
desperate character, shot and killed Serenas C. Hooker, a worthy farmer of Polk
county, for accusing him of taking a watch. He also was convicted and hanged.
He had three associates in crime, Hiram Everman, his brother, who plead guilty
and was sentenced to three years in the penitentiary; Enoch Smith, who cscaped
by the disagreement of the jury, was rearrested, tried again, sentenced to
death, and finally pardoned; and David J. Coe, who by obtaining a change of
venue was acquitted. As there was no prison where Hiram Everman could serve, he
was publicly sold by the sheriff on the day of his brother’s execution, to
Theodore Prather, the highest bidder, and was set at liberty by the petition of
his master just before the expiration of the three years. Smith took a
land-claim in Lane county, and married. After several years his wife left him
for some cause unknown. He shot himself in April 1877, intentionally, as it was
believed. Salem Mercury, April 18, 1877. About the time of the former murder,
Nimrod O’Kelly, in Benton county, killed Jeremiah Mahoney, in p. quarrel about
a land-claim. He was sentenced to the penitentiary and pardoned. In August, in
Polk county, Adam E. Wimple, 35 years of age, murdered liis wife, a girl of
fourteen, setting fire to the house to conceal his crime. He had married this
child, whose name was Mary Allen, about one year before. Wimple was a native of
New York. S. F. Alta, Sept. 28, 1852. He was hanged at Dallas October 8, 1852.
Or. Statesman, Oct. 23, 1852. Robert Maynard killed J. C. Platt on Rogue River
for ridiculing him. He was executed by vigilants. Before the election of
officers for Jackson county, one Brown shot another man, was arrested, tried
before W. W. Fowler, temporarily elected judge, and handed. Prim's Judic.
Affairs in Southern Or., MS., 10. In July 1853, Joseph ifott was tried for the
murder of Ryland D. Hill whom he shot in an affray in Umpqua county. He was
acquitted. Many lesser crimes appear to hav e been committed, such as burglary
and larceny; and frequent jail deliveries were effected, these structures
being built of logs and not guarded In two years after the discovery of gold in
California, Oregon had a criminal calender as large in proportion to the
population as the older states.
could be made for the
administration of the laws. The president should be plainly told that there
were “many respectable individuals in Oregon capable of discharging the duties
of judges, or filling any offices under the territorial government, who would
either discharge their duties or resign their offices.”29 The
arrival of the new chief justice, and Pratt, brought a temporary quiet. Strong
went to reside at Cathlamet, in his own district, and the other judges in
theirs.
At the first term of
court held in Clackamas county by Chief Justice Nelson, he was called upon to
decide upon the constitutionality of the law excluding negroes from Oregon.
This law*, first enacted by the provisional legislature in 1844, had been
amended, reenacted, and clung to by the law-makers of Oregon with singular
pertinacity, the first territorial legislature reviving it among their earliest
enactments. Thurston, when questioned in congress concerning the matter,
defended the law against free blacks upon the ground that the people dreaded
their influence among the Indians, whom they incited to hostilities.30
Such a reason had indeed been given in 1844, when two disorderly negroes had
caused a collision between white men and Indians, but it could not be advanced
as a sufficient explanation of the settled determination of the founders of
Oregon to keep negroes out of the territory, because all the southern and
western frontier states had possessed a large population of blacks, both slave
and free, at the time they had fought the savages, without finding the negroes
a dangerous element of their population. It was to quite another cause that
the hatred of the African was to be ascribed; namely, scorn for an enslaved
race, which refused political equality to men of a black skin, and which might
raise the question of slavery to disturb the peace of society. It was not
enough that Oregon
2SOr. Statesman,
April 11, 1851. Among those taking part in thi* meeting were W. W. Chapman.
I). II. Lounsdale, H. I). O’liryant, J. S. Smith, Z. C. Norton, S. Coffin, W.
B. Otway, and N. Northrop.
KCo»g.
Globe, 1849-50, 1079, 1091.
should be a free
territory which could not make a bondsman of a black man, but it must exclude
the remainder of the conflict then raging on his behalf in certain quarters.
Judge Nelson upheld the constitutionality of the law against free blacks, and
two offenders were given thirty days in which to leave the territory.31
The judges found a
large number of indictments in the first and second districts.32 The
most important case in Yamhill county was one to test the legality of taxing
land, or selling property to collect taxes, and was brought by C. M. Walker
against the sheriff, Andrew Shuck, Pratt deciding that there had been no
trespass. In the cases in behalf of the United States, Deady was appointed
commissioner in chancery, and David Logan33 to take affidavits and
acknowledgments of bail under the laws of congress. The law practitioners of
1850-1-2 in Oregon had the opportunity, and in many instances the talent, to
stamp themselves upon the history of the commonwealth, supplanting in a great
degree the men who were its founders,81 while endeavoring to rid the
terri-
1115y a
curious coincidence one of the banished negroes was Winslow, the culprit in the
Oregon City Indian affair of 1844, -who had lived since then at the month of
the Columbia. Yanderpool was the other exiie. S. F. Alta, Sept. 10, 1831; Or.
Statexman, Sept. 2, 1861.
02 There were 30 indictments in Yamhill
county alone, a large proportion being for breach of verbal contract. Six were
for selling liquor to Indians, being federal cases.
SJLogan was
born in Springfield, 111., in 1824. His father waF. an eminent lawyer, and at
one time a justice of the supreme court of Illinois. David immigrated to
Oregon in 1850 and settled at Lafayette. He ran against Deady fur the
legislature in 1831 and via? beaten. Soon after he removed to Portland, where
he became distinguished for his shrewdness and i 'Owers of oratory, being a
great jury lawyer. He married in 1862 Mary P. Waldo, daughter of Daniel Waldo.
His highTy excitable temperament led him into excesses which injured
his otherwise eminent standing, and cut short his brilliant career in 1874.
Salem Mercury, April 3, 1874
3‘ The
practising attorneys at this time were A. L. Lovejoy, W. G. T’Vault, J. Quinn
'Lhomton, E. Hamilton, A Holbrook, Matthew P. Deady, B. F. Hard- i-ig, It. P.
Boise, David Logan, E. M. Barnum, J. W. Nesmith, A. D. M. Harrison, James
McCabe, A. C. Gibbs, S. F. Chadwick, A. B. P. Wood, T. McF. Patton, F. Tilford,
A. Campbell, D. B. Brenan, W. W. Chapman, A. E. Wait, S. D. Mayre, John A.
Anderson, and C. Lancaster. There were others who had been bred to a legal
profession, who were at work in the mines or living on laud claims, some of
whom resumed practice as society became more organized.
tory of men whom they
regarded as transient, whose places they coveted.
There is always
presumably a coloring of truth to charges brought against public officers, even
when used for party purposes as they were in Oregon. The democracy wTere
united in their determination to see nothing good in the federal appointees,
with the exception of Pratt, who besides being a democrat had been sent to
them by President Polk. On the other hand there were those who censured Pratt33
for being what he was in the eyes of the democracy. The governor was held36
equally objectionable with the judges, tirst on account of the position he had
taken on the capital location question, and again for maintaining Kentucky
hospitality, and spending the money of the government freely without consulting
any one, and as his enemies chose to believe without any care for the public
interests. A sort of gay and fashionable air was imparted to society in Oregon
City by the families of the territorial officers and the hospitable Dr
McLoughlin,37 which was a new thing in the Willamette Valley, and
provoked not a little jealousy among the more sedate and surly.35
86 W. W
Chapman for contempt of court was sentenced by Pratt to twenty days’
imprisonment and to have his name stricken from the roll of attorneys. It was a
political issue. Chapman was assisted by his Portland friends to escape, was
rearrested, and on application to Judge Nelson discharged on a, writ of error.
S2d Gong., 1st Sess., Mine. Doc. 9, 3. See also case of Arthur f ayhie
sentenced by Pratt for contempt, in which Nelson listened to a charge by Fayhie
of misconduct in office on the part of Pratt, and discharged the prisoner by
the advice of Strong.
36An example
of the discourtesy used toward the federal officers was given when the governor
was bereaved of his wife by an accident. Mrs Caines was riding on the Clatsop
plains, whither she had gone on an excursion, when her horse becoming
frightened at a wagon she was thrown under the wheels, receiving injuries from
which she died. The same paper which announced her death attacked the governor
with un.stinted abuse. Mrs Caines Mas a daughter of Nicholas Kincaid of
Versailles. Ky. Her mother was Priscilla McBride. She was born March 13, 1800,
and married to Gaines June 22, 181'). Or. Spectator, Aug. 19, lS-el. About
fifteen months after his wife’s death, Gaine» married Margaret B. Wands, one of
the live lady teachers sent to Oregon by Gov. Slade. Or. Statesman, Nov. 27,
1851.
31 Mrs M. E.
Wilson in Or. Sketches, MS., 10.
38 Here is what one says of Oregon City
society at the time: All wap oddity. ‘Clergymen so eccentric as to have been
thrown over by the board on account of their queemess, had found their way
hither, and fought their way among peculiai people, into positions of some
kind. People were odd
In order to sustain
his position with regard to the location act, Gaines appealed for an opinion to
the attorney-general of the United States, who returned for an answer that the
legislature had a right to locate the seat of government without the consent of
the governor, but that the governor’s concurrence was necessary to make legal
the expenditure of the appropriations,39 which reply left untouched
the point raised by Gaines, that the act was invalid because it embraced more
than one object. With regard to this matter the attorney-general was silent,
and the quarrel stood as at the beginning, the governor refusing to recognize
the law of the legislature as binding on him. His enemies ceased to deny the
unconstitutionality of the law, admitting that it might prove void by reason
of non-conformity to the organic act, but they contended that until this was
shown to be true in a competent court, it was the law of the land; and to treat
it as a nullity before it had been disapproved by congress, to which all the
acts of the legislature must be submitted, was to establish a dangerous
precedent, a principle striking at the foundation of all law and the public
security.
Into this controversy
the United States judges wTere necessarily drawn, the organic act
requiring them to hold a term of court, annually, at the seat of government;
any two of the three constituting a
in dress as well.
Whenever one wished to appear wall before his or her friends, they resurrected
from old chests and trunks clothes made years ago. Now, e,s one costumer in one part of the world at one time, had
made one dress, and another had made at another time another dress, an assembly
in Oregon at this time presented to a new-comer, accustomed to only one fashion
at once, a peculiar sight. Mrs Walker, wife of a missionary at Chimikane, near
Fort Colville, naving been 11 years from her clothed sisters, on coming to
Oregon City was surprised to find her dresses as much in the fashion as any of
the rest of them.’ Mrs, Wilson, Or. Sketches, MS.. 16, 17. Another says of the
missionary and pioneer families: ‘ Une lady who had been living at Clatsop
since 1846 had a parasol well preserved, at least 30 years old, with a folding
handle and an ivory ring to slip over the folds -w hen closed. Another lady had
a bonnet and shawl of nearly the same age 'which she wore to church. All these
articles were of good quality, and an evidence of past fashion and
respectability. ’ Manners as well as clothes go out of mode, and much of the
oddity Mrs Wilson discovered in an Oregon assembly in Gov. Gaines’ time was
onty manners out of fashion.
Or.
Spectator, July 29, 1851; Or. Statement, Aug. 5, 1851.,
quorum.40
On the first of December, the legislature- elect41 convened at
Salem, as the capital of Oregon, except one councilman, Columbia Lancaster, and
tour representatives, A. E. Wait, W. F. Matlock, and D. F. Brown field.
Therefore this small minority organized as the legislative assembly of Oregon,
at the territorial library room in Oregon City, was qualified by Judge Strong,
and continued to meet and adjourn for two weeks. Lancaster, the single councilman,
spent this fortnight in making motions and seconding them himself, and
preparing a memorial to congress in which he asked for an increase in the
number of councilinen to fifteen; for the improvement of the Columbia River;
for a bounty of one hundred and sixty acres of land to the volunteers in the
Cayuse war; a pension to the widows and orphans of the men killed in the war;
troops to be stationed at the several posts in the territory; protection to the
immigration; ten thousand dollars to purchase a library for the university, and
a military road to Puget Sound.42
About this time the
supreme court met at Oregon City, Judges Nelson and Strong deciding to adopt
a0r. Gen.
Laws, 1H4S-1S64, 71.
*] The
council was composed of Matthew P. Deady, of Vamhilh .1. M. G>ai risen, of
Marion; A. L. Lovejoy, of Clackamas; Fred. Waymire, of Polk; W. B. Mealey, of
Linn; Samuel Parker, of Clackamas and Marion; A. L. Humphrey, of Benton;
Lawrence Hall, of Washington; Columbia Lancaster, of Lewis, Clark, and
Vancouver counties. The house consisted of Geo. L. Curry, A. E. Wait, and W. T.
Matlock, of Clackamas; Benj. Simpson, \\ ilie Chapman, and James Davidson, of
Marion; J. C. Avery and Geo. E. Cole, of Benton; Luther White and William Allphin,
of Linn; Ralph Wilcox, W. M. King, and T.
C. Bishop, of Washington; A. J Hembree,
Samuel McSweeD, and R. C. Kinney, of Yamhill; Nat Ford and J. S. Holman of
Polk: David M. Risdon, of Lane; J. W. Drew, of Umpqua; John A. Anderson and D.
F. Brownfield of Cl&tsop and Pacific. Or. Statesman, July 4, 1851.
** In style Lancaster
was something of a Munchausen. “It is- true,’ he say* in ilia memorial, which
must indeed have astonished congress, ‘that the Columbia River, like the
principles of civil ami religious equality, with wilu and unconquerable fury
has burst asunder the Cascade and Coast ranges of mountains, and shattered into
fragments th< basaltic formations,’ etc. S2d Cong., 1st Sess., H. Alvic.
Doc. 14, 1-5; Or. Statiman, Jan. 13, 1852. ‘Basaltic formation’ then became a
sobriquet for the whig councilman among the Salem division of the legislature.
The memorial w aa signed ‘ Columbia Lancaster, late president pro tem. of the
council, and W. T. Matlock, late speaker pro tem. of the house of representatives.’
Hist.
Os., Vol. II. 11
the governor’s view
of the seat-of-government question, while Pratt, siding with the main body of
the legislature, repaired to Salem as the proper place to hold the annual
session of the United States court. Thus a majority of the legislature convened
at Salem as the seat of government, and a majority of the supreme court at
Oregon City as the proper capital; and the division was 'kely to prove a
serious bar to the legality of the proceedings of one or the other.43
The majority of the people were on the side of the legislature, and ready to
denounce the imported judges who had set themselves up in opposition to their
representatives. Before the meeting of the legislative body the people on the
north side of the Columbia had expressed their dissatisfaction with Strong for
refusing to hold court at the place selected by the county commissioners,
according to an act of the legislature requiring them to fix the place of
holding court until the county seat should be established. The place selected
was at the claim of Sidney Ford, on the Chehalis River, whereas the judge; went
to the house of John R. Jackson, twenty miles distant, and sent a peremptory
order to the jurors to repair to the same place, which they refused to do, on
the ground that they had been ordered in the manner of slave-driving, to which
they objected as unbecoming a judge and insulting to themselves. A public
meeting was held, at which it was decided that the conduct of the judge merited
the investigation of the impeaching power.44
The proceedings of
the meeting were published about the time of the convening of the assembly, and
a correspondence followed, in which J. B. Chapman
** Francis
Ermatinger being cited to appear in a case brought against him at Oregon City,
objected to hearing ot the cause apun the ground that tht law required a
majority of the judges of the court to Ce present at the seat of government,
which was at Salem. The chief justice said in substance: ‘By the act of coming
here we have virtually decided this question.’ Or. Spectator, Dec. 2, 1851. _ .
:1The
principal persons in the transactions of the indignation meeting were J. B,
Chapman, M. T Simmons, D. F. Brownfield, W. 1’. Dougherty, E. Sylvester, Inos.
W. Glasgow, and James McAllister, Or. Statesman, Dec. 2, 1S51.
exonerated Judge
Strong, declaring that the sentiment of the meeting had been maliciously
misrepresented; Strong replying that the explanation was satisfactory to him.
But the Statesman, ever on the alert to pry into actions and motives, soon made
it appear that the reconciliation had not been between the people and Strong,
but that W. W. Chapman, who had been dismissed from the roll of attorneys in
the second district, had himself written the letter and used means to procure
his brother’s signature with the object of being admitted to practice in the
first district; the threefold purpose being gained of exculpating Strong,
undoing the acts of Pratt, and replacing Chapman on the roll of attorneys.45
A majority of the
legislative assembly having convened at Salem, that body organized by electing
Samuel Parker president of the council, and Richard J. White, chief clerk,
assisted by Chester N. Terry and Thomas B. Micou. In the house of
representatives William M. King was elected speaker, and Benjamin F. Harding
chief clerk. Having spent several days in making and adopting rules of
procedure, on the 5th of December the representatives informed the council of
their appointment of a committee, consisting of Cole, Andersou, Drew, White, and
Chapman, to act in conjunction with a committee from the council, to draft
resolutions concerning the course pursued by the federal officers.46
The message of the representatives was laid on the table until the 8th. In the
mean time Deady offered a resolution in the council that, in view of the action
of Nelson and Strong, a memorial be sent to congress on the subject. Hall
followed this resolution with another, that Hamilton, secretary of the
territory, should be informed that the legislative assembly was organized at
Salem, and that his services as secretary were required at the
41 Or.
Statefman. Feb. 3, 1852.
* Ur. Council, Jour. 1831-2, 10.
place named, which
was laid on the table. Finally, on the 9th, a committee from both houses to
draft a memorial to congress was appointed, consisting of Curry, Anderson, and
Avery, 011 the part of the representatives, and Garrison, Waymire, and Humphrey,
on the part of the council.47
Pratt’s opinion in
the matter was then asked, which sustained the legislature as against the
judges. Hector was then ordered to bring the territorial library from Oregon
City to Salem 011 or before the first day of January 1852, which was not
permitted by tho federal officers.4*
The legislators then
passed an act re-arranging the judicial districts, and taking the counties of
Linn, Marion, and Lane from the first and attaching them to the second
district.43 This action was justified by the Statesman, on the
ground that Judge Nelson had proclaimed that he should decree all the legislation
of the session held at Salem null. On the other hand the people of the three
counties mentioned, excepting a small minority, held them to be valid; and it
was better that Pratt should administer the laws peacefully than that Nelson
should, by declaring them void, create disorder, and cause dissatisfaction. The
latter was, therefore, left but one county, Clackamas, in which to administer
justice. But the nuilifiers, as the whig officials came now to be called, were
not
47 Or.
Council, Jovr. 1851-2,12-13. This, committee appears to Lav? been intended to
draft a memorial on general subjects, as the memorial concerning the
interference of the governor and the condition of the judiciary wad drawn by a
different committee.
4!"The
iStatesman of July 3d remarked: ‘ The territorial library, the gift of congress
to Oregon, became the property, to all intents and purposes, of the federal
clique, who refused to allow the books to be removed to Salem, and occupied the
library room daily with a librarian of the governor’s appointing.’ A full
account of the affair was published in a. little sheet called Vox PopuH,
printed at Salem, and devoted to legislative proceedings and the location
question. The first number was issued on the 18th of December 1851. The
standing advertisement ar the head of the local column was as follows: ‘ The
Vox Populi will be published and edited at Salem, 0. T., during the session of
tho legislative assembly by an association of gentlemen. ’ Thin little paper
contained a great deal that was personally disagreeable to the federal
officers.
*• Deady'* Hitt. Or.,
MS., 27-8; istrony’s Hitti. Or., MS., 62-3; Grover's Pub. Life in Or., MS., 53.
without their
friends. The Oregonian, which was the accredited organ of the federal clique,
was loud in condemnation of the course pursued by the legislators, while the
Spectator, which professed to be an independent paper, weakly supported
Governor Claines and Chief Justice Nelson. Even in the legislative body itself
there was a certain minority who protested against the acts of the majority,
not on the subject of the location act alone, or the change in the judicial
districts, leaving the chief justice one county only for his district, but also
on account of the memorial to congress, prepared by the joint committee from
both houses, setting forth the condition of affairs in the territory, and
asking that the people of Oregon might be permitted to elect their governor,
secretary, and judges.
The memorial passed
the assembly almost by acclamation, three members only voting against it, one
of them protesting formally that it was a calumnious document. The people then
took up the matter, public meetings being held in the different counties to
approve or condemn the course of the legislature, a large majority expressing
approbation of the assembly and censuring the whig judges. A bill was finally
passed calling for a constitutional convention in the event of congress
refusing to entertain their petition to permit Oregon to elect her governor and
judges. This important business having been disposed of, the legislators
addressed themselves to other matters. Lane was instructed to ask for an
amendment to the laud law; for an increase in the number of councilmen in
proportion to the increase of representatives; to procure the immediate survey
of Yaquina Bay and Umpqua River; to procure the auditing and payment of the
Cayuse war accounts; to have the organic act amended so as to allow the county
commissioners to locate the school lands in legal subdivisions or ki fractions
lying between claims, without reference to size or shape, where the sixteenth
and thirty-sixth sec
tions were already
settled upon; to Lave the postal agent in Oregon60 instructed to
locate post-offices and establish mail routes, so as to facilitate correspondence
with different portions of the territory, instead of aiming to increase the
revenue of the general govern-
o o o
‘ment; to endeavor to
have the mail steamship contract complied with in the matter of leaving a mail
at the mouth of the Umpqua River, and to procure the change of the port of
entry on that river from Scotts- burg to Umpqua City. Last of all, the delegate
was requested to advise congress of the fact that the territorial secretary,
Hamilton, refused to pay the legislators their dues; and that it was feared
the money had been expended in some other manner.
Several new counties
were created at this session, raising the whole number to sixteen. An act to
create and organize Simmons out of a part of Lewis county was amended to make
it Thurston county, and the eastern limits of Lewis were altered and defined.51
Douglas was orgauized out of Umpqua county, leaving the latter on the coast,
while the Umpqua Valley constituted Douglas. The county of Jackson was also
created out of the southern portion of the former Umpqua county, comprising the
valley of the Rogue River,52 and it was thought the Shasta Valley.
These two new countries were attached to Umpqua for judicial purposes, by
which arrangement the Second Judicial district was made to extend from the
Columbia River to the California boundary.53
60 Tlie postal agent was Nathaniel Coe, who
was made the subject of invidious remark, being a presidential appointee.
51 The boundaries are not given in the
reports. They were subsequently changed when Washington was set off. See Or.
Local Laws, 1851-3, 13-15, 30; New Tacoma North Pacific Coast, Dec. 15, 1879.
52 A resolution was passed by the assembly
that the surveyor-general be required to take measures to ascertain whether the
town known as Shasta Butte Cityj(Yreka) was in Oregon or not, and to publish
the result of his observations in the Statesman. Or. Council, Jour. 1851-2, 53.
53 The first term of the United States
district court held at the new court-house in Cyntheann was iii October 185' At
this term .lames McCabe, B. F. Harding, A. B. I1. Wood, J. W.
Nesmith, and W. G. T’Vault were admitted to practice in the Second Judicial
district. McCabe was appointed prosecuting attorney, Holbrook having gone on a
visit to tho
The legislature provided
for taking the census in order to apportion representatives, and authorized the
county commissioners to locate the election districts; and to act as school
commissioners to establish common schools. A board of three commissioners, Harrison
Linnville, Sidney Ford, and Jesse Applegate, was appointed to select and locate
two township* of land to aid in the establishment of a university, according
to the provisions of the act of congress of September 27, 1850.
An act was passed, of
which Waymire was tlio author, accepting the Oregon City claim according to the
act of donation, and also creating the office of commissioner to control and
sell the lands donated by congress for the endowment of a university; but it
became of no effect through the failure of the assembly to appoint such an
officer.54 Deady was the author of an act exempting the wife’s half
of a donation claim from liability for the debts of the husband, which was
passed, and which has saved the homesteads of many families from sheriff’s sale.
Among the local laws
were two incorporating the Oregon academy at Lafayette, and the first Methodist
church at Salem.55 In order to defeat the federal
States. J, W. Nesmith
was appointed master and commissioner in chancery, and J. H. Lewis commissioner
to take bail. Lewis, fainiiiarly known as ‘Unclejack,’ came to Oregon in 1847
and settled on La Creole, onafarm, later the property of John M. Scott, on
which a portion of the town of Dallas is located. Upon the resignation of H. M.
Weller, county clerk, in August 18.31, Lewis was appointed in his place, and
subsequently elected to the office by the people. His name is closely connected
with the history of the county and of Dallas.. The first term of the district
court bekl in any part of .southern Oregon was at Yonealla, in the autumn of
1852. Gibhs’ jWoles, MS., 15. The iirst courts in Jackson county about 1851-2
were held by justices of the peace called alcaldes, as in California. Rogers w
as the first, Abbott the second, it was not known at tliiis time whether Rogue
River Valley fell within the limits of California or Oregon, and the
jurisdiction being doubtful the miners improvised a government. See Popular
Tribuna U, vol. i., this series; Prim’s Judicial Affairs, MS., 7-10;
Jacksonville Dm. Times, April 8, 1871; Ilichardson’s Mississippi, 407; Overland
Monthly, xii. 225-30. Pratt left Oregon in 1856 to reside in Cal. He had done
substantial pioneer work on the bench, and owing to his conspicuous career he
had been criticised—doubtless through partisan feeling.
54 For act see Or.
Statesman, Feb. 3, 1852. t
5i Trustees of Oregon academy: Ahio S. Watt,
R. P. Boise, James McBride, A. J. Hembree, Edward Geary, James W. Nesmith,
Matthew P. Deady, R.
officers in tlieir
effort to deprive‘the legislators of the use of the territorial library, an act
was passed requiring a five thousand dollar bond to be given by the librarian,
who was elected by the assembly.66
Besides the memorial
concerning the governor and judges, another petition addressed to congress
asked for better mail facilities with a poet-office at each court-house in the
several counties, and a mail route direct from San Francisco to Puget Sound,
showing the increasing settlement of that region. It was asked that troops be
stationed in the Hogue River Valley, and at points between Fort Hall and The
Dalles for the protection of the immigration, which this year suffered several
atrocities at the hands of the Indians on this portion of the route; that the
pay of the revenue officers be increased;57 and that an appropriation
be made to continue the geological survey of Oregon already begun.
Having elected R. P.
Boise district-attorney for the first and second judicial districts, and I. N.
Fbey to the same office for the third district; reelected Bush territorial
printer, and J. D. Boon territorial treasurer/8 the assembly
adjourned on the 21st of J anuary, to carry on the war against the federal officers
in a different field.59
C. Kinney, and Joel
Palmer. Or. Loral Lavs, 1851-2, 62-3. The Methodist church in Oregon City was*
incorporated in May 1850.
5* Ludwell
Rector was elected. The former librarian was a young man who came out with
Gaines, and placed in that position by him while he held the clerkship of the
surveyor-general’s office, and also of the supreme court. Or. Statesman, Feb.
3, 1852.
5' See
memorial of J. A. Anderson of Clatsop County in Or. Statesman, Jan, 20, 1852.
68 J. D. Boon was a Wesleyan Methodist
preacher, a plain, uidearned man, honest and fervent, an immigrant of 1845. He
was for many years a resident of Salem, and held the office of treasurer for
several terms. Dcady’s Scrap
Booh, 87.
59 There were in this legislature a few not
heretofore specially mentioned. J. M. Garrison, one of the men of 1843, before
spoken of, was born in Indiana in 1813, and was a farmer in Marion county.
Wilie Chapman, also of Marion, was bom in South Carolina in 1817, reared in
Tenn,, and came to Oregon i» 1847. He kept a hotel at Salem. Luther White, of
Linn, preacher and farmer, was bom in 1797 in Ky, and immigrated to Oregon in
1847. A. J. Hembree, of the immigration of 1843, was bom in Tenn. in 1813; was
a merchant and farmer in Yamhill. James S. Holman, an immigrant of 1847,
From the adjournment
of the legislative assembly great anxiety was felt as to the action of congress
in the matter of the memorial. Meanwhile the newspaper war was waged with
bitterness and no great attention to decency. Seldom was journalism more
completely prostituted to party and personal issues than in Oregon at this time
and for several years thereafter. Private character and personal idiosyncrasies
were subjected to the most scathing ridicule.
With regard to the
truth of the allegations brought against the unpopular officials, from the
evidence before mo, there is no doubt that the governor was vain and
narrow-minded; though of course his enemies exaggerated his weak points, while
covering his- creditable ones,1®° and that to a degree his official
errors could not justify, heaping ridicule upon his past military career, as
well as blame upon his present gubernatorial acts,61 and accusing
him of everything dishonest,
was born in Tenn. in
1S13; a fanner in Polk. David S. Risdon was bom in Vt in 1823, came to Oregon
in 1850; lawyer by profession. John A. Anderson was born in ICy in 1824,
reared in north Miss., and came to Oregon in 1850; lawyer and clerk in the
custom-house at Astoria. James Davidson, bom in Ky in 1702; emigrated thence in
1847; housejoiner by occupation. George E. Cole, politician, born in New York
in 1820; emigr ated thence in
1850 by the way of California. He removed to
Washington in 1858, anil was sent as a delegate to congress; but afterward
returned to Oregon, and held the office of postmaster at Portland from 1873 to
1881.
60 Applegate’s Views of
Hint., MS., 4S. Gaines assaulted Bush m the street on two occasions; once for
accidentally jostling him, and again for something said in the Statesman. See
issues of Jan. 27th and June 2!), 1852. A writer calling himself ‘A Kentuckian
’ had attacked the governor’s exercise of the pardoning power in the case of
Enoch Smith, reminding his excellency that Kentucky, which produced the
governor, produced also nearly all the murderers in Oregon, namely, Keen,
Kendall, Turner, the two Evermans, and Smith. ‘ Common sense, sir,’'said this
correspondent, * should teach you that the prestige of Kentucky origin will not
sustain you in your mental imbecility; and that Kentucky aristocracy, devoid of
sense and viitue, will not pass current in this intelligent market.’ Or'. Statesman,
June 19^ 1852. .
61 John P. Gaines was born in Augusta, Va,
in September 1795, removing to Boone county, Ky, in early youth. He volunteered
in the war of 1812, being in the battle of the Thames and several other
engagements. He represented Boone county for several years in the legislature
of Ky, and was (subsequently sent to congress from 1847 to 1S49. He was elected
major of the Ky cavalry, and served in the Mexican war until taken prisoner at
Encamacion. After some months of captivity he escaped, and joining tire army
served to the end of the war. On his return from Mexico, Taylor appointed him
governor of Oregon. When his term expired he retired upon a farm in Marion
county, where he resided till his death in December 1857. S. f. Alta, Jan. 4, 1858.
from drawing his
family stores from the quarter-mas- ter’s department at Vancouver, to
re-auditing and chaoojin" the values of the certificates of the commissioners
appointed to audit the Cayuse war claims, and retaining the same to use for
political purposes ;f'2 the truth being that these claims
were used by both parties. Holbrook, the I'nited States attorney, was charged
with dishonesty 'and with influencing both the governor and judges, and
denounced as being responsible for many of their acts;63 a judgment
to which subsequent events seemed to give color.
At the regular term,
court was held in Marion county. Nelson repaired to Salem, and was met by a
committee with offensive resolutions passed at a public meeting, and with other
tokens of the spirit in which an attempt to defy the law of the territory, as
passed at the last session, would be received.64 Meantime the
opposing parties had each had a hearing at
62 Or. Statesman, Nov. 0, 1832; Icl., Tel).
26, 1853. Whether or not this was true, Lane procured an amendment to the
former acts of congress in order to make up the deficiency said to have been
occasioned by the alteration of the certificates. Cong. Globe, 1852-3, app.
341; 33d Cong., 1st Stss., II. Com. Sept. 122, 4-5.
63 Memorial, in 32d Conq., 1st Sess., H.
Jilisj. Doc. 9, 2; Or. Statesman, May 18, 1852.
64The
ridicule, however, 'was not all on one side. There appeared.in the Oregonian,
and afterward in pamphlet form, -with a dedication to the editors of Vox
Populi, a satire written in dramatic verse, and styled a Melodrama, illustrated
with rude wood-cuts, anil allowing considerable ability both for composition
and burlesque. This publication, both on account of its political effect and
because it was the first book written and published in Oregon of an original
nature, deserves to be remembered. It contained 32 double-columned pages,
divided into five acts. The persons satirized were Pratt, Deady, Lovejoy, King,
Anderson, Avery, Waymire, Parker, Thornton, Will son, Bush, Backenstos, and Waterman
of the Portland Time s. The author was William L. Adams, an immigrant of 1848,
a native of Painesville, Ohio, where he was born Feb. 1821. His parents removed
to Michigan in 1834. In 1835 Adams entered college at Canton, 111.; going
afterward to Galesburg, supporting himself by teaching in the vacations. He
finished his studies at Bothany College, Va, and became a convert to the
renowned Alexander Campbell, lr 1845 he married Olivia Goodell, a native of
Maine, and settled in Henderson County, 111., from which state he came to
Oregon. He taught school in Yamhill county, ami wa^ elected probate judge. He
was offered a press at Oregon City if he would establish a whig newspaper at
that place, IVhich he declined; but in 1858 he purchased the Spectator press
and helped materially to found the present republican party of Oregon. He was
rewarded with the collectorship at Astoria under Lincoln. Portland Went Shore,
May, 1870. .
Washington. The
legislative memorial and communications from the governor and secretary were
spread before both houses of congress.03 The same mail which
conveyed the memorial conveyed a copy of the location act, the governor’s
message on the subject, the opinion of Attorney-General Crittenden, and the
opinions of the district judges of Oregon. The president in order to put an
end to the quarrel recommended congress to fix the seat of government of
Oregon either temporarily or permanently, and to approve or disapprove the laws
passed at Salem, in conformity to their decision66 in favor of or
against that place for the seat of government. To disapprove the action of the
assembly would be to cause the nullification of many useful laws, and to create
protracted confusion without ending the political feud. Accordingly congress
confirmed the location and other laws passed at Salem, by a joint resolution,
and the president signed it on the 4th of May.67
Thus far the
legislative party was triumphant. The imported officials had been rebuked; the
course of Governor Gaines had been commented on by many of the eastern papers
in no flattering terms; and letters from their delegate led them to believe
that congress might grant the amendments asked to the organic act, permitting
them to elect their governor and judges. The house did indeed on the 22d of
June pass a bill to amend,63 but no action was taken upon it in the
senate, though a motion was made to return it, with other unfinished business,
at the close of the session, to the files of the senate.
The difference
between the first Oregon delegate and the second was very apparent in the
management
*32d
Cong., 1st Sess., S. Jour., 339; (long. Globe, 1851-2, 451, 771; S2d Cong., 1st
Hess., II. JIke. Doc. 10; 32d Cong., 1st Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 94, 29.
m32d Cong.,
1st Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 94, 1-'-; and Id., 96, 1-8; Location Law, 1-39. The
Location Law is a pamphlet publication containing the documents on this
subject.
iJCong.
Globe, 1851-2. 1199, 1209; 32d Cong., 1st Sess., S. Jour., 394; Or. Statesman,
June 29, 1852; Or. Gen. Laws, 1845-04, 71.
6s32d Cong.,
1st Sess., Cong. Globe, 1851-2, 1594.
of this business. Had
Thurston been charged by his party to procure the passage of this amendment,
the journals of the house would have shown some bold and fiery assaults upon
established rules, and, proofs positive that the innovation was necessary to
the peace and prosperity of the territory. On the contrary, Lane was betrayed
by his loyalty to his personal friends into seeming to deny the allegations of
his constituents against the judiciary.
The location question
led to the regular organization of a democratic party in Oregon in the spring
of 1852, forcing the whigs to nominate a ticket. The democrats carried the
election; and soon after this triumph came the official information of the
action of congress on the location law, when Gaines, with that want of tact
which rendered abortive his administration, was no sooner officially informed
of the confirmation of the laws of the legislative assembly and the settlement
of the seat-of-government question than he issued a proclamation calling for a
special session of the legislature to commence 011 the 2Gtli of July. In
obedience to the call, the newly elected members, many of whom were of the late
legislative body, assembled at Salem, and organized by electing Deady president
of the council, and Harding speaker of the house. With the same absence of
discretion the governor in his message, after congratulating them on the settlement
of a vexed question, informed the legislature that it was still a matter of
grave doubt to what extent the location act had been confirmed; and that eveu
had it been wholly and permanently established, it was still so defective as to
require further legislation, for which purpose he had called them together,
though conscious it was at a season of the year when to attend to this
important duty would seriously interfere with their ordinary avocations; yet
he hoped they would be willing to make any reasonable sacrifice for the
general good. The defects in the location
act were pointed out,
and they were reminded that no sites for the public buildings had yet been
selected, and until that was done no contracts could be let for beginning the
work; nor could any money be drawn from the sums appropriated until the
commissioners were authorized bv law to call for it. He also called their
attention to the necessity of re-arranging the judicial districts, and reminded
them of the incongruous coudition of the laws, recommending the appointment
of a board for their revision, with other suggestions, good enough in
themselves, but. distasteful as coming from him under the circumstances, and
at an unusual and inconvenient time. In this mood the assembly adjourned sine
clie on the third day, without having transacted any legislative business, and
the seat-of'-government feud became quieted for a time.
This did not,
however, end the battle. The chief justice refused to recognize the prosecuting
attorney elected by the legislative assembly, in the absence of Amory Halbrook,
and appointed S. B. Mayre, who acted in this capacity at the spring term of
court in Clackamas county. The law of the territory requiring indictments to
be signed by this officer, it was apprehended that 011 account of the irregular
proceedings of the chief justice many indictments would be quashed. In this
condition of affairs the democratic press was ardently advocating the election
of Franklin Pierce, the party candidate for the presidency of the United
States, as if the welfare of the territory depended upon the executive being a
democrat. Although the remainder of Gaines’ administration was more peaceful,
he never became a favorite of either faction, and great was the rejoicing when
at the close of his delegateship Lane was returned to Oregon as governor, to
resign and run again for delegate, leaving his secretary, George L. Curry, one
of the Salem clique, as the party leaders came to be denominated, to rule
according to their promptings.
!
DISCOVERY OF GOLD IN”
OREGON1.
1850-1852.
Politics
and Prospecting—Immigration—An Era
of Discovert —Explorations ON THE SorTHEKN OREGON SEABOARD- -THE
CALIFORNIA Company—The Schooner ‘Samuel
Roberts’ at titl Mouths of Rogue River and the Umpqua —Meeting v, ith the
Oregon Party— Laying-out of Lands and Town Sites—Failure of the Umpqua
Company--The Finding of Gold in Various Localities- -The Mail Service—Efforts
of Thurston in Congress—Settlement of Port Orford and Discovery of Coos Bay—The
Colony at Port Oisford— Inman Attack -The T’Vault
Expedition—Massacre—Government Assistance.
While politics
occupied so much attention, the country was making long strides in material
progress. The immigration of 1850 to the Pacific coast, by the overland route
alone, amounted to between thirty and forty thousand persons, chiefly men.
Through the exertions of the Oregon delegate, in and out of congress, about
eight thousand were persuaded to settle in Oregon, where, they arrived after
undergoing more than the usual misfortunes. Among other things was cholera,
from which several hundred died between the Missouri River and Port Laramie.1
The crowded condition of the road, which was one cause of the pestilence,
occasioned delays with the consequent exhaustion of supplies.2 The
famine becoming known in Portland, assistance was forwarded to The Dalles
White, in
Camp Fire Orations, MS., 9 10; Dowell's Journal, MS., 5; Johnson's Cal. and
Or., 255; Or. Spectator, Sept. 20, 1830.
"Says one of the
sufferers: ‘ I saw meD who had beep strong stout men walking along through the
hot desert sands, crjing like children with fatigue, hunger, and duspaii '
Cardwell's Embj. Comp']/, MS., 1,
military post, and
thence carried forward and distributed by army officers and soldiers. Among
the arrivals were many children, made orphans en route, and it was in the
interest of these and like helpless ones that Frederick Way mire petitioned
congress to amend the land law, as mentioned in the previous chapter. Those who
came this year were bent on speculation more than any who had come before them;
the gold fever had unsettled deas of plodding industry and slow accumulation.
Some came for pleasure and observation.3
Under the excitement
of gold-seeking and the spirit of adventure awakened by it, all the great
north-western seaboard was opened to settlement with marvellous rapidity. A
rage for discovery and prospecting possessed the people, and produced in a
short time marked results. From the Klamath River to Puget Sound, and from the
upper Columbia to the sea, men were spying out mineral wealth or laying plans
to profit by the operations of those who preferred the risks of the
gold-fields to other and more settled pursuits. In the spring of 1850 an
association of seventy persons was formed in San Francisco to discover the
mouth of Klamath River, believed at the
•Among those-who took
the route to the Columbia River us a Henrj J. Coke, an English gentleman
travelling for pleasure. He arrived at Vancouver Oct. 22, 1850, and after a
’trief look at Oregon City wailed in the Mart/ Dare for the Islands, visiting
San Francisco in Feb. 1831, thence proceeding to Mexico and Vera Cruz, and by
the way of St Thomas back to England, sll without appearing to see much, though
he wrote a book called Coke’s Ride. Two Frenchmen, Julius Brenchly and Jules
Remy, were much interested in the Mormons, and wrote a book of not much value.
Remy and Brenchly, ii. 307-8.
F. (t. Ittam started
from Kentucky intending to settle in Oregon, but seized by cholera was kept at
Fort Laramie till the following year, when with a party of six he < ame on
to the Willamette Valley, and tinally took up Lis residence at Yreka,
California. Hearn's California Sketches, MS., is a collection of observations
on the border country between California and Oregon.
Two Irishmen, Kelly
and Conway, crossed the continent this year with no other supplies than thev
carried in their haversacks, depending on their rilles for food. They were only
three months in travelling from Kansas to the Sacramento Valley, which they
entered before going to Oregon. Quigley's Irixh Race, ‘216-17. During xiug. and
Sept. of this year Oregon was visited by the French traveller Saint Amant, who
made some unimportant notes for the French government. Certain of his
observations were apociyphal. See Saint Ama/il, 139-391.
time, owing to an
error of Fremont’s, to be in Oregon. The object was wholly speculative, and
included besides hunting for gold the opening of a road to the mines of
northern California, the founding of towns at the most favorable points on the
route, with other enterprises. In May thirty-live of the shareholders, and some
others, set out in the schooner Samuel Roberts to explore the coast near the
Oregon boundary. None of them were accustomed to hardships, and not more than
three .knew anything about sailing a ship. Lyman, the captain and owner, was
not a sailor, but left the management of the vessel to Peter Mackie, a young
Canadian who understood his business, and who subsequently for many years
sailed a steamship between San Francisco and Portland. Lyman’s second mate was
an Englishman named Samuel E. Smith, also a fair seaman; while the rest of the
crew were volunteers from among the schooner’s company.
The expedition was
furnished with a four-pound carronade and small arms. For shot they brought
half a ton of nails, screws, hinges, and other bits of iron gathered from the
ashes of a burned hardware store. Provisions were abundant, and two surveyors,
with their instruments, were among the company/ which boasted several college
graduates and men of parts.6
By good fortune,
rather than by any knowledge or superior management, the schooner passed safely
up the coast as far as the mouth of Rogue River, but without having seen the
entrance to the Klamath, which thyy looked for north of its right latitude. A
‘These were Nathan
Schofield, A. M., author of a work on surveying, and Socrates Schofield his
son, both from near Norwich, Connecticut. Schofield Creek in 1 )ouglas county
is named after the laiter.
5 Besides
the Schofields there were in the exploring company Ileman \\ m- chester, and
brother, editor of the Pacific News of San Francisco; Dr Ilenry 1’ayne, of New
York; Dr E. R. Fiske, of Massachusetts; S. S. Maun, a graduate of Harvard
University; Dr J. W. Drew, of New Hampshire; Barney, of New Yoik; Woodbury, of
Connecticut; C.T. Hopkins, of San Francisco; Henry H. Woodward, Patrick
Flanagaa, Anthony Ten Eyck, A. G. Able, James K. Kelly, afterward a leading man
in Oregon politics; Dean, Tierman, Evans, and Knight, whose names have been
preserved.
boat with six men
sent to examine the entrance was overturned in the river and two were drowned,
the others being rescued' by Indians who pulled them ashore to strip them of
their clothing. The schooner meantime was following in, and by the aid of
glasses it was discovered that the shore was populous with excited savages
running hither and thither with such display of ferocity as would have deterred
the vessel from entering had not those on board determined to rescue their
comrades at any hazard. It was high tide, and by much manoeuvring the schooner
was run over the bar in a fathom and a half of water. The shout of relief as
they entered the river was answered by yells from the shore, where could be
seen the survivors of the boat’s crew, naked and half dead with cold and
exhaustion, being freely handled by their captors. As soon as the vessel was
well inside, two hundred natives appeared and crowded on board, the explorers
being unable to prevent them. The best they could do was to feign indifference
and trade the old iron for peltries. When the natives had nothing left to
exchange for coveted articles, they exhibited an ingenuity as thieves that
would have done credit to a London pickpocket. Says one of the company: “Some
grabbed the cook’s towels, one bit a hole in the shirt of one of our men to get
at some beads he had deposited there, and so slyly, too, that the latter did
not perceive his loss at the time. One fellow stole the eye-glass of the ship’s
quadrant, and another made way with the surveyor’s note-book. Some started the
schooner’s copper with their teeth; and had actually made some progress in
stripping her as she lay high and dry at low water, before they were found out.
One enterprising genius undertook to get possession of the chain and anchor by
sawing off the former under water with his iron knife! Conscious of guilt, and
fearing lest we might discover the mischief he intended us, he would now and
then throw a furtive glance toward the bow of the vessel, to the
Hiex. Oe.. Vol. II 12
great amusement of
those who were watching him through the hawse pipes.”
An examination more
laborious than profitable was made of the country thereabout, which seemed to
offer no inducements to enterprise sutficient to warrant the founding of a
settlement for any purpose. Upon consultation it was decided to continue the
voyage as far north as the Umpqua River, and having dispersed the tenacious
thieves of Rogue River by firing among them a quantity of their miscellaneous
ammunition, the schooner succeeded in getting to sea again without accident.
Proceeding up the
coast, the entrance to Coos Bay was sighted, but the vessel being becalmed
could not enter. While awaiting wind, a canoe approached from the north,
containing Umpquas, who offered to show the entrance to their river, which was
made the 5th of August. Two of the party went ashore in the canoe, returning at
nightfall with reports that caused the carronade to belch forth a salute to the
rocks and woods, heightened by the roar of a simultaneous discharge of small
arms. A flag made on the voyage was run up the mast, and all was hilarity on
board the Samuel Roberts. On the 6th, the schooner crossed the bar, being the
first vessel known to have entered the river in safety. On rounding into the
cove called Winchester Bay, after one of the explorers, they came upon a party
of Oregonians; Jesse Applegate, Levi Scott, and Joseph Sloan, who were
themselves exploring the valley of the Umpqua with a purpose similar to their
own.8 A boat was sent ashore and a joyful meeting took place in
which mutual encouragement and assistance were promised. It was found that
Scott had already taken a claim about twenty-six miles up the river at the
place which now bears the name of Scottsburg, and that the party had come down
to the mouth in the expectation of meeting
6 Or.
Spectator, March 7 and Sept. 12, 1850. Set also Pioneer Hoaj., i. *282, 350.
tlierc the United
States surveying schooner Ewing, in the hope of obtaining a good report of the
harbor. But on learning the designs of the California com- ' pany, a hearty
cooperation was offered on one part, and willingly accepted on the other
Another circumstance in favor of the Umpqua for settlement was the peaceable
disposition of the natives, who since the days when they murdered Jedediah
Smith’s party had been brought under the pacifying influences of the Hudson’s
Bay Company, and sustained a good reputation as compared with the other coast
tribes.
On the morning of the
7th the schooner proceeded up the river, keeping the channel by sounding from a
small boat in advance, and finding it one of the loveliest of streams;7
at least, so thought the explorers, one of whom afterward became its historian.8
Finding a good depth of water, with the tide, for a distance of eighteen miles,
the boat’s crew became negligent, and failing to note a gravelly bar at the
foot of a bluff a thousand feet in height the schooner grounded in eight feet
of water, and when the tide ebbed was left stranded.9
However, the small
boat proceeded to the foot of the rapids, where Scott was located, this being
the head of tide-water, and the vessel was afterward brought safely hither. In
consideration of their services in
7It is the
largest river between the Sacramento and the Columbia. ‘Vessels of 800 tons
can enter.’ Mrs Victor, in Par. Ilural Press, Nov. 8, J879. ‘The Umpqua is
sometimes supposed to be the river discovered by Flores in 1003, and afterwards
referred to as the “lliver of the West.’” Davidson's Coast Pilot, 126.
f This was
Charles T. Hopkins, who wrote an account of the Umpqua adventure for the S. F.
Pioneer, vol. i. ii., a periodical published in the early days of California
magazine literature. I have drawn my account partly from this source, as well
as from (ribbs’ Note* on Or. Hist., MS., 2-3, and from Historical
Correspondence, MS., by S. S. Mann, S. F. Chadwick, H. H. Woodward. members of
the Umpqua company, and also from other sources, among which are Williams’ S. H
. Oregon, MS., 2-3.; Letters of 1). J. Lyons, and the Oregon Spectator, Sept.
5, 1850; Deady’s Scrap-Book, 83; S. F. Evening Picayune, Sept. 6, 1850.
9 Gibbs says: ‘The passengers endeavored
to lighten the cargo by pouring the vessel’s store of liquors down their
throats, from which hilarious proceeding the shoal took the namo of Brandy
Bar.’ Notes, MS., 4.
opening the river to
navigation and commerce, Scott presented the company with one hundred and sixty
acres of his land-claim, or that portion lying below the rapids, for a town
site. Affairs having progressed so well the members of the expedition now
organized regularly into a joint stock association called the “Umpqua Town-site
and Colonization Land Company,” the property to be divided into shares and
drawn by lot among the original members. They divided their forces, and aided
by Applegate and Scott proceeded to survey and explore to and through the
Umpqua Valley. One party set out for the ferry on the north branch of the
Umpqua, and another for the main valley,10 coming out at Applegate’s
settlement of Yoncalla, while a third remained with the schooner. Three weeks
of industrious search enabled them to select four sites for future settlements.
One at the mouth of the river was named Umpqua City, and contained twelve
hundred and eighty acres, being situated on both sides of the entrance. The
second location was Scottsburg. The third, called Elkton, was situated on Elk
River at its junction with the Umpqua. The fourth, at the ferry above
mentioned, was named Winchester, and was purchased by the company from the
original claimant, John Aiken, who had a valuable property at that place, the
natural centre of the valley.
Having made these
selections according to the best judgment of the surveyors, some of the company
remained, while the rest reembarked and returned to San Francisco. In October
the company having sold quite a number of lots were able to begin operations in
Oregon. They despatched the brig Kate Ileath, Captain Thomas Wood, with milling
machinery, mer chandise, and seventy-five emigrants. On this vessel were also
a number of zinc houses made in Boston,
10 Oaklard, a tew miles south of Youealla,
was laid out in 1849 by Chester Lyman, since a proiessor at Yalti College. This
ia the oldest surveyed town in the Umpcjua Valley. Or. Sketches, SIS., 3.
which were put up cm
the site of Umpqua City. In charge of the company’s business was Addison C.
Gibbs, afterward governor uf Oregon, who was on his way to the territory when
he fell in with the projectors of the scheme, and accepted a position and shares.11
Thus far all went
well, But the Umpqua Company were destined to bear some of those misfortunes
Avdiich usually attend like enterprises. The passage of the Oregon land law in
September was the first blow, framed as it was to prevent companies or nonresidents
from holding lands for speculative purposes, in consequence of which no patent
could issue to the company, and it could give no title to the lands it was
offering for sale. They might, unrebuked, have carried on a trade begun in
timber; but the loss of one vessel loaded with piles, and the ruinous detention
of another, together with a fall of fifty per cent in the price of their
cargoes, soon left the contractors in debt, and an assignment was the result,
an event hastened by the failure of the firm in San Francisco with which the
company had deposited its funds. Five months after the return of the Samuel
Roberts to San Francisco, not one of those who sailed from the river in her was
in any manner connected with the Umpqua scheme. The company in California
having ceased to furnish means, those left in Oregon were compelled to direct
their efforts toward solving the problem of how to live.12
11D. C.
Underwood, who had become a member of the association, was a passenger on the
Kate Heath, a man well known in business and political circles in the state.
13 Drew
remained at Umpqua City, where he was subsequently Indian agent for many years,
and where he held the office of collector of customs and subsequently of
inspector. He was unmarried. Marysville Appeal, Jan. 20, 18G4. Winchester
remained in Oregon, residing at Scottsburg, then at Rose* burg and Empire City.
He was a lawyer, and a favorite with the bar of the Second Judicial district. 1
He was generous in dealing, liberal in thought, of entire truth, and absolutely
incorruptible.’ Salem Mercury, Nov. 10, 1876. Gibbs took a land claim seven
miles above the mouth of the Umpqua, laying out the town of Gardiner, and
residing there for several years, during which time he returned to the east and
married Margaret M. Watkins, of Erie county, N. Y. Addison Crandall Gibbs,
afterward governor of Oregon, wTas born at East Otto, Cattaraugus
county, X. Y., July 9, 1S25, and educated at the New York State Normal school.
He became a teacher, and studied law,
But although the
Umpqua Company failed to carry out its designs, it had greatly benefited
southern Oregon by surveying and mapping Umpqua harbor, the notes of the survey
being published, with a report of their explorations and discoveries of rich
agricultural lands, abundant and excellent timber, valuable water-power, coal
and gold mines, fisheries and stone-
being admitted to the
bar in May 1849 at Albany. He is descended from a long line of lawyers in
England; his great grandfather was a commissioned officer in the revolutionary
war. In Oregon he acted well his part of pioneer, carrying the mail in person,
or by deputy, from Yoncalla to Scottsburg for a period of four years through
the floods and storms of the wild coast mountains, never missing a trip. He
was elected to the legislature of 1801-2. When Gardiner was made a port of
entry, Gibbs became collector of customs for the southern district of Oregon.
He afterward removed to the Umpqua Valley, and in 1S58 to Portland, where he
continued the practice of law. He was ever a true friend of Oregon, taking a
great personal interest in her development and an intelligent pride in her
history. He has spared no pains in giving me information, which is embodied in
a manuscript entitled. Motes on the History of Oregon.
Stephen Fowler
Chadwick, a native of Connecticut, studied law in New York, where he was
admitted to practice in 1850, immediately after which he set out for the
Pacific coast, joining the Umpqua Company and arriving in Oregon just in time
to be left a stranded speculator on the beautiful but lonely bank of that
picturesque river. When tiie settlement of the valley increased he practised
his profession with honor and profit, being elected county and probate judge,
and also to represent Douglas county in the con vention which framed the state
constitution. He was presidential elector in 1804 and 1868, being the messenger
to carry the vote to Washington in the latter year. He was elected secretary of
state in 1870, which office he held for eight years, becoming governor for the
last two years by the resignation of Grover, who was elected to the U. S.
senate. Governor Chadwick was also a distinguished member of the order of
freemasons, having been grand master in the lodge of Perfection, and having
received the 33d degree in the Scotch rite, as well as having been for 17 years
chairman of the committee on foreign correspondence for the grand lodge of
Oregon, and a favorite orator of th< order. He married in 1856 Jane A. Smith
of Douglas county, a native of V irginia, by whom he has two daughters and two
sous. Of a lively und amiable temper and courteous manner, he has always
enjoyed a popularity independent of official eminence. His contributions to
this history consist of letters and a brief statement of the Public Records of
the Capitol in manuscript. 1 shall never forget his kindness to me during my
visit to Oregon in 1S7S. James K. Kelly was born in Center county, Penn., in
1819, educated at Princeton college, N. J., and studied law at Carlisle law
school, graduating in 1842, and practising in Lewiston, Penn., until 1849, when
he started for California by way of Mexico.. Not finding mining to his taste,
he embarked his fortunes in the Umpqua Company. He went to Oregon City and soon
came into notice. He was appointed code commissioner in 1853, as I ha\e
elsewhere mentioned, and was in the same year elected to the council, of which
he was a member for four years anil president for two sessions. As a military
mail he figured conspicuously in the Indian wars. He was a member of the
constitutional convention in 1857, and of the state senate in 1800. In 1870 he
was sent to the U. S. senate, and in 1878 was appointed chief justice of the
supreme court. His political career will be more particularly noticed m the
progress of thia history.
quarries. These
accounts brought population to that part of the coast, and soon vessels began
to ply between San Francisco and Scottsburg. Gardiner, named after the captain
of the Bostonian, which was wrecked in trying to enter the river in 1850,
sprang up in 1851. In that year also a trail was constructed for pack-animals
across the mountains to Winchester,18 which became the county seat
of Douglas county, with a United States land office. From Winchester the route
was extended to the mines in the Umpqua and Hogue Iliver valleys. Long trains
of mules, laden with goods for the mining region filed daily along the
precipitous path which was dignified with the name of road, their tinkling
bells striking cheerily the ear of the lonely traveller plodding his weary way
to the gold-fields. Scottsburg, which was the point of departure for the
pack-trains, became a commercial entrepot of importance.14 The
influence of the Umpqua interest was sufficient to obtain from congress at the
session of 1850-51 appropriations for mail service by sea aud land, a
light-house at the mouth of the river, and a separate collection district.15
As the mines were
opened permanent settlements were made upon the farming lands of southern
Oregon, and various small towns were started from 1851 to
15 Winchester was laid out by Addison C.
Flint, who was in Chile in 1845, to assist in the preliminary survey of the
railroad subsequently built by the infamous Harry Meigs. In 1849 Flint came to
California, and the following ytar to Oregon to make surveys for the Umpqua
Company. He also laid out the town of Roseburg in 1851 for Aaron Rose, where he
took up his residence in 1857. Or. Sketches, MS., 2-4.
A Allan,
McKinlay, and McTavish of the Hudson’s Bay Company opened a trading-house at
Seottsburg; and Jesse Applegate also turned merchant. Applegate’s manner of
doing business is described by himself in Burnett’s IRecollections of a
Pioneer: ‘1 sold goods on credit to those who needed them most, not to those
who were able to pay, lost §30,000, and quit the business.’
15 The steamers carrying the maili from
Panamd to the Columbia lliver* were under contract to stop at the Umpqua, anil
one entry was made, but the steamer was so nearly wrecked that no further
attempt followed. The i merchants and others at Scottsburg and the lower towns,
as well as at AViuchester, had to wait for their letters and papers to go to
Portland and be sent up the valley by the bi-montlily mail to Yoncalla, a delay
which was severely felt and impatiently resented. The legislature did not fail
to represent the matter to congress, and Thurston did all he could to satisfy
his constituents, though he could not compel the steamship company to keep its
contract or congress to annul it.
1853 in the region
south of Winchester,10 notably the town of Roseburg, founded by
Aaron Hose,17 who purchased the claim from its locators for a horse,
and a poor one at that. A flouring mill was put iu operation in the northern
part of Umpqua Valley, and another erected during the summer of 1851 at Winchester.18
A saw-mill soon followed in the Rogue River Valley,19 many of which
improvements were traceable, more or less directly, to the impetus given to
settlement by the Umpqua Company.
In passing back and
forth to California, the Oregon miners had not failed to observe that the same
soil and geological structure characterized the valleys north of the supposed'20
northern boundary of California that
16 The first house ii Rogue River Valley was
built at the ferry on Rogue River established by Joel Perkins. The place was
first known as Perkins’ Ferry, then Long’s Ferry, and lastly as Vannoy’s. The
next settlement was at the mouth of Evans creek, a tributary of Rogue River, so
called from a trader named Davis Evans, a somewhat bad character, who located
there. The third was the claim of one Bills, also of doubtful repute. Then came
the farm of N". C. Dean at Willow Springs, five miles north of
Jacksonville, and near it the claim of A. A. Skinner, who b«ilt a house in the
autumn of 1851. South of Skinner’s, on the road to Yreka, was the place of
Stone and Points on Wagner creek, and beyond, toward the head of the valley,
those of Dunn, Smith, Russell, Barron, and a few others. Duncan’« Settlement,
MS., 5-6. The author of this work, L. J. C. Duncan, was born in Tennessee in
1818. He came to California in 1849, and worked in the Mariposa miuca until
the autumn of 1850, when, becoming iil, he came to Oregon for a change of
climate and more settled society. In the aatumn of 1851 he determined to try
mining iu the Shasta. Valley, and also to secure, a land claim in the Rogue
River Valley. This he did, locating on Bear or Stuart creek,
12 miles south-east of Jacksonville, where he
resided from 1851 to 1858, during ■which time he mined
on Jackson’s creek. He shared in the Indian wars
which troubled the settlements for a number of years, finally establishing
himself in Jacksonville in the practice of the law, and being elected to the
office of judge.
vDead?/’*Hist.
On, MS., 72-3.
18 Or. Spectator, Feb* 10, 1852.
19 J. A. Cardwell was born in Tennessee in
1827, emigrated from Iowa to Oregon in 1850, spent the first winter in the
service of Quartermaster Ingalls at Fort Vancouver, and started in the spring
for California with 26 others to engage in mining. After a skirmish with the
Rogue River Indians and various other adventures they reached the mines at
Yreka, where they worked until the dry season forced a suspension of
operations, when Cardwell, with E. Emery, J. Emery, and David Hurley, went to
the present site of Ashland in the Rogue River Valley, and taking up a claim
erected the first saw-mill in that region early in 1S52. I have derived much
valuable information from Mr Cardwell concerning southern Oregon history, which
is contained in a manuscript entitled Emigrant Company, in Mr Cardwell’s own
hand, of the incidents of the immigration of 1S30, the settlement of the Rogue
River Val* ley, and the Indian wars which followed.
20 As late as 1854 the boundary was still in
doubt. ‘Intelligence has just
were found in the
known mining' regions, and prospecting was carried on to a considerable extent
early in 1850. In June two hundred miners were at work in the Umpqua Valley.*1
But little gold was found at this time, and the movement was southward, to
Rogue River and Klamath. According to the best authorities the first discovery
o* any of the tributaries of the Klamath was in the spring of 1850 at Salmon
Creek. In July discoveries were made on the main Klamath, ten miles above the
mouth of Trinity River, and in September on Scott River. In the spring of 1851
gold was found in the Shasta Valley,22 at various places,
boon received from
the surveying party under T. P. Robinson, county sur veyor, who was
commissioned by the governor to survey the boundary line between California and
Oregon. The party were met on the mountains by several gentlemen of this city,
whose statement can be relied on, when they were informed by some of the
gentlemen attached to the expedition, that the disputed tenitory belonged to
Oregon, and not California, as was generally supposed. This territory includes
two of the finest districts in the country, Sailor’s Diggings and Althouse
Creek, besides some other minor places not of much importance to either. The
announcement has caused some excitement in that neighborhood, as the miners do
not like to be so suddenly transported from California to Oregon. They have
heretofore voted both in California and Oregon, although in the former state it
has caused several contested election cases, and refused to pay taxes to
either. It is also rumored around the city, fur which we will not vouch, that
Yreka is in Oregon. But we hardly think it possible, from the observations
heretofore taken by scientific men, which brings Yreka 15 miles within the
line.’ Cresent City Herald, in 1). Alta Cala., Juue 28, 1854.
21 S'. F. Courier, July 10, 1850.
22 In the early .summer of 1S50 Gen. Line,
with a small party of Oregonians, viz. John Kelly, Thomas Brown, Martin
Angell, Samuel and John Simondson, and Lane’s Indian servant, made a discovery
on the Shasta river near where the town of Yreka was afterward built. The
Indians proving troublesome the party removed to the diggings on the upper
Sacramento, but noi finding gold as plentiful as expected set out to prospect
on Pit River, from which place they were driven by the Indians back to the
Sacramento where they wintered, going in February 1851 to Scott River, from
which locality Lane was recalled to the Willamette Valley to run for the office
of delegate to congress. Speaking of the Pit river tribe, Lane says: ‘The Pit
River Indians were great thieves and murderers. They actually stole the
blankets off the men in our camp, though I kept one man on guard all the time.
They stole our best horse, tied at the head of my bed, which consisted of a
blanket spread on the ground, with my saddle for a pillow. They sent an arrow
into a miner because he happened to be rolled in his blanket so that they could
not pull it from him. They caught Driscoll when out prospecting, and were
hurrying him off into the mountains when my Indian boy gave the ala rm and
I went to his rescue. He was so frightened
he could neither move nor speak, which condition of their captive impeded their
progress. When I appeared he fell down in a swoon. 1 pointed my gun, which
rested on my six-shooter, ami ordered the Indians to leave. While they
hesitated and were trying to flank me my Indian boy brought the canoe,
alongside tho shore, on seeing
notably on
Greenhorn Creek, Yreka, and Humbug Creek. •
The Oregon miners
were by this time satisfied that gold existed north of the Siskiyou range.
Their explorations resulted in finding the metal on Big Bar of Kogue River,
and in the canon of Josephine Creek. Meanwhile the beautiful and richly grassed
valley of Hogue River became the paradise of packers, who grazed their mules
there, returning to Scottsburg or the Willamette for a fresh cargo. In February
1852 one Sykes who worked on the place of A. A. Skinner found gold on Jackson
Creek, about on the west line of the present town of Jacksonville, and soon
after two packers, Cluggage and Pool, occupying themselves with prospecting
while their animals were feeding, discovered Rich Gulch, half a mile north of
Sykes’ discovery. The wealth of these mines'23 led to an irruption
from the California side of the Siskiyou, and Willow Springs five miles north
of Jacksonville, Pleasant Creek, Applegate Creek, and many other localities
became deservedly famous, yielding well for a number of years.
Every miner, settler,
and trader in this remote interior region was anxious to hear from friends,
home, and of the great commercial world without. As I have before said Thurston
labored earnestly to show congress the necessity of better mail facilities for
Oregon,21 the benefit intended to have been conferred
which they beat a
hasty retreat thinking I was about to be reenforced. Driscoll would never
cross to the east side of the river after his adventure. ’ Lane’s
Autobiography, MS., lO-t-5.
23Early
Affairs, MS., 10; Duncan’s Southern Or., MS., 5-6; DmveW* Scrap-book, 31;
Victor's Or., 334. A nugget was found in the Rogue River diggings weighing $S00
and another $1300. See accounts in a. F. Alta, Sept. 14, 1852; S. F. Pac. News,
March 14, 1851; and S. F. Herald, Sept. 28, 1851.
21 In October 1845 the postmaster-general
advertised for proposals to carry the United States mail from New York by
Habana to the Chagre River and back; with joint or separate offers to extend
the transportation to Panama and up the 1’aeitic to the mouth of the Columbia,
and thence to the Haw aiian Islands, the senate recommending a mail route to
Oregon. Between 1846 and 1848 the government thought of the plan of encouraging
by subsidies the
having been diverted
almost entirely to California by the exigencies of the larger population and
business of that state with its phenomenal growth.
The postal agent
appointed at San Francisco for the Pacific coast discharged his duty by
appointing postmasters,2u but further than sending the mails to
Oregon on sailing vessels occasionally lie did nothing for the relief of the
territory.26 Not a mail steamer appeared on the Columbia in 1849.
Thurston wrote home in December that he had been hunting up the documents
relating to the Pacific mail service, and the reason why the steamers did not
come to Astoria. The result of his search was the discovery that the then late
secretary of the navy had agreed with Aspinwall that if he should send the
Oregon mail and take the same, once a month, by sailing vessel, “at or near the
mouth of the Klamath River,’- and would touch at San Francisco,
Monterey, and San Diego free of cost to the government, he should not be
required to ruu steamers to Oregon till after receiving six months’ notice.27
Here were good faith
and intelligence indeed! The
establishment of a
line of steamers between Panamd and Oregon, by way of some port in California.
At length Howland and Aspinwall agreed to carry the mails once a month, and to
put on a line of three steamers of from 1,000 to 1,200 tons, giving cabin
accommodations for about 25 passengers, as many it was thought as would
probably go at one time, the remainder of the vessel being devoted to freight.
Crosby's statement, MS., 3. Three steamers were constructed under a contract
with the secretary of the. navy, viz.: the California, 1,400 tons, -with a
single engine of 2o0 horse-power, handsomely Unished and carrying 46 cabin and
a hundred steerage passengers; the Panamd of 1,100 tons, and the Oregon of
1,200 tuns, similarly built and furnished. SSd Cong., 1st Sess., S. Doc. 50;
Hon. Polynesian, April 7, 1849; Otis’ Panamd li. I!. The California left port
in the autumn of 184S, arriving at Valparaiso on the 20th of December,
seventy-four days from New York, proceeding thence to Callao ami Panamd, where
passengers from New York to Habana and Chagre were awaiting her, and reaching
San Francisco on the 28th of February 1849, where she was received with great
enthusiasm. She brought on this first trip over 18*000 letters. S. F. Alta
California in Polynesian, April 14, 1849. See also Hist. Cal. and Cal. Inter
Poct'la, this Series.
24 John
Adair at Astoria, F. Smith at Portland, George L. Curry at Oregon City, and J.
li. McOlane, at Salem. J. C. Avery was postmaster at Corvallis, Jesse Applegate
at Yoncalla, S. F. Chadwick at Scottsburg.
26Or.
Spectator, Nov. 29, 1849; Rtpt. of Gen. Smith, in 31st Cong., 1st Sess., S.
Doc. 47, 107.
aOr.
Spectator, April 18, 1800.
then undiscovered
mouth of the Klamath Ilivor for a distributing point for the Oregon mail!
Thurston with characteristic energy soon procured the promise of the secretary
that the notice should be immediately given, and that after June 1850 mail
steamers should go “not only to Nisqually, but to Astoria.”23 The
postmaster-general also recommended the reduction of the postage to California
and Oregon to take effect by the end of June 1851.29
At length in June
1850 the steamship Carolina, Captain R. L. Whiting, made her first trip to Portland
with mails and passengers.30 She was withdrawn in August and placed
on the Panama route in order to complete the semi-monthly communication called
for between that port and San Francisco. On the 1st of September the California
arrived at Astoria and departed the same day, having lost three days in a heavy
fog off the bar. On the 27th the Panama arrived at Astoria, and two days later
the Seagull,51 a steam propeller. On the 24th of October the
Oregon brought up the mail for the first time, and was an object of much
interest on account of her name.32 There was no regularity in
arrivals or departures until the coming from New Yoik of the Columbia,
28 This
quotation refers to an effort on the part of certain persons to make Nisqually
the point of distribution of the mails. The proposition was sustained by
Wilkes and Sir George Simpson. ‘If they get ahead of me,’ said Thurston in his
letter, ‘they will rise early and work late.’
2931st
Cong., 2d Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 1, 408, 410. This favor also nai ' chiefly the
result of the representations of the Oregon delegate. A single letter from
Oregon to the States cost 40 cents; from California 12J cents, before the
reduction which made the postage uniform for the Pacific coast and fixed it at
six ccnts a single sheet, or double the rate in the Atlantic states. Or.
Statesman, May 9, 1851.
SuMcCracken's
Early Steamboativg, MS., 7; Salem Directory, 1S74, 95; Portland Oregonian, Jan.
13, 1872. There was an incongruity in the law establishing the mail service,
which provided for a semi-monthly mail to the river Chagre, but only a monthly
mail from l’anama up the coast. Kept, of P. M. Gen., in Slst Cong., 2d Sess.,
II. Ex. Doc. 1, 410; Or. Spectator, Aug. 8, 1S50.
31 The Seagull was wrecked on the Humboldt
bar on her passage to Oregon, Feb. 20, 1S52. Or. Statesman, March 2, 1852.
32 Or. Spectator, Oct. 31, 1850. The Oregon
was transformed into a sailing vessel after many years of service, and was
finally sunk in the strait of Juan de Fuca by collision with the bark Germania
in 1880. Her commander when she first came to Oregon was Lieut. Charles P.
Patterson of the navy.
brought out by
Lieutenant G. W. Totten of the navy, in March 1851;, and afterward commanded by
William Dali.33
The Columbia supplied
a great deficiency in communication with California and the east, though
Oregon was still forced to be content with a monthly mail, while California had
one twice a month. The postmaster-general’s direction that Astoria should be
made a distributing office was a blunder that the delegate failed to rectify.
Owing to the lack of navigation by steamers on the rivers, Astoria was but a
remove nearer than San Francisco, and while not quite so inaccessible as the
mouth of the Klamath, was nearly so. When the post-routes were advertised, no
bids were offered for the Astoria route, and when the mail for the interior was
left at that place a special effort must be made to bring it to Portland.34
Troubled by reason of
this isolation, the people of Oregon had asked over and over for increased mail
facilities, and as one of the ways of obtaining them, and also of increasing
their commercial opportunities, had prayed congress to order a survey of the
coast, its bays and river entrances. Almost immediately
83 4 The
Columbia was commenced in New York by a man named Hunt, who lived in Astoria,
under an agreement with Coffin, Lownsdale, and Chapman, the proprietors, of
Portland, to furnish a certain amount of money to build a vessel to run between
San Francisco and Astoria. Hunt went east, and the keel of the vessel was laid
in 1849, and he got her on the ways and ready to launch when his money gave
out, and the town proprietors of Portland did not send any more. So she was
sold, and Howland and Aspinwall bought her for this trade themselves. . .She
ran regularly once a month from San Francisco to Portland, carrying the mails
and passengers.’ She was very stanchly built, of 700 tons register, would carry
50 or 60 cabin passengers, with about as many in the steerage, and cost
$150,000. N. Y. Tribune, in Or, Spectator, Dec. 12, 1850; Deady's Hist. Or.,
MS., 10-11.
34 The
postal agent appointed in 1851 was Nathaniel Coe, a man of high character and
scholarly attainments, as well as religious habits. He was a native of
Morristown, New Jersey, bom September 11, 1788, a whig, and a member of the
Baptist church. In his earlier years he represented Alleghany county, New York,
in the state legislature. When his term of office in Oregon expired he remained
in the country, settling on the Columbia River near the mouth of Hood River, on
the eastern slope of the Cascade Mountains. ‘His mental energy was such, that
neither the rapid progress of the sciences of our time, nor his own great age
of eighty, could check his habits of study. The ripened fruits of scholarship
that resulted appeared as bright as ever even in the last weeks of his life. He
died at Hood River, his residence, October 17, 1868/ Vancouver Register, Nov.
7, ISOS; Dalles Mountaineer, Oct. 23, 1868.
upon the organization
of the territory, Professor A. I). Bache, superintendent of the United States
coast survey, was notified that he would he expected to commence the survey of
the coast of the United States on the Pacific. A corps of officers was selected
and divided into two branches, one party to conduct the duties of the service
on shore, and the other to make a hydrographical survey.
The former duty
devolved upon assistant-superin- tendent, James S. Williams, Brevet-Captain 1).
P. Hammond, and Joseph S. Ruth, sub-assistant. The naval survey was conducted
by Lieutenant W. P. McArthur, in the schooner Ewing, which was commanded by
Lieutenant Washington Bartlett of the United States navy. The time of their
advent on the coast was an unfortunate one, the spring of 1849, when the gold
excitement was at its height, prices of labor and living extortionate, and the
difficulty of restraining men on board ship, or in any service, excessive, the
officers having to stand guard over the men,85 or to put to sea to
prevent desertions.
So many delays were
experienced from these and other causes that nothing was accomplished in 1 849,
and the Ewing wintered at the Hawaiian Islands, returning to San Francisco for
her stores in the spring, and again losing some of her men. On the 3<1 of
April, Bartlett succeeded in getting to sea with men enough to work the vessel,
though some of these were placed in irons on reaching the Columbia River. The
first Oregon newspaper which fell under Bartlett’s eye contained a letter of
Thurston’s, in which he reflected severely on the surveying expedition for
neglect to proceed with their duties, which was supplemented by censorious
remarks by the editor. To
3:; A mutiny
occurred in ■which
Passed Midshipman Gibson was nearly drowned in San Francisco Bay by five of the
seamen. They escaped, w ere pursued, captured, ami sentenced to death by a
general court-martial Tw'O were hanged on board the Ewing and the others on the
St Mary’s, a ship of the U. S. squadron. Letter of Lieut. Bartlett, in Or.
Spectator, June 27, 1850; Lawson’n Autohiog., MS., 2; Davidson’s Biography.
these attacks
Bartlett replied through the same medium, and took occasion to reprove the
Oregonians for their lack of enterprise in failing to sustain a pilot service
at the mouth of the Columbia, which service, since the passage of the pilotage
act, had received little encouragement or support,88 and also for
giving countenance to the desertion of his men.
The work accomplished
by the Ewing during the summer was the survey of the entrance to the Columbia,
the designation of places for buoys to mark the channel, of a site for a
liglit-house on Cape Disappointment, and the examination of the coast south of
the Columbia. The survey showed that the “rock- ribbed and iron-bound” shore of
Oregon really was a beach of sand from Point Adams to Cape Arago, a distance of
one hundred and sixty-live miles, only thirty-three miles of that distance
being cliffs of rock where the ocean touched the shore. From Cape Arago to the
forty-second parallel, a distance of eiglity-five miles, rock was found to
predominate,
36 Capt
White, a Xew York pilot, conceiv'd! the idea of establishing himself and a
corps of competent assistants at the mouth of the Columbia, thereby conferring
a great benefit on Oregon commerce, anti presumably a reasonable amount of
reward upon himself. But his venture, like a great many others prt jected from
the other side of the continent, was a failure. On bringing his fine
pilot-boat, the Win, O. Hag&taff, up the coast, in September 1849, he
attempted to enter Rogue River, but got aground on the bar, was attacked by the
Indians, and himself ami associates, with their men, driven into tho mountains,
where they wandered for eighteen days in terrible destitution before reaching
Fort Umprjua, at which post they received succor. The Ilw/staff was robbed and
burned; her place being supplied by another boat called the Mary Taylor, The
Pioneer, i. 351; Davidson's Coast Pilot, 11213; Williams’ S. W. Or., MS. 2. It
was the neglect of the Oregonians to make good the loss of Captain White, or a
portion of it, to which Bartlett referred. For the year during which White hail
charge of the bar pilotage 09 vessels of from GO to 650 tons crossed in all
128 times. The onlj loss of a vessel in that time was that of the Josephine,
loaded with lumber of the Oregon Milling Company. She was becalmed on the bar,
and a gale coming up in the night she dragged her anchor and was carried on the
sands, where she was dismasted and abandoned. She afterward floated out to sea,
being a total loss. George Gibbs, in Or. Spectator, May 2, 1850. The pilot
commissioners, consisting at this time of Gov. Lane and captains Couch and
Crosby, made a strong appeal in behalf of White, but he was left to bear his
losses and go whither he pleased. Johnson's Cat. and Or., 254-5; Carrol’s Star
of the West, 290-5; Stevens, in Pat. R. R. Rept., i. 109, 291-2, 015—10; Polynesian,
July 20, 1850. The merchants finally advanced the pay of pilots so as to l e
remunerative, after which time little was heard about the terrors of the
Columbia bar.
there being only
fifteen miles of sand on this part of the coast.37 Little attention
was given to any bay or stream north of the Umpqua, McArthur offering it as his
opinion that they were accessible by small boats alone, except Yaquina, which
might, he conjectured, be entered by vessels of a larger class.
It will be remembered
that the Samuel Roberts entered the Umpqua August G, 1850, and surveyed the
mouth of the river, and the river itself to Scotts- burg. As the Ewing did not
leave the Columbia until the 7th, McArthur’s survey was subsequent to this one.
He crossed the bar in the second cutter and not in the schooner; and pronounced
the channel practicable for steamers, but dangerous for sailing vessels, unless
under favorable circumstances. Slight examination was made of Coos Bay, an
opinion being formed from simply looking at the mouth that it would be found
available for steamers. The Coquille Liver was said to be only large enough for
canoes; and Rogue River also unfit for sailing vessels, being so narrow as to
scarcely afford room to turn in. So much for the Oregon coast. As to the
Klamath, while it had more water on the bar than any river south of the
Columbia, it was so narrow and so rapid as to be unsafe for sailing vessels.S:i
This was a very
unsatisfactory report for the projectors of seaport towns in southern Oregon.
It was almost equally disappointing to the naval and postoffice departments of
the general government, and to the mail contractors, who were then still
anxious to avoid running their steamers to the Columbia, and determined if
possible to find a different mail route. The recommendation of the postmaster-general
at the instance of the Oregon delegate, that they should be required to leave
the 'mail at Scottsburg, as I have mentioned, induced them to make a special
effort to
11 Coast.
Survey, 1850. 70; 8 F. Par. Newt, ,Tan. 18, 1861.
38McArthur
died in fSol while on his way to Panama, and the east. Law- non.'a Autobiog.,
MS., !2G.
found a settlement on
the southern coast which would enable them to avoid the bar of tho Umpqua.
The place selected
was on a small bay about eight miles south of Cape Blanco, and a little south
of Point Orford. Orders were issued to Captain Tichenor39 of the
Seagull, which was running to Portland, to put in at this place, previously
visited by him,40 and there leave a small colony of settlers, who
were to examine the country for a road into the interior. Accordingly in June
1851 the Seagull stopped at Port Orford, as it was named, and left there nine
men, commanded by J. M. Kirkpatrick, with the necessary stores and arms. A
four-pounder was placed in position on the top of a high rock with one side
sloping to the sea, and which at high tide became an island by the united
waters of the ocean and a small creek which flowed by its base.
While the steamer
remained in port, the Indians, of whom there were many in the neighborhood, appeared
friendly. But on the second day after her departure, about forty of them held a
war-dance, during which their numbers were constantly augmented by arrivals
from the heavily wooded and hilly country back from the shore. When a
considerable force was gathered the chief ordered an advance on the fortified
39 William Tichenor was bom in Newark, N.
J., June 13, 1S13, his ancestor Daniel Tichenor being one of the original
proprietors of that town. He followed the sea/ making his tirst voyage in 1S25.
In 1833 he married and went to Indiana, but could not remain in the interior.
After again making a sea voyage he tried living in Edgar county, Illinois,
where he represented the ninth senatorial district. In 1846 he recruited two
companies for the regiment commanded by Col. E. D. Baker, whom he afterward
helped to elect to the U. S. senate from Oregon. Tichenor came to the Pacific
coast in 1849, and having mined for a short time on the American River,
purchased the schooner J. M. Ryerson, and sailed for the gulf of California,
exploring the coast to San Francisco and northward, discovering the bay spoken
of above. He finally settled at Port Orford, and was three times elected to the
lower house of the Oregon legislature, and once to the senate. lie took up the
study of law and practised for 16 years, and was at one time county judge of
Curry county. Yet during all this time he never quite gave up seafaring.
Letter of Tichenor, in Historical Correspondence, MS.
40 Port Orford was established and owned by
Capt. Tichenor, T. Butler King, collector of the port of San Francisco, James
Gamble, Fred M. Smith, M. Hubbard, and W. G. T* Vault. Or. Statesman, Aug. 19,
1851.
Hist. Oa., Vol. II. 13
rock of tlie
settlers, who motioned them to keep back or receive their fire. But the
savages, ignorant perhaps of the use of cannon, continued to come nearer until
it became evident that a hand-to-hand conflict would soon ensue. When one of
them had seized a musket in the hands of a settler, Kirkpatrick touched a
fire-brand to the cannon, and discharged it in the midst of the advancing
multitude, bringing several to the ground. The men then took aim and shot six
at the first fire. Turning on those nearest with their guns clubbed, they were
able to knock down several, and the battle was won. In fifteen minutes the
Indians had twenty killed and fifteen wounded. Of the white men four were
wounded by tho arrows of the savages which fell in a shower upon them. The
Indians were permitted to carry off their dead, and a lull followed.
But the condition of
the settlers was harassing. They feared to leave their fortified camp to
explore for a road to the interior, and determined to await the return of the
Seagull, which was to bring another company from San Francisco. At the end of
five days the Indians reappeared in greater force, and seeing the white men
still in possession of their stronghold and presenting a determined front,
retired a short distance down the coast to hold a war-dance and work up
courage. The settlers, poorly supplied with ammunition, wished to avoid another
conflict in which they might be defeated, and taking advantage of the temporary
absence of the foe essayed to escape to the woods, carrying nothing but their
arms.
It was a bold and
desperate movement but it proved successful. Travelling as rapidly as possible
in the almost tropical jungle of the Coast Range, and keeping in the forest
for the first five or six miles, they emerged at night on the beach, and by
using great caution eluded their pursuers. On coming to Coquille River, a
village of about two hundred Indians was discovered on the bank opposite, which
they avoided
by going up the
stream for several miles and crossing it on a raft. To be secure against a
similar encounter, they now kept to the woods for two days, though by doing so
they deprived themselves of the only food, except salmon berries, which they
had been able to find. At one place they fell in with a small band of savTages
whom they frightened away by charging toward them. Again emerging on the beach
they lived on mussels for four days. The only assistance received was from the
natives on Cowan River which empties into Coos Bay. These people were friendly,
and fed and helped them on their way. On the eighth day the party reached the
mouth of the Umpqua, where they were kindly cared for by the settlers at that
place.41
When Tichenor arrived
at San Francisco, he proceeded to raise a party of forty men to reenforce his
settlement at Port Orford, to which he had promised to return by the 23d of the
month. The Seagull being detained, he took passage on the Columbia, Captain Le
Roy, and arrived at Port Orford as agreed, on the 23d, being surprised at not
seeing any of his men on shore. He immediately landed, however, with Le Roy
and eight others, and saw provisions and tools scattered over the ground, and
on every side the signs of a hard struggle. On the ground was a diary kept by
one of the party, in which the beginning of the first day’s battle was
described, leaving off abruptly where the first Indian seized a comrade’s gun.
Hence it was thought that all had been killed, and the account first published
of the affair set it down as a massacre; a report which about one week later
was corrected by a letter from Kirkpatrick, who, after giving a history of his
adventures, concluded
11 Williams’ S. W. Oregon, MS., 1-6; Alta
California, June 30th and July 25, 1851; Wills' Wild Life, in Van Tromp's
Adventures, 149-50; A rm- strowfs Or., 60-4; Crane's Top. Mem., 37-40; Overland
Monthly, xiv. 179-82; Portland Bulletin, Feb. 25, 1873; Or. Spectator, Juty 3,
1851; Or. Statesman, July 4th and 15, 1851; Parrish's Or. Anecdotes, MS., 41-5;
Harper's Mag. y xiii. 590-1; S. F. Herald, June 30, 1851; Id.,
July 15, 1851; Lawson's Autobiog., MS., 32-3; S. F. Alta, June 30, 1851;
Taylor's Spec. Press, 19.
.with a favorable
description of the country and the announcement that he had discovered a tine
bay at the mouth of the Cowan River.*2 This important discovery was
little heeded by the founders of Port Orford, who were bent upon establishing
their settlement on a more southern point of the coast.
Tichenor left his
California party at Port Orford well armed and fortified and proceeded to
Portland, where he advertised to land passengers within thirty- five miles of the
Rogue River mines, having brought up about two dozen miners from San Francisco
and landed them at Port Orford to make their way from thence to the interior,
at their own hazard. On reT; turning down the coast the Columbia
again touched at Port Orford and left a party of Oregon men, so that by August
there were about seventy persons at the new settlement. They were ail well
armed and kept guard with military regularity. To some was assigned the duty of
hunting, elk, deer, and other game being plentiful on the coast mountains, and
birds of numerous kinds inhabiting the woods and seashore. A Whitehall boat
w-as left for fishing and shooting purposes. These hunting tours were also
exploring expeditions, resulting in a thorough examination of the coast from
the Coquille River on the north to a little below the California line on the
south, in which distance no better port was discovered.4"
The 24th of August a
party of twenty-three44 under T’Vault set out to explore the
interior, T’Vault’s .experience as a pioneer was supposed to fit him for the
position of guide and Indian-fighter, a most responsible office 111 that
region of hostile savages,
4 Xow
called Coos, an Indian name.
13 Says
Williann in his S. W. Oregon, IIS., 9: ‘It was upon one of these expeditions,
returning from a point where Crescent City now stands, that with a fair wind,
myself at the helm, we sailed into the beautiful Chetcoe River which we ever
pronounced the loveliest little spot upon that line of coast.’
u I give
here the number as given by Williams, one of the coiupany, though it is stated
to bo onty 18 by T’Vault, the leader, in Alla California, Oct. 14, 1851.
particularly as the
expedition was made up of immigrants of the previous year, -with little or no
knowledge of the country, or of mountain life. Only two of them, Williams and
Lount, both young men from Michigan, were good hunters; and 011 them would
depend the food supply after the ten days’ rations with which each man was
furnished should be exhausted.
Nothing daunted,
however, they set out on horses, and proceeded southward along the coast as far
as the mouth of Rogue River. The natives along the route were numerous, but
shy, and on being approached tied into the woods. At Rogue River, however, they
assumed a different air, and raised their bows threateningly, but on seeing
g«ns levelled at them desisted. During the march they hovered about the rear of
the party, who on camping at night selected an open place, and after feeding
their horses burned the grass for two hundred yards around that the savages
might not have it to hide in, keeping at the same time a double guard.
Proceeding thus cautiously they avoided collision with these savages.
When they had reached
a point about fifty miles from the ocean, on the north bank of Rogue River,
having lost their way and provisions becoming low, some determined to turn
back. T’Vault, unwilling to abandon the adventure, offered increased pay to
such as would continue it. Accordingly nine went on with him toward the valley,
though but one of them could be depended upon to bring in game.45
The separation took place on the 1st of September, the advancing party
proceeding up Rogue River, by which course they were assured they could not
fail soon to reach the travelled road.
On the evening of the
9th they came upon the
45 This was
'Williams. The others were: Patrick Murphy, of New York; A. S. Doherty and
Gilbert Brush, of Texas; Cyrus Iledden, of Newark, N. <J.; JoLn I*. Holland,
of New Hampshire; T. J. Davenport, of Massachusetts; Jeremiah Ryan, of
Maryland; J. P. Pepper, of New York. Alta California, Oct 14, 1801.
head-waters of a
stream flowing, it was believed, into the ocean near Cape Blanco. They were
therefore, though designing to go south-eastward^, actually some distance north
as well as east from Port Orford, the nature of the country and the direction
of the ridges forcing them out of their intended course. Finding an open
country on this stream, they followed it down some distance, and chancing to
meet an Indian boy engaged him as a guide, who brought them to the southern
branch of a river, down which they travelled, finding the bottoms covered with
a thick growth of trees peculiar to low, moist lands. It was now determined to
abandon their horses, as they could advance with difficulty, and had no longer
anything to carry which could not be dispensed with. They therefore procured
the services of some Indians with canoes to take them to the mouth of the
river, which they found to have a beautiful valley of rich land, and to be,
after passing the junction of' the two forks, about eighty yards wide, with the
tide ebbing and flowing from two to three feet.46 On the 14th, about
ten o’clock in the morning, having descended to within a few miles of the
ocean, a member of the party, Mr Hedden, one of those driven out of Port Orford
in .Tuvie, and who escaped up the coast, recognized the stream as the Coquille
River, which the previous party had crossed on a raft. Too exhausted to
navigate a boat for themselves, and overcome by hunger, they engaged some
natives47 to take them down the river, instead of which they were
carried to a large rancheria situated about two miles from the ocean.
Savages thronged the
shore armed with bows and arrows, long knives,43 and war-clubs, and
were upon them the moment they stepped ashore. T’Vault
*On Coquille River,
12 mile? below the north fork, is a tree ■with the
name ‘ Dennis White, 1S34, ’
to which some persons have attached importance. Armstrong’s
(Jr., 05.
17 One of
the Indians who paddled their canoes had witli him ‘ the identical gun that
James II. Eagan had broken over an Indian's head at Port Orford in .June-
last. ’ Williams’ S. W. Or., MS., ‘28.
-8 These
knives, two and two and a half feet long, were manufactured by
aftenvard declared
that the first thing he was conscious of was being in the river, fifteen yards
from shore and swimming. He glanced toward the village, and saw only a horrible
confusion, and heard the yells of savage triumph mingled with the sound of
blows and the shrieks of his unfurtunate comrades. At the same instant he saw
Brush in the water not far from him and an Indian standing in a canoe striking
him on the head with a paddle, while the water around was stained with blood.
At this juncture
occurred an incident such as is used to embellish romances, when a woman or a
child in the midst of savagery displays those feelings of humanity common to
all men. While the two white men were struggling for their lives in the stream
a canoe shot from the opposite bank. In it standing erect was an Indian lad,
who on reaching the spot assisted them into the canoe, handed them the paddle,
then springing into the water swam back to the shore. They succeeded in getting
to land, and stripping’ themselves, crawled up the bank and into the thicket
without once standing upright. Striking southward through the rough and briery
undergrowth they hurried on as long as daylight lasted, and at night emerged
upon the beach, reaching Cape Blanco the following morning, where the Indians
received them kindly, and after taking care of them for a day conveyed them to
Port Orford. T’Vaultwas not severely wounded, but Brush had part of his scalp
taken off by one of the long knives. Both were suffering from famine and
bruises, and believed themselves the only survivors.49 But in about
two weeks it was ascertained that others of the party were living, namely:
Williams,150
the Indians out of
some hand iron taken from the wreck of the Hor/staff. They were furnished with
wlmlebon'i handles. Parrish's Or. Anecdotes, MS., 00.
<[>Lawson's
Autobiog., MS., 45-6; Portland Bulletin, March 3, 1873; S. I' Herald, Oct. 14,
1851; Ashland Tidings, July 12th and 19, 187S; Portland West Shore, May 1878.
50 The narrative of Williams is one of the
most thrilling in the literature of savage warfare. When the attack was made he
had just stepped ashore from the canoe. His first struggle was with two
powerful savages for tho
Davenport, and
Hedden, tlie other live having been murdered, their companies hardly knew how.
With this signal
disaster terminated the first attempt to reach the Rogue River Valley from
Port Orford; and thus fiercely did the red inhabitants of this region welcome
their white brethren. The difficulties with the various tribes which grew out
of this and similar encounters I shall describe in the history of the wars of
1851-3.
Soon after the
failure of the T’Vault expedition another company was fitted out to explore in
a differ-
possessi~n of his
rifle, which being discharged in the contest, for a moment gave him relief by
frightening his assailants. Amidst the yells of Indians and the cries and
groans of comrades he forccd his way through the infuriated crowd with the
stock of his gun, being completely surrounded, fighting in a circle, and
striking in all directions. Soon only the barrel of his gun remained in his
hands, with which he continued to deal heavy blows as he advanced along a piece
of open ground toward the forest, receiving blows as well, one f-f which felled
him to the ground. Quickly recovering himself, with one desperate plunge the
living wall waa broken, and he darted for the woods. As he ran an arrow hit him
between the left hip and lower ribs, penetrating the abdomen, and bringing him
to a sudden stop. Finding it impossible t> move, he drew out the shaft which
broke off, leaving one joint of its length, with the barb, in his body. So
great was his excitement that after the first sensation no pain was felt. The
main party of Indians being occupied with rifling the bodies of the slain, a
race for life now set in with about a dozen of the most persistent of his
enemies. Though several times struck with arrows he ran down all but two who
placed themselves on each side about ten feet away shooting every instant.
Despairing of escape Williams turned on them, but while he chased one the other
shot at him from behind. As if to leave him no chance for life the suspenders
of his pantaloons gave way, and being impeded by their falling down he was
forced to stop and kick them off. With his eyes and mouth filled with blood from
a wounil on the head, blinded and despairing he yet turned to enter the forest
when he fell headlong. At this the Indians rushed upon him sure of their prey;
one of them who carried a captured gun attempted to fire, but it failed. Says
the narrator: ‘The sickening sensations of the last half hour were at once
dispelled when I realized that the gun had refused to fire. I was on my feet in
a moment, rifle barrel in hand. Instead of running I stood firm, and the Indian
with the rifle also met me with it drawn by the breech. The critical moment of
the whole affair had arrived, and I knew it must be the final struggle. The
first two or three blows I failed utterly, and received some severe bruises,
but fortune was on my side, ami a lucky blow given with unusual force fell upon
my antagonist killing him almost instantly. I seized the cun, a sharp report
followed, and I had the satisfaction of seeing my remaining pursuer stagger
and fall dead.’ Expecting to die of his wounds Williams entered the shadow of
the woods to seek a place where he might lie down in peace. Soon afterward he
fell in with Hedden, who had escaped uninjured, and who with some friendly
Indians assisted him to reach the Umpqua, where they arrived after six days of
intense suffering from injuries, famine, and cold, and where they found the
brig Almira, Capt. Gibbs, lying, which took them to Gardiner. All
cot direction for a
road to the interior,01 which was compelled to return without
effecting its object. Port Orford, however, received the encouragement and assistance
of government officials, including the coast survey officers and military men,52
and throve in consequence. Troops were stationed there,53 and
before the close of the year the work of surveying a military road was begun by
Lieutenant Williamson, of the topographical engineers, with an escort of
dragoons from Casey’s command at Port Orford. Several families had also joined
the settlement, about half a dozen dwelling houses having been erected for
their accommodation.51 The troops were quartered in nine log
buildings half a mile from the town.63 A permanent route to the
mines was not adopted, however, until late the following year.
Casey’s command
having returned to Benicia about the 1st of December, in January following the
schooner Captain Lincoln, Naghel master, was despatched to Port Orford from San
Francisco with troops and
Williams5
wounds except that in the abdomen healed readily. That discharged for a year.
In four years the arrowr-head had worked itself out, but not until
the seventh year did the broken shaft follow it. Davenport, like Hedden, was
unhurt, but wandered starving in the mountains many days before reaching a
settlement. Williams was born in Vermont, and came to the Pacific coast in
1850. He made his home at Ashland, enjoying the respect of his fellow-men,
combining in his manner the peculiarities of the border with those of a
thorough and competent business man. Portland West Shore, June 18, 1878.
61 Or. Statesman, Nov. 4, 1851.
52 Probably stories like the following had
their effect: ‘Port Orford has recently been ascertained to be one of the very
best harbors on the Pacific coast, accessible to the largest class of vessels,
and situated at a convenient intermediate point between the Umpqua and Rogue
Rivers. ’ Ttejjt. of Gen. Hitchcock, in S2d Gong., 1st Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 2,
149; S. F. Alta, July 13th and Sept. 14, 1852.
53 Lieutenant Kautz, of the rifles,
with 20 men stationed at Astoria, was ordered to Port Orford in August, at the
instance of Tichenor, where a post was to be established for the protection of
the miners in Rogue River Valley, which was represented to be but 35 miles
distant from this place. After the massacre on the Coquille, Col. Casey, of the
2d infantry, was despatched from vSan Francisco wTith portions of
three dragoon companies, arriving at Port Orford on the 22d of October. *
51 Saint Amant, 41-2, 144; Or. Statesman,
Dec. 16, 1851.
55 $2d Cong., 2d Sess., II. lux. Doc. i, pt.
ii. 105-6; S. F. Herald, Nov. 8, 1852.
stores under
Lieutenant Stanton. The weather being foul she missed the harbor and went
ashore on a sand spit two miles north of the entrance to Coos Bay. The
passengers and cargo were safely landed on the beach, where shelter was
obtained under sails stretched on booms and spars. Thus exposed, annoyed by
high winds and drifting sands, and by the thieving propensities of the
natives, Stanton was forced to remain four mouths. An effort was made to
explore a trail to Port Orford by means of which pack-trains could be sent to
their relief. Twelve dragoons were assigned to this service, with orders to
wait at Port Orford for despatches from San Francisco in answer to his own,
which, as the mail steamers avoided that place after hearing of the wreck of
the schooner, did not arrive until settled weather in March. Quartermaster
Miller replied to Stanton by taking passage for Port.Orford 011 the Columbia
under a special arrangement to stop at that port. But the steamer’s captain
being unacquainted with the coast, and having nearly made the mistake of
attempting to enter Rogue River, proceeded to the Columbia, and it was not
until the 12th of April that Miller reached his destination. He brought a train
of twenty mules from Port Orford, the route proving a most harassing one, over
slippery mountain spurs, through dense forests obstructed with fallen timber,
across several rivers, besides sand dunes and marshes, four days being consumed
in marching fifty miles.
On reaching Camp
Castaway, Miller proceeded to the Umpqua, where he found and chartered the
schooner Nassau, which was brought around into Coos Bay, being the first vessel
to enter that harbor. Wagons had been shipped by the quartermaster to the
Umpqua by the brig Fawn. The mules were sent to haul them down the beach by
what proved to be a good road, and the stores being loaded into them were
transported across two miles of sand to the west shore of the bay and placed
011 board the Nassau, in
which they were taken
to Port Orford,56 arriving the 20th of May.
The knowledge of the
country obtained in these forced expeditions, added to the exploration of the
Coquille Vail j by road-hunters in the previous autumn, and by the military
expedition of Casey to punish the Coquilles, of which I shall speak in another
place, was the means of attracting attention to the advantages of this portion
of Oregon for settlement. A chart of Coos Bay entrance was made by Nagliel,
which was sufficiently correct fur sailing purposes, and the harbor was
favorably reported upon by Miller.57
On the 28th of
January the schooner Juliet, Captain Collins, was driven ashore near Yaquina
Bay, the crew and passengers being compelled to remain upon the stormy coast
until by aid of an Indian messenger horses could be brought from the
Willamette to transport them to that more hospitable region.53 While
Collins was detained, which was until the latter part of March, he occupied a
portion of his time in exploring Yaquina Bay, finding it navigable for vessels
drawing from six to eight feet of water: but the
O o 7
entrance was a bad
one. In the bay were found oysters and clams, while the adjacent land was
deemed excellent. Thus by accident59 as well as effort the secrets
of the coast country were brought to light, and
66 The
Nassau was wrecked at the entrance to the Umpqua a few months later. Or.
Statesman, Sept. 18, 1852. From 1850 to 1852 five vessels were lost at this
place, the Bostonian, Nassau, Almira, Orchilla, and Caleb Curtes,
57 32d Cong., Sess., //. S. Ex. Doc. 1, pt.
ii. 103-9.
58 Dr McLoughlin, Hugh Burns, W. C.
Griswold, and W. H. Barnhart responded to the appeal of the shipwrecked, and
furnished the means of their rescue from suffering. Or. Statesman, March 2d and
April 6, 1852.
69 Of marine disasters there seem to have
been a great number in 1851-2. The most appalling was of the steam propeller
General Warren, Captain Charles Thompson, which stranded on Clatsop spit, after
passing out of the Columbia, Jan. 28, 1852. The steamer was found to be leaking
badly, and being put about could not make the river again. She broke up almost
immediately after striking the sands, and by daylight next morning there was
only enough left of the wreck to afford standing room for her passengers and
crew. A boat, the only one remaining, was despatched in charge of the bar pilot
to
although the
immigration of 1851 was not more than a third as much as that of the previous
year, there were people enough running to and fro, looking for new enterprises,
to impart an interest to each fresh revelation of the resources of the
territory.
Astoria for
assistance. On its return nothing could be found but some floating fragments
of the vessel. Not a life was saved of the 52 persons on board. Or. Statesman,
Feb. 10th and 24, 1852j Id., March 9, 1852; Swan'* Ar. W. Coast,
259j Portland Oregonian, Feb. 7, 1852; S. F. Alta, Feb. 16, 1852.
INDIAN AFFAIRS.
1851.
Politics—Election
op a Delegate—Extinguishment of Inman Titles— Indian Superintendents and Agents
Appointed—Kindness or the Great
Father at Washington—Appropriations of Congress— Frauds Arising from the
System—Easy Expenditure of Government Money—Unpopularity of Human
Sympathy—Efficiency of Superintendent Dart—Thirteen Treaties Effected—Lane
among the Rogue River Indians and in the Mines—Divers Outrages and
Retaliations—Military Affairs—Rogue River War—The Stronghold—Battle of Table
Rock—Death of Stuart—Kearney's Prisoners.
Lane was not a
skilful politician and finished orator like Thurston, though he had much
natural ability,1 and had the latter been alive, notwithstanding his
many misdeeds, Lane could not so easily have secured the election as delegate
to congress. It was a personal rather than a party matter,2 though
a party spirit developed rapidly after Lane’s nomination, chiefly because a
majority of the people were democrats,3 and
1 ‘ Gen. Lane is a man of a high order of
original genius. He ia not selfmade, but God-made. He was educated nowhere.
Nobody but a man of superior natural capacity, without education, could have
maintained himself among men from early youth as he did.’ Grover’s Pub. Life,
MS., 81. We may hereby infer the idea intended to be conveyed, however
ill-fitting the words.
2 Says W. W. Buck: ‘Before 1851 there were
no nominations made. In 1851 they organized into political parties as whigs and
democrats. Before that men of prominence would think of some one, and go to him
and find out if he would serve. The knowledge of the movement would spread, and
the foremost candidate get elected, while others ran scattering.’ Enterprises,
MS., 13.
3 Jesse Applegate, who had been mentioned
as suitable for the place, wrote to the Spectator March 14th: ‘ The people of
the southern frontier, of which I am one, owe to Gov. Lane a debt of gratitude
too strong for party prejudices to cancel, and too great for time to erase.
..Rifle in hand he gal-
• (205)
their favorites,
Thurston and Lane, wore democrats, while the administration was whig and not in
sympathy with them.
The movement for Lane
began in February, the earliest intimation of it appearing in the Spectator of
March Gtli, after which he was nominated in a public meeting at Lafayette. Lane
himself did uot appear on the ground uniil the last of April, and the news of
Thurston’s death arriving within a few days, Lane’s name was immediately put
forward by every journal in the territory. But he was not, for all that, without
an opponent. The mission party nominated W. JL Willson, who from a whajing-ship
cooper and lay Methodist had come to be called doctor and been given places of
trust. His supporters were the defenders of that part of Thurston’s policy
which was generally condemned. There was nothing of consequence at issue
however, and as Lane was facile of tongue4 and clap-trap, he was
elected by a majority of 1,832 with 2,917 votes cast.5 As soon as
the returns were all in, Lane set out again for the mines, where he was just in
time to be of service to the settlers of Hogue River Valley.
Immediately upon the
passage of an act by congress, extinguishing Indian titles west of the Cascade
Mountains in 1850, the president appointed superintendent of Indian affairs,
Anson Dart of Wisconsin, who arrived early in October, accompanied by P. C.
Dart, his secretary. Three Indian agents were appointed
lantly braved the
floods and storms of winter to save our property, •wives, and daughters from
the rapine of a lawless soldiery,’ which statement, howsoever it pictures
public sentiment, smacks somewhat of the usual electioneering exaggeration.
■' He had a
particularly happy faculty for what we would call domestic electioneering. He
did not mi.ke speeches, but would go around and talk with families. They used
to tell this story about him, and I think it is true, that what he got at one
place, in the way of seeds or choice articles, he distributed at tho next
place. He brought these, with candies, and always kissed the children.’
Strong’s Hint. Or., MS., 11.
° Lane’x
Autobiography, MS., 02; Or. Spectator, July 1, 1851; Amer. Almanac, 1852, 223;
Tribune Almanac, 1852, 51; Overland Monthly, i. 37.
at the same time,
namely: A. G. Henry of Illinois,6 II. H. Spalding, and Elias
Wampole. Dart’s instructions from the commissioner, under date of July 20,
1850, were in general, to govern himself by the instructions furnished to Lane
as ex-officio superintendent,7 to be modified according to
circumstances. The number of agents and subagents appointed had been in
accordance with the recommendation of Lane, and to the information contained in
Lane’s report he was requested to give particular attention, as well as to the
suppression of the liquor traffic, and the enforcement of the penalties
provided in the intercourse act of 1834, and also as amended in 1847, making
one or two years’ imprisonment a punishment for furnishing Indians with
intoxicating drink.8 A feature of the instructions, showing
Thurston’s hand in this matter, was the order not to purchase goods from the
Hudson’s Bay Company for distribution among the Indians, but that they be
purchased of American merchants, and the Indians taught that it was from the
American government they received such benefits. It was also forbidden in the
instructions that the company should have trading posts within the limits of
United States territory,8 the superintendent being required to proceed
with them in accordance with the terms of the act regulating intercourse with
the Indians.
“Thurston, who was
nra^h opposed to appointing men from the east, wrote to Oregon: ‘Dr Henry of
Illinois was appointed Indian agent, held on to it a while, drew 5750 under the
pretence of going to Oregon, and then resigned, leaving the government minus
that sum Upou his resigning Mr Simeon Francis was nominated, first giving
assurance that he would leave for Oregon, but instead of doing so he is* at
home in Illinois.’ Or. Spectator, April 10, 1851.
^ S 1st
Con;)., 1st 6'ess., S. Doc. 52, 1-7, 154-80.
'It should be here
mentioned, in justice to Thurston, that when the Indian bill was under
consideration by the congressional committees, it was brought to his notice by
the commissioner, that while Lane had given much information on the number and
condition of the Indians, tiie number of agents necessary, the ami innt of
money necessary for agency buildings, agents, expenses, and presents to the
Indians, he had neglected to state what tribes should be bought out, the extent
of their territory, what would be a fair price for the lands, to what place
they should be removed, and whether such lands were vacant. Thurston furnished
this information according to his conception of right, and had the bill framed
for the extinguishment of titles in that part of Oregon, which was rapidly
tilling up with white settlers. See Letter of Orlando Brown, Commissioner, in
Or. Spectator, Oct. 31, 1S50.
s 31st
Cong., 2d Sens., II. Ex. Doc. 1, 140.
As to the attitude of
government toward the Indians there was the usua’ political twaddle. An
important object to be aimed at, the commissioner said, was the reconciling of
differences between tribes. Civilized people may tight, but not savages. The
Indians, should be urged to engage in agricultural pursuits, to raise grain,
vegetables, and stock of all kinds; and to encourage them, small premiums might
be offered for the greatest quantity of produce, or number of cattle and other
farm animals. With regard to missionaries among the Indians, they were to be
encouraged without reference to denomination, and left free to use the best
means of christianizing. The sum of twenty thousand dollars was advanced to the
superintendent, of which five thousand was to be applied to the erection of
houses for the accommodation of himself and agents, four thousand for his own
residence, and the remainder for temporary buildings to be used by the agents
before becoming permanently established. The remainder was for presents and
provisions.
There were further
appointed for Oregon three commissioners to make treaties with the Indians,
John P. Gaines, governor, Alonzo A. Skinner, and Beverly S. Allen; the last
received his commission the 12th of August and arrived in Oregon in the early
part of February 1851. The instructions were general, the department being
ignorant of the territory, except that it extended from the 42d to the 49th
parallel, and was included between the Cascade Mountains and the Pacific Ocean.
The object of the government it was said was to extinguish the Indian titles,
and remove the complaint of the settlers that they could acquire no perfect
titles to their claims before the Indians had been quieted. They were advised
therefore to treat first with the Indians in the Willamette Valley, and with
each tribe separately.10
10 ‘ The
maximum price given for Indian lands has been ten cents per acre, but this lias
been fur small quantities of great value from their contiguity to
They were to fix upon
an amount of money to be paid, and agree upon an annuity not to exceed five per
cent of the whole amount. It was also advised that money be not employed, but
that articles of use should be substituted; and the natives be urged to accept
such things as would assist them in becoming farmers and mechanics, and to
secure medical aid and education. If any money remained after so providing it
might be expended for goods to be delivered annually in the Indian country. The
sum of twenty thousand dollars was to be applied to these objects; fifteen
thousand to be placed at the disposal of Governor Gaines, at the sub-treasury,
San Francisco, and to be accounted for by vouchers; and five thousand to be
invested in goods and sent round Cape Horn for distribution among the Indians.
The commissioners were allowed mileage for themselves and secretary at the
rate of ten cents a mile, together with salaries of eight dollars a day during
service for each of the commissioners, and five dollars for the secretary. They
were also to have as many interpreters and assistants as they might deem
necessary, at a proper compensation, and their travelling expenses paid.11
Such was the
flattering prospect under which the Indian agency business opened in Oregon.
Truly, a government must have faith in its servants to place such temptations
in their way. Frauds innumerable were the result; from five hundred to five
thousand dollars would be paid to the politicians to secure an agency, the
returns from which investment, with hundreds per cent profit, must be made by
systematic peculations and pilferings, so that not one quarter of the moneys
appropriated on behalf of the Indians
the States; and it is
merely mentioned to show that some important consideration has always been
involved when so large a price has been given. It is not for a moment to be
supposed that any such consideration can be involved in any purchases to be
made by you, and it is supposed a very small portion of that price will be
required.’ A. S. Loughery, Acting Commissioner, in 31st Cong., 2d Sess., H. Ex.
Doc. 1, 147.
1131st
Cong., 2d JSess., II. Ex. Doc. 1, 145-51; HayesJ Scraps,
iv. 9-10.
Hist.
Ob., Vol. II. 14
would be expended for
their benefit. Perhaps the public conscience was soothed by this show of
justice, as pretentious as it was hollow, and the emptiness of which was patent
to every one; but it would have been in as good taste, and far more manly and
honest, to have shot down the aboriginals and seized their lands without these
hypocrisies and stealings, as was frequently done.
()ften the people
were worse than the government or its agents, so that there was little
inducement for the latter to be honest. In the present instance the
commissioners were far more just and humane than the settlers themselves. It is
true they entered upon their duties in Aprd 1851 with a pomp and circumstance
in no wise in keeping with the simple habits of the Oregon settlers; with
interpreters, clerks, commissaries, and a retinue of servants they established
themselves atCliampoeg, to which place agents brought the so-called chiefs of
the wretched tribes of the Yv’il- lamette; but they displayed a heart and a
humanity in their efforts which did them honor. Of the San- tiam band of the
Calapooyas they purchased a portion of the valley eighty miles in length by
twenty in breadth; of the Tualatin branch of the same nation a tract of country
fifty miles by thirty hi extent, these lands being among the best in the
valley, and already settled upon by white men. The number of Indians of both
sexes and all ages making a claim to this extent of territory was in the former
instance one hundred and fifty-five and in the latter sixty- five.
The commissioners
were unable to induce the Calapooyas to remove east of the Cascade mountains,
as had been the intention of the government, their refusal resting upon
reluctance to leave the graves of their ancestors, and ignorance of the means
of procuring a livelihood in any country but their own. To these
representations Gaines and his associates lent a sympathizing ear, and allowed
the Indians to select reser
vations within the
valley of tracts of land of a few miles in extent situated upon the lower
slopes of the Cascade and Coast ranges, where game, roots, and berries could be
procured with ease.12
As to the
instructions of the commissioner at Washington, it was not possible to carry
them out. Schools the Indians refused to have; and from their experience of
them and their effects on the young I am quite sure the savages were right.
Only a few of the Tualatin band would consent to receive farming utensils, not
wishing to have habits of labor forced upon them with their annuities. They
were anxious also to be paid in cash, consenting reluctantly to accept a
portion of their-annuities in clothing and provisions.
In May four other
treaties were concluded with the Luekiamute, Calapooyas, and Molallas, the
territory thus secured to civilization comprising about half the Willamette
Valley.13 The upper and lower Molallas received forty-two thousand
dollars, payable in twenty annual instalments, about one third to be in cash
and the remainder in goods, with a present on the ratification of the treaties
of a few rifles and horses for the head men. Like the Calapooyas they steadily
refused to devote any portion of their annuities to educational purposes, the
general sentiment of these western Indians being that they had but a little
time to live, and it was useless to trouble themselves about education, a
sentiment not wholly Indian, since it kept Europe in darkness for a thousand
years.14
12 No mention is made of the price paid for
these lands, nor have I seen these treaties in print.
13 This is the report of the commissioners,
though the description of tlie landa purchased is different in the Spectator of
.May 15, 1851, where it is said that the purchase included all the east side of
the valley to the head-watera of the Willamette.
1 * The
native eloquence, touched and made pathetic by the despondency of the natives,
being quoted in public by the commissioners, subjected them to the ridicule of
the anti-administration journal, as for instance: ‘In this city Judge Skinner
spent days, and for aught we know, weeks, in interpreting Slacum’s jargon
speeches, while Gaines, swelling with consequence, pronounced them more
eloquent than the orations of Demosthenes or Cicero, and peddled
In order to give tlie
Indians the reservations they desired it was necessary to include some tracts
claimed by settlers, which would either have to be vacated, the government
paying for their improvements, or the settlers compelled to live among the
Indians, an alternative not likely to commend itself to either the settlers
or the government.
A careful summing-up
of the report of the commissioners showed that they had simply agreed to pay
annuities to the Indians for twenty years, to make them presents, and to build
them houses, while the Indians still occupied lands of their own choosing in
portions of the valley already being settled by white people, and that they
refused to accept teachers, either religious or secular, or to cultivate the
ground. Bv these terms all the hopeful themes of the commissioner at Washington
fell to the ground. And yet the government was begged to ratify the treaties,
because failure to do so would add to the distrust already felt by the Indians
from their frequent disappointments, and make any further negotiations
difficult.15
About the time the
last of the six treaties was concluded information was received that congress,
by act of the 27tli of February, had abolished all special Indian commissions,
and transferred to the superintendent the power to make treaties. All but
three hundred dollars of the twenty thousand appropriated under the advice of
Thurston for this branch of the service had been expended by Gaines in five
weeks of absurd magnificence at Champoeg, the paltry remainder being handed
over to Superintendent Dart, who received no pay for the extra service with
which to defray the expense of making further treaties. Thus ended the first
essay of congress to settle the question of title to Indian lands.
them about the town
This ridiculous farce made the actors the laughing* stock of the boyst, and
even of the Indiana.’ Ur. Statesman, Nov. 6, 1S52.
u Report of
Commissioners, in SSd Cong., 1st Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 2, pt. iii. 471.
Dart did not find
liis office a sinecure. The area of the country over which his superintendency
extended was so great that, even with the aid of more agents, I’ttle could be
accomplished in a season, six months of the year only admitting of travel in
the unsettled portions of the territory. To add to his embarrassment, the
three agents appointed had left him almost alone to perform the duty which
should have been divided among several assistants,16 the pay offered
to agents being so small as to be despised by men of character and ability who
had their living to earn.
About the 1st of June
1851 Dart set out to visit the Indians east of the Cascade Mountains, who since
the close of the Cayuse war had maintained a friendly attitude, but who hearing
that it was the design to send the western Indians among them were becoming
uneasy. Their opposition to having the sickly and degraded Willamette natives
in their midst was equal to that of the white people. Neither wore they willing
to come to any arrangement by which they would be compelled to quit the couutry
which each tribe for itself called its own. Dart promised them just treatment,
and that they should receive pay for their lands. Having selected a site for an
agency building on the Umatilla he proceeded to Waiilatpu and Lapwai, as
instructed, to determine the losses sustained by the Presbyterians, according
to the instructions of government.17
16 Dart complained in hia report that
Spalding, who had been assigned to the Umpqua country, had visited it but twice
during the year, and asked his removal and the substitution of E. A. Starling.
The latter was first stationed at the mouth of the Columbia, and soon after
sent to Puget Sound. Wam- pole arrived in Oregon in July 1851, was sent to
Umatilla, and removed in less than three months for violating orders and
trading with the Indians. Allen, appointed after Henry and Francis, also
finally declined, when Skinner accepted the place too late in the year to accomplish
anything. A. Van Dusen, of Astoria, had been appointed subagent, but declined;
then Shortess had accepted the position. Walker had been appointed to go among
the Spokanes, but it was doubtful if $750 a year would be accepted. Finally J.
L. Parrish, also a subagent, was the only man who had proven efficient and
ready to perform the services required of him. 32d Cong., 1st Sess., H. Ex.
Doc. 2, pt. iii. 473; IT. S. Ev. If. B. Co. Claims, 27; Amer, Almanac, 1851,
113; Id., 1852, 116; Dunniway’s Capt. Gray's Company, 162.
17 The claims against the government for the
destruction of the missions was large in the estimation of Dart, who does not
state the amount.
The Cayuses expressed
satisfaction that the United States cherished no hatred toward them for their
past misdeeds, and received assurances of fair treatment in the future, sealed
with a feast upon a fat ox. At Lapwai the same promises were given and
ceremonies observed. The only thing worthy of remark that I find in the report
of Dart’s visit to eastern Oregon is the fact mentioned that the Cayuses had
dwindled from their former greatness to be the most insignificant tribe in the
upper country, there being left but one hundred and twenty-six, of whom
thirty-eight only were men; and the great expense attending his visit,1*
the results of which were not what the government expected, if indeed any body
knew what was expected. The government was hardly prepared to purchase the
whole Oregon territory, even at the minimum price of three cents an acre, and
it was dangerous policy holding out the promise of something not likely to be
performed.
As to the
Presbyterian mission claims, if the board had been paid what it cost to have
its property appraised, it would have been all it was entitled to, and particularly
since each station could hold a section of land under the organic act. And as
to the claims of private individuals for property destroyed by the Cayuses,
these Indians not being in receipt of annuities out of which the claims could
be taken, there was no way in which they could be collected. Neither was the
agency erected of any benefit to the Indians, because the agent, Wampole, soon
violated the law, was removed, and the agency closed.
18 There were 11 persons in Part’s
party—himself and secretary, 2 interpreters, drawing together $11 a day; 2
carpenters, $12; 3 packers, $15; 2 cooks, $6. The secretary received $5 a day,
making the wages of the party $50 daily at the start, in addition to the
superintendent’s salary. Transportation to The Dalles cost $400. At The Dalles
another man with 20 horses was hired at $15 a day, and 2 wagons with oxen at
$12; the passage from Portland to Umatilla costing $1,500 besides subsistence.
And this was only the beginning of expenses. The lumber for the agency building
at Umatilla had to be carried forty miles at an enormous cost; the beef which
feasted the Cayuses cost $80, and other things in proportion. 32d Oong., 1st
Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 2, pt. iii.
Concerning that part
of his instructions to encourage missionaries as teachers among the Indians,
Dart had little to say; for which reason, or in revenge for his dismissal,
Spalding represented that no American teachers, but only Catholics and
foreigners were given permission to enter the Indian country.19 But
as his name was appended to all the treaties made while he was agent, with one
exception, he must have been as guilty as any of excluding American teachers.
The truth was that Dart promised the Indians of eastern Oregon that they should
not be disturbed in their religious practices, but have such teachers as they
preferred.20 This to the sectarian Protestant mind was simply
atrocious, though it seemed only politic and just to the unbiassed
understanding of the superintendent.
With regard to that
part of liis instructions relating to suppressing the establishments of the
Hudson’s Bay Company in Oregon, he informed the commissioner that he found the
company to have rights which prompted him to call the attention of the
government to the subject before he attempted to interfere with them, and
suggested the propriety of purchasing those rights instead of proceeding
against British traders as criminals, the only accusation that could be brought
against them being that they sold better goods to the Indians for less money
than American traders.
And concerning the
intercourse act prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors to the natives,
Dart remarked that although a good deal of liquor was con
19 This charge being deemed inimical to the
administration, the President denied it in a letter to the Philadelphia Daily
Sun, April 1852. The matter is referred to in the Or. Statesman, June 15th and
July 3, 1852. See also Horne Missionary, vol. lxxxiv. 276.
20 In 1852 a Catholic priest, E. C.
Chirouse, settled on a piece of land at Walla Walla, making a claim under the
act of congress establishing the territorial government of Washington. He
failed to make his tinal pro' >t according to law and the notification of
liirt intentions was not filed till 1SG0, when Archbishop Tilanchet made a
notification; but it appeared that whatever title there was, was in Chirouse.
He relinquished it to the U. S. in IS02, but it was then too late for the
Catholic church to set up a claim, and the archbishop’s notification was not
allowed. Portland Oregonian, March 10, 1872.
sumed in Oregon, in
some localities the Indians used less in proportion than any others in the
United States, and referred to the difficulty of obtaining evidence against
liquor sellers on account of the law of Oregon excluding colored witnesses, lie
also gave it as his opinion that except the Shoshones and llogue River Indians
the aborigines of Oregon were more peaceable than any of the uncivilized
tribes, but that to keep in check these savages troops were indispensable, recommending
that a company be stationed in the Shoshone country to protect the next year’s
immigration.121 Altogether Dart seems to have been a fair and
reasonable man, who discharged his duty under unfavorable circumstances with
promptness and good sense.
21 Eighteen thousand dollars ■n orth of
property wa« stolon by the Shoshones in 1851; many
w hite men were killed, and more wounded. Ilutchiaon Clark, uf Illinois, was
driving, in advance of his company, with his mother, sister, and a j oung
brother in the family carnage near Raft River 40 miles west of Fort Hall, when
tho party was attacked, his mother and brother killed, and Miss Grace Clark,
after being outraged and shot through the body and wrist, was thrown over a
precipice to die. She alighted on ii bank of sand which broke the force of the
fall. Tho savages then rolled stones over after her, some of which struck and
wounded her, notwithstanding all of which she survived and readied Oregon
alive. She was married afterward to a Hr Vandervert, and settled on the coast
branch uf the Willamette. She died Feb. 20, 1875. When the train came up and
discovered the bloody deed and that the Indians had driven off over twenty
valuable horses, a company was formed, led by Charles Clark, to follow and
chastise them. These were driven back, however, with a loss of one killed and
one wounded. A brother of this Clark family named Thomas had emigrated in 1848,
and was awaiting the arrival of his friends when the outrages occurred. Or.
Statesman, Sept. 23, 1851. The same band killed Hr Miller, from Virginia, and
seriously wounded his daughter. They killed Jackson, a brother-iu-law of
Miller, at the same time, and attacked a train of twenty wagons, led by
Ilarpool, being repulsed with some loss. Other parties were attacked at
different points, and maay persons wounded. Or. Spectator, Sept. 2, 1851;
Barnes' Or. and Cal., MS,, 26. Raymond, superintendent at Fort Hall, said that
HI emigrants had been shot by the Shoshones and their allies the Bannacks. Or.
Statesman, Dec. 9, 1851; S. F. Alta, Sept. 28, 1851. The residents of the
country were at a loss to account for these outrages, so hold on the part of
the savages, and so injurious to the white people. It was said that the decline
of the fur-trade- compelled the Indians to robbery, and that they willingly
availed themselves of an opportunity not only to make good their losses, but to
be avenged for any wrongs, real or imaginary, which they had ever suffered at
the hands of white men. A more obvious reason might be found in the withdrawal
of the influence wielded over them by the Hudson’s Bay Company, who being now
under United States and Oregon law was forbidden to furnish ammunition, ami was
no longer esteemed among the Indians who had nothing to gain by obedience. Some
of the emigrants professed to believe the Indian hostilities directly due to
Mormon influence. David Newsome of the immigration
On returning from
eastern Oregon, Dart visited the mouth of the Columbia in company with two of
his agents, and made treaties with the Indians on both sides of the river, the
tract purchased extending from the Chehalis River on the north to the Yaqui- na
Bay on the south; and from the ocean on the west, to above the mouth of the
Cowlitz. River. For this territory the sum of ninety-one thousand three hundred
dollars was promised, to be paid in ten yearly instalments, in clothing,
provisions, and other necessary articles. Reservations were made on Clatsop
Point, and Woody and Cathlamet islands; and one was made at Shoalwater Bay,
conditioned upon the majority of the Indians removing to that place within one
year, in which case they would be provided with a manual labor school, a lumber
and flouring mill, and a farmer and blacksmith to instruct them in agriculture
and the smith’s art.
Other treaties were
made daring the summer and autumn. The Clackamas tribe, numbering eighty-eight-
persons, nineteen of whom were men, was promised an annuity of two thousand
five hundred dollars for a period of ten years, five hundred in money, and the
remainder in food and clothing.22 The natives of the south-western
coast also agreed to cede a territory extending from the Coquille River to the
southern boundary of Oregon, and from the Pacific Ocean
of 1S51 says: ‘Every
murder, theft, and raid upon us from Fort Laramie to Grande Hondo we could
trace to Mormon influences and plans. I recorded very many instances of thefts,
robberies, and murders on the journey in my journal.’ Portland West Shore, Feb.
1870. I find no ground whatever for tiiis assertion. But whatever the cause,
they were an alarming feature of the time, arid called for government
interference. Hence a petition to congress in the memorial of the legislature
for troops to be stationed at the several posts selected in 1849 or at other
points upon the road; and of a demand ol Lane’s, that the rifle regiment should
be i etumed to Oregon to keep the Indians in cheek. 32d Cong., 1st Sess., Cong.
Globe, lSol-2, i. 507. When Superintendent Dart was in the Nez Perc6 country
that tribe complained of the depredations of the Shoshones, and wished to go
to war. Dart, however, exacted a promise to wait a year, and if then the United
States had not redressed their w rongs, they should be left at liberty to go
against their enemies. If the Nss I’ercSs had been allowed to punish the
Shoshones it would have saved the lives of many innocent persons and a large
amount of government money.
32 Or. Statesman, Aug. 19, 1851; Or.
Spectator, Dee. 2, 1831.
to a line drawn fifty
miles east, eighty miles in length, covering an area of two and a lialf million
acres, most of which was mountainous and heavily timbered, with a few small
valleys on the coast and in the interior,23 for the sum of
twenty-eight thousand five hundred dollars, payable in ten annual instalments,
no part of which was to be paid in money. Thirteen treaties in all were
concluded with different tribes, by the superintendent, for a quantity of laud
amounting to six million acres, at an average cost of not over three cents an
acre.24
In November Dart left
Oregon for "Washington, taking with him the several treaties for
ratification, and to pi'ovide for carrying them out.
The demand for the
office of an Indian agent in western Oregon began in 1849, or as soon as the
Indians learned that white men might be expected to travel through their
country with horses, provisions, and property of various kinds, which they
might be desirous to have. The trade in horses was good in the mines of
California, and Cayuse stock was purchased and driven there by Oregon traders,
who made a large profit.25 Many miners also returned from California
overland, and in doing so had frequent encounters with Indians, generally at
the crossing of Rogue Iliver.26 The ferrying at this place was
performed in canoes, made for the occasion, and which, when used and left, were
stolen by the Indians to compel the next party to make another, the delay
affording opportunity for
23 32d Cong., 1st, Sess., II, Ex. Doc. 2,
pt. iii. 483.
24 After liis return from his expedition
east of the Cascade Range, Dart seemed to have practised an economy which was
probably greatly suggested by the strictures of the democratic press rpon the
proceedings of the previous oommission. ‘All the expense,’he says, referring to
the Coquille country, ‘ of making these treaties, adding the salaries of the
officers of government, while thus engaged, -would mako the cost of the land
less than one cent and a half per acre. 32d Cong., 1st Sess., II. Ex. Doc. 2,
pt. iii. And in the California Courier he says the total cost of negotiating
the whole thirteen treaties was, including travelling expenses, about $3,0C0.
Or. Statesman, Report, Dec. 9, 1831.
‘'‘Honolulu
Friend, Aug. 24, 1850.
S6Hancock’s
Thirteen are, MS.; Johnson’s Ual. and Or., 121-2, 133.
falling on them
should they prove unwary. After several companies had been attacked the miners
turned upon the Indians and became the assailants. And to stop the stealing of
canoes, left for the convenience of those in the rear, some miners concealed
themselves and lay in wait for the thieves, who when they entered the canoe
were shot. However beneficial this may have been for the protection of the
ferry it did not mend matters in a general way. If the Indians had at first
been instigated simply by a desire for plunder,27 they had now
gained from the retaliation of the Americans another motive—revenge.
In the spring of 1850
a party of miners, who had collected a considerable sum in gold-dust in the
placers of California and were returning home, reached the Rogue River,
crossing one day, toward sunset, and encamped about Rock Point. They did not
keep a very careful watch, and a sudden attack caused them to run to cover,
while the Indians plundered the camp of everything of value, including the bags
of gold- dust. But one man, who had his treasure on his person, escaped being
robbed.
It was to settle with
these rogues for this and like transactions that Lane set out in May or June
1850 to visit southern Oregon, as before mentioned. The party consisted of
fifteen white men, and the same number of Klickitats, under their chief
Quatley, the determined enemy of the Rogue River people. Quatley was told what
was expected of him, which was not to fight unless it become necesary, but to
assist in making a treaty. They overtook on the way some cattle-drivers going
to California, who travelled with
27 Barnes’
Or. and Cal., MS., 13. Says Lane, speaking of the chief at Rogue River, over
whom he obtained a strong influence: ‘Joe told me that the first time he shed
white blood, he, with another Indian, discovered lato in the afternoon two
whites on horseback passing through their country. At first they thought these
might be men intending some mischief to their people, but having watched them
to their camp and seen them build their fire for the night, they conceived the
idea of murdering them for the sake of the horses and luggage. This they did,
taking their scalps. After that they always killed any whites they could for
the sake of plunder.’ Autobiography, MS.,
them, glad of an
escort. All were well mounted, with plenty of provisions on pack horses, and
well armed. They proceeded leisurely, and stopped to hunt and dry venison in
the valley of Grave Creek. About the middle of June they arrived at llogue
River, and encamped near the Indian villages, Lane sending word to the
principal chief that he had come to talk with him and his people, and to make a
treaty of peace and friendship. To this message the chief returned answer that
he would come in two days with all his people, unarmed, as Lane stipulated.
Accordingly, the two
principal chiefs and about seventy-five warriors came and crossed to the south
side, where Lane’s company were encamped. A circle was formed, Lane and the
chiefs standing inside the ring. But before the conference began a second band,
as large as the first, and fully armed with bows and arrows, began descending a
neighboring hill upon the camp. Lane told Quatley to come inside the ring, and
stand, with two or three of his Indians, beside the head Rogue River chief. The
new-comers were ordered to lay down their arms and be seated, and the business
of the council proceeded, Lane keeping a sharp lookout, and exchanging
significant glances with Quatley and his party. The occasion of the visit was
then fully explained to the people of Rogue River; they were reminded of their
uniform conduct toward white men, of their murders and robberies, and were told
that hereafter white people must travel through their country in safety; that
their laws had been extended over all that region, and if obeyed every one
could live in peace; and that if the Indians behaved well compensation would be
made them for their lands that might be settled upon, and an agent sent to see
that they had justice.
Following Lane’s
speech, the Rogue River chief addressed, in loud, deliberate tones, his people,
when presently they all rose and raised the war-cry, and those wTho
had arms displayed them. Lane told Quat-
ley to hold fast the
head chief, •whom he had already seized, and ordering his men not to fire, he
sprang with revolver in hand into the line of the traitors and knocked up their
guns, commanding them to be seated and lay down their arms. As the chief was a
prisoner, and Quatley held a knife at his throat, they were constrained to
obey. The captive chief, who had not counted upon this prompt action, and whose
brothers had previously disposed themselves among their people to be ready for
action, finding his situation critical, told them to do as the white chief Lad
said. After a brief consultation they rose again, being ordered by the chief to
retire and not to return for two days, when they should come in a friendly
manner to another council. The Indians then took their departure, sullen and
humiliated, leaving their chief a prisoner in the hands of the white men, by
whom he was secured in such a manner that he could not escape.
Lane used the two
days to impress upon the mind of the savage that he had better accept the
offered friendship, and again gave him the promise of government aid if he
should make and observe a treaty allowing white men to pass safety through the
country, to mine in the vicinity, and to settle in the Rogue River Valley.23
By the time his people returned, he had become convinced that this wTas
his best course, and advised them to accept the terms offered, and live in
peace, which was finally agreed to. But the gold- dust of the Oregon party
the}’ had robbed in the spring was gone past all reclaim, as they had, without
knowing its value, poured it all into the river, at a point where it was impossible
to recover it. Some property of no value was given up; and thus was made the
first
{The
morning after the chief had been made a prisoner his old wife (he had several
others, but said he only loved his first wife} came very cautiously to the bank
of the river opposite, and asked to come over and stay with her chief; that she
did not wish to be free while he was a prisoner. She was told to come and stay,
and was kindly treated.’ Lane's Autobiography, Mb.j 94—5*
treaty with tliis
tribe, a treaty which was observed with passable fidelity for about a year.29
The treaty concluded,
Lane gave the Indians slips of paper stating the fact, and warning white men to
do them no injury. These papers, bearing his signature, became a talisman
among these Indians, who on approaching a white man would hold one of them out
exclaiming, “Jo Lane, Jo Lane,” the only English words they knew. On taking
leave the chief, whose name hereafter by consent of Lane was to be Jo, presented
his friend with a boy slave from the Modoc tribe, who accompanied him to the
Shasta mines to which he now proceeded, the time when his resignation was to
take effect having passed. Here he dug gold, and dodged Indian arrows like any
common miner until the spring of 1851, when he was recalled to Oregon.30
The gold discoveries
of 1850 in the Klamatli Valley caused an exodus of Oregonians thither early in
the following year ; and notwithstanding Lane’s treaty with Chief Jo, great
vigilance was required to prevent hostile encounters with his tribe as well as
with that of the Umpqua Valley south of the canon.31 It
53like
man> another old soldier Lane loved to boast of his exploits. ‘He asked the
interpreter the name of the white chief,’ says the general, ‘and requested me
to come to him as he wanted to talk. As I walked up to him he said, “Mika name
Jo Lane?” I said, “Nawitka,” whiehis “ Yes.” He said, “ I want yon to give me
your name, for,” said ho, “I have seen no man like yon.” L told the interpreter
to say to him that I would give him half my name, but not all; that he should
be called Jo. He was much pleased, anu to the day of his death he was known as
Jo. At his request I named his wife, calling her Sally. They had a son and a
daughter, a lad of fourteen, the girl being about sixteen. She was quite a
young queen in her manner and bearing, and for an Indian quite pretty. I named
the boy Ben, and the girl Mary.’ Lane's Autobiography, MS., 96- 8.
80Sacramento
Transcript, Jan. 14, 1881. Lane had his adventures in the mines, some of which
are well told in his Autobiography. While on Pit River, his Modoc boy, whom he
named John, and who from bting kindly treated became a devoted servant, was the
means of saving his life and that of an Oregonian named Driscoll, pp. 88-108.
31 Cardwell,
in his Emigrant Company, MS., 2-11, gives a history of his personal experience
in travelling through and residing in Southern Oregon in
1851 with 27 others. The Cow-croek Indians
followed and annoyed them for some distance, when tmally one of them was shot
and wounded in the act of taking a horse from camp. At Grra\e creek, in Rogue
River Valley, tnree
soon became evident
that Jo, even if lie were honestly intentioned, could not keep the peace, the
annoying and often threatening demonstrations of his people leading to occasional
overt acts on the part of the miners, a circumstance likely to be construed by
the Indians as sufficient provocation to further and more pronounced hostility.
Some time in May a
young man named Billey was treacherously murdered by two Rogue River Indians,
who, professing to be friendly, were travelling and camping with three white
men. They rose in the night, took Dilley’s gun, the only one in the party, shot
him while sleeping, and made off with the horses and property, the other two
men fleeing back to a company in the rear. On hearing of it thirty men of
Shasta formed a company, headed by one Long, marched over the Siskiyou, and
coming upon a band at the crossing of Rogue River, killed a sub-chief and one
other Indian, took two warriors and two daughters of another chief prisoners,
and held them as hostages for the delivery of the murderers of Dilley. I he
chief refused to give up the guilty Indians, but threatened instead to send a
strong party to destroy Long’s com- _ »
Indians pretending to
bo friendly offered to show his party where gold could be found on the surface
of the ground, telling their story so artfully that cross-questioning of the
three separately did not show any contradiction in their statements, and the
party consented to follow these guides. On a plain, subsequently known As
Harris tlat, the wagons stopped and 11 men were left to guard them, while the
rest of the company kept on with the Indians. They were led some distance up
Applegate creek, where on examining the bars fine gold was found, but none of
the promised nuggets. When the men began prospecting the stream the Indians
collected on the sides of the hills above them, yelling and rolling stones down
the descent. The miners, however, continued to examine the bars up the stream,
a part of them standing guard rifle in hand; working in this manner two days
and encamping in open ground at night. On the evening of the second day their
tormentor!* withdrew in that mysterious manner which precedes an fttack, and
Cardwell’s party fled in haste through the favoring darkness relieved by a late
moon, across the ridge to Rogue River. At Feikins’ ferry, just established,
they found Chief Jo, who Was rather ostentatiously protectiug this tirst white
settlement. While breakfasting a pursuing party of Indians rode up within a
short distance of camp where they were stopped by the presented rifles of the
white men. Jo called this a hunting party ami assured the miners they should
not be molested in passing through the country; on which explanation and
promise >vord was sent to the wagon train, and the company proceeded across
the Siskiyou Mountains to Shasta flat, where they discovered good mines on the
12th of March.
pany, which remained
at the crossing awaiting events.85 It does not appear that Long’s
party was attacked, but several unsuspecting companies suffered in their stead.
These attacks were made chiefly at one place some distance south of the ferry
where Long and his men cncamped.33 The alarm spread throughout, the
southern valleys, and a petition was forwarded to Governor Gaines from the
settlers in the Umpqua for permission to raise a company of volunteers to fight
the Indians. The governor decided to look over the field before granting leave
to the citizens to fight, and repaired in person to the scene of the reported
hostilities.
The Spectator, which
was understood to lean toward Gaines and the administration, as opposed to the
Statesman and democracy, referring to the petition remarked that leave had been
asked to march into the Indian country and slay the savages wherever found;
that the prejudice against Indians was very strong in the mines and daily
increasing; and that no doubt this petition had been sent to the governor to
secure his sanction to bringing a claim against the government for the expenses
of another Indian war.
One of Thurston’s
measures had been the removal
u Or.
Statesman, .Tune 20, 1851; Or. Spectator, June 19, 1851.
33 On the 1st of June 26 men were attacked
at the same place, and an Indian was killed in the skirmish. On the 2d four men
were set upon in this camp and robbed of their horses and property, but escaped
alive to Perkins’ ferry; and on the same day a pack-train belonging to one
Nichols was robbed of a naitiber of animals with their packs, one of the men
being wounded in the lieel by a ball. Two other parties were attacked on the
same day, one of which lost four men. On the 3d of June McBride and 31 others
were attacked in camp south of Rogue River. A. Richardson, of San JosS, California,
James Barlow, Captain Turpin, Jesse Dodson and son, Aaron Payne, Dillard Holman,
Jesse Runnels, l’resley Lovelady, and Richard Sparks of Oregon were in the
company and were commended for bravery. Or. Statesman, June 20, 1851. There
were but 17 guns in the party, while the Indians numbered over 200, having
about the same number of guns besides their bows and arrows, and were led by a
chief known as Chucklehead. The attack was made at daybrt ak, i:nd the battle
lasted four hours and a half, when Chucklehead being killed the Indians
withdrew. It was believed that the Rogue River people lost several killed and
wounded. None of the w hite men were seriously hurt, owing to the bad firing of
the Indians, not yet used to guns, not to mention their station on the top of a
hill. Three horses, a mule, and §1,500 worth of other property and gold-dust
were taken by the Indians.
from the territory of
the United States troops, which after years of private and legislative appeal
were at an enormous expense finally stationed at the different posts according
to the desire of the people. He represented to congress that so far from being
a blessing they were really a curse to the country, which would gladly be rid
of them. To his constituents he said that the cost of maintaining the rifle
regiment was four hundred thousand dollars a year. lie proposed as a substitute
to persuade congress to furnish a good supply of arms, ammunition, and military
stores to Oregon, and authorize the governor to call out volunteers when needed,
both as a saving to the government and a means of profit to the territory, a
part of the plan being to expend one hundred thousand dollars saved in goods
for the Indians, which should be purchased only of American merchants in
Oregon.
Thurston’s plan had
been carried out so far as removing the rifle regiment was concerned, which in
the month of April began to depart in divisions for California, and thence to
Jefferson Barracks;34 leaving on the 1st of June, when Major
Kearney began his march southward with the last division, only two skeleton
companies of artillerymen to take charge of the government property at
Steilacoom, Astoria, Vancouver, and The Dalles. He moved slowly, examining the
country for military stations, and the best route for a military road which
should avoid the Umpqua canon. On arriving at Yoncalla,33 Kearney
!*
Brackett's U. S. Cavalry, 129; Or. Spectator, April 10, 1851; Or. Statesman,
May 30, 1851; 32d Cong., 1st Sess., 11. Ex. Doc. 2, pt. i. 144-53.
3:1 Yoncalla
is a compound of yonc, eagle, and calla or calla-calla, bird or fowl, in the
Indian dialect. It was applied as a name to a conspicuous butte in the Umpqua
Valley, at the foot of which Jesse Applegate made his home, a large and
hospitable mansion, now going to ruin. Applegate agreed to assist Kearney only
in case of a better route than the canon road being discovered, liis men
should put it in condition to be travelled by the immigration that year, to
which Kearney consented, and a detachment of 28 men, under Lieutenant
Williamson, accompanied by Levi Scott as well as Applegate, began the
reconnoissance about the lllth of June, the main bodj of Kearney’s command
travelling the old road. It was almost with satisfaction that Applegate and
Scott found that no better route than the one they opened i.:i 1846 nvuld be
discovered, since it removed the reproach of their Hist. On., Yol. II. 15 1
consulted with Jesse
Applegate, whom he prevailed upon to assist in the exploration of the country
east of the canon, in which they were engaged when the Indian Avar began in
Rogue River Valley.
The exploring party
had proceeded as far as this pass when they learned from a settler at the north
end of the canon, one Knott, of the hostilities, and that the Indians were
gathered at Table Rock, an almost impregnable position about twenty miles east
of the ferry on Rogue River.38 On this information Kearney, with a
detachment of twenty-eight men, took up the march for the Indian stronghold
with the design of dislodging them. A heavy rain had swollen the streams and
impeded his progress, and it was not until the morning of the l7tli of June
that he reached Rogue River at a point five miles distant from Table Rock.
While looking for a ford indications of Indians in the vicinity were
discovered, and Kearney hoped to be able to surprise them. He ordered the
command to fasten their sabres to their saddles to prevent noise, and divided
his force, a part under Captain Walker crossing to the south side of the river
to intercept any fugitives, while the remainder under Captain James Stuart kept
upon the north side.
Stuart soon came upon
the Indians who were prepared for battle. Dismounting his men, wTlio
in their haste left their sabres tied to their saddles, Stuart made a dash upon
the enemy. They met him with equal courage. A brief struggle took place in
which eleven Indians were killed and several wounded. Stuart himself was
matched against a powerful warrior, who had been struck more than once without
enemies
that they were to blame for not finding r better one at that time. None other
has ever been found, though Applegate himself expected when with Kearney to be
able to get a road saving 40 miles of travel. Ewald, in Or. Statesman, July 22,
1851. - k
36 Table Rock is a ilat-topped mountain
overhanging Rogue River. Using the rock as a watch-tower, the Indians in
perfect security had a large extent of country and a long line of road under
their observation, and could determine the strength of any passing company of
travellers and their place of encampment, before sallying forth to the attack.
Or. Statesman, July 22,1851.
meeting his death. As
the captain approached, the savage, though prostrate, let fly an arrow which
pierced him through, lodging in the kidneys, of which wound he died the day
after the battle.37 Captain Peck was also wounded severely, and one
of the troops slightly.
The Indians, wTho
were found to be in large numbers, retreated upon their stronghold, and
Kearney also fell back to wait for the coming-up of lieuten- auts Williamson
and Irvine with a detachment, and the volunteer companies hastily gathered
among the miners.88 Camp was made at the mouth of a tributary of
Rogue River, entering a few miles below Table Rock, which was named Stuart
creek after the dying captain. It was not till the 23d that the Indians wrere
again engaged. A skirmish occurred in the morning, and a four hours’ battle in
the afternoon of that day. The Indians were stationed in a densely wooded
hummock, which gave them the advantage in point of position, while in the
matter of arms the
37 Brackett,
in his XJ. S. Cavalry, calls this officer ‘the excellent and beloved Captain
James Stuart.’ The nature of the wound caused excruciating pain, but his great
regret was that after passing unharmed through six hard battles in Mexico he
shonld die in the wilderness at the hands of an Indian. It i3 doubtful,
however, if death on a Mexican battle-field would have brought with it a more
lasting renown. Stuart Creek on which he was interred — camp being made over
his grave to obliterate it—and the warm place kept for him in the hearts of
Oregonians will perpetuate his memory. Cardwell's Emigrant Company, MS., 14;
Or. Statesman, July 8, 1851; S. F. AUa> July 16, 1851; State Rights Democrat
> Dec. 15th and 22, 1876.
88 Cardwell
relates that his company were returning from Josephine creek— named after a
daughter of Kirby who founded Kirbyville—on their way to Yreka, when they met
Applegate at the ferry on Rogue River, who suggested that it ‘ would be proper
enough to assist the government troops and Lamer- ick’s volunteers to clean out
the Indians in Rogue River Valley. * Thirty men upon this suggestion went to
Willow Springs on the 16th, upon the understanding that Kearney would make an
attack next day near the mouth of Stuart’s creek, when it was thought the
Indians would move in this direction, and the volunteers could engage them
until the troops came up. ‘ At daylight the following morning,* says Cardwell,
‘we heard the firing commence. It was kept up quite briskly for about fifteen
minutes. There was a terrible yelling and crying by the Indians, and howling of
dogs during the battle.5 Emigrant Company, MS., 12; Crane's Top.
Mem., MS., 40. The names of Applegate, Scott, Boone, T’Vault, Armstrong,
Blanchard, and Colonel Tranor from California, are mentioned in Lane’s
correspondence in the Or. Statesman July 22, 1851, as ready to assist the
troops. I suppose this to be James W. Tranor, formerly of the New Orleans
press, ‘an adventurous pioneer and brilliant newspaper writer,’ who was
afterward killed by Indians while crossing Pit River. Oakland Transcript, Dec.
7, 1872.
troops were better
furnished. In these battles the savages again suffered severely, and on the
other side several were wounded but none killed.
While these events were
in progress both Gaines and Lane were on their way to the scene of action. The
governor’s position was not an enviable one. Scarcely were the riflemen beyond
the Willamette when he was forced to write the president representing the
imprudence of withdrawing the troops at this time, no provision having been
made by the legislature for organising the militia of the territory, or for
meeting in any way the emergency evidently arising.39 The reply
which in due time he received was that the rifle regiment had been withdrawn,
first because its services were needed on the frontier of Mexico and Texas, and
secondly because the Oregon delegate had assured the department that its
presence in Oregon was not needed. In answer to the governor’s suggestion that
a post should be established in southern Oregon, the secretary gave it as his
opinion that the commanding officer in California should order a recon-
noissance in that part of the country, with a view to selecting a proper site
for such a post without loss of time. But with regard to troops, there were
none that could be sent to Oregon; nor could they, if put en route at that
time, 't being already September, reach there in time to meet the emergency.
The secretary therefore suggested that companies of militia might be organized,
which could be mustered into service for short periods, and used in
conjunction with the regular troops in the pursuit of Indians, or as the
exigencies of the service demanded.
Meanwhile Gaines,
deprived entirely of military support, endeavored to raise a. volunteer
company at Yon- calla to escort him over the dangerous portion of the route to
Rogue River; but most of the men of Umpqua, having either gone to the mines or
to reenforce
19 32d
Conq., 1st Sees., H. Ex. iJoc. 2, pt. i. 143; Or. Sptdatur, Aug. 12, 1851.
Kearney, tins was a
difficult undertaking, detaining him so that it was the last of the month
before he reached his destination. Lane having already started south to look
after his mining property before quitting Oregon for Washington arrived at the
Umpqua canon on the 21st, where he was met by a party going north, from whom he
obtained the news of the battle of the 17th and the results, with the
information that more fighting was expected. Hastening forward with his party
of about forty men he arrived at the foot of the Rogue River mountains on the
night of the 22d, where he learned from an express rider that Kearney had by
that time left cam}) on Stuart creek with the intention of making a night march
in order to strike the Indians at daybreak of the 23d.
He set out to join
Kearney, but after a hard day’s ride, being unsuccessful, proceeded next
morning to Camp Stuart with the hope of learning something of the movements of
Kearney’s command. That evening Scott and T’Vault came to camp with a small
party, for supplies, and Lane returned with them to the army, riding from nine
o’clock in the evening to two o’clock in the morning, and being heartily
welcomed both by Kearnpy and the volunteers.
Early on the 25tli,
the command moved back down the river to overtake the Indians, who had escaped
during the night, and crossing the river seven miles above the ferry found the
trail leading up Sardine creek, which being followed brought them up with the
fugitives, one of whom was killed, while the others scattered through the woods
like a covey of quail in the grass. Two days were spent in pursuing and taking
prisoners the women and children, the men escaping. On the 27th the army
scoured the country from the ferry to Table Rock, returning in the evening to
Camp Stuart, when the campaign was considered as closed. Fifty Indians had
been killed and thirty prisoners taken, while the loss to the white warriors,
since the first battle, was a few wounded.
The Indians had at
the first been proudly defiant, Chief Jo boasting that he had a thousand
warriors, and could keep that number of arrows in the air continually. But
their pride had suffered a fall which left them apparently humbled. They
complained to Lane, whom they recognized, talking across the river in
stentorian tones, that white men had come on horses in great numbers, invading
every portion of their country. They were afraid, they said, to lie down to
sleep lest the strangers should be upon them. They wearied of war and wanted peace.40
There was truth as well as oratorical effect in their harangues, for just at
this time their sleep was indeed insecure*; but it was not taken into account
by them that they had given white men this feeling of insecurity of which they
complained.
Now that the fighting
was over Kearney was anxious to resume his march toward California, but was
embarrassed with the charge of prisoners. The governor had not yet arrived; the
superintendent of Indian affairs was a great distance off in another part of
the territory; there was no place where they could be confined iij Rogue River
valley, nor did lie know of any means of sending them to Oregon City. But he
was determined not to release them until they had consented to a treaty of
peace. Sooner than do that he would take them with him to California and send
them back to Oregon by sea. Indeed he had proceeded with them to within
twenty-five miles of Shasta Butte, a mining town afterward named Yreka,41
when Lane, who when his services were no longer needed in the field had
continued his journey to Shasta Valley, again came to his relief by offering to
escort the prisoners to Oregon City whither he was about to return, or to
deliver them to the governor or super-
40 Letter of
Lane, in Or. Statesman, .Tulv 22, 1851.
11 It is
said that the Indians called Mount Shasta Yee-ka, and that the miners having
caught something of Spanish orthographj and pronunciation changed it to Yreka;
hence Shasta Butte city became Yreka. E. Steele, in Or. Council, Jour. 1857-8,
app. 44.
intendent of Indian
affairs wherever he might find them. Lieutenant Irvine,42 from whom
Lane learned Kearney’s predicament, carried Lane’s proposition to the major,
and the prisoners were at once sent to his care, escorted by Captain Walker.
Lane’s party43 set out immediately for the north, and on the 7th of
July delivered their charge to Governor Gaines, who had arrived at the ferry,
where he was encamped with fifteen men waiting for his interpreters to bring
the Rogue River chiefs to a council, his success in which undertaking wTas
greatly due to his possession of their families. Lane then hastened to Oregon
City to embark for the national capital, having added much to his reputation
with the people by his readiness of action in this first Indian war west of the
Cascade Mountains, as well as in the prompt arrest of the deserting riflemen in
the spring of 1850. To do, to do quickly, and generally to do the thing
pleasing to the people, of whom he always seemed to be thinking, was natural
and easy for him, and in this lay the secret of his popularity.
When Gaines arrived
at Rogue River he found Kearney had gone, not a trooper in the country, and the
Indians scattered. He made an attempt to collect them for a council, and
succeeded, as I have intimated, by means of the prisoners Lane brought him, in
inducing about one hundred, among whom .were eleven head men, to agree to a
peace. By the terms of the treaty, which was altogether informal, his commission
having been withdrawn, the Indians placed
42 Irvine, who was with Williamson on a
topographical expedition, had an adventure before he was well out of the Shasta
country with two Indians and a Frenchman who took him prisoner, bound him to a
tree, and inflicted some tortures upon him. The Frenchman who was using the
Indians for his own purposes finally sent them away 011 some pretence, and
taking the wTatch and valuables belonging to Irvine sat dowrn
by the camp-fire to count his spoil. While thus engaged the lieutenant
succeeded in freeing himself from his bonds, and rushing upon the fellow struck
him senseless for a moment. O11 recovering himself the Frenchman struggled
desperately with his former prisoner but was finally killed and Irvine escaped.
Or. Statesman, Aug. 5, 1851. _
43 Among Lane’s company were Daniel Waldo,
Hunter, and Rust of Kentucky, and Simonson of Indiana.
themselves under the
jurisdiction and protection of the United States, and agreed to restore all the
property stolen at any time from white persons, in return' for which promises
of good behavior they received back their wives and children and any property
taken from them. There was nothing in the treaty to prevent the Indians, as
soon as they were reunited to their families, from resuming their hostilities;
and indeed it was well known that there were two parties amongst them—one in
favor of war and the other opposed to it, but the majority for it. Though so
severely punished, the head chief of the war party refused to treat with
Kearney, and challenged him to further combat, after the battle of the 23d. It
was quite natural therefore that the governor should qualify his belief that
they would observe the treaty, provided an efficient agent and a small military
force could be sent among them. And it was no less natural that the miners and
settlers should doubt the keeping of the compact, and believe in a peace procured
by the rifle.
PLAUSIBLE
PACIFICATION.
185)-1852.
Officers and Indian
Agents at Poet Orford—Attitude of the Co-
quille.-1—U. S. Troops Ordered out—Soldiers as
Indian-fighters— The Savages too Much for Totm—Something or Scarface and th*
Shastas—Steele Secures a Conference—Action of Superintendent Skinner—Much Ado
about Nothing—Some Fighting—An Insect re 1'bace—Moke Troops Ordered to
Vancouver.
General Hitchcock,
commanding the Pacific division at Benicia, California, on hearing Kearny’s account
of affairs between the Indians and the miners, made a visit to Oregon; and
ha\ing been persuaded that Port Orford was the proper point for a garrison,
transferred Lieutenant Kautz and his company of twenty men from Astoria, where
the governor had declared they wTere of no use, to Port Orford,
where he afterward complained they were worth no more. At the same time the
superintendent of Indian affairs, with agents Parrish and Spalding, repaired to
tlio southern coast to treat if possible with its people. They took passage on
the propeller Seagull, from Portland, on the 12th of September, 1851, T’Vault’s
party being at that time in the mountains looking for a road. The Seagull
arrived at Port Orford on the 14th, two days before T’Vault and Brush were returned
to that place, naked and stiff with wounds, by the charitable natives of Cape
Blanco.
The twofold policy of
the United States made it the duty of the superintendent to notice the murderous
" (233)
conduct of the
Ooquilles. As Dart had como to treat, ho did not wish to appear as an avenger;
neither did he feel secure as conciliator. It was at length decided to employ
the Cape Blanco native, who undertook to ascertain the whereabouts, alive or
dead, of the seven men still missing of the T'Vault party. This he did by
sending two women of his tribe to the Coquille River, where the killing of
five, and probable escape of the rest, was ascertained. The women interred the
mangled bodies in the sand.
The attitude of the
Coquilles was not assuring. To treat with them while they harbored murderers
would not do; and how to make them give them up without calling on the military
puzzled the superintendent. Finally Parrish, whose residence among the Clatsops
had given him some knowledge of the coast tribes, undertook to secure hostages,
but failed.1 Dart returned to Portland about the 1st of October,
leaving his interpreter with Kautz.
Between the visits of
Governor Gaines to Rogue River and Dart to Port Orford, disturbances had been
resumed in the former region. Gaines had agreed upon a mutual restitution of
property or of its value, which was found not to work well, the miners being as
much dissatisfied as the Indians. From this reason, and because the majority of
the Rogue River natives were not parties to the treaty, not many weeks had
elapsed after Gaines returned to Oregon City before depredations were resumed.
A settler’s cabin was broken into on Grave Creek, and some travellers were
fired 011 from ambush;2 rumors of which reaching the superintendent
before leaving the Willamette, he sent a messenger to request the Rogue River
chiefs to meet him at Port Orford. Ignorance of Indian ways, unpardonable iti a
superintendent, could alone have caused so great a blunder. Not only did they
refuse thus to go into their neighbor’s territory,
1 Or.
Anecdotes, MS., 58-01
a Or.
Statesman, Sept. 2, 9, 10, and 30, 1831.
but made the request
an excuse for further disturbances.3 Again, there were white men in
this region who killed and robbed white men, charging their crimes4
upon the savages. Indian Agent Skinner held conferences with several bands at
Rogue River, all of whom professed friendship and accepted presents;5
in which better frame of mind I will leave them and return to affairs at Port
Orford.
When intelligence of
the massacre on the Coquille was received at division headquarters in
California, punishment was deemed necessary, and as I have before mentioned, a
military force was transferred to the Port Orford station. The troops,
commanded by Lieutenant-colonel Casey of the 2d infantry, were portions of
companies E and A, 1st dragoons dismounted, lieutenants Thomas Wright and
George Stoneman, and company C with their horses. The dismounted men arrived at
Port Orford October 22d, and the mounted men by the next steamer, five days
later. On the 31st the three companies set out for the mouth of the Coquille,
arriving at their destination November 3d, Colonel Casey and Lieutenant
Stanton leading the mounted men, with Brush, a survivor of the massacre, as
guide, and a few stragglers. The Coquilles were bold and brave. One of them
meeting Wright away from camp attempted to wrest from him his rifl<%and was
shot by that officer for his temerity. On the 5th the savages assembled on the
_ "Two drovers,
Moffat and Evans, taking a herd ot swine to the Shasta, mines, encamped with
two others near the foot of the Siskiyou Mountains, their liogs eating the
acorns used as food by the natives, who demanded a hog in payment. One of them
pointed his gun at a pig as if to shoot, whereupon Moifat < rew his pistol,
and accidentally discharging it, hurt liis hand. Irritated by the pain, Moffat
fired at the Indian, killing him. Another Indian then fired at Moffat, giving
him a mortal wound. In the excitement, Evans and the Indians exchanged shots,
wounds being received on both sides. Moffat was from Philadelphia, where he had
a family. Or. Statesman, Nov.
11 and 25, 1851; Or. Spectator, Jan. 6,
1832.
1 '1 here was at this time on the southern
border of Oregon an organized band of desperadoes, white men, half-breeds, and
Indians, who were the terror of the miners. See Popular Tribunal«, this scries,
passim.
bV. S. Sen.
Doc., 32d coug. 2d sess., i. 433.
north bank to the
number of one hundred and fifty, and by their gesticulations challenged the
troops to battle. The soldiers fired across the river, the Co- quilles
returning the fire with the guns taken from T’Yault’s party ;tf but
no damage was done. Constructing a raft, the main body crossed to the north
side on the 7th in a cold drenching rain, while Stanton proceeded up the south
side, ready to cooperate with Casey when the Indians, who had now retreated up
the stream, should be found. It was soon ascertained that a campaign on the
Coquille was no trilling matter. The savages were nowhere to be found in force,
having fled toward head waters, or a favorable ambush. Marching in order was
not to be thought of; and after several days of wading through morasses, climbing
hills, and forcing a way among the undergrowth by day and sleeping under a
single wet blanket at night, the order to retreat was given. Nothing had been
met with on the route but deserted villages, which were invariably destroyed, together
with the winter’s store of provisions—a noble revenge on innocent women and
children, who must starve in consequence. Returning to the mouth of the river,
Casey sent to Port Orford for boats to be brought overland, on the arrival of
which the campaign was recommenced on a different plan.
In three small boats
were crowded sixty men, in such a manner that their arms could not be used; and
so they proceeded up the river for four days, finding no enemy. At the forks,
the current being strong, the troops encamped. It was now the 20th of November,
and the weather very inclement. On the 21st Casey detailed Stoneman to proceed
up the south branch with one boat and fourteen men; while Wright
f T’Vault
isays there were eight rifles, one musket, ono double-barrelled pistol, one
Sharp’s patent 30 shooting rifle, one Colt’s six-shooter, one brace holster
pistols, ■with
ammunition, and some blankets. Here were fourteen shoot- ing-armti, many of
them repeating, yet the party conld not defend themselves on account of the
suddenness and manner of the attack. Or. Statesman, Oct. 7, 1S0I.
■with a
similar force ascended the north branch, looking for Indians. After advancing
six or eight miles, Stoneman discovered the enemy in force on both banks. A few
shots were fired, and the party returned and reported. In the course of the
afternoon Wright also returned, having been about eighteen miles up the north
branch without finding any foe. On the 22d the whole command set out toward the
Indian camp on the south branch, taking only two boats, with five men in each,
the troops marching up the right bank to within half a mile of the point aimed
at, when Stoneman crossed to the left bank with one company, and the march was
resumed m silence, the boats continuing to ascend with equal caution. The
Indians were found assembled at the junction. When the boats were within a
hundred and fifty yards of them the savages opened fire with guns and arrows.
Wright then made a dash to the river bank, and with yells drove the savages into
concealment. Meanwhile Stoneman was busy picking off certain of the enemy
stationed on the bank to prevent a landing.
The engagement lasted
only about twenty minutes, and the Coquilles had now scampered into the woods,
where it would be useless to attempt to follow them. Fifteen were killed and
many appeared to be wounded. Their lodges and provisions were burned, while
their canoes were carried away. Casey, who was with Wright on the north bank,
joined in the fighting with enthusiasm, telling the men to take good aim and
not throw away shots.7
The troops returned
to the mouth of the river, where they remained for a few days, and then marched
back to Port Orford, and took passage on the Columbia for San Francisco, where
they arrived on the 12th
7 The
ab..ve details are mostly from the letter of a private soldier, written to his
brother in the east. Before the letter was mushed the writer was drowned in the
Sixes River near Capo Blanco, while riding express frvm Port Orford t >
Lieut. Stoneman’s camp at the mnuth of the Coquille. The letter was published
in the AHa California, Dec. 14, 1S51. It agrees with other but less particular
accounts, in thu S. F. Herald of Dec. 4,1851, and Or. Statesman, L)ec. 16 and
30,1851. See also Davidson's Coatf Pilot, 119.
of December.8
This expedition cost t-lie government some twenty-five thousand dollars,9
and resulted in killing a dozen or more Indians, which coming after the late
friendly professions of Indian Agent Parrish, did not tend to confidence in the
promises of the government, or increase the safety of the settlers.10
I have told how Stanton returned to Oregon
with troops to garrison Fort Orford, being shipwrecked and detained four months
at Coos Bay. lie had orders to explore for a road to the interior, in connection
with Williamson, who had already begun this survey. The work was prosecuted
with energy, and finished in the autumn of 1852.
The presents
distributed by Skinner had not the virtue to preserve lasting tranquillity in
the mining region. In the latter part of April 1852, a citizen of Marion county
returning from the mines was robbed of his horse and other property in the
Grave Creek hills by Bogue River Indians. This act was followed by other
interruption of travellers, and demand for pay for passing fords.11
Growing bolder, robbery was followed by murder, and then came war.12
On the 8th of July, a
Shasta, named Scarface, a
*Cal.
Cottrier, Dec. 13, 1851.
9 Fee port of Major Iiobtrt AUen, in U. S.
H. Ex. Doc. 2, vol. ii. part 1, p. IjO, 32d cong. 1st seas.
10 ‘ The commanders went without an
interpreter to the Coquille village,
9 ad just banged away until they gratified
themselves, and then went to Port Orford and back to San Francisco.’ Parrish's
Or. Anecdotes, MS., 06. See also Alta California, Dec. 14, 1851.
II llearne’s Cal, Sketches, MS., 2.
12 In the early spring of 1852 a party of
five men, led by James Coy, left Jacksonville to look for mining ground toward
the coast. Having discovered some good diggings on a tributary of Illinois
Itiver, now called Josephine Creek, they were following up the right branch,
when they discovered, three miles above the junction, the remains of two white
men, evidently murdered by the Indians. Being few iu number, they determined to
return and reenforce. Camping at night at the mouth of Josephine Creek, they
were attacked by a large force. They kept the enemy at bay until the next
night, when one of the men crowded through their linos, and hastened to
Jacksonville for aid. All that day, and the next, and until about ten o’clock
on the third, the besieged defended their little fortress, when a party of 33
came down th< mountain to their relief; and finding the country rich in
mines, took up claims, and made the first permanent settlement iii Illinois
Valley. t>crap3 Southern Or. Hist., in Ashland Tidings, Sept. 20, 1878.
notorious villain,
who liad killed his chief and usurped authority, murdered one Calvin Woodman,
on Indian Creek, a small tributary of the Klamath. The white men of Shasta and
Scott’s valleys arrested the head chief, and demanded the surrender of Scarfacc
and his accomplice, another Shasta known as Bill. The captured chief not only
refused, but made his escape. The miners then organized, and in a fight -which
ensued the sheriff was wounded, some horses being killed. Mr E. Steele was then
living at Yreka. lie had mined in the Shasta valley when Lane was digging gold
in that vicinity. The natives had named him Jo Lane’s Brother, and he had great
influence with them. Steele had been absent at the time of the murder, but
returning to Scott Valley soon after, found the Indians moving their families
toward the Salmon River mountains, a sign of approaching trouble. Hastening to
Johnson’s rancho, he learned what had occurred, and also met there a company
from Scott Bar prosecuting an unsuccessful search for the savages in the
direction of Yreka. Next day, at the request of Johnson, who had his family at
the rancho and was concerned for their safety, Steele collected the Indians in
Scott Yalley and held a council.
The Shastas, to which
nation belonged the Roinie River tribes, were divided under several chiefs as
follows: Tolo was the acknowledged head of those who lived in the fiat country
about Yreka; Scarface and Bill were over those in Shasta Valley; John of those in
Scott Yalley; and Sam and Jo of those in Rogue River Valley, having been
formerly all under one chief, the father of John. On the death of the old
chief a feud had arisen concerning the supremacy, which was interrupted by the
appearance of white men, since which time each had controlled his own band.
Then there were two chiefs who had their country at the foot of the Siskiyou
Mountains on the north side, or south of Jacksonville, namely, Tipso, that is
to say, The Hairy, from his heavy beard, and Sullix, or the Bad-tem
pered, both of whom
were unfriendly to the settlers and miners.13 They also had wars
with the Shastas on the south side of the Siskiyou,14 and were altogether
turbulent in their character,
The chiefs whom
Steele induced to trust themselves inside Johnson’s stockade for conference
were Tolo, his son Philip, and John, with three of his brothers, one of whom
was known as Jim. These affirmed that they desired peace, and said if Steele
would accompany them they would go in search of the murderers. Accordingly a
party of seven was formed, four more joining at Shasta canon.15
Proceeding to Yreka, Steele had some trouble to protect his savages from the
citizens, who wished to hang them. But an order of arrest having been obtained
from the county judge, the party proceeded, and in two days reached the
hiding-place of Scarface and Bill. The criminals had fled, having gone to join
Sam, brother of Chief Jo, Lane’s namesake, who had taken up arms because Dr
Ambrose, a settler, had seized the ground which was the winter residence of the
tribe, and because he would not betroth his daughter to Sam’s son, both
children being still of tender age.
Tolo, Philip, and Jim
then withdrew from the party of white men, substituting two young warriors, who
were pledged to find Scarface and BUI, or suffer in their stead. A party under
Wright then proceeded to the Klamath country. Steele went to Rogue River,
hearing on the Siskiyou Mountain confirmation of the war rumor from a captured
warrior, afterward shot in trying to effect his escape.
Rumors of
disaffection reaching Table Rock,18 seven
13 See Cardwell's Em. Co., MS., 15, 7.
14 Id., 15-21; Ashland Tid., Deo. 2, 9,
187(1, and Sept. 20, 1878.
J3The Scott
Valley men were John McLeod, James Bruce, James White, Peter Snellbaok, John
Galvin, and a youth called Harry. The four irom
Shasta were J. D.
Cook, F. W. Merritt, L. S. Thompson, and Ben. 'Wright, who acted as
interpreter.
^Jacksonville was at
this time called Table Rock, though without rele
vance. The first
journal published there was the Table Rock Sentinel. Prim’s Judicial Affairs in
S. Or., MS., 3.
ty-five or eighty
men, with John K. Lamerick as leader, volunteered to go and kill Indians.
Hearing of it, Skinner hastened to prevent slaughter, but only obtained a
promise not to attack until he should have had an opportunity of parley. A
committee of four was appointed by the citizens of Table Rock to accompany the
agent. They found Sam at his encampment at Rig Bar, two miles from the house
of Ambrose, and at no great distance from Stuart’s former camp. Sam did not
hesitate to cross to the south side to talk with Skinner. He declared himself
for peace, and proposed to send for his brother Jo, with all his band, to meet
the agent the following day; nor did he make any objection when told that a
large number of white men would be present to witness the negotiations.
At this juncture,
Steele arrived in the valley with his party and two Shastas, Skinner confessing
to him that the situation was serious. He agreed, however, to Steele’s request
to make the delivery of the murderers one of the conditions of peace.
At the time
appointed, Skinner and Steele repaired to Big Bar with their respective
commands and the volunteers under Lamerick. One of Steele’s Shastas was sent to
Sam with a message, requesting him to come over the river and bring a few of
his warriors as a body-guard. After the usual Indian parley he came,
accompanied by Jo and a few fighting men; but seeing Lamerick’s company mounted
and drawn up in line, expressed a fear of them, when Skinner caused them to
dismount and stack their arms.
The messenger to
Sam’s camp told Steele that he had recognized the murderers among Sam’s people,
and Steele demanded his arrest; but Skinner refused, fearing bloodshed. The
agent went further, and ordered the release of two prisoners taken by Steele on
the north side of the Siskiyou Mountains, Sam having first made the demand, and
refused to negotiate until it was complied with. The order was aocom-
Hist.
Ob., Vol. II. 16
panied witli tlie
notice to Steele that he was within the jurisdiction of the person giving the
command. But all was of no avail. Steele seemed as determined to precipitate
war as was Skinner to avoid it. Finally Skinner addressed himself to the
prisoners, telling them they were free, that he was chief of the white people
in the Indian country, and they should accept their liberty. On the other hand,
Steele warned his prisoners that if they attempted to escape they would be
shot, when Skinner threatened to arrest and send him to Oregon City. The
quarrel ended by Steele keeping his captives under a guard of two of his own
men, who were instructed to shoot them if they ran away, Sam and his party
being informed of the order. His six remaining men were stationed with
reference to a surprise from the rear and a rescue.
The conference then
proceeded; but presently a hundred armed warriors crossed the river and mixed
with the unarmed white men, whereupon Steele ordered his men to resume their
arms.
The council resulted
in nothing. Sam declined to give up the murderers, and the talk of the chiefs
was shuffling and evasive. At length, on a pretence of wishing to consult with
some of his people, Sam obtained permission to return to the north bank of the
river, from which he shouted back defiance, and saying that he should not
return. The white forces were then divided, Lamerick going with half the
company to a ford above Big Bar, and his lieutenant with the remainder to the
ford half a mile below, prepared to cross the river and attack Sam’s camp if
any hostile demonstrations should be made at the council ground. But the agent,
apprehensive of an outbreak, followed the angry chief to the, north sideA
the Indians also crossing over until about fifty only remained. Becoming
alarmed for the safety of Skinner, Steele placed a guard at the crossing to
prevent all the Indians returning to camp before the agent should come back,
which he did in company with one
of the Shastas, who
had been sent to warn him. Though the agent was aware that this man could point
out the murderers, lie would not consent, lest it should be a signal for
battle.
By the time Steele
had recrossed the river, a fresh commotion arose over the rumor that Scarface
was seen with two others going over the hills toward the Klamath. The Bogue
River warriors, still on the south side, observing it, began posting themselves
under cover of some trees, as if preparing for a skirmish, to prevent which
Steele’s men placed themselves in a position to intercept them, when an
encounter appearing imminent, Martin Angel 1,^ a settler, proposed to the Indians
to give up their arms, and sheltering themselves in a log house in the
vicinity, to remain there as hostages until the criminals should be brought
back by their own people. The proposition was accepted; but when they had
filed past Steele’s party they made a dash to gain the woods. This was the
critical moment. To allow the savages to gain cover would be to expose the
white men to a fire they could not return; therefore the order was given, and
firing set in on both sides.
It should not be
forgotten that Steele’s men from the California side of the Siskiyou,
throughout the whole affair, had done all that was done to precipitate the
conflict, which was nevertheless probably unavoidable in the agitated state of
both Indians and white men. The savages were well armed and ready for war, and
the miners and settlers were bent on the mastery. When the firing began,
Lamerick’s company were still at the fords, some distance from the others. At
the sound of the guns he hastened up the valley to give protection to the
settlers’ families,
17 Angell had formerly resided at Oregon
City. Ho removed to Rogue Itiver Valley, participated in the Indian wars, and
was killed by the savages of Rogue River in 1855. He was regarded as a good man
and is useful citizen. His only son made hia residence at Portland. Lane's
Autobiography, MS„ 107.
leaving a minority of
the volunteers to engage the Indians from the north side should they attempt to
cross the river.18
The fighting lasted
but a short time. The Indians made a charge with the design of releasing
Steele’s prisoners, when they ran toward the river. One was shot before he
reached it, the other as he came out of the water on the opposite bank. Sam
then ordered a party of warriors to the south side to cut off Steele, but they
were themselves surprised by a detachment of the volunteers, and several
killed,19 the remainder retreating. Only one white man was wounded,
and he in one finger. The Indian agent had retired to his residence at the
beginning of the fight. That same night information was received that during
the holding of the council some Indians had gone to a bar down the river, and
had surprised and ki led a small company of miners. Lamerick at once made
preparations to cross the river on the night of the 19th of July, and take his
position in the pass between Table Rock and the river, while Steele’s company
moved at the same time farther up, to turn the Indians back on Lainerick’s
force in the morning. The movement was successful. Sam’s people were
surrounded, and the chief sued for peace on the terms first offered, namely,
that he should give up the murderers, asking that the agent be sent for to make
a treaty.
Rut Skinner, who had
found himself ignored as
18 ‘ Before we reached the place where the
battle was going on, we met a large portion of the companj coming from the
battle as* fast as their horses could run. The foremost man was Charley
Johnson, lit called to me to Come with him. I said, “Have the Indians whipped
jnu?” He paid nothing, Imt kept ou running, and crying, “Come this way.” We
wheeled, and went with the crowd, who went to the house of Dr Ambrose. The
Indians had started toward the house, and it was supposed they meant to murder
the family.’ Cardwell’s Emigrant Company, MS., 24.
19 Steele says sixteen, including the
prisoners. Canlwell states that many sprang into the water and were shot.
Skinner gives the number as four; and states further that 1
a man by the name of Steel, 'who pretended to be the leader of the party from
Shasta, was principally instrumental in causing the attack on the prisoners,
which for a time produced general hostilities.’ U. S. Sen. Doc., i., 32d cong.
2d sess., vol. i. pt i. 457. Cardwell’s Emigrant Company, MS., 2i>;
California Star, Aug 7, lboS.
maintainer of the
peace, and was busy preparing for the defence of his house and property, was
slow to respond to this request. A council was appointed for the next day. In
the explanations which followed it was ascertained that Scarface had not been
with Sam, but was hiding in the Salmon River mountains. The person pointed out
as Scarface was Sullix of Tipso’s hand, who also had a face badly scarred. The
real criminal was ultimately arrested, and hanged at Yreka. A treaty was agreed
to by Sam requiring the Rogue River Indians to hold no communication with the
Shastas.20 For the remainder of the summer hostili ties (in Rogue
River were suspended, the Indian agent occasionally presenting Sam’s band with
a fat ox, finding it easier and cheaper to purchase peace with beef than to
let robberies go on, or to punish the robbers.21
Such was the
condition of Indian affairs 111 the south oT‘ Oregon in the summer
and autumn of 18j2, when the superintendent received official notice that al!
the Indian treaties negotiated in Oregon had been ordered to lie upon the table
in the senate; while ho was instructed by the commissioner, until the general
policy of the government should be more definitely understood, to enter into
110 more treaty stipulations with them, except such as might be imperiously
required to preserve peace.22 As if partially to avert the probable
consequences to the people of Oregon of this rejection of the treaties entered
into between Governor Gaines, Superintendent Dart, and the Indians, there
arrived at Vancouver, in September, 2G8 men, rank and file, composing the
skeleton of tho 4th regiment of infantry, under Lieutenant-colonel Bonneville.23
It was now too late in the season for
20 Sullix was badly wounded on tho day of
the battle. See Cardwell's Emigrant Company, MS., 25 -6.
21 The expenses of Steele's expedition were
$2,200, which were never reimbursed from any source.
22 Letter of Anson Dart in Or. Statesman,
Oct. 30, 1852. Dart resigned in December, his resignation to take effect the
following June.
23 ‘A large number of the 4th reg. had died
on tho Isthmus.1 Or. Stats*' man, Sept. 25, 1S52.
troops to do more
tlian go into winter quarters. The settlers and the emigration had defended
themselves for another year without aid from the government, and the comments
afterward made upon their manner of doing it, in the opinion of the volunteers
came with a very ill grace from the officers of that government.24
Further details of
this? campaign are given in Lane’s Autobiography, MS.; Cardwell's Emigrant
Company, AliS.; and the filed o£ the Oregon Statesman.
SURVEYS AND
TOWN-MAKING.
1851-1853.
Proposed
TerritoriDivision—Coast SnriY—Light-houses
Established—James S. Lawson—His
Biography, Public Services, and
Contribution to History—Progress North of the Columbia—South of the
Columbia—Birth of Towns—Creation of Counties—Proposed New Territory—River
Navigation—Improvements at the Clackamas Rapids—On the Tualatin River—La
Creole River—Bridge- building—Work at the Palls of the "Willamette—Fruit
Culture —The First Apples Sent to California—Agricultural Progress— Imports and
Exports—Society.
A movement was made
north of tlie Columbia River in the spring of 1851, to divide Oregon, all that
portion north and west of the Columbia to be erected into a new territory, with
a separate government—a scheme which met with little opposition from the
legislature of Oregon or from congress. Accordingly in March 1853 the
separation was consummated. The reasons advanced wTere the alleged
disadvantages to the Puget Sound region of unequal legislation, distance from
the seat of government, and rivalry in commercial interests. North of the
Columbia progress was slow from the beginning of American settlements m 1845 to
1850, when the Puget Sound region began to feel the effect of the California
gold discoveries, with increased facilities for. communication with the east.
In answer to the oft-repeated prayers of the legislature of Oregon, that a
survey might be made of the Pacific coast of the United States, a commission
was appointed in
November 1848, whose
business it was to make an examination with reference to points of occupation
for the security of trade and commerce, and for military and naval purposes.
The commissioners
were Brevet Colonel J. L. Smith, Major Cornelius A. Ogden, Lieutenant Danville
Lead- better of the engineer corps of the United States army, and commanders
Louis M. Goldsborough, G. J. Van Brunt, and Lieutenant Simon F. Blunt of the
navy. They sailed from San Francisco in the government steam propeller
Massachusetts, officered by Samuel Ivnox, lieutenant commanding, Isaac N.
Briceland acting lieutenant, and James H. Moore acting master, arriving in
Puget Sound about the same time the Ewing reached the Columbia Iliver in the
spring of 1850, and remaining in the sound until July. The commissioners
reported in favor of light houses at New Dungeness and Cape Flattery, or
Tatooch Island, informing the government that traffic had much increased in
Oregon, and on the sound, it being their opinion that no spot on the globe
offered equal facilities for the lumber trade.1 Shoal water Bay was
examined by Lieutenant Leadbetter, who gave his name to the southern side of
the entrance, which is called Leadbetter Point. The Massachusetts visited the
Columbia, and recommended Cape Disappointment on which to place a
light-liouse. After this superficial recounoissance, which terminated in July,
the commissioners returned to California.
The length of time
elapsing from the sailing of the commission from New York to its arrival on the
Northwest Coast, with the complaints of the Oregon delegate, caused the
secretary of the treasury to request Professor A. D. Bache, superintendent of
coast surveys, to hasten operations in that quarter as much as possible; a
request which led the latter to despatch a third party, in the spring of 1850,
under Professor George Davidson, which arrived in California in June,
1 Coast
Survey, 1800, 127.
and proceeded
immediately to carry out the intentions of the government.2 Being
employed on the coast of southern California, Davidson did not reach Oregon
till June 1851, when he completed the topographical surveys of Cape
Disappointment, Point Adams, and Sand Island, at the entrance to the Columbia,
and departed southward, having time only to examine Port Orford harbor before
the winter storms. It was not until July 1852 that a protractcd and careful
survey was begun by Davidson’s party, when he returned in the steamer Active,3
Captain James Alden of the navy, to examine the shores of the Strait of Fuca
and adjacent coasts, a work in which he was engaged for sev-
. . O
O
eral years, to his
own credit and the advantage of the country.4 For many years Captain
Lawson has directed his very valuable efforts to the region about Puget Sound.3
2 "Davidson's party were all young
men, anxious to distinguish themselves. They were A. M. Harrison, James S.
Lawson, and John Rockwell. They sailed in the steamer Philadelphia, Capt.
Robert Pearson, crossed the Isthmus, an.1 took passage again on the
Tennessee, Capt. Cole, for San Francisco. Lawson's Autobiography, MS., 5-18.
5 The Active was the old steamer Gold
Hunter rechristened. Lawson’s Autobiography, MS., 49.
_ 4 For
biography, and further information concerning Prof. Davidson and his labors,
see Hist. Gal., this series.
“James S. Lawson was
bom in Philadelphia, Feb. 13, 1828, was educated in the schools of that city,
«nd while in the Central high school was a classmate of George Davidson, Prof.
Bache being principal. Bache had formerly been president of Girard College, and
still had charge of the magnetic observatory in the collego grounds. Tlio
night observers were selected from the pupils of the high school, and of these
Lawson was one, continuing to serve till the closing of the observatory in
1843. In that year Lawson was appointed second assistant teacher in the
Catherine-street grammar school of Philadelphia, which position he held for one
year, when he was offered a position in the Friends’ school at Wiliningtun,
Delaware, under charge of Samuel Allsoff. In January 1848 Lawson commenced
duty as a clerk to Prof. Bache, then superintendent of the U. S. coast survey,
remaining in that capacity until detached ;.nd ordered to join Davidson for
the surveys on the Pacific coast in 1850. From the time of his arrival on tho
Pacific coast to the present, Capt. Lawson has been almost continuously engaged
in the labor of making government surveys as an assistant of Prof. Davidson.
Lawson’s Autobiography, MS., 2. His work for a number of years lias been
chiefly in that portion of tho original Oregon territory north of the Columbia
and west ii: tho Cascade Mountains, and his residence has been at Olympia,
where his high character and scientific attainments have secured him the esteem
of all, and in which quiet and beautiful little capital repose may be found
from occasional toil and exposure. Mr Harrison was, like Davidson and Lawson,
a graduate of the Philadelphia, Central school, and of the same class.
This manuscript of
Lawson’s authorship is one of unusual value, contain-
I have referred to
the surveying expeditions in this place with the design, not only of bringing
them into their proper sequence in point of time, but to make plain as 1
proceed correlative portions of my narrative.
Between 184G, the
year following the first American settlements on Puget Sound, and 1848, population
did not much increase, nor was there any commerce to speak of witfo the
outside world until the autumn of the last-named year, when the settlers
discarded their shingle-making and their insignificant trade at Fort Nisqually,
to open with their ox-teams a watron road to the mines on the American River.
The new movement revolutionized affairs. Not only was the precious dust now to
be found in gratifying bulk in many odd receptacles never intended for such use
in the cabins of squatters, but money, real hard coin, became once more
familiar to fingers that had nearly forgotten the touch of the precious metals.
In January 1850, some returning miners reached the Sound in the first American
vessel entering those waters for the purposes of trade, and owned by a company
of four of them.6 This was the beginning of trade on Puget Sound,
which had increased considerably in 1852-3, owing to the demand for lumber in
San Francisco. The towns of Olympia, Steilacoom, Alki, Seattle, and Port
Towmsend already enjoyed some of the advantages of commerce, though yet in
their infancy. A town had been started on Baker Bay, which, however, had but a
brief existence, and settlements had been made on Shoalwater Bay and Gray
Harbor, as well as on the principal rivers entering them, and at Cowlitz
Lauding. At the Cascades of the Columbia a town was surveyed in 1850, and
mg, besides a history
of the scientific- work of the coast survey, many original scraps of history,
biography, and anecdotes of person* inet with in the early years of the
service, both in Oregon and California. Published entire it would be read with
interest. It is often a source of regret that the limits of my work, extended
as it is, preclude the possibility of extracting all that is tempting in my
manuscripts.
6 See hist. Wash., this series.
trading
establishments located at the upper and lower falls; and in fact, the map of
that portion of Oregon north of the Columbia had marked upon it in the spring
of 1852 nearly every important point which is seen there to-day.
Of the general
condition of the country south of the Columbia at the period of the division,
something may be here said, as I shall not again refer to it in a particular
manner. The population, before the addition of the large immigration of 1852,
was about twenty thousand, most of whom were scattered over the
"Willamette Valley upon farms. The rage for laying out towns, which was at
its height from 1850 to
1853, had a tendency to retard the growth of any one
of them.7 Oregon City, the oldest in the territory, had not much
over one thousand inhabitants. Portland, by reason of its advantages for
unloading shipping, had double that number. The other towns, Milwaukie, Salem,
Corvallis, Albany, Eugene, Lafayette, Dayton, and Hillsboro, and the newer
ones in the southern valleys, could none Of them count a thousand.8
7 Joel Palmer bought the claim of Andrew
Smith, and founded the town of Dayton about 1S50. Lafayette was the property of
Joel Perkins, Corvallis of J. C. Avery, Albany of the Monteith brothers,
Eugene of Eugene Skinner, Canyonville of Jesse Roberts, who sold it to Marks,
Sideman & Co., who laid it out for a town.
e A town
called Milwaukie was surveyed on the claim of Lot Whitcomb. It contained 500
inhabitants in the autumn of 1850, more than it had thirty years later. Or.
Spectator, Nov. 28, 1S50. Deady, in Overland Monthly, i. 37. Oswego, on the
west bank of the Willamette, later famous for its iron-works, was laid out
about the same time, but never had the population of Milwaukie, of which it was
the rival. Dallas, in Polk county, was founded in 1852. St Helen, on the
Columbia, was competing for the advantage of being the seaport of Oregon, and
the Pacific Mail Steamship Company had decreed that so it should be, when the
remonstrances, if not the sinister acts, of Portland men effected the ruin of
ambitious hopes. St Helen was on the land claim of H. M. Knighton, an immigrant
of 1845, and had an excellent situation. Weed's Queen Charlotte Id. Exp., MS.,
7. ‘Milton and St Helen, one and a half miles apart, on the Columbia, had each
20 or 25 houses.. .. Gray, a Dane, was the chief founder of St Helen.’
Saint-Amant, Voyages e?i ('al. H Or., 308-9, 378. It was surveyed and marked
out in lots and blocks l>y P. W. Crawford, assisted by W. II. Tappan, and
afterward mapped by Joseph Trutch, later of Victoria,'B. C. A road was laid out
to the Tualatin plains, and a railroad projected; the steamship company erected
a wharf with .other improvements. But meetings were held in Portland to prevent
the
Some ambitious
persons attempted to get a county organization for the country east of the
Cascade Mountains in the winter of 1852-3, to which the leg-
Btopping of the
steamers below that town, and successive fires destroyed the company's
improvements at -St Helen, compelling their vessels to go to the former place.
Milton, another
candidate for favor, was situated on Scappoosc Bay, an arm of the Willamette,
just above St Helen. It was founded Ly sea captains Nathan Crosby and Thomas
H. Smith, who purchased the Hunsaker mills on Milton Creek, where they made
lumber to load tho bark Louisiana, which they owned. They also opened a store
there, and assisted i: building the road to the Tualatin plains. Several
sea-going men invested in lots, and business for a time was brisk. But all
their brilliant hopes were destined to destruction, for there came a summer
flood which swept the town away. Captains Drew, Menzies, Pope, and Williams
were interested in Milton. Crawford’s A’ar., MS., 223. Among thr settlers iu
the vicinity of St Helen an.l Milton was Capt. F. A. Lemont, of Bath, Maine,
who as a sailor accompanied Capt. Dominis when he entered the Columbia in
1S29-30. He was afterward on Wyeth’s vessel, the May Dacre, w hich was in the
river in 1S31. Returning to Oregon after having been master of several
vessels, he settled at St Helen in 1850, where he still resides. Of the early
residents Lemoi.t ha* furnished me the following list from memory: Benjamin
Durcll, Witherell, WT. H. Tappan, Joseph Trutch, John Trutch, L. C.
Gray, Aaron Broyles, James G. Hunter, Dr Adlum, Hiram Field, Seth Pope, Jahn
Dodge, George Thing, William English, William Hazard, Benjdnin Teal, B. Conley,
William Meeker, Charles H. Reed, Joseph Caplcs, Joseph Cunningham, A. E. Clark,
Robert Germain, G. W. Veasie, C. Carpenter, J. Carpenter, Lockwood, Little,
Tripp, Berry, Dunn, Burrows, Fiske, Layton, Kearns, Holly, Maybae, Archilles,
Cortland, and Atwood, with others. Knighton, the owner of St Helen, is
pronounced by Crawford a ‘presumptuous man,’ because while knowing nothing
about navigation, as Crawford adrrns, he undertook to pilot the Silvie de
Grasse to Astoria, running her upon the 'O.'k where she was spitted. He
subsequently sailed a vessel to China, and finally engaged as a captain on the
Willamette. Knighton died at The Dalles about 1SG4. His wife was Elizabeth
Martin of Yamhill county, ne left several children In Washington.
W’estport, on the
Columbia, thirty miles above Astoria, was settled by John WTest in
1S51; and Rainier, opposite the Cowlitz, by Charles E Fox i i the same year. It
served for several years a: a distributing point for mail and passengers to
anil from Puget Sound. Frank Warrsn, A. Harper and brother, and William C.
Moody were among the residents at Rainier. Crait>- ford’s Nar., MS., 200. At
or near The Dalles there hail been a solitary settler ever since the close of
the Cayuse war; and also a settler named Tomlinson, and two Frenchmen on farms
in Tygh Valley, fifty miles or more south of The Dalles. These pioneers of
eastern Oregon, after the missionaries, made money as well as a good living, by
trading in cattle and horses w ith emigrants and Indians, which they sold to
the mi-iers in California. After the establishment of a military post at The
Dalles, it required a government license, issued by the sup. of Indian affairs,
to trade anywhere above the Cascades, and a special permission from the
commander of the post to trade at this point. John C Bell of Salem was the
first trader at The Dalles, as he was sutler for the army at The Dalles in
1850. When the rifle regiment were ordered away, Bell sold to William Gibson,
who then became sutler. In 1851 A. McKinlay & Co., of Oregon City, obtained
permission to establish a trading post at The- Dalles, and building a cabin
they placed it in charge of Perrin Whitman. In 1852, they erected a frame
building west of the present Umatilla House, -which they used as a store, but
sold the following year to Simma and Humason. W\ C. Laughlin took a land claim
t;ua
'slature would have
consented if they had agreed to have the new county attached to Clarke for
judicial purposes; but this being objected to, and the population being
scarce, the legislature declined to create the county, which was however
established in January 1854, and called Wasco.9 In the matter of
other county organizations south of the Columbia, the legislature was ready to
grant all petitions if not to anticipate them. In 1852-3 it created Jackson,
includ-
year and built a
house upon it. A Air Bigelow brought a small stock of goods to The Dalles,
chiefly groceries anil liquors, and built a store the following year; and
William Gibson moved his store from the garrison grounds to the town outside.
Tt was subsequently purchased by Victor Trevitt, who kept a saloon called the
Mount Hood.
In the autumn of
185*2, companies K and I of the 4th inf. reg., under Capt. Alvord, relieved the
little squad at artillery men who had garrisoned tiie post since the departure
of the rifle regiment. It was the post which formed the nucleus of trade and
business at The Dalles, and which made it necessary to improve the means of
transportation, that the government supplies might be more easily and rapidly
conveyed. The immigration of 18o2 were not blind to the advantages ol the
location, and a number of claims were taken on the small streams in the
neighborhood of The Dalles. Rumors of gold discoveries in the Cascade
Mountains north of the Columbia River were current about this time. H. P.
Isaacs of Walla Walla, who is the author of an intelligent account of the
development of eastern Oregon a'i<i Washington, tntitled The Upper Columbia
Basin, MS., relates that a Klikitat found and gave to a Frenehinan a piece of
gold quartz, which being exhibited at Oregon City indui id him to go with the
Indian in the spring of 1853 to look for it But the Klikitat cither could not
or would not find the place, and Isaacs went to trade with the immigrants at
Fort Bois£, putting a ferry across Snake River in the summer of that year, but
returning to The Dalles, where he remained until 1863, when he removed to the
Walla Walla Valley and put up a srrist mill, and assisted in various ways to
improve that section. Isaacs married a daughter of James Fulton oi The Dalles,
of whom I have already made mention. A store was kept in The I>alles by L.
J. Henderson and Shang, in a canvas house They built a log house the next year.
Tompkins opened >v hotel in a building put up by MeKinlay & Co. Forman
built a blacksmith shop, and Lieut. Forsyth erected a two- story frame house,
v, hich was occupied the next year as :<■ hotel by
Gates. Cushing and Low soon put up another log store, ind James McAuliff a
third. Dal'ex Mountaineer, May 28, 1SG9.
‘Or. Jour.
Council, 1852-3, 90; Gen. Laws Or., 544. The establishment of Waseo county was
opposed by Major Rains of the 4th infantry stationed at. Fort Dalles in the
winter of 1853-4. He said that Wasco county was the largest ever known, though
it had but about; thirty-five white inhabitants, and these claimed a right to
locate where they chose, in accordance with ilie aet of Sept. 27, 1850. Or.
Jour. Councit, 1853-4, app. 49-50; U. S. Sen. Doc, 16, vol. vi. 16-17, 33d
eong. 2d sess. Rains reported to Washington, which ^lustratod for a time the
efforts of Lane to get a bill through congress regulating bounty -warrants in
Oregon, it being feared that some of them [night be located in Wasco county.
Or. Statesman, March 20, 1855; Cong. Globe, 33d cong. 2d sess., 490. Wm C.
Laughlin, Warren Keith, and John Tompkins were appointed commissioners, J. A.
Simms sheriff, and Justin Chen- oweth, judge,
ing the valley of
Rogue River and the country west of it to the Pacific. At the session of 1853,
it created Coos county from the western portion of Jackson, Tillamook from the
western part of Yamhill, and Columbia from the northern end of Washington county.
The county seat of Douglas was changed from Winchester to Roseburg by election,
according to an act of the legislature.
The creation of new
counties and the loss of those north of the Columbia called for another census,
and the redistricting of the territory of Oregon, with the reapportionment of
members of the legislative assembly, which consisted under the new arrangement
of thirty members. The first judicial district was made to comprise Marion,
Linn, Lane, Benton, and Polk, and was assigned to Judge Williams. The second
district, consisting of Washington, Clackamas, Yamhill, and Columbia, to Judge
Olney; while the third, comprising Umpqua, Douglas, Jackson, and Coos, was
given to McFadden, who held it for one term only, when Deady was reinstated.
Notwithstanding the
Indian disturbances in southern Oregon, its growth continued to be rapid. The
shifting nature of the population may be inferred from fact that to Jackson
county was apportioned four representatives, while Marion, Washington, and
Clackamas were each allowed but three.10
A scheme was put on
foot to form a new territory out of the southern countries with a portion of
northern California, the movement originating at Yreka, where it was advocated
by the Mountain Herald. A meeting was held at Jacksonville January 7, 1854, which
appointed a convention for the 25th. Memorials were drafted to congress and
the Oregon and California legislatures. The proceedings of the convention were
published in the leading journals of the coast, but the project received no
encouragement from
10 Or. Statesman, Feb. 14, 1854.
legislators, nor did
Lane lend himself to the scheme further than to present the memorial to
congress.11 On the contrary, he wrote to the Jacksonville malecon-
tents that he could not approve of their action, which would, as ho could
easily discern, delay the admission of Oregon as a state, a consummation wished
for by his supporters, to whom he essayed to add the democrats of southern
Oregon. Nothing further was thenceforward heard of the projected new territory.12
Nothing was more
indicative of the change taking place with the introduction of gold than the
improvement in the means of transportation on the Willamette and Columbia
rivers, which was now performed by steamboats.13
11 U. S. H.
Jour609, 33d cong. 1st sess.
12 The Oregon men known to have been
connected with this movement were Samuel Culver, T. MeFadden Patton, L. F.
Mosher, D. M. Kenny, S. Ettlinger, Jesse Richardson, W. W. Fowler, C. Sims,
Anthony Little, S. C. Graves, W. Burt, George Dart, A. Melntire, G. L. Snelling,
0. S. Drew, John E. Ross, Richard Dugan, Martin Angell, aud J. A. Lupton. Those
from the south side of the Siskiyou Mountains were E. Steele, H. G. Ferris, C.
N. Thornbury, E. J. Curtis, E. Moore, 0. Wheeloek, and J. Darrough. Or.
Statesman,, Feb. 7 and 28, 1854.
13The first
steamboat built to run upon these waters was called the Columbia. She was an
oddly shaped and clumsy craft, being a double-ender, like a ferry-boat. Her
machinery was purchased in California by James Frost, one of the followers of
the rifle regiment, who brought it to Astoria, where his boat was built. Frost
was sutler to the regiment in which his brother was quartermaster. He returned
to Missouri, and in the civil war held a command in the rebellious militia of
that state. His home was afterward in St Louis. Deady, in McCracken's Portland,
MS., 7. It was a slow boat, taking 26 hours from Astoria to Oregon City, to
which point she made her first voyage July 4, 1850. S. F. Pac. News, May 11,
July 24, and Aug. 1, 1S50; S. F. Herald, July 24, 1850; Portland Standard, July
8, 1879.
The second venture in
steam navigation was the Lot Whitcomb of Oregon, named after her owner, built
at Milwaukie, and launched with much ceremony on Christmas, 1850. She began
running in March following. The name was selected by a committee nominated in a
public meeting held for the purpose, W. K. Kilborn in the chair, and A. Bush
secretary. The committee, A. L, Lovejoy, Heetor Campbell, W. W. Buck, Capt.
Kilborn, and Governor Gaines, decided to give her the name of her owner, who
was presented with a handsome suit of colors by Kilborn, Lovejoy, and N. Ford
for the meeting. Or. Spectator, Dec. 12, 1850, and June 27, 1851. She was built
by a regular ship-builder, named Hanseotnbe, her machinery being purchased in
San Francisco. Deady s Hist. OrMS., 21; McCracken’s Portland > MS., 11;
BrUjff* Port Townsend, MS., 22; Sacramento Transcript, June 29, 1850; Overland
Monthly, i. 37. In the summer of 1853 the Whitcomb was sold to a California
company for $50,000, just $42,000 more than she eost. The Lot Whitcomb was
greatly superior to the first steamer. Both obtained large prices for carrying
passengers and freight, and for towing sailing vessels on
The navigation of the
Willamette was much impeded by rocks and rapids. On the Clackamas rapids below
Oregon City, thirty thousand dollars was expended in removing obstructions to
steamers, and the channel was also cleared to Salem in 1852. The Tualatin
Iliver was made navigable for some distance by private enterprise. A canal was
made to connect
the Columbia.
McCracken says lie paid two ounces of gold-dust for a passage on the Columbia
from Astoria to Portland which lasted two clays, sleeping on the upper deck,
the steamer having a great many on board. Portland, MS., 4. When the Whitcomb
began running the fare was reduced to 815. John McCracken came to Oregon from
California, w here he had been in mercantile pursuits at Stockton, in November
1849. He began business in Oregon City in 1850, selling liquors, and was interested
in the Island mill. He subsequently removed to Portland, where he became a
large owner in shipping, steamboats, and merchandising. His wife was a daughter
of Dr Barclay of Oregon City, formerly of tho II. B. Co.
From the summer of
1851, steamboats multiplied, though the fashion of them was not very
commodious, nor were they elegant in their appointment, but they served the
purpose, for which they were introduced, of expediting travel.
The third river
steamboat was the Black Hawk, a small iron propeller brought out from New York,
and run between Portland and Oregon City, the Lot Whitcomb being too deep to
get over the Clackamas rapids. The Willamette, a steam schooner belonging to
Howland and Aspinwall, arrived in March 1853, by sailing vessel, being put
together on the upper Willamette, finished in the autumn, and run for a season,
after which she was brought over the falls, and used to carry the mail from
Astoria to Portland; but the arrival of the steamship Columbia, which went to
Portland with the mails, rendered her services unnecessary, and she was sold to
a company composed of Murray, Iloyt, Breck, and others, who took ’ier to
California, where she ran as an opposition boat on the Sacramento, and was
finally sold to the California Steam Navigation Company. The WiBsmette was a
side-wheel steamer and finished in fine style, but not adapted to the
navigation of the Willamette River. Athey’s Workshop*, MS., !j; Or. Spectator,
Sept. 30, 1851. The Hotmer, built to run on the upper river, was finished in
May 1851, and the Yamhill in August. In the autumn of the same year a small
iron steamer, called the Bully Washington, was placed on the lower river. This
boat was subsequently taken to the Umpqua, where she ran until a better one,
the Ilinsdale, owned by Hinsdale and L^ne, was built. The Multnomah was also
built this year, followed by the Gazelle, in 185'2, handsomely finished, for
the upper nver trade. She ran a few months and blew up, killing two persons
and injuring others. The Castle and the Oregon were also running at this time.
On the Upper Columbia, between the Cascades and The Dalles, the steamer James
P. Flint was put on in the autumn of 1851. She was owned by D. F. Bradford and
others. She struck a rock and sunk while bringing down the immigration of 1852,
but w~as raised and repaired. She was commanded by Van Berger, mate J. W.
Watkins. Dalles Mountaineer, May 28, 1 S<5!}. The Belle and the Eagle, two
small iron steamers, were running on the Columbia about this time. The Belle
was built at Oregon City for Wells and Williams. The Eagle was brought to
Oregon by John Irving, who died in Victoria in 1874. The Fashion ran to the
Cascades to connect with the Mint. Further facts concerning the history of
steamboating will 1 *> brought out in another part of this work, this brief
abstract being intended only co show the progress made from 1850 to 1853.
La Creole River with
the Willamette. The Yamhill River was spanned at Lafayette with a strong doubletrack
bridge placed on abutments of hewn timber, bolted and filled with earth, and
raised fifty feet above low water.14 This was the first structure of
the kind in the country. The Rockville Canal and Transportation Company was
incorporated in February 1853, for the purpose of constructing a basin or breakwater
with a canal at and around the foils of the Willamette, which work was
completed by December
1854, greatly increasing the comfort of travel by
avoiding the portage.15
In 1851 the fruit
trees set out in 1847 began to bear, so that a limited supply of fruit was
furnished the home market;18 and two years later a shipment was made
out of the territory by Meek and Luell- ing, of Milwaukie, who sold four
bushels of apples in San Francisco for five hundred dollars. The following year
they sent forty bushels to the same market, which brought twenty-five hundred
dollars. In 18G1 the shipment of apples from Oregon amounted to over
seventy-five thousand bushels;17 but they no longer
14 Or. Statesman, Sept. 23, 1851.
13Id.l Fell.
20, 1S53. Deady gives some account of this important work in his Hist. Or.,
MS., 28. A mam named Page from California, representing capital in that state,
procured the passage of the act of incorporation. The project w as to build a
basin on the west side of the river above the falls, with Hliils, and hoisting
works to lift goods above the falls, and deposit them in the basin, instead of
wagoning them a r ile or more as had been done. They constructed the basin, and
erected mills at its lower edge. The hoisting V. orks were made with ropes,
wheels, and cages, in which passseng^rs and goods wTere lifted
up. Page was killed by the explosion of the Gazelle, owned by the company,
after which the enterprise went to pieces through suits brought against the
company by employes, and the property fell lto the hands of Kelley, one of the lawyers,
and Robert Pentland. In the winter of 1800-1, the mills and all were destroyed
by fire, when works of a similar nature were commenced on the east side oi the
river, where they remained unt;' the completion of the canal and locks on the
west side, of a recent date.
16 On McCarvcr’s iarm, one mile east of
Oregon City, was an orchard of
15 acres containing 200 apple-trees, and
large numbers of pears, plums, apricots, cherries, nectarines, and small
fruits. It yielded this year 15 bushels of currants, and a lull crop of the
above-named fruits. Or. Statesman, July 29, 1851. In 1852, R. C. Ueer
advertised his nursery as containing 42 varieties of apples, 15 of pears, 5 of
peaches, and 0 of cherries. Thomas Cox raised b Rhode Island greening 12J
inches in circumference, a good size for a young tree. Id., Dec. 18,1852.
17 Id., Sept. 22,1802; Oregonian, July
15,1SG2; Overland Monthly, i. 39.
Hist.
Oe., Vol. II. 17
were worth their
weight in gold. The productiveness of the country in every way was well established
before 1853, as may be seen in the frequent allusions to extraordinary growth
and yield.13 If the farmer was not comfortable and happy in the
period between 1850 and 1800, it was because he had not in him the capacity
for enjoying the bounty of unspoded nature, and the good fortune of a ready
market; and yet some there were who in the midst of affluence lived like the
starveling peasantry of other countries, from simple indifference to the
advantages of comfort in their surroundings.19
The imports m 1852-3,
according to the commerce and navigation reports, amounted to about §84,000,
but were probably more than that. Direct trade with China was begun in 1851,
the brig Amazon bringing a cargo of tea, coffee, sugar, syrup, and other
articles from Whampoa to Portland, consigned to Norris and Company. The same
year the schooner John AUeyne brought a cargo of Sandwich Islands products
consigned to Allen McKinlay and Company of Oregon City, but nothing like a
regular trade with foreign ports was established for several years later, and
the exports generally went no farther than San Francisco. Farming machinery did
not begin to be introduced till 1852, the first reaper brought to Oregon being
a McCormick, which found general use throughout the territory.20 As
might be expected, society improved in its outward manifestations, and the
rising generation were permitted to enjoy privi
18 One bun^h of 257 stalks of wheat from
Geer’s farm, Marion eounty, averaged GO grains to the head. On Hubbard’s farm
in Yamhill, one. head of timothy measured 11 in< lies. Oats on McVicker’s
farm in Clackamas stood over 8 feet in height. Id the Cowlitz Valley one hill
of potatoes weighed 53 pounds and another 40. Two turnips would fill a
half-bushel measure. Tolmie, at Nisqually, raised an onion that weighed a pound
and ton ounces. Columbian, Nov. 18, 1851. The troops at Steilacoom raised on 12
acres of ground 5,000 bushels of potatoes, some of which weighed two pounds
each. Or. Spectator, Nov. 18, 1851.
19 De Bow’s Encycl., xiv. G03-4; Fisher and
Colby’s Am. Statistics, 429-30.
’•Or, Statesman, Julj
24, 1852.
leges which their
parents had only dreamed of when they set their faces toward the tar
Pacific—the privileges of education, travel, and intercourse with older
countries, as well as ease and plenty in their Oregon homes.21 And
yet this was only the beginning of the end at which the descendants of the
pioneers were entitled by the endurance of their fathers to arrive.
21 The 7th TT. S. census taken in 1830 shows
the following nativities for Oregon: Missouri, 2,200; Illinois, 1,023;
Kentucky, over 700; Indiana, over 700; Ohio, over 600; New York, over 600;
Virginia, over 400; Tennessee, over 400; Iowa, over 400; Pennsylvania, over
300; North Carolina, over 200; Massachusetts. 187; Maine, 129; Vermont, 111;
Connecticut, 72; Maryland, 73; Arkansas, 61; New Jersey, 09; and in all the
other states less than 50 each, the smallest nnmlier being from Florida. The
total foreign population was 1,159, 3u0 of whom were natives of British
America, 207 English, about 200 Irish, over 100 Scotch, and 150 German. The
others were scattering, the greatest number from any other foreign country
being 45 from France; unknown, 143; :a all 13,043. Abstract of the 7th Census,
16; Moseley's Or., 1850-75, 93; De Bow’s Encycl., xiv. 591-000. These are those
who are more strictly classed as pioneers; those who came after them, from 1850
to 1853, though assisting so much, as I have shown, in the development of the
territory, were only pioneers in certain things, and not pioneers in the.
larger sense.
LAND LAWS AND LAND
TITLE?.
1851-1855.
The Donation Law—Its Provisions and Workings—Attitude ot
Ook- gress—Powers or the Provisional Government—Qualification or Voters —
Surveys — Rights of Women and Children — Amendments—Preemption
Privileges—Duties of the Surveyor General —Claimants to Lands of tiie Hudson’s
Bay and Puget Sound Companies—Mission Claims—Methodists, Presbytep.ians, and
Catholics—Prominent Land Cases—Litigation in Regard t>> the Site of
Portland—The Rights of Settlers—The Caruthers Claim—The Dalles Town-site
Claim—Pretensions of the Methodists—Claims of TnE Catholics—Advantages and
Disadvantages of the Donation System.
A subject which was
regarded as of the highest importance after the passage of the donation act of
September 27, 1850, was the proper construction of the law as applied to land
claims under a variety of circumstances. A large amount of land, including the
better portions of the Willamette Valley, had been taken, occupied, and to some
extent improved under the provisional government, and its land law; the latter
having undergone several changes to adapt it to the convenience and best
interests of the people, as I have noted elsewhere.
The provisional
legislative assemblies had several times memorialized congress on the subject
of confirming their acts, on establishing a territorial government in Oregon,
chiefly with regard to preserving the land law intact. Their petition was
granted with regard to every other legislative enactment excepting that
affecting the titles to lands; and with regard to
(26C
this, the organic act
expressly said that all laws previously passed in any way affecting the title
to lands should be null and void, and the legislative assembly should be
prohibited from passing any laws interfering with the primary disposal of the
soil which belonged to the United States. The first section of that act,
however, made an absolute grant to the missionary stations then occupied, of
640 acres, with the improvements thereon.
Thus while the
missionary stations, if there were any within the meaning of the act of that
time, had an incontrovertible right and title, the settlers, whose means were
often all in their claims, had none whatever; and in this condition they were
kept for a period of two years, or until the autumn of 1850, when their rights
revived under the donation law, whose beneficent provisions all recognized.
This law, which I
have not yet fully reviewed, provided in the first ] lace for the survey of
the public lands in Oregon. It then proceeded to grant to every white settler
or occupant of the public lands, American half-breeds included, over eighteen
years of age, and a citizen of the United States, or having declared his
intention according to law of becoming such, or who should make such
declaration on or before the first day of December 1851, then residing in the
territory, or becoming a resident before December 1850 —a provision made to
include the immigration of that year—040 acres to a married man, half of which
was to belong to his wife in her own right, and 320 acres to a single man, or
if he should become married within a year from the 1st of December 1850, 320
more to his wife, no patents to issue until after a four years’ residence.
At this point for the
first time the act took cognizance of the provisional law making the surviving
children or heirs of claimants under that law the legal heirs also under the
donation law; this provision applying as well to the heirs of aliens who had de
clared their
intention to become naturalized citizens of the United States, but who died
before completing their naturalization, as to native-born citizens. The several
provisos to this part of the land law declared that the donation should embrace
the laud actually occupied and cultivated by the settler thereon; that all
sales of land made before the issuance of patents should be void; and lastly,
that those claiming under the treaty with Great Britain could not claim under
the donation act.
Then came another
class of beneficiaries. All white male citizens of the United States, or
persons who should have made a declaration of their intention to become such,
above twenty-one years of age, and emigrating to and settling in Oregon after
December 1, 1850, and before December 1, 1853, and all white male American
citizens not before provided for who should become twenty-one years of age in
the territory between December 1851 and December 1853, and who should comply
with the requirements of the law as already stated, should each receive, if
single, ICO acres of land, and if married another 160 to his wife, in her own
right; or if becoming married within a year after his arrival in the territory,
or one year after becoming twenty-one, the same. These were the conditions of
the gifts in respect of qualifications and time.
But further, the law
required the settler to notify the surveyor general within three months after
the survey had been made, where his claim was located; or :f the
settlement should commence after the survey, then three months after making his
claim; and the law required all claims after December 1, 1850, to be bounded by
lines running east and west and north and south, and to be taken in compact
form. Proof of having commenced settlement and cultivation had to be made to
the surveyor general within twelve months after the survey or after settlement.
All these terms being complied with, at any time after the expiration of four
years from date of settlement the sur-
vevor general might
issue a certificate, when, upon the proof being complete, a patent would issue
from the commissioner of the general land office to the holder of the claims.
The surveyor general was furnished with judicial power to judge of all
questions arising under the act; but his judgment was not necessarily final,
being preliminary only to a final decision according to the laws of the
territory. These were the principal features of the donation law.1
In order to be able
to settle the various questions which might arise, it was necessary first to
decide what constituted naturalization, or how it was impaired. The first case
which came up for consideration was that of John McLoughlin, the principal
features of which have been given iti the history of the Oregon City claim. It was
sought in this case to show a flaw in the proceedings on account of the
imperfect organization of the courts. In the discussion which followed, and for
which Thurston had sought to prepare himself by procuring legal opinions
beforehand, considerable alarm was felt among other aliens. S. M. llolderness
applied to Judge Pratt, then the only district judge iu the territory, on the
17th of May 1850, to know if the proceedings were good in his case, as many
others were similarly situated, and it was important to have a precedent
established.
Pratt gave it as his
opinion that the Clackamas county circuit court, as it existed on the 27th of
March 1849, was a competent court, within the meaning of the naturalization
laws, in which a declaration of intention by an alien could be legally made as
a preparatory step to becoming a citizen of the United States; the
naturalization power being vested in congress, which had provided that
application might be made to any circuit, district, or territorial court, or to
any state court which was a court of record, having a
1 See U.
S’. II. Ex. Doc. i?., vol. ii. pt iii. 5-8, 32d con". 1st- se^s.; Dtady's
Or. Laws, 1845-04, 84-90; Dead/s Or. Gen. Laws, 1843, 72, G3-75.
seal and clerk; and
the declaration might be made before the clerk of one of the courts as well as
before the court itself. The only question was whether the circuit court of
Clackamas county, n the district of Oregon, was on the 24th of March, 1849, or
about that time, a territorial court of the United States.
Congress alone had
authority to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory
and other property of the United States, and that power was first exercised in
Oregon, and an organized government given to it by the congressional act of August
14, 1848. It went into effect, and the territory had a legal existence from and
after its passage, and the laws of the United States were at the same time
extended over the territory, amongst the others, that of the naturalization of
aliens. But it was admitted that the benefits to be derived from proceedings under
these laws would be practically valueless unless the machinery of justice was
at the same time provided to aid in their administration and enforcement.
Congress had not omitted this; but there existed an extraordinary state of
things in Oregon which made it unlike other territorial districts at the date
of its organization. Unusual means had therefore been provided to meet the
emergency. Without waiting to go through the ordinary routine of directing the
electing of a legislative body to assemble and frame a code of statutes, laws
were at once provided by the adoption of those already furnished to their hand
by the necessities of the late provisional government; and in addition to
extending tho laws of the United States over the territory, it was declared
that the laws thus adopted should remain in force until modified or repealed.
Congress had thus made its own a system of laws which had been in use by the
people before the territory had a legal existence. Among those laws was one
creating and establishing certain courts of record in each county, known as
circuit courts; and one of those courts composing the circuit was that of
the county of
Clackamas, which tribunal congress had adopted as a territorial court of the
United States. The permanent judicial power provided for in the organic act
was not in force, or had not superseded the temporary courts, because it had
not at that time entered upon the discharge of its duties, Chief Justice
Bryant not assuming the judicial ermine in Oregon until the 23d of May 1849,
the cases in question occurring in March.'-* To the point attempted to be made
later, that there had been no court because of-the irregularity of the judges
in convening it, he replied that the court itself did not cease to exist, after
being established, because there was no judge to attend to its duties, the
clerk continuing in office and in charge of the records.3
There had been a
contest immediately after the establishment of the territorial government
concerning the right of the foreign residents to vote at any election after
the lirst one, for which the organic act had distinctly provided, and a strong
effort had been made to declare the alien vote of 1849 illegal. The lirst
territorial legislature, in providing for and regulating general elections and
prescribing the qualifications of voters, declared that a foreigner must bo
duly naturalized before he could vote, the law being one of those adopted from
the Iowa statutes. One party, of whom Thurston was the head, supported by the
missionary interest, strenuously insisted upon this construction of the 5th
section of the organic law, because at the election which made Thurston
delegate the foreign- born voters had not supported him, and with him the
measures of the missionary class.
The opinion of the
United States judges being
2 In Pratt’s opinion on the location of
the seat of government, he reiterates this belief, and says that both he and
Bryant held that ‘no power existed by which the supreme court could be legally
held before the seat of government was established.’ Or. Statesman, Jan. (j,
18.Y2. According to this belief, the proceedings of the district courts vveie
illegal for nearly two years.
3 Or. Spectator, May 22, 1x51.
asked, Strong replied
to a letter of Thurston’s, confirming the position taken by the delegate, that
after the first election, until their naturalization was completed, no
foreigner could be allowed to vote.4 The inference was plain; if not
allowed to vote, not a citizen; if not a citizen, not entitled to the benefits
of the land law. Thurston also procured the expression of a similar opinion
from the chairman of the judiciary of the house of representatives, and from
the chairman of the committee on territories, which he had published in the
Spectator. Under these influences, the legislature of 1850—1 substantially
reenacted the Iowa law adopted in 1849, but Deady succeeded in procuring the
passage of a proviso giving foreigners who had resided hi the country five
years prior to that time, and who had declared, as most of them had, their
intention of becoming citizens, a right to vote.5
The Thurston
interest, asserting that congress had not intended to invest the foreign-born
inhabitants of Oregon with the privileges of citizens, declared that it was not
necessary that the oath to support the government of the United States and the
organic act should be taken before a court of record, but might for such
purpose be done before a common magistrate. Could they delude the ignorant into
making this error, advantage could be taken of it to invalidate subsequent
proceedings. But Pratt pointed out that while part of the proceedings, namely,
the taking of the oath required, could have been done before a magistrate, the
declaration of intention to become a citizen could only be made according to
the form and before the court prescribed in the naturalization laws; and that
the act of congress setting forth what was necessary to be done to become
entitled to the right to vote at the first election in Oregon did not separate
them—from
4 Or. Spectator, Nov. 28, 1850.
6 Deady
Bays lie had a ‘hard fight.’ The proviso Mi meant, and was understood to mean,
the restoration to McLoughlin, and the British subjects who had always lived in
the country, of the elective franchise. Hist. Or., MS,, SI.
which it was plain
that congress meant to confer upon the alien population of Oregon the
privileges of citizenship without delay, and to cement the population of the
territory as it stood when it asked that its provisional laws should be
adopted.
The meaning of the
5th section of the organic act should have been plain enough to any but
prejudiced minds. In the first place, it required the voter to bo a male above
the age of twenty-one years, and a resident of the territory at the time of
the passage of the act. The qualifications prescribed were, that he should be a
citizen of the United States of that age, or that being twenty-one he should
have declared on oath his intention to become a citizen, and have taken the
oath to support the constitution of the United States and the provisions of the
organic act. This gave him the right to vote at the first election, and made
him eligible to office; but the qualifications of voters and office-holders at
all subsequent elections should be prescribed by the legislative assembly. This
did not mean that the legislature should enact laws contrary to this which
admitted to citizenship all those who voted at the first election, by the very
terms required, namely, to take the oath of allegiance and make a declaration
of an intention to assume the duties of an American citizen; but that after
having set out 011 its territorial career under these conditions, it could make
such changes as were found necessary or desirable thereafter not in conilict
with the organic act. The proof of this position is in the fact that after and
not before giving the legislature the privilege, comes the proviso containing
the prescribed qualifications of a voter which must go into the territorial
laws, the same being „hose which entitled any white man to vote at the first
election. Having once taken those obligations which were forever to make him a
citizen of the United States by the organic act, the legislature had no right,
though it exercised the assumed power, to disfranchise those who voted
at the first
election, When in 1852-3 the legislature amended the laws regulating elections,
it removed in a final manner the restrictions which the Thurston democracy had
placed upon foreign-horn residents of the country. By the new law all white
male inhabitants over twenty-one years of age, having become naturalized, or
having declared their intention to become citizens, and having resided six
months in the territory, and in the county fifteen days next preceding the
election, were entitled to vote at any election in the territory.
To return to the
donation law and its construction. Persons could be found who were doubtful of
the meaning of very common words when they came to see them in a congressional
act, and who were unable to decide what ‘settler’ or 'occupant’ meant, or how
to construe ‘improvement’ or ‘possession.’ To help such as these, various legal
opinions were submitted through the columns of newspapers; but it was generally
found that a settler could be absent from Lis claim a great deal of his time,
and that occupation and improvement were defined in accordance with the means
and the convenience of the claimant.6
The surveyor-general,
who arrived in Oregon in time to begin the surveys of the public lands in October,
1S51, had before him a difficult labor/ The survey of the Willamette meridian
was begun at
6 See Home.
Missionary, vol. 24, 156. Thornton held that there was snch a thing as implied
residence, and that a man might be a resident by the residence of his agent;
and cited Kent’s Com., 77. Also that a claimant whose dwelling was nut on the
land, but who improved it by the application of his personal labor, or that of
his hired man, or member of his family, could demand a patent at the expiration
of four years. See opinion of J. Q. Thornton n Or. Spectator, Jan. 16, 1851. It
is significant that in these discussions ami opinions in which Thornton took a
prominent part at the time, he laid no claim to the authorship of tlu land law.
To do this was an afterthought. Mrs Odell, in her Bioyrophy of Thurston, MS.,
28, remarks upon this.
7Cong.
Globe, app], 1852-3, vol. xxvii. 331, 32d cong. i'd sess.; U. S. II. Ex. Doc.
2, vol. ii. ptiii. 5-8, 32d cong. 1st sess. The survey was conducted on the
method of base and meridian lines, and triangulations from fixed stations to
all prominent objects within the range of the theodolite, by means of which
relative distances were obtained, together with a general knowiedge of the
country, in advance of the linear surveys. Id.
the upper mouth of
the Willamette River, and the base line 7f miles south, in order to avoid the
Columbia River in extending the base line east to the Cascade Mountains. The
intersection of the base and meridian lines was 3^ miles west of the Willamette.
The reason given for fixing the point of beginning at this place was because
the Indians were friendly on either side of the line for some distance north
and south, and a survey in this locality would best accommodate the immediate
wants of the settlers.8 But it was soon found that the nature of
the country through which the initial lines were run would make it desirable in
order to accommodate the settlers to change the field of operations to the inhabited
valleys,3 three fourths of the meridian line north of the base line
passing through a country broken and heavily timbered. The base line east of
the meridian to the summit of the Cascade Mountains also passed through a
densely timbered country almost entirely unsettled. But on the west side of the
meridian line were the Tualatin plains, this section of the country being first
to be benefited by the survey.
On the 5tli of
February, 1852, appeared the first notice to settlers of surveys that had been
completed in certain townships, and that the surveyor general was prepared to
receive the notifications of their respective claims and to adjust the
boundaries thereof, he being made the arbiter and register of all donation
.claims.10 At the same time settlers were advised that they must
have their claims surveyed and cor* Kept of Preston in 17. S. U, Ex. Dor 52,
1851-t, v. £3, 31st con". 1st sess. It w as done liy Thurston's advice.
See Gong. Olobe, 1849-50, xxi. pt li. 1077, 31st cong. 1st sess.
8 William Ives was the contractor for the
survey of the base line and Willamette meridian north of it; and James Freeman
of the Willamette meridian south of it, as far as the Umpqua Valley.
10The first
survej.s advertised were of tov.nship 1 north, range 1 east; townships 7 and 8
south, range 1 west; and township 7 south, range 3 and 4 west. The oldest pu
tents issued for donation claims are those in Washington county, unless the
Oregon City lots may be older. See Or. Spectator, Feb. 10, 1852.
tiers established before
the government survey was made, in order that they might be able to describe
their boundaries by courses, distances, metes, and bounds, and to show where
their lines intersected the government Jines, claims being generally bounded
according to the fancy or convenience of the owner, instead of by the
rectangular method adopted in the public surveys.
The privilege of
retaining their claims as they had taken them was one that had been asked for
by memorial, but which had not been granted without qualification in the land
law. Thurston had explained how the letter of the law was to be evaded, and had
predicted that the surveyor general would be on the side of the people in this
matter.11 Preston, as had been foreseen, was lenient in allowing
irregular boundaries; a map of that portion of Oregon covered by donation
claims presenting a curious patchwork of parallelograms with angles obtuse, and
triangles with angles of every degree. Another suggestion of the surveyor
general was that settlers on filing their notifications, date of settlement,
and making proof of citizenship, should state whether they were married;13
for in the settlement of Oregon and the history of its division among the
inhabitants, marriage had been made to assume unusual importance. Contrary to
all precedent, the women of this remote region were placed by congress in this
respect upon an equality with the men—it may be in acknowledgment of their
having earned in the same manner and measure a right to be considered creditors
of the government, or the men may have made this arrangement that they through
their wives might control more land. It had, it is true, limited this equality
to those who were married, or had been married on starting for Oregon,13
v Letter to
the Electors of Oregon, 8.
18 Portland
Oregonian, Feb. 7, 1852.
13 ‘As respects grants of land, they ■will be
placed upon the same ' loting aa main citizens, provided that &uch widows
were in this country before De
but it was upon the
presumption that there were no unmarried women in Oregon, which was near the
truth. Men took advantage of the law, and to be able to lord it over a mile
square of laud married girls no more than children, who as soon as they became
wives were entitled to claim half a section in their own right;14
and girls in order to have this right married without due consideration.
Congress had indeed,
in its effort to reward the settlers of Oregon for Americanizing the Pacific
coast, refused to consider the probable effects of its bounty upon the future
of the country, though it was not unknown what it might be.15 The
Oregon legislature, notwithstanding, continued to ask for additional grants and
favors; first in 1851-2, that all white American women over eighteen years of
age who were in the territory on the 1st of December 1850, not provided for in
the donation act, should be given 320 acres of land; and to all white American
women over twenty- one who had arrived in the territory or might arrive between
the dates of December 1, 1850, and December 1, 1853, not provided for, 160
acres; no woman to receive more than one donation, or to receive a patent until
she had resided four years in the territory.
It was also asked
that all orphan children of white parents, residing in the territory before the
1st of December, 1850, who did not inherit under the act,18
cumber 1, 1850, ami
arc of American birth.’ Or. Spectator, Maj 8, 1851. Thurston in his Letter to
the Electors remarks that this feature of the dona- tio'i act wa? a popular one
in congress, and that he thought it just.
14It has
been decided that the words ‘single man’ included an unmarried woman. 7 Wall.,
219. See Deaily's Gen. Laws Or., 1S43-72. But I do not see how under that
construction a woman could be prevented holding as a ‘single mair first and as
married woman afterward, because the patent to her husband, as a married man,
would include 010 acres, 320 of which would be hern
15 ‘They said it would be injurious to the
country schools, by preventing the count.y from being thickly settled; that it
would retard the agricultural growth of the country; and tiiough it would meet
the case of many deserv- mg men, it would open the door to frauds and
speculations by all means to be avoided.’ Thurston’s Letter to the Electors of
Oregon, 8; Beadle’s Undev. West, 762-3; Home Missionary, vol. 26, p. 45.
16 Those whoso parents had died in Oregon
before the passage of tlie law
should be granted
eighty acres each: and that all orphan children whose parents had died in
coming to or after arriving in Oregon between 1850 and 1853 should receive
forty acres of land each.17
Neither of these
petitions was granted18 at the time, while many others were offered
by resolution or otherwise. As the period was expiring when lands would be
free, it began to be said that the time should be extended, even indefinitely,
and that all lands should be free.19
There was never, in
the history of the world, a better opportunity to test the doctrine of free
land, nor anything that came so near realizing it as the settlement of Oregon.
Could the government have restricted its donations to the actual cultivators
of the soil, and the quantity to the reasonable requirements of the individual
farmer, the experiment would have been complete. But since the donation was in
the nature of a reward to all classes of emigrants alike, this could not be
done, and the compensation had to be ample.
Some persons found it
a hardship to be restrained from selling their land for a period of four years,
and preferred paying the minimum price of $1.25 an acre to waiting for the
expiration of the full term. Accordingly, in February 1853, the donation law
was so amended that the surveyor-general might receive
did not come under
the requirements of the donation act; nor those whose parents had died upon the
road to Oregon. As they could not inherit, a direct grant was asked.
17 Or. Statesman, Dec. 16, 1831.
18 Heirs of settlers in Oregon who died
prior to Sept. 27, 1850, cannot inherit or hold land by virtue of the
residence and cultivation of their ancestors. Ford vs Kennedy, i Or. 100. The
daughter of Jason Lee was portionless, while the children of later comers
inherited.
19 See Or. Statesman, Nov. 6, 1853. A
resolution offered in the assembly of 1852-3 asked that the land east of the
Cascade mountains should be immediately surveyed, and sold at the minimum
price, in quantities not exceeding 640 acres to each purchaser; the money to
be applied to the construction of that portion of the contemplated I'acilic
railroad west of the Rocky Mountains. This was the first practical suggestion
of the Oregon legislature concerning the overland i ulroad, and appropriated
ail or nearly all the land in Oregon to the use of Oregon, the western portion
except that north of tne Columbia being to a great extent claimed.
tliis money after two
years of settlement in lieu of the remaining two years, the rights of the
claimant in tho event of his death to descend to his heirs at law as before. By
the amendatory act, widows of men who had they lived 'would have been entitled
to claim under the original act were granted all that their husbands would have
been entitled to receive had they lived,20 and their heirs after
them.
By this act also the
extent of all government reservations was fixed. For magazines, arsenals, dockyards,
and other public uses, except for forts, the amount of land was not to exceed
twenty acres to each, or at one place, nor for forts more than 640 acres.21
If in the judgment of the president it should be necessary to include in any
reservation the improvements of a settler, their value should be ascertained
and paid. The time fixed by this act for the expiration of the privileges of
the donation law was April 1855, when all the surveyed public lands left
unclaimed should be subject to public sale or private entry, the same as the
other public lands of the United States.
The land law of
Oregon waa again amended in July
1854, ;n anticipation of the coming into
market of the public lands, by extending to Oregon and Washington the
preemption privilege granted September 4, 1841, to the people of the
territories, to apply to any unclaimed lands, whether surveyed or not. For the
convenience of the later settlers, the time for giving notice to the surveyor
general of the time and place of settlement was once more extended to December
1855, or the last moment before the public lands became
salable. The act of 1854 declared that the donations thereafter should in no
case include a town site or lands settled upon for purposes of business or
!0 See
previous note 13. The surveyor general had before so construed the law.
_ 21 T’ais
was a great relief to the immigration at The Dalles, where the military had
taken up ten miles square of land, thereby greatly inconveniencing travellers
by depriving their Btock of a range any where near the usual place of
embarkation on the Columl lia.
Hisr. Ob., Vol. II. 13
trade, and not for
agriculture; hut tho legal subdivisions included in such town sites should be
subject to the operations of the act of May 23, 1844, “for the relief of
citizens of towns upon lands of the United States, under certain
circumstances.”22 The proviso to the 4th section of the original
act, declaring void all sales of lands before the issue of the patents
therefor, was repealed, and sales were declared invalid only where the claimant
had not resided four years upon the land. By these terms two subjects which had
greatly troubled the land claimants were disposed of; those who had been a long
time in the country could sell their lands without waiting for the issuance of
their patents, and those who had taken claims and laid out towns upon natural
town-sites were left undisturbed.23 This last amendment to the
donation law granted the oft-repeated prayer of the settlers that the orphan
children of the earliest immigrants who died before the passage of the act of
September 27, 1850, should be allowed grants of land, the donation to this
class being 160 acres each, Under this amendment Jason Lee’s daughter could
claim the small reward of a quarter-section of land for her father’s services
in colonizing the country. These orphans’ claims were to be set off to them by
the surveyor general in good agricultural land, and in case of the' decease of
either of them their rights vested in the survivors of the family. Such was the
land law as regarded individuals.
This act, besides,
extended to the territory of Wash-
22 This act provided that 'when any of the
surveyed public lands had been occupied as a town site, and was not therefore
subject to entry under the existing laws, in case the town were incorporated,
the judges of the county court for that county should enter it at tho proper
land office, at the irini- mum price, for the several use and benefit of the:
occupants thereof according to their respective interests, the proceeds of the
sale3 of lots to be disposed of according to rules and regulations prescribed
by the legislature; but the land must be entered prior to the commencement of
the public sale of the body of land in which the town site was included. See
taote on p. 72, Gen. Laws Or.
!3 Many
patents never issued. It was held by the courts that the law actually invested
the claimant who had complied with its requirements with the ownership of the
land, and that the patent waa simply evidence which did not affect the title.
Dtady’s Scraps, 5.
ington all the
provisions of the Oregon land law, or any of its amendments, and authorized a
separate corps of officers for this additional surveying district, whose duties
should be the same as those of the surveyor general, register, and receiver of
Oregon. It also gave two townships of land each to Oregon and Washington in
lieu of the two townships granted by the original act to Oregon for university
purposes.
Later, on March 12,
I860, the provisions of the act of September 28, 1850, for aiding in reclaiming
the swamp lands of Arkansas, were extended to Oregon, by which the state
obtained a large amount of valuable lands, of which gift I shall have
something to say hereafter
From the abstract here
given of the donation law at different periods, my reader will be informed not
only of the bounty of the government, but of the onerous nature of the duties
of the surveyor-general, who was to adjudicate in all matters of dispute or
question concerning land titles. His instructions authorized and required him
to settle the business of the Oregon City claim by notifying all purchasers,
donees, or assigns of lots or parts of lots acquired of McLoughlin previous to
March 4, 1849, to present their evidences of title, and have their land
surveyed, in order that patents might be issued to them; and this in 1852 was
rapidly being done.24
His special attention
was directed to the third article of the treaty of 1846, between the United
States and Great Britain, which provided that in the future appropriation of
the territory south of 49‘ north latitude, the possessory rights23
of the Hudson’s Bay
!* U. S. II. Ex. Doc. 52, v. 25, 32(1 oong. 1st sess.
25 This
subject came up in a peculiar hbape as late as 1871, 'when H. W. Corbett u;.3
in the U. S. senate. A case bail to be decided in the courts of Oregon in 1870,
'where certain persons claimed under William Johnson, who befure the treaty ot
1846 settled upon a tract of land south of I’ortiand. But Johnson died before
the land law was passed, anil the courts decided that in this case Johnson had
first lost his possessory rights by abandoning the claim; by dying beiore the
donation law was passed, he was not provided
Company, and of all
British subjects who should be found already in the occupation of land or other
property lawfully acquired, within the said territory, should be respected; and
to the fourth article, which declared that the farms, lands, and other property
belonging to the Puget Sound Agricultural Company on the north side of the
Columbia, should be confirmed to the said company, with the stipulation that
in case the situation of these farms and lands should be considered by the
United States to be of public and political importance, and the United States
government should signify a desire to obtain possession of the whole or any
part thereof, the property so required should be transferred to the said
government at a proper valuation, to be agreed upon between the parties. The
commissioner directed the surveyor- general to call upon claimants under the
treaty, or their agents, to present to him the evidence of the rights in which
they claimed to be protected by the treaty, and to show him the original
localities and boundaries of the same which they held at the date of the
treaty; and he was not required to survey in sections or minute subdivisions
the land covered by such claims, but only to extend the township lines over
them, so as to indicate their relative position and connection with the public
domain.
The surveyor-general
reported with regard to these claims, that McLoughlin, who had recently become
a naturalized citizen of the United States, had given notice September 29,
1852, that he claimed under the treaty of 184G a tract of land containing 640
acres, which included Oregon City within its boundaries, and that he protested
against any act that would dis-
for in that act, and
therefore had no title either under the treaty or the land law by which his
heirs could hold. This raised a question of In w with regard to the heirs of
British residents of Oregon before the treaty of 1846; and Corbett introduced
a bill in the senate to extend the rights of citizenship to half-breeds born
within the territory of Oregon previous to 1816, and now subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States, which was passed. Sup. Court Petitions, Or.
Laws, 1870, 227-9; Cong. Globe, 1871-2, app 730, 42J cong. 2d ses.-,.; Cong. Globe, 1871-2, part iL, p. 1179, 42d cong. 2d sess.
turb his possession,
except of the portion sold or granted by him within the limits of the Oregon
City claim.26
As to the limits of
the Hudson’s Bay Company’s claim in the territory, it was the opinion of chief
factor John Ballenden, he said, that no one could state the nature or define
the limits of that claim. He callcd the attention of the general land
commissioner, and through 1dm of the government, to the fact that settlers were
claiming valuable tracts of land included within the limits of that claimc.d by
the Hudson’s Bay and Puget Sound companies, and controversies had arisen not
only as to the boundaries, but as to the rights of the companies under the
treaty of 1846; and declared that it was extremely desirable that the nature
of these rights should be decided upon.27 To decide upon them himself
was something beyond his power, and he recommended, as the legislative assembly,
the military commander, and the superintendent of Indian affairs had done, that
the rights, whatever they were, of these companies, should be purchased. To
this advice, as we know, congress turned a deaf ear, until squatters had left
no land to quarrel over. The people knew nothing and cared less about the
rights of aliens to the soil of the United States. In the mean time the delay
multiplied the evils complained of. Let us take the site of Vancouver as an
example. Either it did or it did not belong to the Hudson’s Bay Company by the
terms of the treaty of 184G. If it did, then it was in the nature of a grant to
the company, from the fact that the donation law admitted the right of British
subjects to claim under the treaty, by confining them to a single grant of
land, and leaving it optional with them whether it should
2r I ha ve
already shown that having becomo an American citizen, McLough- liu could not
claim under the treaty. See Deady’s Or. Laws. 1845--04, 56-7. McLoughlin wap
led t'> commit thii error by the uiibrts of his foes to destroy his
citizenship.
37 U. IS'.
II. Ex. Doc. 14, iii. 14-17, 32d cong. 2d sess.; Olympia
Columbian, April 9, 1853.
be under the treaty
or under the donation law.2* In one case, however, it limited the
amount of land, and in the other it did not. But there was no provision made in
the donation law, the organic act, or anywhere else by which those claiming
under the treaty could define their boundaries or have their lands surveyed
and set off to them. The United States had simply promised to respect the
company’s rights to the lands, without inquiring what they were. They had
promised also to purchase them, should it be found they were of public or
political importance, and to pay a proper valuation, to be agreed upon between
the parties. But the citizens of the United States, covering the lands of the
Hudson’s Bay and Puget Sound Agricultural companies with claims, under the
donation law, deprived both companies and the United States of their
possession.
One of the
settlers—or, as they were called, squatters—on the Hudson’s Bay Company’s
lands was Amos M. Short, who claimed the town site of Vancouver.29
When he first went on the lands, before the treaty, the company put him off But
he persisted in returning, and subsequently killed two men to prevent being
ejected by process of law. Nevertheless, when the donation law' was passed
Short took no steps to tile a notification of his claim. Perhaps he was waiting
the action of congress with regard to the Hudson’s Bay Company’s rights. While
he waited he died, having lost the benefits of the act of September 27, 1850,
by delay. In the mean time congress passed the act of the 14th of February,
1853, permitting all persons who had located or might hereafter locate lauds
in that territory, in accordance writh the provisions of the law of
1850, in lieu of continued occupation, to purchase their claims at the rate of
$1.25 an acre, provided they had been two years
2F Df-ady’a
Oen. Laws Or., 1845-64,96. _
-91 have
given a part of Short’s history on page 703 of vol. i. lie tvas drowneil when
the Vandal la was wrecked, in January 1S53.
upon the land. The
widow of Short then filed a notification under the new act, and in order to
secure the whole of the 640 acres, which might have been claimed under the
original donation act, dated the residence of her husband and herself from
1848. But Mrs Short, whose notidcation was made in October 1853, was still too
late to receive the benefit of the new act, as Bishop Blanchet had caused a
similar notification to be made in May, claiming 640 acres for the mission of
St James30 out of the indefinite grant to the Hudson’s Bay Company.
Though the company’s rights of occupancy did not expire until 1859, the bishop
chose to take the same view held by the American squatters, and claimed
possession at Vancouver, where the priests of his church had been simply guests
or chaplains, under the clause in the organic act giving missions a mile square
of land; and the surveyor general of Washington Territory decided in his favor.81
Xo patent was however issued to the catholic church, the question of the
Hudson’s Bay Company’s claim remaining in abeyance, and the decision of the surveyor
general being reversed by the commissioner of the general land office, after
which an appeal was taken to the secretary of the interior.32
30 Says Roberts: ‘Even the catholics tried
to get the land at Vancouver... In the face of the 11th section of the donation
law. by which people were precluded from interfering with the company’s lands,
how could Short, the Roman catholics, and others do as they did?’
Recollections, MS., SO, 03.
31 The papers show that the mission
notification was on file before any claims were asserted to contiguous lands.
It is the oldest claim. Its recognition is coeval with the organization of
Oregon, and was a. positive grant more than two years before any American
settler could acquire an interest in or title to unoccupied public lands.
Report of Surveyor General, in Claim of St James Mission, 21; Oly mpia
Standard, April 5, 1802.
32 The council employed for the mission
furnished elaborate arguments on the side of the United States, as against the
rights of the Hudson’s Bay Company, one of the most striking of \.Ixich is the
following: ‘The fundamental objection to our claim is, that the United States
could not in good faith dispose of these lands pending the “indefinite” rights
of the Hudson’s Bay Company. We have seen that as to time they were not
indefinite, but had a fixed termination in May 1839. But either way, how can
the United States at the same time deny their right to appropriate or dispose
of the lands permanently, only respecting the possessory rights of the company,
and yet in 1849, 1S.)0, 1803, or 1854 have made such appropriation (for
military purposes) and permanent disposition, and now set it up against its
grant to us in 1S4S?.. .It is
The case not being
definitely decided, a bill was brought before congress in 1874 for the relief
of the catholic mission of St James, and on being referred to the committee on
private land claims, the chairman reported that it was the opinion of the
committee that the mission was entitled to G40 acres under the act of August 14,
1848, and recommended the passage of the bill, with an amendment saving to the
United States the right to remove from the premises any property, buildings, ur
other improvements it might have upon that portion of the claim covered by the
military reservation.83 But the bill did not pass; and in 1875, a
similar bill being under advisement by the committee on private land claims,
the secretary of war addressed a letter to the committee, in which he said that
the military reservation was valued at a million dollars, and that the claim of
the St James mission covered the whole of it; and that the war department had
always held that the religious establishment of the claimants was not a
missionary station among Indian tribes on the 14tli of August 1848, and that
the occupancy of the lands in question at that date was not such as the act of
congress required. The secretary recommended that the matter go before a court
and jury for final adjustment, on the passage of an act pro\iding for the
settlement of this and similar claims.54
Again in 1876, a bill
being before congress whose object was to cause a patent to be issued to the St
James mission, the committee on private land claims
said that tho United
States had title to the lands, yet it could not dispose of them absolutely in
pro’.senti, so that the grantee could demand immediate possession. Granted, so
far as the Hudson’s Lay Company was upon these lands with its possessory
rights, those rights must be respected. But how' does this admission derogate
from the right to grant such title as the United States then had, which wad the
proprietary right, encumbered only by a temporary right of possession, for
limited and special purpose?’ The arguments and evidence in this case are
published in a pamphlet called Claim of the St James Mission, Vancouver, IF.
T., to 640 acres of Land, from which the above is quoted.
S3 U. S. II.
Rept., 630, 43d cong. 1st sess., 1873-4.
84 U. S. II.
Ex. Doc., 117, 43d cong. 2d sess.
reported in favor of
the mission’s right to the land so far only as to amend the bill so as to
enable all the adverse claimants to assert their rights before the courts; and
recommended that in order to bring the matter into the courts, a patent should
be issued to the mission, with an amendment saving the rights of adverse
claimants and of the United States to any buildings or fixtures on the land.85
After long delays the
title was finally settled in November 18.74 by the issuance of a patent to Abel
G. Tripp, mayor of Vancouver, in trust for the several use and benefit of the
inhabitants according to their respective interests. Under an act of the legislature
the mayor then proceeded to convey to the occupants of lots and blocks the land
in their possession, according to the congressional law before adverted to in
reference to town sites.
That a number of land
cases should grow out of misunderstandings and misconstructions of the land law
was inevitable. Among the more important of the unsettled titles was that to
the site of Portland. The reader already knows that in 1843 Overton claimed on
the west bank of the Willamette 640 acres, of which soon after he sold half to
Lovejoy, and in 1845 the other half to Pettygrove; and that these two jointly
improved the claim, laying it off into lots and blocks, some of which they sold
to other settlors in the town, who in their turn made improvements.
In 1845, also,
Lovejoy sold his half of the claim to Benjamin Stark, who came to Portland this
year as supercargo of a vessel, Pettygrove and Stark continuing to hold it
together, and to sell lots. In 1848 Pettygrove, Stark being absent, sold his
remaining interest to Daniel II. Lownsdale. The land being
^ Cong.
Globe, 1876-7, 44; U. S. H. Kept, 1S9, 44th cong. 1st sess., 1S75-6, U. S. II,
Com. Hept, i. 249, 44th cong. 1st sess.; Portland Oregonian, Oct. SO, 1869;
Rossit Souvenirs, yi. 00.
registered in the
name of Pettygrove, Lownsdale laid claim to the whole, including Stark’s
portion, and filed his claim to the whole with the registrar, residing upon it
in Pettygrove’s house.36
In March 1849
Lownsdale sold his interest n the claim to Stephen Coffin, and immediately
repurchased half of it upon an agreement with Coffin that he should undertake
to procure a patent from the United States, when the property was to be equally
owned, the expenses and profits to be equally divided; or if the agreement
should be dissolved by mutual consent, Coffin should convey his half to
Lownsdale. The deed of Coffin reserved the rights of all purchasers of lots
under Pettygrove, binding the contracting parties to make good their titles
when a patent should be obtained. In December of the same year Lownsdale and
Coffin sold a third interest in the claim to \V. W. Chapman, reserving, as
before, the rights of lot owners.
Up to this time there
had been no partition of the land; but in the spring of 1350, Stark having returned
and asserted his right in the property, a division was agreed to between Stark
and Lownsdale, by which each held his portion in severalty, and to confirm
titles to purchasers on their separate parcels of land, Stark taking the
northern and Lownsdale the southern half of the claim.
Upon the passage of
the donation law, with its various requirements and restrictions, it became
necessary for each claimant, in order not to relinquish his right to some
other, to apply for a title to a definitely described portion of the whole
claim. Accordingly, on the 10th of March, 1852, Lownsdale, having been four
years in possession, came to an arrangement with Coffin and Chapman with
regard to the division of his part of the claim in which they were
30 Lownsdale
had previously resided west of this claim, on a creek where he had a tannery,
the first in Oregon to make leather for sale. He paid for the claim in leather.
Overland Monthly, i. 36.
equal
owners. The division being agreed upon, it became necessary also to make some
bargain by which the lots sold on the three several portions of Lowns- dale’s
interest might fall with some degree of fairness to the three owners when they
came to make deeds after receiving patents; the same being necessary with
regard to the lots previously selected by their wives out of their claims,
which were exchanged to bring them within the limits agreed upon previous to
going before the surveyor general for a certificate. Everything being settled
between Lownsdale, Chapman, and Coffin, the first two filed their notification
of settlement and claim on the 11th of March, and the latter on the 19th of
August.
On the 8th
of April Lownsdale, by the advice of A. E. Wait, filed a notification of claim
to the whole G40 acres, upon the ground that Job McXainee, who had in 1847
attempted to jump the Portland claim, but had afterward abandoned it, had
returned, and was about to file a notification for the whole claim. Lownsdale
and Wait excused the dishonesty of the act by the assertion that either of the
other two owners couhl have done the same had they chosen. A controversy arose
between Chapman and Coffin on one side and Lownsdale on the other, which was decided
by the surveyor general in favor of Chapman and Coffin, Lownsdale refusing to
accept the decision. Stark and the others then appealed to the commissioner of
the general laud office, who gave as his opinion that Portland could not be
held as a donation claim: first, because it dated from 1845, and congress did
not recognize claims under the provisional government; again, because congress
contemplated only agricultural grants; and last, on account of the clause in
the organic act which made void all laws of the provisional government
affecting the title to land, lie also believed the town-site law to be extended
to Oregon along with the other United States laws; and
further
asserted that the donations were in the nature of preemption, only more
liberal.37
This
decision made the Portland land case more intricate than before, all rights of
ownership in the land being disallowed, and there being no reasonable hope that
those claiming it could ever acquire any; since if they should be able to hold
the land until it came into market, there would still be the danger that any
person being settled upon any of the legal subdivisions might claim it, if not
sufficiently settled to be organized into a town. Or should the town-site law
be resorted to, the town would be parcelled out to the occupants according to
the amount occupied by each. Sad ending of golden dreams!
But the
commissioner himself pointed out a possible Haw in the argument, in the word
‘surveyed,’ in the second line of the act of 1844. The lands settled 011 in
Oregon as town sites were not surveyed, which might affect the application of
that law. The doubt led to the employment of the judicial talent of the
territory in the solution of this legal puzzle, which was not, after all, so
difficult as at a cursory glance it had seemed. Chief Justice Williams, iu a
case brought by Henry Martin against W. G-. T Vault aud others, who, having
sold town lots in Vancouver in exchange for Martii>’s land claim, under a
bond to comply with the requirements of the expected donation law, and then to
convey to Martin by a good and sufficient deed, refused to make good their
agreement, reviewed the decision of Commissioner Wilson and Secretary
McClelland in a manner that threw much light upon the town-site law, and showed
Oregon lawyers capable of dealing with these knotty questions.
.Judge
Williams denied that that portion of the organic act which repealed all
territorial laws affecting the title to land repealed all laws regulating the
87 Or.
Statesman, June 6, 1854; Olympia Pioneer and Democrat, -Iune24, 1S54; Portland
Oregonian, June 10, 1S54. See also Brief on behalf of Stark, Coffin, and
Chapman, prepared l>y S. S. Baxter.
possessory
rights of settlers. Congress, he said, was aware that many persons had taken
and largely improved claims under the provisional government, and did not
design to leave those claims without legal protection, but simply to assert
the rights of the United States; did not mean to say that the claim laws of the
territory should be void as between citizeu and citizen, but that the United
States title should not be encumbered. He argued that if the act of 1848
vacated such claims, the act of 1850 made them valid, by granting to those who
had resided upon their claims, and by protecting the rights of their heirs, in
the case of their demise before the issuance of patents. The surveyor general
was expressly required to issue certificates, upon the proper proof of
settlement and cultivation, “whether made under the provisional government or
not.” He declared untenable the proposition that land occupied as a town site
prior to 1850 was not subject to donation under the act. A man might settle
upon a claim in 1850, and in 1852 lay it out into a town site; but the surveyor
general could not refuse him a certificate, so long as he had continued to
reside upon and cultivate any part of it.
The rights
of settlers before 1850 and after were placed Upon precisely the same footing,
and therefore if a claim wrere taken in 1847, and laid off in town
lots in 1849, supposing the law to have been complied with in other respects,
the claimant would have the same rights as if he had gone upon the land after
the passage of the donation law. The surveyor general could-not say to an
applicant who had complied with the law that he had forfeited his right by
attempting to build up a town. A settler had a right to admit persons to occupy
under him or to exclude them; and if he admitted them—such action not being
against the public good—it ought not to prejudice his claim.
J udge
Williams further held that the town-site law of 1844 was not applicable to
Oregon, and that the land laws of the United States had not been extended
over this
territory. The preemption law had never been in force in Oregon; there were no
land districts or land offices established.33 No claims had ever
been taken with reference to such a law, nor had any one ever thought of being
governed by them in Oregon. And as to town sites, while the California land law
excepted them from private entry, the organic act of Oregon excepted only salt
and mineral lands, and said nothing about town sites; while the act of 1850 specifically
granted the Oregon City claim, leaving all other claims upon the same footing,
one with another.
Meanwhile,
the citizens of Portland who had purchased lots were in a state of
bewilderment as to their titles. They knew of whom they had purchased; but
since the apportionment of the surveyor general, which made over to Coffin a
part of Lownsdale’s conveyances and to Lownsdale and Chapman a part of Coffin’s
conveyances, they knew not where to look for titles. To use the words of one
concerned, a ‘three days’ protracted meeting’ of the citizens had been held to
devise ways and means of obtaining titles to their lots. They finally memorialized
congress to pass a special act, exempting the town site of Portland from the
provisions of the donation act, which failed to meet with approval, being
opposed by a counter-petition of the proprietors; though whether it would have
succeeded without the opposition was unknown.
In the
winter of 1854--5 a bill was before the legislative assembly for the purchase
of the Portland land claim under the town-site law of 1844, before mentioned,
Portland having become incorporated in 1851, and having an extent of two miles
on the river by one mile west from it. Coffin and Chapman opposed the bill, and
the legislature adjourned without taking
38 Two land districts were
established in February 1855, Willamette and Umpqua, but the duties of officers
appointed were by act declared to be * the same as are now prescribed by law
for other land offices, and for the surveyor general of Oregon, so far as they
apply to such offices. ’ Or. Statutes, 1853-4, 57. They simply extended new
facilities to, without imposing any new regulations upon, the settlers. 4
any action
in the matter.33 Finally, the city of Portland was allowed to enter
320 acres under the town- site law in I860, some individual claims under tho
same being disallowed.110
The
decision rendered by the general land office in 1858 was that the claims of
Stark, Chapman, and Coffin were good, under their several notifications; that
Lownsdale’s was good under his first notification; and that where the claims of
these parties conflicted with the town-site entry of 320 acres their titles
should be secured through the town authorities under the provisions of the act
of 1844, and the supplementary act of 1854 relating to town sites.41
On the
demise of Lownsdale, not long after, his heirs at law attempted to lay claim to
certain lots in Portland which had been sold previous to the adjustment of
titles, but with the understanding and agreement that when their claims should
be confirmed the grantors of titles to town lots should confirm the title of
the grantees. The validity of the titles obtained from Stark, Lownsdale,
Coffin, and Chapman, whether confirmed or not, was sustained by the courts. A
case different from either of these was one in which the heirs of Mrs Lownsdale
proved that she had never dedicated to the public use in streets or otherwise a
portion of her part of the donation claim; nor had the city purchased from her
the ground on which Park street, the pride of Portland, was laid out. To
compel the city to do this, a row of small houses was built in the street,
where
39 Or. Statesman, Feb. 6, 1855. As the
reader has probably noticed, tho town-site law was extended to Oregon in July
1S54, but did not apply to claims already taken, consequently would not apply
to Portland. See also Dec. Sup. Cl, relative to Town Sites in Or.; Or.
Statesman, Aug. 8, 1875; Or. S. C. Eepts, 1853-4.
10 A. P. Dennison, and one Spear, made
claims which were disallowed. The letter’s pretensions arose from having leased
some land between 1850 and 1S53, and believing that he could claim as a
resident under that act. Dennison’s pretensions were similarly founded, and, I
believe, Carter’s also.
Brief
inbehalf ofStark, Coffin, Lownsdale, and Chapman, 1-24; Or. Statesman, Dec.
21. 1858. See also Martin vs T’Vault, 1 Or. 77; Lownsdale vs City of Portland
(U. S. D. 0.), 1 Or. 3S0; Chapman vs School District No. 1 etal.; Op'm. Justice
Deculy, C. C. U. S.; Burke vs Lownsdde.
they
remain to this time, the city unwilling to purchase at the present value, and
the owners determined not to make a present of the land to the public.13
There was likewise a suit for the Portland levee, which had been dedicated to
the use of the public. The supreme court decided that it belonged to the town;
but Deady reversed the decision, on the ground that at the time the former
decision was rendered the land did not belong to the city, but to Coffin,
Chapman, and Lownsdale.43
42 Lownsdale died in April 1862. His widow
was Nancy Gillihan, to whom he was married about 1S50.
‘’Apropos of the
history of Portland land titles: there came to Oregon ■with the
immigration of 1817 a woman, commonly believed to be a widow, calling herself
Mrs Elizabeth Caruthers, and with her, Finiee Caruthers, her son. They settled
on land adjoining Portland on the south, and when the donation law of 1850 was
passed, the woman entered her part of the claim under the name of Elizabeth
Thomas, explaining that she had married one Thomas, in Tennessee, who had left
her, and who she heard had died in 1821. She preferred for certain reasons to
be known by her maiden name of Caruthers. She was allowed to claim 320 acres,
and her son 320, making a f all donation claim. A house was built on the line
between the two portions, in which both claimants lived. In duo time both
‘proved up’ and obtained their certificates from the land office. About 1857
Mrs C.-ruthers-Thomas died; and in I860 Finice, her son, died. As he was her
sole heir, the whole 640 acres belonged to him. Leaving no will, and being
without family, the estate was administered upon and settled.
So valuable a property was not long without
claimants. The state claimed it as an escheat, Or. Jour. House, 1808, 44—6,
405, but resigned its pretensions on learning that there were heirs ■who could
claim. During this time an attempt had been made to prove Finice Thomas
illegitimate. This failing, A. J. Knott and II. J. Ladd preempted the land
left by Mrs Thomas, on the ground that being a woman she could not take under
the donation act. Knott and Ladd obtained patents to the land; but they were
subsequently set aside by the U. S. sup. ct, which held that a woman was a
r.ian in legal parlance, and that Mrs Thomas’ claim -was good.
Meantime agitation
brought to the surface new facts. There were men in Oregon who had knowp the
husband in Tennessee and Missouri, and who believed him still alive. Two who
ha> I known Thomas, or as he was called, Wrestling Joe, were sent to St
Louis, accompanied by a lawyer, to discover the owner of south Portland. He was
found, his identity established, his interest in the property purchased for
the parties conducting the search, and lie was brought to Oregon to aid in
establishing the right of the purchasers. In Oregon were found ;i number of
persons who recognized and identified him as Wrestling Joe of the Missouri frontier,
though old and feeble. lie -was a man not likely to be forgotten or mistaken,
and had a remarkable soar on bis fact. In 1872 a case was brought to trial
before a iury, who en the evidence decided that the man brought to Oregon was
Joe Thornes. Soon after, and pending an appeal to the sup. ct , a compromise
was effected with the contestants, by the formation of the South Portland
Iteal Estate Association, which bought up all the conflicting claims and
entered into possession. Subsequently they soli I to Villard.
After the settlement
of the ~uils as above, Wrestling Joe became incensed with some of the men
connected with the settlement, and denied that he was
Advantage
was sought to be taken by some of that clause in the donation law which
declared that no laws passed by the provisional legislature interfering with
the primary disposal of the soil should be valid. But the courts held, very
properly, that it had not been the intention of congress to interfere with the
arrangements already made between the settlers as to the disposal of their
claims, but that on the contrary the organic law of the territory distinctly
said that all bonds and obligations valid under the laws of the provisional
government, not in conflict with the laws of the United States, were to be
valid under the territorial laws till altered by the legislature, and that the
owners of town sites who had promised deeds were legally bound to furnish them
on obtaining the title to the land. And the courts also decided that taxes
should be paid on land claims before the patents issued, because by the act of
September 27, 1850, the land was the property in fee simple of every claimant
who had fulfilled the conditions of the law.
A question
arose concerning the right of a man having an Indian woman for a wife to hold
640 acres of land, which was decided by the courts that he could so hold.
The Dalles
town-site claim was involved in doubt and litigation down to a recent period,
or during a term of twenty-three years. That the methodists first settled at
this point as missionaries is known to the reader; also that in 1847 they sold
it to Whitman, who was in possession during the Oayuse war, which drove all the
white population out of the country. Thus the first claim was methodist,
transferred to the presbyterians, and finally abandoned. But, as I have
that person,
asserting that his name was John C. Nixon, ami that all he hail testified to
before was false. This led to the indictment and arrest of the men who went to
St Louis to find and identify Thomas, but on their trial tlio evidence was so
strong that they were acquitted. Soon after, Thomas returned to St Louis,
where he lived, as before, after the manner of a mendi. cant. See communication
by TV. 0. Johnson, in Portland Or., Feb. 2, 1S78.
Ui»r. Ob., Vol. II. 19
elsewhere
shown, a catholic mission was maintained there afterward tor some years.
From the
sale44 and abandonment of the Dalles mission to June 1850 there was
no protestant mission at that place; but subsequent to the passage of the
donation law, and notwithstanding the military reservation of the previous
month of May, an attempt was made to revive the methodist claim in that year by
surveying and making a claim which took in the old mission site; and in 1854
their agent, Thomas H. Pearne, notified the surveyor general of the fact.45
In the interim, however, a town had grown up at this place, and certain private
individuals and the town officers opposed the pretensions of the methodists.
And it would seem from the action of the military authorities at an earlier
date that either they differed from the methodist society as to their rights,
or were willing to give them an opportunity to recover damages for the
appropriation of' their property, the former mission premises being located
about in the centre of the reservation.
When the
amended land law in 1853 reduced the military reservations in Oregon to a mile
square, the reserve as laid out still took something more than half of the
claim as surveyed by the methodists in , 1850.46 For this the
society, by its agent, brought a
44 The price
paid by Whitman for the improvements at The Dalles was, according to the
testimony of the methodist claimants, $000 in a draft on the American board,
the agreement being cancelled in 1849 by a surrender of the draft.
4“ The
superintendent of the M. E. mission, William lloberts, advertised in the
Spectator of Jan. 10, ISoO, that he designed to reoccupy the place, declaring
that the society had only withdrawn from it for fear of the Indians, though
every one could know that when the mission was sold the war had not yet broken
out. The Indians were, however, ill-tempered and defiant, as I have related.
See Fulton’s Eastern Oregon, MS., 8.
46Fulton
describes the boundaries as follows: ‘When the government reduced the military
reservations to a mile square, it happened that, on surveying the land so as
to bring the fort: in the proper position with regard to the boundaries, a
strip of land was left nearly a quarter of a mile in width next the river,
which was not covered by the reserve. To this strip of land tlie mission
returned, upon the pretence that as it was not included in the military
reservation, for which they had received §24,000, it was still theirs. In addition
to the river front, there was also a strip of land on the east side of the
reserve which was brought by tho government survey within the section that
claim
against the government for $20,000 for the land, and later of $4,000 for the
improvements, which in their best days had been sold to Whitman for $600.
Congress, by the advice of Major G-. J. Raines, then in command at Fort Dalles,
and through the efforts of politicians who knew the strength of the society,
allowed both claims;47 and it would have been seemly if this liberal
indemnity for a false claim had satisfied the greed of that ever-hungry body of
Christian ministers. But they still laid claim to every foot of ground which
by their survey of 1850 fell without the boundaries of the military reserve,
taking enough on every side of it to make up half of a legal mission donation.^
The case
came before three successive surveyor- generals and the land commissioners,49
and was each time decided against the missionary society, until, as I have
said, congress was induced to pay damages to the amount of $24,000, in the
expectation, no doubt, that this would settle the claims of the missionaries
forever. Instead of this, however, the methodist influence was strong enough
with the secretary of the interior in 1875 to enlist him in the business of getting
a deed iu fee simple from the government of the land claimed by the
missionaries,50 although the prop-
would have been the
mission claim if adhered to as originally occupied. This also they claimed,
managing so well that to make out their section they went all around the
reserve. Eastern Or., MS., 3-5.
47 Bill passed iu June 1860. See remarks
upon it by Or. Statesman, April
26, 1S59; Id., March 15, 1859; Ind. Aff. Rept,
1854, 284-6.
“They- made another
point—that Waller had left The Dalles and taken land at Salem, where he had but
half a claim, which he wanted to fdl up at The Dalles. Fulton’s Eastern Or.,
MS., 7. Deady says notwithstanding that Roberts had declared the sale to
Whitman cancelled in 1S49, a formal deed of quitclaim was not obtained till
Feb. 2S, 1859; and further, that on the 3d of November, 1S58, Walker and Eells,
professing to act for the American board, had conveyed the premises to M. M.
McCarver and Samuel L. White, subject only to the military reservation.
Portland Oregonian, Dec. 4, 1879; Or. Statesman, Aug. 25 and Sept. 8, 1855.
*9 U. S.
II. Ex. Doc., 1, vol. v. 5, 38th cong. 2d sess.; Land Off. Rept, 1864, 2;
Portland Oregonian, Jan. 23, 1865.
50Portland
Adrocate, May 6, 1875; Vancotwer Register, Aug. 6, 1875; V. Y. Methodist, in
Walla Walla Statesman, May 1, 1875. Fulton says James K. Kelly told him that
Delano had himself been a methodist minister, winch may account for the strong
interest in this case. Eastern Or., MS., 6.
erty was
already covered by a patent under the donation act to W. D. Bigelow, who
settled at The Dalles in 1850,51 and a deed under the town-site act.
But by Judge Deady this patent was held of no effect, because the section of
the statutes under which it was issued imposed conditions which were not complied
with, namely, that the grant could only be made upon a survey approved by the
surveyor general and found correct by the commissioner, neither of which could
be maintained, as both had rejected the claim. And in any case, under the
statute,52 such a patent could operate only as a relinquishment of
title on the part of the United States, and could not interfere with any valid
adverse right like that of Bigelow or Dalles City, nor preclude legal
investigation and decision by a proper judicial tribunal.
This legal
investigation began in the circuit court of Wasco county in September 1877, but
was removed in the following January to the United States district court,
which rendered a decision in October 1879 adverse to the missionary society,
and sustaining the rights of the town-site owners under the donation and town-site
laws, founded upon a thorough examination of the history and evidence in the
case. The mission then appealed to the U. S. supreme court, which, in 1883,
finally affirmed Deady’s decision, and The Dalles, which' had been under this
cloud for a quarter of a century, was at length enabled to give a clear title
to its property.
The claim
made by the catholics at The Dalles in
51 Bigelow
sold and conveyed, Dec. 9, 1860, an undivided third interest in
27 acres of his claim to James X. Kelly and
Aaron E. Wait; and Dec. 12, 1864, also conveyed to Orlando Humason the
remaining two third* of this tract. Humason died in Sept. 1S75, leaving the
property to his widow I'hoebe Humason, who became one of three in a suit
against the missionary society. See The Dalles Meth. Miss. Claim Cases, 5, a
pamphlet of 22 pp. Bigelow also conveyed to Kelly and Wait 46 town lots on the
hill part of the town, known as Blaif addition to Dalles City. Id.
“2Deady
quotes it as ‘section 2447 of the E. S.,’ and says it was ‘taken from the act
of Dec. 22, 1854, authorizing the issue of patents in certain cases, and only
applies where there has been a grant by statute without a provision for the
issue of a patent,’ which could nou be affirmed in this case.
1848, and
who really were in possession at the time of the passage of the organic act,
was set aside, except so far as they were allowed to retain about half an acre
for a building spot. So differently is law interpreted, according to whether
its advocates are governed by its strict construction, by popular clamor, or by
equity and common sense.
In the
case of the original ‘old mission’ of the methodist church in the Willamette
Valley, the removal of the mission school to Salem in 1843 prevented title.
The land on which Salem now stands would have come under the law had not the
mission school been discontinued in 1844; and the same may be said of all the
several stations, that they had been abandoned before 1850.
As to the
grants to protestant missions, they received little benefit from them. The
American board sold Waiilatpu for $1,000 to Cushing Eells, as I have before
mentioned. It was not a town site, and there was no quarrel over it. An attempt
by the catholics to claim under the donation law at Walla Walla was a failure
through neglect to make the proper notification, as I have also stated
elsewhere. No notice of the privilege to claim at Lapwai was taken until 18G2,
when the Indian agent of Washington Territory for the Nez Perces was notified
by Eells that the land he was occupying for agency purposes was claimed by the
American board, and a contest arose about surveying the land, which was
referred to the Indian bureau, Eells forbidding the agent to make any further
improvements.63 But as the law under which
53 Charles
Hutchins, thi agent referred to, remarks that the missionaries
at Lapwai may fcavo
acted with discretion in retiring to the Willamette Val
ley, although they
were assured of protection by the Nez Perc6s; but as
they had made no
demonstration of returning from 1847 to 1S62, and had
been engaged in other
pursuits, it was suggestive of tho thought that it was
the value of the
improvements made upon tho land that prompted them to
put in their claim at
this time. lie could have added that the general im
provement in this
part of the country might have prompted them. hid. Ajf.
Sept,
180-2, 426.
the
missions could claim required actual occupancy at the time of its passage, none
of the lands resided upon by the presbyterians were granted to the board except
the Waiilatpu claim from which the occupants were excluded by violence and
death. Thus, of all the land which the missionaries had taken so much trouble
to secure to their societies, and which the organic act was intended to
convey, only the bloodstained soil of Whitman’s station was ever confirmed to
the church, because before 1848 every Indian mission had been abandoned except
those of the catholics, who failed to manage well enough to have their claims
acknowledged where they might have done so, and who committed the blunder of
attempting to seize the laud of the Hudson’s Bay Company at Vancouver.
Great as
was the bounty of the government, it was not an unmixed blessing. It developed
rapacity in some places, and encouraged slothful habits among some by giving them
more than they could care for, and allowing them to hope for riches from the
sale of their unused acres. The people, too, soon fell out with the
surveyor-general for taking advantage of his position to exact illegal fees
for surveying their claims prior to the public survey, Preston requiring them
to bear this expense, and to employ his corps of surveyors. About $25,000 wras
extorted from the farmers in this way, when Preston was removed on their complaint,
and Charles Iv. Gardiner of Washington city appointed in his place in November
1853.
Gardiner
had not long been in office before lie followed Preston’s example. The people
protested and threatened, and Gardiner was obliged to yield. Both the
beneficiaries and the federal officer knew that an appeal to the general land
office would result in the people having their will in any matters pertaining
to their donation. The donation privileges expired in 1855, after which time
the public lands were subject
to the
United States law for preemption and purchase.64 On the admission
of Oregon as a state in 1859, out of eight thousand land claims iiled in the
registrar’s office in Oregon City, only about one eighth had been forwarded to
Washington for patent, owing to the neglect of the government to furnish clerks
to the registrar, who could issue no more than one certificate daily. Fees not
being allowed, this officer could not aiford to hire assistants. But in 18G2
fees were allowed, and the work progressed more satisfactorily, though it is
doubtful if ten years afterward all the donation patents had been issued.35
64 In 1856
John S. Ziefoer was appointed surveyor general, and held the offii-e until
1859, when W. W. Chapman was appointed. In 1861 he gavf. way to B. J. Pengra,
and he in turn to E. L. x\pplegate, who was followed by W. H. Odell, Ben.
Simpson, and J. C. Tolman, all Oregon men.
55 Land Off. Kept, 1S58, 33, 1863, 21-2; Or.
Argus, Sept. 11, 1858; S. !<’. Bulletin, Jan. 28, 1864.
POLITICS
AND rROGPESS.
1853.
Legislative
Proceedings—Judicial Districts—Public Buildings—Tenor of
Legislation*—Instructions to the Congressional Delegate—Harbors and
Shipping—Lane’s Congressional Labors—Charges against Governor Caines—Ocean Mail
Service—Protection of Overland Immigrants—Military Roads—Division of the Territory—Federal
Appointments—New Judges and their Districts—Wiiigs and Democrats—Lane as
Governor and Delegate—Alonzo A. Skinner—As Able and Humane Man—Sketch of his
Life and Public Services.
1 have said nothing
about the legislative and political doings of the territory since the summer
of 1852, when the assembly met in obedience to a call from Governor Gaines,
only to show its contempt by adjourning without entering upon any business.1
At the regular term in December there were present five whigs, three from
Clackamas county and two from Yamhill. Only one other county, Umpqua, ran a
whig ticket, and that elected a democrat, which promised little comfort for the
adherents of Gaines
1 The
council was composed of Deady, Garrison, Lovejoy, Hall, and Way- mire of the
former legislature, and A. L. Humphry of Benton and Lane counties, Lucius W.
Phelps of Linn, and Levi Seott of Umpqua, Douglas, and Jackson. Lancaster, from
the north side of the Columbia, was not present. The members of the lower house
were J. C. Avery and George E. Cole of Benton; W. T. Matlock, A. E. Wait, and
Lot Whitcomb of Clackamas; John A. Anderson of Clatsop and Pacific; F. A.
Chenoweth of Clarke and Lewis; Curtis of Douglas; John K Hardin of Jackson;
Thomas N. Aubrey of Lane; James Curl End Roy*i Cottle of Linn; B. F. Harding,
Benjamin Simpson, and Jacob Conser of Marion; H. N. V. Holmes and J. M. Fulkerson
of Polk; A. C. Gibbs of Umpqua; -John Pdeliardson, F. B. Martin, aud John Carey
of Yunhill; Benjamin Stark, Milton Tuttle, and Israel Mitchell of Washington.
Or. Statesman, July 31, 1S52. The officers elected in July held over,
and the
federal judges, whose mendacity in denying the validity of the act of 1849,
adopting certain of the Revised Statutes of 1843 of Iowa, popularly known as
the steamboat code,2 was the cause of more confusion than their
opposition to the location of the seat of government act, also declared to be
invalid, because two of them used the Revised Statutes of Iowa of 1838, adopted
by the provisional government, in their courts, instead of the later one which
the legislative assembly declared to be the law.
As I have
before recorded, the legislature of 18512, in order to secure the
administration of the laws they enacted, altered the judicial districts in such
a manner that Pratt’s district included the greater part of the Willamette
Valley. But Pratt’s term expired in the autumn of 1852-3, and a now man, C. F.
Train, had been appointed in his place, toward whom the democracy were not
favorably inclined, simply because he was a whig appointee.3 As
Pratt was no longer at hand, and as the business of the courts in the counties
assigned to him was too great for a single judge, the legislature in 1852-3
redistricted the territory, making the 1st district, which belonged to Chief
Justice Nelson, comprise the counties of Lane, Umpqua, Douglas, and Jackson;
the 2d district, which would be Train’s, embrace Clackamas, Marion, Yamhill,
Polk, Benton, and Linn; and the 3d, or Strong’s, consist of Washington,
Clatsop, Clarke, Lewis, Thurston, Pierce, and Tsland. By this arrangement
Nelson would have been compelled to remain in contact with border life during
the remainder of his term had not Deady, who was then president of the council,
relented so far as to procure the insertion in the act of
! Amory
Holbrook thna named it, meanm^ it vrax a carry-oll, because it had not been
adopted act by act. Says the Or. Statesman, Jan. 8, 1S53:
‘ The code of laws
known as the steamboat code, enacted by the legislative assembly, has been and
is still disregarded by both of the federal judges in the territory, while the
old Iowa blue-book, expressly repealed by the assembly, is enforced throughout
their districts.’
! The Or.
Statesman, Dec. 18, 1852, predicted that ha would never come to Oregon, and lie
never did.
a section
allowing the judges to assign themselves to their districts by mutual
agreement, only notifying the secretary of the territory, who should publish
the notice before the beginning of March;4 the concession being made
on account of the active opposition of the whig members to the bill as it was
iirst drawn, they making it a party question, and several democrats joining
with them. The law as it wTas passed also made all writs and
recognizances before issued valid, and declared that no proceedings should bo
deemed erroneous in consequence of the change in the districts. The judges
immediately complied with the conditions of the new law, and assigned themselves
to the territory they had formerly occupied.
The former
acts concerning the location of the public buildings of the territory were
amended at this term and new boards appointed,5 the governor being
declared treasurer of the funds appropriated, without power to expend any
portion except upon an order t'rom the several boards constituted by the
legislature.” Here the matter rested until the next term of the legislature.
*Id., Feb.
12, 1833. The Statesman remarked that the majority in the house had killed the
first bill and decided to leave the people without courts, unless they could
carry a party point, when the council in a commendable spirit of conciliation
passed a new bill.
5 The new board consisted of Eli M.
Barnum, Albert W. Ferguson, and Alvis Kimsey. Bamu;n was from Ohio, and his
wife was Frances Latimer of Norwalk, in that state. The penitentiary board
consisted of William M. King, Samuel Parker, and Nathaniel Ford. University
board, James A. Bennett, John Trapp, and Lucius Phelps.
6 The acts of this legislature which it
may be well to mention are as follows: Creating and regulating the office of
prosecuting attorney; L. F. Grover being appointed for the 2d district, R. E.
Stratton for the 1st, and Alexander Campbell for the 3d. At the election of
June following, R. P. Bois6 was chosen in the 2d district, Sims in the 1st, and
Alex. Campbell in the 3d. Establishing probate courts, and providing for the
election of constables and notaries public. A. M. Poe was made a notary for
Thurston county, D. S. Maynard of King, John M. Chapman of Pierce, R. H.
Lansdale of Island, A. A. Plummer of Jefferson, Adam Van Puscn of Clatsop,
James Scudder of Pacific, Septimus Ileulat of Clackamas, and W. M. King of
Washington county. Or. Statesman. Feb. 2G, 1853. An act was passed authorizing
the appointment of two justices of the peace in that portion of (llaekaiuas
east of the Cascades, and appointing Cornelius Palmer ami Justin Chenoweth. The
commissioners of each county were authorized by act to locate a quartcr-
section of land for the benefit of county seats, in accordance with the law of
congress passed May
26, 1824, and report such locations to tho surveyor general. Or. Gen. Laws, 1802-3,
GS.
I have spoken before of the several new
counties created at this session, making necessary a new apportionment of
representatives. Those north of the Columbia were Pierce, King, Island, and
Jefferson. The county seat of Pierce was located on the land claim of John M.
Chapman at Steilacoom; King, on the claim of David S. Maynard at Seattle;
Jefferson, on the claim of Alfred A. I’lmnmer at Port Townsend; Lewis, on the
claim of Frederick
A. Clark at the tipper landing of the Cowlitz.
Commissioners ot King county were A. A. Itenny, John N. Lowe, Luther M.
Collins; David C. Bor ing, sheriff; II. D. Yesler, probate clerk. Commissioners
of Jefferson county, Lucius B. Hastings, David F. Brnwnfield, Albert Briggs; H.
C. Wilson, sheriff; A. A. Plummer, probate clerk. Commissioners of Island
county, Samuel D. Howe, John Alexander, John Crockett; W. L. Allen, sheriff;
1!. H. Lansdale, probate clerk. Commissioners of Pierce county, Thomas M.
Chambers, William Dougherty, Alexander Smith; John Bradley, sheriff; John M.
Chapman, probate clerk , The county seat of Thurston county was located at
Olympia, and that of Jackson county at Jacksonville. The commissioners
appointed were James Cluggage, James Dean, and Abel George; Sykes, sheriff;
Levi A. Ilice, probate clerk. The county seat of Lane was fixed at Eugene City
The earliest settlers of this part of the Willamette were, besides Skinner,
Felix Scott, Jacob Spores, Benjamin Richardson, John Brown, Marion Scott. John
Vallely, Benjamin and Joseph Davis, C. Mulligan, Lemuel Davis, Hilyard Shaw,
Elijah Bristow, William Smith, Isaac and Elias Briggs.
The election law was
amended, removing the five years’ restriction from foreign-born citizens, and
reducing the probationary period of naturalized foreigners to six months.
An act was passed
creating an irreducible school fund out of all moneys in any way devoted to
school purposes, whether by donation, bequest, sale, or rent of school lands,
or in any manner whatever, the interest of which was to be divided among the
school districts in proportion to the number of children between 4 and 21
years of age, with other regulations concerning educational matters. A board
of commissioners, consisting of Arnold Fuller, Jacob Martin, and Harrison
Linnville, was created to select the two townships of land granted by congress
to a territorial university; and an act was passed authorizing the university
commissioners to sell one fourth or more of the township, to be selected south
of the Columbia, for the purpose of erecting a university building.
The Wallamet
University was established, by act of the legislature Jan. 10, 1853, the
trustees being David Leslie, William Roberts, George Abernethy, W. H. Wilson,
Alanson Beers, Francis S. Hoyt, -Tames H. Wilbur, Calvin S. Kingsley, John Flim,
E. M. Barnum, L. F. Grover, B.
F. Harding, Samuel Burch, Francis Fletcher,
Jeremiah Ralston, John D. Boon, Joseph Holman, AVebley Hauxhurst, Jacob Conser,
Alvin F. Waller, John Stewart, James R, Robb, Cyrus Olney, Asahel Bush, and
Samuel Parker.
Pilotage was
established at the mouth of the Umpqu?, and the office of wreck-master created
for the several counties bordering on the sea-coast. S. S. llanii was appointed
for Umpqua and Jackson, Thomas Goodwin for Clatsop and Pacific, and Samuel B.
Crockett for the coast north of Pacific county, to serve until these offices
were filled by election.
The First Methodist
Church of Portland was incorporated January 2oth, and the city of Portland on
the 2Sth. A divorce law was passed at this ses-
lamette
River; §30,000 for opening a military road from Steilacoom to Fort Walla Walla;
$40,000 for a military road from Scottsburgto Ilogue River Valley; $15,000 to
build a light-house at the mouth of the Umpqua; $15,000 for buoys at the
entrance of that river ; and $40,000 tu erect a fire-proof custom-house at that
place. He was also instructed to have St Helen made a port of delivery; to have
the surveyor general’s office removed to Salem; to procure an increase in the
number of members of council from nine to fifteen, and in the house of
representatives from eighteen to thirty; to ask for a military reconnoissance
of the country between the Willamette Valley and Fort Boise; to procure the
establishment of a mail route from Olympia to Port Townsend, with post offices
at Steilacoom, Seattle, and Port Townsend, with other routes and offices at
Whidby Island and the mouth of the Snohomish River; to urge the survey of the
boundary line between California and Oregon; to procure money for the
continuance of the geological survey which had been carried on for one year
previous in Oregon territory;7 to call the attention of congress to
the manner in which the Pacific Mail Steamship Company violated their contract
to carry the mail from Panama to Astoria;8 and to endeavor
sion, the first
enacted in the territory, divorces hitherto having been granted by the
legislature, which failed to inquire closely into the cause for complaint. The
law made impoteucy, adultery, bigamy, compulsion or fraud, wilful desertion for
two years, conviction of felony, habitual drunkenness, gro*s cruelty, and
failure to support the wife, one or all justification for severing the
marriage tie. A later divorce law required three years’ abandonment, not
otherwise differing essentially from that of 1852-3. A large number of road
acts were passed, showing the development of the country.
5 In 1851
congress ordered a general reconnoissance from the Rocky Mountains to the
Pacific, to be performed by the geologists J. Evans, 1). 1). Owens,
B. P. Shumard, and Norwood. It was useful in
pointing out the location of various minerals used in the operations of
commerce and manufacture, though most of the important discoveries have been
made by the unlearned but practical miner. U. S. H. Ex. Doc., 2, pt ii. 7, 32d
cong. 1 sess.; U. S. Sen. Com. Kept, 177, 1-3, 6, 36th cong. 1st sess.; Or.
Spectator, Nov. 18, 1851; -Olympia Columbian, Jan. 22, 1852.
8 No steamship except the Frfmont, and she
only once, had ventured to cross the Umpqua bar. From 1851 to 1858 the
following vessels were lost on the southern coast of Oregon: At or near the
mouth of the Umpqua, the Bostonian, Caleb Curtis, Roanoke, Achilles, Nassau,
Almira, Fawn, and Loo- Choo; aud at or near the entrance of Coos Bay the
Cyclops, Jackson, and two
to have
the salary of the postmaster at that place raised to one thousand dollars.
This was a
formidable amount of work for a single delegate, but Lane was equal to the
undertaking. And here I will briefly review the congressional labors of
Thurston’s successor, who had won a lasting place in the esteem and confidence
of his constituency by using his influence in favor of so amending the
organic.law as to permit the people to elect their own governor and judges, and
when the measure failed, by sustaining the action of the legislature in the
location of the seat of government.
Lane was
always en rapport with the democracy of the territory, and while possessing
less mind, less intellectual force and ability, and proceeding with less
foresight than Thurston, he made a better impression in congress with his more
superficial accomplishments, by his frankness, activity, and a certain
gallantry and bonhomie natural to him.9 His first work in congress
was in procuring the amendment to Thurston’s bill to settle the Cayuse war
accounts, which author- .zed the payment of the amount already found due by the
commissioners appointed by the legislature of 1850-1, amounting to §73,000.10
Among the
charges brought against Governor Gaines was that of re-auditing and changing
the values of the certificates of the commissioners ap-
others. In 1858 the
Emihj Par.knnl was wrecked at Rhoalwater Bay. When Gov. Curry in 1S55-G
addressed a communication to the secretary of the U. S. treasury, reminding him
that an appropriation had been made for lighthouses and fog-signals at the
Umpqua and Columbia rivers, but that none of these aids to commerce had been
received, Guthrie replied that there was no immediate need of them at the
Umpqua or at Shoalwater Bay, as not more than one vessel in a month visited
either place! Perhaps there would have been more vessels had there been more
light-houses. In Dec. 1856 the lighthouse at Cape Disappointment, was
completed, and in 1857 those at Cape Flattery, New Dungeness, and Umpqua; but
the latter was undermined by the sea, being set upon the sands.
9 There is a flattering biography of Lane,
published in Washington in
1S52, with the design of forwarding his political
aspirations with the national democratic convention which met in Baltimore in
June of that year.
10 U. S. H
Jour., 1039,1224, 32d eong. 1st sess.; V. S. Laws, ir. Gong. Olohe,
1831-52, ptiii. ix.; U. S. II. Jour., 387, 33d cong. 1st sess.; Or. Statesman,
July 10, 1852.
pointed by
the legislature to audit the Cay use war claims, and of retaining the warrants
forwarded to him for delivery, to be used for political purposes. Lane had a
different way of making the war claims profitable to himself Gaines was
informed from Washington that the report of the territorial commissioners
would be the guide in the future adjustment of the Cayuse accounts. Lano
procured the passage of an amendment to the former enactments on this subject,
which made up the deficiency occasioned by the alteration of the certificates;
and the different manner of making polit ical capital out of the war claims
commended the delegate to the affections of the people.11 The 33d
congress concluded the business of the Cayuse wTar by appropriating
§75,000 to pay its remaining expenses.12
Lane urged
the establishment of mail routes through the territory, and the better
performance of the mail service; but although congress had appropriated in 1852
over $348,000 for the ocean mail service on the Pacific coast,13
Oregon still justly complained that less than the right proportion was expended
in carrying the mails north of San Francisco. The appropriations for the
various branches of the public service in Oregon for 1852, besides
mail-carrying, amounted to §78,300, and Lane collected about §800 more from the
government to pay for taking the census of 1850. He also procured the passage
of a bill authorizing the president to designate places for ports of entry and
delivery for the collection districts of Puget Sound and Umpqua, instead of
those already established, and increasing the salary of the collector at
Astoria to §3,000; but he failed to secure additional collection districts, as
had been prayed for by the legislature.
11 Or. Statesman, May 14, 1853; Letter of
Gaines, m Id., Feb. 26, 1S63; Cong. Globe, 1853, app. 341; U. S. II. Com.
Ri.pt, 122, vol. ii. 4-5, 32d cong. 1st sess.
12 U. S. II. Ex. Doc. J/>, 33d cong. 1st
sess.; U. S. II. Corn. Mept, 122, 33d cong. 1st sess.; Cong. Globe, 1853-4,
2239, 33d cong. 1st sess.
13 U. S. Lawn, in Cong. Globe, 1851-2, pt
iii. xxix.
He also
introduced a bill granting bounty land to the officers and soldiers of the
Cayuse war, which failed as first presented, but succeeded at a subsequent session.1*
A measure
in which Lane, with his genius for military affairs, was earnestly engaged,
was one for the protection of the Oregon settlers and immigrants from Indian
depredations. Early in February 1852 he offered a resolution in the house that
the president should be requested to communicate to that body what steps if any
had been taken to secure the safety of the immigration, and in case none had
been taken, that he should cause a regiment of mounted riflemen to be placed on
duty in Rogue Eiver Valley, and on the road between The Dalles and Fort Hall.15
In the debate which followed, Lane was reproved for directing the president how
to dispose of the army, and told that the matter could go before the military
committee; to which he replied that there was no time for the ordinary routine,
that the immigration would soon be upon the road, and that the regiment of mounted
riflemen belonged of right to Oregon, having been raised for that territory.
But he was met with the statement that his predecessor Thurston had declared
the regiment unnecessary, and had asked its withdrawal in the name of the
Oregon
t t O
people;16
to which Lane replied that Thurston might have so believed, but that although
in the inhabited portion of the territory the people might be able to defend
themselves, there was no protection for those
“Speech of Brooks of
N. Y., in Cong. Qlobe, 1851-52, 027. Failing to have Oregon embraced in the
benefits of this bill, Lane introduced his own, as has been said, anil lost it.
But at the 2d session of the 33d congress a bounty land bill was passed, which
by his exertions was made to cover ‘ any wars’ in which volunteer troops had
been regularly enrolled since 1790. Bacon’* Merc. Life, MS., 10.
l!>Cong.
Qlobe, 1851-2, 507.
16 The secretary of war writes Gaines: ‘All
accounts concur in representing the Indians o! that region as neither numerous
nor warlike. The late del- legate to congress. Mr Thurston, confirmed this
account, and represented that some ill feeling had sprung up between the troops
and the people of the territory, and that the latter desired their removal.’
Or. Spectator, Aug. 12, 1861.
travelling
upon the road several hundred miles from the settlements, and cited the
occurrences of 185 L iu the Shoshone country. His resolution was laid on the
table, but in the mean time he obtained an assurance from the secretary of war
that troops should be placed along the overland route in time to protect the
travel of 1852.17 On the 8th of April Lane presented a petition in
his own name, as a citizen of Oregon, praying for arms and ammunition to be
placed by the government in the hands of the people for their defence against
the savages; hoping, if no other measure was adopted, Thurston’s plan, which
had gained the favorable attention of congress, might be carried iuto effect.
At the same time Senator Douglas, who was ever ready to assist the
representatives of the Pacific coast, reported a bill for the protection of the
overland route,14 which was opposed because it would bring with it
the discussion of the Pacific railroad question, for which congress was not
prepared, and which it was at that time anxious to avoid. The bill was
postponed, Lane’s efforts for the protection of the territory being partly
successful, as the chapter following will show.
The
reconnoissance from the 'Willamette Vallov to Port Boise which the legislature
asked for was designed not only to hold the Indians in check, but to explore
that portion of Oregon lying to the east of the head waters of the Willamette
with a view to opening a road directly from Boisd to the head of the valley,
complaint having been made that the legislature had not sufficiently
interested itself hitherto in explorations for wagon routes. But no troops came
overland this year, and t was left, as before, for the
17 At the same time Senator Gwin of
California had a bill before the senate ‘ to provide for the better protection
of the people of California and Oregon.’ Gong. Globe, vol. xxir., pti. p. 471,
32d cong. 1st sess.; Or. Statesman, April 6, 18j2.
18 Cong. Globe, 1831-2, 1 OS 1.
immigrations
to open new routes, with the usual amount of peril and suffering.1*
Appropriations
for military roads, which were asked for by the legislature of 1852-3, had
already been urged by Lane at the first session of the 3 2d congress, and were
obtained at the second session, to the amount of forty thousand dollars; twenty
thousand to construct a rni.itary road from Steilacoom to Walla Walla,20
and twenty thousand for the improvement of the road from the Umpqua Valley to
Hogue River.'21
19The
legislature of 1851-2 authorized a company of seven men, William Macey, John Diamond.
W. T Walker, William Tandy, Alexander King, Joseph Meadows, and J. Clarke, to
explore an immigrant road from the upper part of the Willamette Valley to Fort
Bois£, expending something over S3,000 in the enterprise. They proceeded by the
middle branch of the river, by what is now known as the Diamond Teak pass, to
the summit of the Cascade Mountains. They named the pt ak to the south of their
route Macey, now called Scott peak; and that on the north Diamond peak. They
followed down a small stream to its junction with Des Chutes River, naming the
mountains which here cross the country from south-west to north-east the Walker
Iiange, and down Des Chutes to Crooked Paver, from which they travelled east to
the head of Malheur River, naming the butte which here seems to terminate the
Blue Range, King peak. Aft< r passing this peak they were attacked by
Indians, who wounded three of the party and captured their baggage, when they
wandered for 8 days with only wild berries to eat, coming to the old immigrunt
road CO miles from Bois6, and returning to the Willamette by this route. Or.
Jour. Council, 1832-3, app. 13-15. Another company wa;( sent out in*1853 to
improve the trail marked out by the first, which they did so hastily and
imperfectly that about 1,500 people who took the new route w ere lost for five
weeks among the mountains, marshes, and deserts of the region about the head
waters of the Des Chutes, repeating the experiences in a great measure of the
lost immigrants of 1845. No lives were lost, but many thousand dollars’ worth
of property'Was sacrificed. Or. Statesman, Nov. 1, 1853, May 16, 1854; Albany
Register, Aug. 21, 1S09. I have before me a manuscript by Mrs Rowena Nichols,
entitled Indian Affairs. It relates chiefly to the Indian wars of southern and
eastern Oregon, though treating also of other matters. Mrs Nichols was but 2|
years old when with her mother and grandmother she passed through this
experience. She, and one other chiid, a boy, lived on the milk of a cow~ which
their elders managed to keep alive during about six weeks, being unable to eat
the beef of stai ving oxen, like their elders. The immigration of this year
amounted to 0,480 men, -women, and children, much less than that of 1852. T.
Mercer, in Washington Sketches, MS., 1: Hines’ Or., 209; Olympia Columbian,
Nov.
27, 1852; S. F. Alta, Aug. 10, Sept. 19, Oct. 7,
8, 24, and 25, and Nov. 21, 1853; S. F 1). Herald, Aug. 31, 1852; Or.
Statesman, Oct. 4 and Nov, 1, 1853; Olympia Columbian, Nov. 2G, 1853.
2l,Exans in
his I’uyallup address says: ‘Congress having madi an appro- piiat’on for a
military road between Fort Walla Walla a Fort Steilacoom, Lieut Richard Arnold
was assigned the duty of expending it. He avoided that mountain bejond
Greenwater, but in the main adopted the work of the immigrants of 1853. The
money was exhausted in completing their road. He asked in \ain that the labors
’if the citizens should be requited.’ New Tacoma Ledger, July 9, 1880. This
road was opened in 1854 for travel.
21 This road was surveyed in 1853 by B.
Alvord, assisted by Jesse Apple- Hisx. Ob.,
Vol. 11. 20
After his
re-election, Lane securcd another twenty- thousand-dollar appropriation to
build the road asked for by the legislature, from Scottsburg to connect with
the former road to Rogue River,*2 besides other appropriations
sufficient to justify his boast that he had obtained more money for his
territory than any other delegate had ever done.23
I have
already spoken ot‘ the division of the territory according to the petitions of
the inhabitants of tile territory north of the Columbia, and a memorial of the
legislature of 1852-3. This measure also Lane advocated, upon the ground that
the existing territory of Oregon was of too great an area, and encouraged the
democratic party in Oregon to persist in memorializing congress to remove the
obnoxious federal officers appointed by a whig president.24
The spring
of 1853 brought the long-hoped-for chauge in the federal appointments of the
territory. Two weeks after the inauguration of Pierce as president, Lane wrote
his friends in Oregon that all the
gate It was thought
that a route might be found which w ould avoid the Umpqua cation; but after
expending one quarter of the appropriation in sur- \ eying, the remainder was
applied to improving the eafioi and the Grave Creek hills. The contracts were
let to Lindsay Applegate and Jesse Roberts. Cong. O/obe, 1852-3. app. 332; Or.
Statesman, Nov. 8, 1853.
22 The survey of this road was begun in
October 1854, by Lieut Withers, U. S. A., and completed, after another
appropriation had been obtained, in 1838, by Co). Joseph Hooker, then employed
by Capt. Mendall of the topographical t ngineer.s. Hooker was born in Iladlcj,
Mass., in 1819, graduated at West Point in 1837; was adjutant at that post in
1841 and regimental adjutant m 184G. He rose to the rank of brevet colonel in
the Mexican war, after \thich he resigned and went to farming in Sonoma County
Cal., in
1853, losing all his havings. When the civil war
broke, out he was living in Itogue River Valley, and at once offered his
services to the government, and made an honorable record. He died at Garden
City, Long Island, in October 1870. Or. Statesman, June 3, 1801, and Aug. 18,
1862; Bowks’ Far West, 453; S. F. Bulletin, Nov. 1, 1879.
23 Lane's Autobiography, MS., 131. For his
territory, and not for hinnelf. Lane’s ambition was fur glory, and not for
money. He did compel congress to amend the organic act which gave the delegate
from Oregon only $2,500 mileage, and to give him the same mileage enjoyed by
the California senators and representatives, according to the law of 1818 on
this subject. In the debate it came out that Thurston had received §000 over
the legal sum, ‘ by what authority the committee were unable to learn.’ Cong.
Globe, 1851-2, 1377. .
21 Tlio territorial
officers chosen by the assembly were A. Bush, printer; L. E. Grover, auditor;
C. N. Terry, librarian; J. D. Boon, treasurer.
former
incumbents of the federal offices were displaced except Pratt, and he was made
chief justice, with Matthew P. Deady and Cyrus Olney25 as associates.
Before the confirmation of the appointments Judere Pratt’s name was withdrawn
and Oregon thus
1 • • • A
lost an
able and pure chief justice,2 and that of George H. Williams,” a
judge in Keokuk, Iowa, substituted.
With regard
to the other judges, both residents of Oregon, it. was said that Lane procured
the appointment of Deady in order to have him out of his way a few months
later. But Deady was well worthy of the position, and had earned ,t fairly. The
appointments were well received in Oregon, and the judges opened courts in
their respective districts under favorable circumstances, Deady in the
southern, Olney in the northern, and Williams in the central counties. But in
October it began to be rumored that a new appointment had been made for a
judgeship in Oregon; to what place remained unknown for several weeks, when 0.
B. McFadden, of Pennsylvania, appeared in Oregon and claimed the 1st district,
upon the ground that in making out Deady’s commission a mistake in the name had
been made, and that tliere-
25OIney vu a
native of Ohio, studied law ami was admitted to practice in Cineinnati,
removing alter a lew years to Iowa, where he wrs circuit judge, and whence he
emigrated to Oregon in 1831. He resided at different times in Salem, Portland,
and Astoria. He was twice a member of the legislature, and helped to frame the
state constitution. He was twice married, and had 7 ehildren, none of whom
survived iiim. He died at Astoria Dec.
28, 1S70.
_ “ The withdrawal of
Pratt was a loss to Oregon. He laid the foundation >ir the judiciary in the
state. An able and conscientious official.
'George II. Williams
was born in Columbia County, N. Y., March 2, 1823. He received an academic
education, and began the practiee of law at an early age in Iowa, where he wasi
soon elected judge of the circuit court.
I (is circuit included the once famous
Half-breed Tract, and the settlers elected him in the hope that he would decide
their titles to the land to be good; but he disappointed them, and was not
reelected. In the presidential campaign of 1S52, he canvassed Iowa for Pierce,
and was chosen one of the. electors to carry the vote of tho state to
Washington. While there he obtained the appointment of chief justice, and
removed to Oregon the following year. He retained this position till 18o!»,
when the state was admitted. In person tall, angular, and awkward, yet withal
line-looking, he possessed brain tower and force, and was even sometimes
eloquent as a speaker. Oorr. S. i\ Bulletin, m Portland Oregonian, Oct. S,
1864.
fore he
was not July commissioned. On this flimsy pretence, by whom suggested was not
known,2® Deady was unseated and McFadden29 took his
place. Being regarded as a usurper by the majority of the democracy, McFadden
was not popular. With his official acts there was no fault to be found; but by
public meetings and otherwise Lane was given to understand that Oregon wanted
her own men for judges, and not imported stock. Accordingly, after holding one
term in the southern district, before the spring came McFadden was transferred
to Washington Territory, and Deady reinstated. From this time forward there
was no more appointing of non-resident judges with every change of
administration at Washington. The legislature of 1853-4 once more redistricted
the territory, making Marion, Linn, Lane, Benton, and Polk constitute the 1st
district; Clatsop, Washington, Yamhill, and Clackamas the 2d; and the southern
counties the 3d—and peace reigned thenceforward among the judiciary.
As if to
crown this triumph of the Oregon democracy, Lane, whose term as delegate
expired with the 32d congress, was returned to Oregon as governor, removing
Gaines as Gaines had removed him.13 Lane’s popularity at this time
throughout the western and south-western states, whence came the mass of the
emigration to Oregon, was unquestioned. He was denominated the Marius of the
Mexican war,31 the Cincinnatus of Indiana, and even his proceedings
28 Lane w as accused, as 1 have said, of
recommending Deady to prevent hi t running
for delegate, which -wasfair enough; but it was fuither alleged that he planned
the error in the name, and the removal which followed, for which there does not
appear honorable motive.
29Obadiah B.
McFadden was born in Washingtnn county, Penn., Nov. 18, 1817. He studied law,
and was admitted to practice in 1842, and in 1843 was elected to the state
legislature. In 1845 he was chosen clerk of the court of common pleas of his
county, and in 1853 was appointed by President Pierce associate justice of the
sup. ct for the territory of Oregon. Olympia Echo, July 1, 1875.
a"In
his Avtobiography, MS., 08, Lane remarks: ‘1 took care to have Gaines removed
us a kind of compliment to me ’!
51 Jenkins’ History of the War with Mexico,
49&
with
regard to the Rogue River Indians were paraded as brilliant exploits to make
political capital. There was an ingenuous vanity about his public and private
acts, and a happy self-confidence, mingled with a flattering deference to some
and an air of dignity toward others, which made him the hero of certain circles
in Washington, as well as the pride of his constituency. It was with acclaim
therefore that he was welcomed back to Oregon as governor, bringing with him
his wife, children, and relatives, to the number of twenty-nine, that it might
not be said of him that he was a non-resident of the territory. He had taken
pains besides to have all the United States officers in Oregon, from the secretary,
George L. Curry, to the surveyors of the ports, appointed from the residents of
the territory.*1
Lane
arrived in Oregon on the lGth of May, and on the 19tli he had resigned the
office of governor to become a candidate for the seat in congress he had, just
vacated. The programme had been arranged beforehand, and his name placed at
the head of the democratic ticket a month before his return. The opposing
candidate was Indian Agent A. A. Skinner, Lane’s superior in many respects, and
a man every way fitted for the position.33 The organization of
political
32 B. F. Harding was made U. S. attorney; J,
W. Nesmith, U. S. marshal; Joel Palmer, supt Indian affairs; John Adair,
collector at Astoria; A.
C. Gibbs, collector at Umpqua; Win M King,
port surveyor, Portland; Robert W. Dunbar, port surveyor, Milwaukie; P. G.
Stewart, port surveyor, Pacific City; and A. L. Lovejoy, postal agent. A. C.
Gibbs superseded Colin Wilson, the first collector at Umpqua. The surveyors of
ports removed were Thomas J. Dryer, Portland; G. P. Newell, Pacific City; N.
Du Bois, Milwaukie. Or. Statesman, April 30, 1833.
33 Alonzo A. Skinner was born in Portage
co., Ohio, in 1814. He received a good education, and was admitted to the bar
in 1840, and in 1842 settled in Putnam co., where he was elected prosecuting
attorney, his commission being signed by Thomas Corwin. In 1845 lie emigrated
to Oregon, being appointed by Governor Abemethy one of the circuit judges
under the provisional government, which office he retained till the
organization of the territory. In 1851 he was appointed commissioner to treat
with the Indians, together with Governor Gaines and Beverly Allen. In the
latter part of that year he was made Indian agent for the Rogue River Valley,
and removed from Oregon City to southern Oregon. Being a whig, and the
territory overwhelmingly democratic, he was beaten in a contest for the
delegateship of Oregon in 1853, Lane being the successful candidate. After the
expiration of his term of office as' Indian agent, he returned to Eugene City,
w'hieh was founded by Eugene F. Skinner, where he married Eliza Lincoln, one of
the
parties,
on national as well as local issues, began with the contest between Lane and
Skinner for the place as delegate, by the advice of Lane, and with all the ardor
of the Salem clique of partisan democrats, whose moutli-piece was the Oregon
Statesman. The canvass was a warm one, with all the chances in favor of Lane,
who could easily gain the favor of even the whigs of southern Oregon by
fighting Indians, whereas Skinner was not a lighting man. The whole vote cast
at the election of 1853 was 7,48G, and Lane’s majority was 1,575, large enough
to be satisfactory, yet showing that there was a power to be feared in the
‘people’s party,’ as the opponents of democratic rule now styled their
organization
As soon as
the result became known, Lane repaired
to his
land claim near Roseburg, and began building
a
residence for his family,Si But before he had made
much
progress, he was called to take part in subduing
an
outbreak amoiijj the natives of Ro«;ue River Val. . . “ . . ley and vicinity,
which will be the subject of the next
chapter.
Having distinguished himself afresh as general of the Oregon volunteers, he
returned to Washington in October to resume his congressional labors.
worthy arid
accomplished women sent out to Oregon as teachers by Governor Slade. On the
death of Riley E. Stratton, in 18GG, he was appointed by Governor Woods to
fill the vacancy on the bench of the sup. ct. On retiring from this position he
removed to Coos co., and was appointed collector of custom* for thfs port of
Coos Ray, about 1870. He died in April 1877, at Santa Cruz, Cal., whither he
had gone for health. Judge Skinner was an old- style gentleman, generous,
affable, courteous, with a dignity which put vulgar familiarity at 4 distance.
If he did not inscribe liin name highest on the roll of fame, he left to his
family and country that which is of greater value, the memory of an upright and
noble life. See Portland Oregonian, Oct. 1877.
31‘I had
determined to locate in the Umpijua Valley, on account of tho scenery, the
grass, and the water. It just suited my taste. Instead of investing in
Portland and making my fortune, I wanted to please my fancy.1 Lane’s
Autobioyraphi/, MS., 03. Gaines also took a claim about ten miles from Salem.
Or. Statesman, June 28, 1853.
ROGUE RIVER WAR.
1853-1S34.
Impositions and
Retaliations—Outrages by White Men and Indians— Tjie Military Called upon—War
Declared—Suspension of Business—Roads Blockaded—Firing from Ambush—Alden jit
Table Rock—Lane in Command—Battle- -The Savages Sue for Place—
Armistice—Preliminary Agreement—Hostages Given—Anoth»X Treaty with the Rogue
River People—Stipulation.-)—Oiheb Treaties—Cost
op1 the War.
Notwithstanding the
treaty entered into, as I have related, by certain chiefs of Rogue River in the
summer of 1852, hostilities had not altogether ceased, although conducted less
openly than before. With such a rough element in their country as these miners
and settlers, many of them bloody-minded and unprincipled men, and most of
them holding the opinion that it was right and altogether proper that the
natives should be killed, it was impossible to have peace. The white men, many
of them, did not want peace. The quicker the country was rid of the redskin
vermin the better, they said. And in carrying out their determination, they
often outdid the savage in savagery.
There was
a sub-chief, called Taylor by white men, who ranged the country about Grave
Creek, a northern tributary of Rogue River,' who was specially hated, having
killed a party of seven during a winter storm and reported them drowned. He
committed
other
depredations upon small parties passing over
(*111
the road.1
It was believed, also, that white women were prisoners among the Indians near
Table Rock, a rumor arising probably from the vague reports of the captivity of
two white girls near Klamath Lake.
Excited by
what they knew and what they imagined, about the 1st of June, 1853, a party
from Jacksonville and vicinity took Taylor with three others and hanged them.
Then they went to Table Rock to rescue the alleged captive white women, and ■finding
none, they fired into a village of natives, killing six, then went their way
to get drunk and boast of their brave deeds.2
There was
present neither Indian agent nor military officer to prevent the outrages on
either side. The new superintendent, Palmer, was hardly installed in office,
and had at his command but one agent,3 whom he despatched with the
company raised to open the middle route over the Cascade Mountains. As to
troops, the 4th infantry had been sent to the northwest coast in the preceding
September, but were so distributed that no companies were within reach of Rogue
River.4 As might have been expected, a few weeks after the exploits
of the Jacksonville company, the settlements were suddenly attacked, and a
bloody carnival followed.5 Volunteer companies quickly gathered up
the isolated families and patrolled
\Drtw, in
Or. Jour. Covncil, 1837-8, app. 20; (Jr. Statesman, Jane 28, 1853; Jacksonville
Sentinel, May 25, 18G7; Dowell’s Kar., MS., 5-6.
2 ‘ Let our motto be extermination,’ cries
the editor of the Yreka Herald, ‘and death to all opposers.’ See also S. F Alta,
Juno 14, 1853; Jacksonville Sentinel, May 25, 1807. The leaders of tho company
were Bates and Tvvo- goi id.
3 This was J. M. Garrison. Other
appointments arrived soon after, designating Samuel H. Culver and R. R.
Thompson. •). L. Parrish was retained as sub-agent. Rept of Svpt Palmer, in U.
S. M. Ex. Doc., i., vol.
i. pt i. 448, 33d cong. 1st sess.
;Five
companies were stationed at Columbia barracks, Fort Vancouver, one at Fort
Steilacoom, one at the mouth of Umpqua River, two at Port Orford, and one at
Humboldt Bay. Gal. Mil. Aff. Scraps, 13--14; Or. Statesman, Sept. 4, 1852.
5 August
1th, Richard Edwards was killed. August 5th, next night, Thomas J. Mills and
Rhodes Noland were killed, ami one Davis and Burril
F. Griffin were wounded. Ten houses were
burned between Jacksonville and W. G. T’Vault’s place, known as the
Dardanelles, a distance of ten miies.
tlie
country, occasionally being tired at by the concealed foe.8 A
petition was addressed to Captain Al- den, in command of Fort Jones in Scott
Valley, asking for arms and ammunition. Alden immediately came forward with
twelve men. Isaac Hill, with a small company, kept guard at Ashland/
On the 7th
of June, Hill attacked some Indians five miles from Ashland, and killed six of
them. In return, the Indians on the 17th surprised an immigrant camp and
killed and wounded several.8 The houses everywhere were now
fortified; business was suspended, and every available man started out to hunt
Indians.9
On the
15tli S. Ettinger was sent to Salem with a request to Governor Curry for a
requisition on Colonel Bonneville, in command at Vancouver, for a howitzer,
rifles, and ammunition, which was granted. With the howitzer went Lieutenant
Kautz and six artillerymen; and as escort forty volunteers, officered by J. W.
Nesmith captain, L. F. Grover 1st lieutenant, W. K. Beale 2d lieutenant, J.
1). McCurdy surgeon, J. M. Crooks orderly sergeant.10 Over two
hundred volunteers were enrolled in two companies, and the chief command was
given to Alden. From Yrcka there were also eighty volunteers, under Cap-
Tiius were killed
John R. Hardin and Pr Rose, both prominent citizens of Jackson county. Or.
Statesman, Aug. 23, 1853.
1 The men were quartered at the houses of
Frederick Alberding and Patrick Dunn. Their names, so far as I know, besides
Alberding and Dunn, were Thomas Smith, William Taylor, and Andrew B. Carter.
The names of settlers who were gathered in at this place were Frederick Heber
and wife; Robert Wright and wife; Samuel Grubb, wife and five children; William
Taylor, R. B. Hagardine, John Gibbs, M. B. Morris, E. Tungate, Morris Howell.
On the 13th of Aug. they were joined by an immigrant, party just arrived,
consisting of A. G. Fordyce, wife and three children, J. Kennedy, Hugh Smith,
Brice Whitmore, Ira Arrow smith, Wdliain Hodgkins, wife and three children, all
of Iowa, and George Barnett of Illinois. Scraps of Southern Or. Hist., in
Ashland Tidinys, Sept. 27, 1878.
8 High
Sinithand John Gibbs were killed; William Hodgkins, Brice Whitman, A. G.
Fordyce, and M. B. Morris wounded.
9Duncan's
Southern Or., MS., 8, says: ‘Th enraged populace began to slaughter right and
left.’ Martin Angoll, from his own door, shot an Indian. Or. Statesman, Aug.
23, 1853.
10 Grover’s Pub. Life in Or., MS., 29; Or.
Stu.te.iman, Aug. 23, 30, 1833.
tain
Goodall. By the 9th of August, both Nesmith and the Indian superintendent were
at Yoncalla.
Fighters
were plenty, but they were without subsistence. Alden appointed a board of
military commissioners to constitute a general department of supply.11
Learning that the Indians were in force near Table Rock, Alden planned an
attack for the night of the lltli; but in the mean time information came that
the Indians were in the valley killing and burning right aud left. Without
waiting for officers or orders, away rushed the volunteers to the defence of
their homes, and for several days the white men scoured the country in small
bands in pursuit of the foe. Sam, the war chief of Rogue River, now approached
the volunteer camp and offered battle. Alden, having once more collected his
forces, made a movement on the 15th to dislodge the enemy, supposed to be encamped
in a bushy canon five miles north of Table Rock, but whom he found to have
changed their position to some unknown place of concealment. Following their
trail was exceedingly difficult, as the savages had fired the woods behind
them, which obliterated it, filled the atmosphere with smoke and heat, and
made progress dangerous. It was not until the morning of the 17th that
Lieutenant Ely of the Yreka company discovered the Indians on Evans Creek, ten
miles north of their last encampment. Having but twenty-five men, and the main
force having returned to Camp Stuart for supplies, Ely fell back to an open
piece of ground, crossed by creek channels lined with bunches of willows,
where, after sending a messenger to headquarters for reenforcements, he
halted. But before the other companies could come up, he was discovered by Sam,
who hastened to attack him.
Advancing
along the gullies and behind the willows, the Indians opened fire, killing two
men at the first
11 George Dart, Edward Shcil, L. A. Loomis,
ami Richard Dugan constituted the commission.
discharge.
The company retreated for shelter, as rapidly as possible, to a pine ridge a
quarter of a mile away, but the savages soon flanked and surrounded them. The
fight continued for three and a half hours, Ely having four more men killed and
four wounded,12 Goodall with the remaiuder of his company then came
up, and the Indians retreated.
On the
21st, and before Alden was ready to move, Lane arrived with a small force from
Roseburg.13 The command was tendered to Lane, who accepted it.14
A
battalion under Ross was now directed to proceed up Evans Creek to a
designated rendezvous, while two companies, captains Goodall and Rhodes, under
Alden with Lane at their head, marched by the way of Table Rock. The first day
brought Alden’s command fifteen miles beyond Table Rock without having
discovered the enemy; the second day they passed over a broken country
enveloped in clouds of smoke; the third day they made camp at the eastern base
of a rocky ridge between Evans Creek and a small stream farther up Rogue River.
On the morning of the fourth day scouts reported the Indian trail, and a road
to it was made by cutting a passage fur the horses through a thicket.
Between
nine and ten o’clock, Lane, riding in advance along the trail which here was
quite broad, heard a gun fired and distinguished voices. The troops were halted
on the summit of the ridge, and
12J. Shane,
F. Keath, Frank Perry, A. Douglas, A. C. Colburn, and L. Locktirg were killed,
and Lieut Ely, John Albin, James Carrol, and Z. Shutz wounded. Or. Statesman,
Sept. 0, 1853; S. F. Alta, Aug. 28, 1853.
13 Accompanying Lane were Pleasant Armstrong
of Yamhill county, James Cluggage, who had been to the Umpqua Valley to enlist
if possible the Klickitat Indians against the Rogue Rivers, but without
success, and eleven others. See Lane's Autobiography, MS., G3.
u Curry bad
commissioned Lane brigadier-general, and Nesmith, who had not yet arrived, was
bearer of the commission, but this was unknown to either Alden or Lane at the
time. Besides, Lane was a more experienced field-officer than Alden; but Capt.
Cram, of the topographical engineers, subsequently blamed Alden, as well as the
volunteers, because the command wras given to Lane, ‘while Alden, an
army officer, was there to take it.’ U. S. II. Ex. Doc., 114, p. 41, 35th cong.
2d sess.; U. Ex. Doc., i., pt ii. 42, 33d cong. 1st sess.
ordered to
dismount in silence and tie their horses. When all were ready, Alden with
Goodall’s company was directed to proceed on foot along the trail and attack
the Indians in front, while Rhodes with his men took a ridge to the left to
turn the enemy’s flank, Lane waiting for the rear guard to come up, whom he
intended to lead into action.15
The first
intimation the Indians had that they were discovered was when Alden’s command
fired into their camp. Although completely surprised, they made a vigorous
resistance, their camp being fortified with logs, and well supplied with
ammunition. To get at them it was necessary to charge through dense thickets,
an operation both difficult and dangerous from the opportunities offered of an
ambush. Before Lane brought up the rear, Alden had been severely wounded, the
general finding him lying in the arms of a sergeant. Lane then led a charge in
person, and when within thirty yards of the enemy, was struck by a nfle-ball in
his right arm near the shoulder.
In the
afternoon, the Indians called out for a parley, and desired peace; whereupon
Lane ordered a suspension of firing, and sent Robert B. Metcalfe and James
Bruce into their lines to learn what they had to say. Being told that their
former friend, Lane, was in command, they desired an interview, which was
granted.
On going
into their camp, Lane found many wounded; and they were burning their dead, as
if fearful they would fall into the hands of the enemy. He was met by chief Jo,
his namesake, and his. brothers Sam and Jim, who told him their hearts were
sick of war, and that they would meet him seven days thereafter at Table Rock,
when they would give
ljIn this
expedition, W. G. T’Vault acted an aid to Gen. Lane, C. Lewis, a volunteer
captain, as asst adjutant-gen., but falling ill on the 20th, Capt. L. P.
Mosher, who afterward married one of Lane’s daughters, took his place. Mosher
had belonged to the 4th Ohio volunteers. Laiie’e Jit pt in U. S. 11. Ex. Doc.
i., pt ii. 40, 33d cong. 1st seas.
up their
arms,16 make a treaty of peace, and place themselves under the
protection of the Indian superintendent, who should be sent for to be present
at the council. To this Lane agreed, taking a son of Jo as hostage, and
returning to the volunteer encampment at the place of dismounting in the
morning, where tho wounded were being cared for and the dead being buried.17
The Ross
battalion arrived too late for the fight, and having had a toilsome march were
disappointed, and would have renewed the battle, but were restrained by Lane.
Although for two days the camps were within four hundred yards of each other,
the truce remained unbroken. 1 )uring this interval the Indian women brought
water for the wounded white men; and when tho white men moved to camp, the red
men furnished bearers for their litters.18 L find no mention made
of any such humane or Christian conduct on the part of the superior race.
On the
29th, both the white and red battalions moved slowly toward the valley, each
wearing the appearance of confidence, though a strict watch was covertly kept
on both sides.19 The Indians established themselves for the time on
a high piece of ground directly opposite the perpendicular cliffs of Table
Rock, while Lane made his camp in the valley, in plain view from the Indian
position, and about one mile distant, on the spot where Fort Lane was afterward
located.
1 They had 111 rifles and 86 pistols. S. F. Alta, Sept. 4, IS.'3.
17 See Or. Statesman, Nov. 15, 1853. .^mnng
the sla;n was Pleasant Armstrong, brother of the author of Oregon,
a descriptive work from which I have sometimes quoted. The latter say* that as
soon as the troops were away the remains of Ilia brother were exhumed, and
being cut to pieces were left to the wolves. Armstrony’tt Or., 52-3. John
Scarborough and Isaac Bradley were also killed, The wounded were 5 in number,
one of whom, Charles C. Abbe, afterward died of his wound**. The Indian loss
was S killed and 20 wounded.
:8Lam’a
Autobiography, MS., 9G-7.
'9
Siskiyou County Affairs, MS., 2, 4-5; Minto's Early MS., 40; Grover's Pvb.
Life, MS., 28-51; Broicn’s Sabm I)ir., 1871, 33-5; Yreka Mountain Herald,
Sept. 24, 1853; Or. Statesman, Oct. 11, 1S53; IT. S. 11. Ex. Doe,, 114, p.
41-2, 35th cong. 2d sess.; Jarksouville Sentinel, July 1, 1867; Heteorol, Reg.,
1853-4, 5U4; Nesmith's Reminiscences, in Trans. Or. Pioneer Asset., 1879, p.
44; Or. Statesman, Sept. 27, 1853.
The
armistice continued inviolate so far as concerned the volunteer army under
Lane, and the Indians under Sam, Jo, and Jim. But hostilities were not
suspended between independent companies ranging the country and the Grave
Creek and Applegate Creek Indians, and a band of Shastas under Tipso, whose
haunts were in the Siskiyou Mountains.20
A council,
preliminary to a treaty, was held the 4th of September, when more hostages were
given, and the next day Lane, with Smith, Palmer, Grover, and others, visited
the Rogue River camp. The 8th was set for the treaty-making. On that day the
white men presented themselves at the Indian encampment in good force and well
armed. There had arrived, besides, the company from the Willamette, with Kautz
and his howitzer,21 all of which had its effect to obtain their
consent to terms which, although hard, the condition of the white settlers
made imperative,22 placing
20R.
Williams killed 12 Indians md lost one man, Thomas Philip*. Owens, on Grave
Creek, under pledge of peace, got the Indians into liis camp and shot them all.
U. S. II. tz. Doc., 99, p. i, 33d cong. 1 st sess. Again Williams surprised a
party of Indians on Applegate Creek, and after inducing them to lay down their
arms shot 18 of them, etc.
s:1The
Indians had news of the approach of the howitzer several days before it
reached Rogue River. They said it was a hyas rifle, which took a. hatful of
powder for a load, and would shoot down a tree. It was an object of great
terror to the Indians, and they begged not to have it tired. Or. Statesman,
Sept. 27, 1853. •
21 The
treaty bound the Indians to reside permanently in a place to be set aside for
them; to give up their fire-arms to the agent put over them, except a few for
hunting purposes, 17 guns in all; to pay out of the sum received for their
lands indemnity for property destroyed by them; to forfeit all their annuities
should they go to war again against the settlers; to notify the agent of other
tribes entering the valley w ith warlike intent, and assist in exjtelling them;
to apply to the agent for redress whenever they suffered any grievances at the
hands of the wnite people; to give up, in nhort, their entire independence and
become the wards of a government of which they knew nothing.
The treaty of sale of
their lands, concluded on th<; 10th, conveyed all the country claimed by
them, which was bounded bj a line beginning at a point near the mouth of
Applegate Creek, running southerly to the summit of the Siskiyou Mountains, and
along the suii.mits of the Siskiyou and Cascade mountains to the head w aters
of Rogue River, and down that stream to Jump Off Joe Creek, thence down said
creek to a point due nnrth of, und thence to, the place of beginning—a
temporary reservation being made of about 100 square miles on the north side of
ltogue Elver, between Table Ro ;k and Evans Creek, embracing but ten or twelve
square miles of arable
the
conquered wholly in the power of the conquerors, and in return for which they
were to receive quasi benefits which they did not want, could not understand,
and wrere better off without. A treaty was also made with the Cow
Creek band of Umpquas, usually a quiet people, but affected by contact with the
Grave Creek band of the Rogue River nation.23
land, the remainder
being rough and mountainous, abounding in game, while the vicinity of Table
Rock furnished their favorite edible roots.
The United States
agreed to pay for the whole Rogue River Valley thus sold the sum of $60,000,
after deducting §15,000 for indemnity for losses of property by settlers;
§5,000 of the remaining $45,000 to be expended in agricultural implements,
blankets, clothing, and other goods deemed by the sup. most conducive to the
welfare of the Indians, on or before the 1st day of September 1854, and for the
payment of such permanent improvements as had been made on the land reserved by
white claimants, the value of which should be ascertained by three persons
appointed by the sup. to appraise them. The remaining §40,000 was tu be paid is
10 equal annual instalments of £2,500 each, commencing on or about the 1st of
September, 1854, in clothing, blankets, farming utensils, stock, and such other
articles as would best meet the needs of the Indians. It was further agreed to
erect at the expense of the government a dwelling-house for each of three
principal chiefs, the cost of which should not exceed ;}500 each, which
buildings should be put up as Soon as practicable after the ratification of the
treaty. When the Indians should be removed to another permanent reserve,
buildings of equal value should be erected for the chiefs, and §15,000
additional should be paid to the tribe in fh e annual instalments, commencing
at the expiration of the previous instalments.
Other articles were
added to the treaty, by which the Indians were bound to protect the agents or
other persons sent by the U. S. to reside among them, and to refrain from
molesting any white person passing through their reserves. It was agreed that
no private revenges or retaliations should be indulged in on either side; that
the chiefs should, on complaint being made to the. Indian agent, deliver up the
offender to be tried and punished, conformably to the laws of the U. S.; and
also that on complaint of the Indians for any violation of law by white men
against them, the latter should suffer the penalty of the law.
The nacredness of
property was equally secured on either side, the Indians promising to assist
in recovering horses that hail been or might be stolen by their people, and the
United States promising indemnirication for property taken from them by the
white men. And to prevent mischief being made by evil-disposed persons, tha
Indians were required to deliver up on the requisition of the U. S. authorities
or the agents or sup. any white person residing among them. The nai.ies
appended to the treaty were Joel I’almer, superintendent of Indian affairs;
Samuel {I Culver, Indian agent; Apserkahar (Jo), Toquahear (Sam), Anachaharah
(Jim), Tohn, and Ljmpe. The witnesses w ere Joseph Lane, Augustus V. Kautz, J.
W. Nesmith, II. B. Metcalf, John (interpreter), J. D. Mason, and T T. Tierney.
Or. Statesman, Sept. 27, 1853; Nesmith’s Reminiscence?, in Trans. Or. Planter
Asm., 1879, 46: Portland West Shore, May, 1879, 154-5; S. F. Alta, Sept. 24,
1853; Palmer’s Wagon Trains, MS., 50; Ind. Aff. Itept, 1856, 265-7; and 1865,
460 :i
23The land
purchased from the Cow Creek band was in extent about *00 square miles, nearly
one half of which was excellent farming land, and the remainder mountainous,
with a good soil and line timber. The price agreed
On the
whole, the people of Hogue River behaved very well after the treaty. The
settlers and miners in the Illinois Yalley about the middle of October being
troubled by incursions of the coast tribes, who had fled into the interior to
escape the penalty of their depredations on the beach miners about Crescent
City, Lieutenant R, C, W. Radford was sent from Fort Lane with a small
detachment to chastise them. Finding them more numerous than was expected,
Radford was compelled to send for reenforcements, which arriving under
Lieutenaut Caster on the 22d, a three days’ chase over a mountainous country
brought them up with the marauders, when the troops had a skirmish with them,
killing ten or more, and capturing a considerable amount of property which had
been stolen, but losing two men killed and four wounded.
After this
the miners hereabout took care of themselves, and made a treaty with that part
of the Rogue River tribe, which was observed until January 1854, when a party
of miners from Sailor Diggings, in their pursuit of an unknown band of robbers
attacked the treaty Indians, some being kdled on both sides; but the Indian
agent being sent for, an explanation ensued, and peace was. temporarily
restored.
The Indian
disturbances of 1853 in this part of Oregon, according to the report of the
secretary of war,24 cost the lives of more than a hundred white
persons and several hundred Indians. The expense was estimated at $7,000 a
day, or a total of $258,000, though the war lasted for little more than a
month, and there had been in the field only from 200 to 500 men.
In
addition to the actual direct expense of the war
upon was J5] 2,000,
two small houses, costing about £200, fencing and plowing a Held of five acres,
and furnishing the seed to sow it; the purchase money to be paid in annual
instalments of goods. Thio sum was insignificant compared to the value of the
land, but bargains of this kind were graded by the number of persons in the
band, the Cow Creeks being but few. Besides, lmiian agen ? nho intend to bave
their treaties ratified must get the best bargains that can be extorted from
ignorance and need.
11 C. S. II. Ex. Doc., i., pt ii, i3, 33d
cong. 1st sess.
was the
loss by settlers, computed by a commission consisting of L. P. Grover, A. C.
Gibbs, and G. H. Ambrose25 to be little less than $40,000. Of this
amount $17,800, including payment for the improvements on the reserved lands,
was deducted from the sum paid to the Indians for their lands, which left only
$29,000 to be paid by congress, which claims, together with those of the
volunteers, were finally settled on that basis.26
® Portland Oregonian,
Deo. 30, 1851; U. S. II Ex. Doc., 65, 43d cong 2d sess.
The names of the
claimants on account of property destroyed, on which the Indian department paid
a pro rata, of 34.77 per cent out of the $15,000 retained from the treaty
appropriation for that purpose, were as follows, showing who were doing
business, had settled, or were mining in the Rogue River Valley at this period:
Daniel and Ephraim Raymond, Clinton Barney, David Evans, Martin Angel], Michael
Brennan, Albert B. Jennison, William ■J. Newton, Wm
Thompson, Henry Rowland, John W. Patrick, John R. Hardin, Pleasant W. Stone,
Jeremiah Yarnel, Wm S. King, Cram, Rogers & Co., Edith M. Neckel, John
Benjamin, David N. Birdseye, Lewis Rotherend, Mary Ann Hodgkins, George H. C.
Taylor, John Markley, Siginoud Eulinger, James C. Tolman, Henry Ham, William M.
Elliott, Silas and Edward Day, James Triplett, Nathan B. Lane, John Agy, James
Bruce, James B. Fryer, Wm G. F. Vank, Hall & Burpee, John Penneger, John E.
Ross, John S. Miller, D. Irwin, Burrell B. Griffin, Traveena McComb, Wm N. Ballard,
Freeman Smith, Nicholas Kohenstein, Daniel F. Fisher, Thomas D. Jewett,
Sylvester Pease, David Hayhart, McGreer, Drury & Runnels, James Mooney,
John Gheen, Theodosia Cameron, James Abrahams, Francis Nasorett, Galley &
Oliver, T. B. Sanderson, Frederick Rosenstock, Dunn & Alluding. Asa
G. Fordyce, Obadiah D. Harris, James L.
London, Samuel Grubb, Wm Kahler, Samuel Williams, Hiram Niday, John Anderson,
Elias Huntington, Shertack Abrahams, Thomas Frazell, Weller & Rose, Robert
B. Metcalf, Charles Williams, John Swinden, James R. Davis, Isaac Woolen, Wm M.
Hughs. Of the settlers on the reservation lands who brought claims were these:
David Evans, Matthew G. Kennedy, John G. Cook, William Hutchinson, Charles
Grey, Robert B. Metcalf, Jacob Gall, George H. C. Taylor, John M. Silcott,
James Lesly. Report of Svpt Palmer, in U. S. S. Ex. Doc., 52, p. 3-5, 38th
cont;. 2d sess.
His'i. Ob., Vol. II 21
LEGISLATION, MINING,
AND SETTLEMENT,
1853-1854.
John
W. Davis as Governor- Legislative Proceedings—Appropriations by Congress—Oregon
Acts and Resolutions—Affairs on the Umpqua—Light-house Building—Beach
Mining—Indian Disturbances— Palmer’s Superintendence—Settlement of Coos
Bay—Explorations and Mountain-climbing—Politics of the Period— The Question
of State Organization—The People not Ready—Haki> Times— Decadence of the
Gold Epoch—Rise oi Farming Interest—Some First Things — Agricultural
Societies—Woolen Mills—Telegraphs—River and Ocean Shipping Interest and
Disasters—Ward Massacre—Milit iky Situation.
Late in October 1853
intelligence was received in Oregon of the appointment of .J ohn W. Davis of Indiana
as governor of the territory.1 He arrived very opportunely at
Salem, on the 2d of December, just as the legislative assembly was about to
convene. He brought with him the forty thousand dollars appropriated by
congress for the erection of a capitol and penitentiary, which the legislature
had been anxiously awaiting to apply to these purposes. Whether or not he was
aware of the jealousy with which the lawmaking body of Oregon had excluded
Governor Gaines from participating in legislative affairs, he prudently
1 Davis was a native of Pennsylvania, when1,
he studied medicine. He subsequently settled in Indiana, served in the
legislature of that state, being speaker of the lower house, and was three
times elected to congress, servirg trom 1835 to 1837, from 1839 to 1841, and
from 1843 to 1847. He was once speaker of the house of representatives, and
twice president of the national democratic convention. During Polk’s administration
he wa» commissioner to China,. He died in 1859. Or. Stateiman, Oct. 25,1853;
Id., Oct. 11, 1859; Or. Arana, Oct. 15, 1859.
refrained
from overstepping the limits assigned him by the organic law. When informed by
a joint resolution of thn assembly that they had completed their organization,2
he simply replied that it would afford him pleasure to communicate from time to
time from the archives any information they might require. This was a
satisfactory beginning, and indicated a policy from which the fourth
gubernatorial appointee found no occasion to depart during his administration.
The money
being on hand, the next thing was to spend it as quickly as possible,3
which the commissioners had already begun to do, but which the legislature
was compelled to check4 by appointing a new penitentiary board, and
altering the plans for the capitol building. A bill introduced at this session
to re-
2 The members of the council elccted for
1853-4 were L. P. Powers, of Clatsop; Tialph Wilcox, of Washington; J K. Kelly,
of Clackamas; Benj. Simpson, of Marion; John Piichardson, of Yamhill; J. M.
Fulkerson, of Polk. Those bolding over were L. W. Phelps, A. L. Humphry, and
Levi Scott. The house of representatives consisted of J. W. Moffit, Z. C.
Bishop, Robert Thompson, F. C. Cason, L. F. Carter, B. B. Jackson, L. F.
Grover, J. C. Peebles, E. F. Colby, Orlando Humason, Andrew Shuck, A. B.
Westerfield, R. P. Boise, V> . S. Gi'll tin, I. X. Smith, Luther Elkins, J.
A. Bennett, Benj. A. Chapman, H. G. Hadley, Wm J. Martin, George H. Ambrose,
John F. Miller, A. A. Durham, L. S Thompson, S. Goff, C'hauncey Xye. There wag
but one whig in the council, and four in the house. Or. Statesman, June 28,
1S53. Ralph Wilcox was elected president of the
council; Samuel B. Garrett, of Benton, chief clerk; and A. B. P. Wood, of
Polk, assistant clerk; John K. Delaslimutt, sergeant at-arms. The house was
organized by electing Z. C. Bishop, speaker; John McCracken, chief clerk; C. P.
Crandell, enrolling clerk; G. I). R. Boyd, assistant clerk; G. 1>. Russell,
sergeant-at-arms, and Joseph Hunsaker, doorkeeper. Or. Jour. Council. 1803 4,
p. 4, 5.
_ 3 Half
of the $20,000 appropriated for a state house, according to the commissioners’
report, was already expended on the foundations, the architect’s plan being to
make an elegant building of stone, costing, at his estimate, §75,000. T 'o land
on which the foundation was laid was block 84 in the town of Salem, and was
donated by W. II. Willson and wife, from the land which they succeeded in
alienating from the methodist university lands, this being one way of enhancing
the value of tilt remainder. The legislature ordered the superstructure to bo
made of wood.
■The
penitentiary commissioners had selected two blocks of land in Portland, and had
made some slight progress, expending $5,000 of the $20,000 appropriated.
William M. King, president of the board, charged $10 per day as commissioner,
and §5 more as acting commissioner. He speculated in lots, paying Lownsdale
§150 each for foiii lots, on condition that two lots should bo given to him,
for which he received $300. ‘In tliin way,’ says the Orrgonian of Feb. 4, 1854,
‘King has pocketed §925, Lownsdale §000, and Frush $2,800, of the penitentiary
fund. Add to this between $1,100 and $1,200 for his invaluable services for
letting all the prisoners run away, and we have a fair exhibit of financiering
under democratic misrule in Oregon.’
locate
tlxe seat of government may have had some influence in determining the action
of the assembly with regard to the character of the edifice already hi process
of construction. It was the entering wedge for another location war, more
hitter and furious than the first, and which did not culminate until 1855—6.
The university had not made so much advancement as the state house and
penitentiary, the appropriations for the former being in laud, which had to be
converted into money.5
Remembering
the experiences of the past three years, the legislative assembly enacted a
militia law constituting ('regon a military district, and requiring the
appointment by the governor of a brigadier-general, who should hold office for
three years, unless sooner removed; and the choice at the annual election in
each council district of one colonel, one lieutenant- colonel, and one major,
who should meet at a convenient place, within three months, and lay off their
regimental district into company districts, to contain as nearly as possible
one hundred white male adults between the ages of eighteen and forty-five
years capable of bearing arms, and who should appoint captains and lieutenants
to each company district, the captains to appoint sergeants and corporals.
Commissions were to issue from the governor to all officers except sergeants
and corporals, the term of office to be two years, unless prevented by
unsoundness of mind or body, each officer to rank according to the date of his
commission, the usual rules of military organization and government being
incorporated into the act.6 In compliance with this law, Governor
Davis appointed,
5 The
legislature of 1852-3 h*d authorized the commissioners to construct the
university building ‘at the town of Marysville, in the county of Renton, on
such land as shall be donated for that purpose by Joseph P. Eriedly,’ unless
some better or more eligible sitaation should be offered. Or. Statesman, Feb.
5, 1853. The commissioners to select the two townships had only just completed
their work.
"Or.
Jour. Council, 1853-4, 113, 118, 128; Laws of Or., in Or. Sta'eman, Feb. 21,
1854; Or. Jovr. Council, 1S54--5, app, 12, 15, 17.
in April
1854, J. W. Nesmith, brigadier-general; E. M. Barnum, adjutant-general; M. M.
McCarver, commissary-general; and S. C. |>rew, quartermaster-general.7
An act was also passed providing for taking the will of the people at the June
election, concerning a constitutional convention, and the delegate was instructed
to secure from congress an act enabling them to form a state government.8
But the people very sensibly concluded that they did not want to be a state at
present, a majority of 8G9 being against the measure; nor did congress think
well of it, the slavery question as usual exercising its influence, and
although Lane said that Oregon had 60,000 population, which was an
exaggeration.
The doings
of the alcaldes of Jackson county as justices of the peace were legalized; for
up to the time of the appearance of a United States judge in that county the
administration of justice had been irregular, and often extraordinary, making
the persons engaged in it liable to prosecution for illegal proceedings, and
the judgments of the miners’ courts void.9 The business of the
session, taken all in all, was unimportant.10 Worthy of remark was
the cliar-
7 At the June election, Washington county
chose .J L. Meek col, R. M. Porter liuut-eol, John Pool maj.; Yamhill, J. W.
Moffit col. W. Starr lieut-col, J. A. Campbell maj.; Marion, George K. Sheil
col, John McCracken lieut-col, J. C. Geer maj.; Clackamas, W. A. Cason col,
Thos Waterbury lieut-col, W. B. Magers maj.; Linn, L. S. Helm col, N. G.
McDonald lieut-col, Isaac N. Smith maj;.; Douglas, W. J. Martin col, J. S. Lane
lieut- col, D. Barnes maj.; Coos, Stephen Davis col, C. .Gunning lieut-col,
Hugh O’Xeil maj. Or. Statesman, June 13, 20, 27, 1854. Polk and Tillamook conn
ties elected J. K. Delashmutt col, B. P. McLeuch lieut-col, B. F. Burch maj.;
Benton and Lane, J. Kendall col, Jacob Allen lieut-col, William Gird maj.;
Jackson, John E. Ross col. Win J. Newton lieut-col. James H. Russell maj. Or.
Statesman, July 1, 1S54. Or. Jour. Council, 18.37-8, App. 57.
h Laws of
Or., in Or. Statesman, Feb. 7, 1854) Cony. Globe, vol. 28, pt
ii. 1117-8, 33d cong. 1st sess.
“Or. Jour. Council,
1853-4,50; Or. Statesman, Jan. 17, 1854. The former alcaldes were John A.
Hardin, U. S. Hayden, Chamicey Nye, Clark Rogers, and W. W. Fowler. Laws of
Oregon, in Or. Statesman, Jan. 17, 1854. And this, notwithstanding Fowler had
sentenced one Brown to be hanged for murder. Prim’s Judicial Anecdotes, MS.,
10. Th^ first term of the V. S. district court held by Judge Deady began Sept.
5, 1853.
10 Coos, Columbia, and Wasco counties were
established. The name of Marysville was changed to Corvallis. Rogue River had
its name changed to Gold River, and Grave Creek to Leland Creek; but such is
the force of custom, these changes were not regarded, and the next legislature
changed
tering of
four railroad companies, only one of which took any steps toward carrying out
the declared intentions of the company. In the case of the Willamette Valley
Railroad Company, the commissioners held one meeting at Thorp’s mills, in Polk
county, and appointed days for receiving subscriptions in each of the counties.
Rut the time was not yet ripe for railroads, and this temporary enthusiasm
seems to have been aroused by the Pacific railroad survey, then in progress in
the north-west territory of the United States.11
The
success of the Oregon delegates in securing appropriations led the assembly to
ask for money from the general government for “every conceivable purpose,” as
their mentor, the Statesman, reminded them, and for which it reproved them. Yet
the greater part of these applications found favor with congress, either
through their own merits or the address of the dele-
the name of Gold
River back to Rogue River. The methodists incorporated Santiam Academy at
Lebanon, in Linn county, Portland Academy and Female Seminary at Portland, and
Corvallis Academy at Corvallis. Tho presbyterians incorporated Union Academy
at Union Point. The congregation- alists incorporated Tualatin Academy and
Pacific University at Forest Grove; and the citizens of Polk county the
Rickreal Academy, 011 the laud claim of one Lovelady—Rickreal being the
corruption of La Crdole, iu common use with the early settlers. Albany had its
name changed to Tekanah, but it was changed back again next session. Thirty
wagon roads were petitioned for, ami many granted, and the Umpqua Navigation
and Manufacturing Company was incorporated at this session, the object of
which was to improve the navigation of the river at the head of tide-water, and
utiliAj tho water-power at the falls for mills and manufactories. The company
consisted of Robert J. Ladd, J W. Drew, R. E. Stratton, Benjamin Brattan, and
F. W. Merritt; but nothing came of it, the navigation of the river being impracticable.
None of the plans for making Scottsburg a manufacturing town at this time, or
down to the present, succeeded. An appropriation for the improvement of the
river above that place was indeed secured from congress and applied to that
purpose a few years later, so far that a, small steamer built for a low stage
of water made one trip to Winchester. The Umpqua above the falls at Scottsburg
is a succession of rapids over rocky ledges which form the bottom of the
stream. The water in summer is shallow, and in winter often a rushing torreut.
I11 the winter of 1801-2 it carried away the mills and most of the valuable
improvements at the lower town, which were not rebuilt.
11 The Willamette Valley railroad was to
have been built on the west side of the valley. The commissioners were Fred.
Waymire, John Thorp, ami Martin L. Barber. Or. Statesman, April 25, 1854. The
first railroad projected in Oregon was from St Helen, on the Columbia, to
Lafayette, the idea being put forth by II. M. Knighton, original owner of the
former place, and Crosby and Smith, owners of Milton town site. See Or.
Spectator, April 17,1851.
gate in
advocating them. The principal appropriations now obtained were the sum before
mentioned for paying the expenses of the Rogue River war; $10,000 to continue
the military road from Myrtle Creek to Scottsburg; and $10,000 in addition to a
former appropriation of $15,000 to construct a lighthouse at the mouth of the
Umpqua, with a proportionate part of a general appropriation of $59,000 to be
used in the construction of liglit-houses on the coasts of California and
Oregon.12
12 Cong. Globe, 1S53^, 2249. This work,
which had been commenced on the Oregon coast in 1853, was delayed by the loss
of the bark Oriole of Baltimore, Captain Lent?, wrecked on the bar of the
Columbia the 19th of Sept., just as she had arrived inside, -with material and
men to erect the light-house at Cape Disappointment. The wind failing, on the
ebb of the tide the Oriole drifted among the breakers, and on account of the stone
and other heavy cargo in her nold, was quickly broken up. The crew and twenty
workman, with the contractor, F. X. Kelley, and the bar- pilot, Capt. Flavel,
escaped into the boats, and after twelve hours’ work to keep them fiom being
carried out to sea, were picked up by the pilot-boat and taken to Astoria. Thus
ended the first attempt to build the much needed light-house at the mouth of
the Columbia. In 1854 Lieut George H. Derby was appointed superintendent of
light-houses in Cal. and Or. Additional appropriations were asked for in 1854.
In 1S5G the light-house at Cape Disappointment was completed. Its fiist keeper
was John Boyd, a native of Maine, who came to Or. in 1S53, ami was injured in
the explosion of the Gazelle. He married Miss Olivia A. Johnson, also of
Maine, in 1859. They had four children. Boyd died Sept. 10, 1865, at the Cape.
Portland Oregonian, Sept. 18, 1865. The accounting officer of the treasury was
authorized to adjust the expenses of the commissioners appointed by the ter.
assembly to prepare a code of laws, and of collecting and priuting the laws and
archives of the prov. govt. U. S. Home Jour., 725, 33d cong. 1st sess; Cong.
Globe, 1S53-4, app. 2322. The laws and archives of the provisional government,
compiled by L. F. Grover, were printed at Salem by Asahel Bush. The code was
sent to New York to be printed. The salaries of the ter. judges and the sec.
were increased $500 each, and the »er\ ices of Geo. L. Curry, while acting
governor, were computed the same as if he had been governor. The legislative
and other contingent expenses of the ter. amounted to §32,000, besides those of
the sorv.-gen. office, Ind. dep., mil. dep., and mail service. The expenses of
the govt, not included m those paid by the U. S., amounted for the fiscal year
ending Dec. 1853 to only $3,359.54; and the public debt to no more than
§S55.37. Or. Statesman, Dec. 20, 1853; Or. Journal Council, 1853-4, p. 143-5;
Portland Oregonian, Jan. 27, 1854. Two new districts for the collection of
customs were established at the 2d sess, of the 33d cong., viz., Cape Perpetua,
and Port Orford, with collectors drawing salaries of 5^2,000 each, who might
employ each a clerk at §1,500; and a deputy at each port of delivery at §1,000
a year; besides gauger, weigher, and measurer, at §6 a day, and an inspector
at $4. Cong. Globe, vol. 31, app. 3S4, 33d cong. 2d sess. Tha poi t of entry
for the district of Cape Perpetua was fixed at Gardiner, on the Umpqua River.
More vessels entered the Columbia than all the other ports together. From Sept.
1, 1S53, to July 13, 1854, inclusive, there were 179 arrivals at the port of
Astoria, all from S.
F. except one from Coos Bay, two from New
York, and one from London. The London vessel brought goods for the Hudson’s Bay
Company, the only
Next to
the payment of the war debt was the demand for a more efficient mail service.
The people of the Willamette Valley still complained that their mails were
left at Astoria, and that at the best they had no more than two a month. In
southern Oregon it was still worse; and again the citizens of Umpqua
memorialized congress on this vexatious subject. It was represented that the
valleys of southern Oregon and northern California contained some 30,000
inhabitants, who obtained their merchandise from Umpqua harbor, and that it was
imperatively necessary that mail communication should be established between
San Francisco and these valleys. Their petition was so brought before congress
that an act was passed providing for the delivery of the mails at all' the
ports along the coast, from Humboldt Pay to Port Townsend and Olympia, and
0125,000 appropriated for the service.13 Houses were built, a
newspaper14 was established, and hope beat high. But again
foreign vessel
entering Oregon during that time. The departures from the Columbia numbered
184, all for S. F. except one for Coos Bay, two for Callao, one for Australia,
and one for the S. I. Most of these vessels carried lumber, the number of feet
exported being 22,567,000. Or. Statesman, Aug. r. 1854. The direct
appropriations asked for and obtained at the ‘2d sess. of this eetig. were for
the creation of a new land district in southern Or. called the Umpqua district,
to distinguish it from the Willamette district, with ,m office at such point as
the president might direct, Znbriskie Land iLaws, 036; Cong. Globe, vol. 91,
app. 380, 33d cong. 2(1 sess., the appropriation of $40,
000 to complete the penitentiary at Portland,
$27,000 to complete the state house at Salem, and $30,000 to construct the
military road from Salem to Astoria, marked out in 1850 by Samuel Culver and
Lieut Wood of the mounted riiles. Or. Statesman, Oct. 3, 1850. The military
road to Astoria was partly constructed in 1855, under the direction of Lieut
Derby. Money failing, a further appropriation of $15,000 was applied, and still
the road remained practically useless. The appropriation of $30,000 for a
light-house at the Umpqua was also expended by government officers in 1857. The
tower was 105 feet high, but being built on a sandy foundation, it fell over
into the sea in 1870. It does not appear that the money bestowed upon Oregon by
congress in territorial times accomplished the purposes for which it was designed.
Not one of the military roads was better than a mule trail, every road that
could be travelled by wagons being opened by the people at their own expense.
13 U. S 11. Jour., 237, 38S, 411, 516, 53G,
003, 33d cong. 1st sess.; U. S. If. Ex. Doc., i. pt iL 015, C24, 701, 33d cong.
2d sess.
14 By D. J. Lyon, at Scottsburg, called the Umpqua
Gazette. It was first issued in April 1854, and its printer was William J.
Beggs. In Nov. 1854,
G. D. E. Boyd purchased a half-interest, ami
later removed the material to Jacksonville where the publication of the 1'able
Iloek tieiUiuel was begun in
in the
summer of 1854, as after the efforts of Thurston, the Pacific Mai] Steamship
Company made a spasmodic pretence of keeping their contract, which was soon
again abandoned out of fear of the Umpqua bar,15 and this
abandonment, together with the successful rivalry of the road from Crescent
City to the Rogue River Valley, and the final destruction of the Scottsburg
road by the extraordinary storms of 18G1-2, terminated in a few years the
business of the Umpqua, except such lumbering and fishing as were afterward
carried on below Scottsburg.
The
history of beach mining for gold began in the spring of 1853, the discovery of
gold in the sand of the sea-beach leading to one of those sudden migrations of
the mining population expressively termed a ‘rush.’ The first discovery was
made by some halfbreeds in 1852 at the mouth of a creek a few miles north of
the Coquille, near where Randolph appears on the map.16 The gold was
exceedingly fine, the use of a microscope being often necessary to detect it;
yet when saved, by amalgamation with mercury, was
Nov. 1855, by W. G-.
T’Vault, Taylor, and Blakesly, with Beggs as printer. Or. Statesman, Bee. 8,
1855; Or. Argus, Dec. 8, 1855. The name was changed to that of Oregon Sentinel
in 1857. Id., July 25, 1857. D. J. Lyons was born in Cork, Ireland, in 1813,
his family being in the middle rank of life, and connected with the political
troubles of 1798. His father emigrated to Kentucky in 1818. Young Lyons lost
his sight in his boyhood, but was well educated by tutors, and being of a
musical and literary turn of mind, wrote songs fashionable in the circle in
which George D. Prentice, Edmund Flagg, and Amelia Welby were prominent. Lyons
was connected with several light literary publications before coming to Oregon.
He had married Virginia A. Putnam, daughter of Joseph Putnam of Lexington, with
whom he emigrated to Oregon in 1853, settling at Scottsburg, where he resided
nearly 30 years, removing afterward to Marshfield, on (Joos Bay. Beggs was a
brilliant writer on politics, but of dissipated habits. He married a Miss Beebe
of Salem, and deserted her. He ran a brief career, dying in misery in New York
City.
15 The whole coast was little understood,
and unimproved as to harbors. The Anita was lost at Port Orford in Oct. 1852.
Three vessels, the J. JIcri- tkew, Mendora, and Vandalia, were wrecked at the
mouth of the Columbia in Jan. 1853. Capt. E. II. Beard of the Vandaliat
who was from Baltimore, Md., was drowned.
16 S. S. Mann says that the half-breeds sold
their claim to McNamara Brothers for $20,000. Settlement of Coos Bay, MS., 14.
Armstrong, in his Oregon, GO, claims that his brother discovered gold on the
beach at the Coquille in 1842, being driven in there in a schooner by a storm,
while on his way to San Francisco.
found to
bo in paying quantities. The sand in which it was found existed not only on the
modern beach, but on the upper Coquille, forty miles in the interior, at a
place known as Johnson Diggings; but the principal deposits were from the
Coquille River south along the recent beach to the California line.17
A mining
town called Elizabeth sprung up during the summer about thirty miles south of
Port Orford, and another seven miles north of the Coquille, called Randolph
City.18 The latter name may still be found on the maps, but the town
has passed out of existence with hundreds of others. For, although the returns
from certain localities were at first flattering, the irregular value of the
deposits, and the difficulty of disposing of the gold on account of expense of
separation, soon sent most of the miners back to the placer diggings of the
interior, leaving a few of the less impatient to further but still futile
efforts.
The
natives li\ing at the mouth of the Coquille questioned the right of the white
men to occupy that region, and added to insolence robbery and murder.
Therefore, on the 28th of January, a party of forty, led by George H. Abbott,
went to their village, killed fifteen men, and took prisoners the women and
children. Seeing which, the chiefs of other villages were
17 ‘The deposit where the gold was found is
an ancient beach, ruilcs east or back of the present beach. The mines are 180
feet above the level of the ocean, which has evidently receded to that extent.
Tho depth of the gold varies from one to twelve feet, there being 12 feet on
the ocean side to one foot on what was formerly the shore side. The breadth is
from 300 to 500 feet, which is covered Mith white sand to a depth of 40 feet.
The surface is overgrown with a dense forest, and trees of great size are found
in the black sand, in a good state of preservation, which proves that there the
beach na at no remote period. Iron is a large component of th» black sand, and
it would probably pay to work it for that metal now. ’ Gale’s Resources of Coos
Comity, 31. See also Van Tramp's Adventures, 154-5; Armstrong’s Or64- 5, 57-9;
Davidson’s Coa-'it Pilot, 119; Harper’s Monthly, xiii. 594-5; S. F. Com.
Adverti&ir, Feb. 23, 1854; Taylor’s Spec. Press, 584; Cram's Top. Mem,.,
37. W| jr. Blake, in Silliman's Journal, vol. 20, 74, says: ‘Gold is found in
the beach sand from the surface to the depth of C feet or more; it is in very
small thin scales, and separate.3 from the black sand with difficulty.
I’latinum and the associate metals, iridosmine, etc., are tound with the gold
in large quantities, and as they cannot be separated from the gold by washing,
its value in the market is considerably lessened. ’
18Parrish,
in Ind. A f. Itept, 1854, 208-75, 288; S. F. Alta, June 5, 6, July 15, and Aug.
1G, 1854.
glad to
make peace on any terms, and keep it until driven again to desperation.19
Superintendent
Palmer, in the spring of 1854, began a round of visits to liis savage wards,
going by the way of the Rogue River Valley and Crescent City, and proceeding up
the coast to Yaquina Ray. Finding the Indians on the southern coast shy and
unapproachable, he left at Port Orford Sub-agent Parrish witli presents to
effect a conciliation.20
Promineut
among matters growing out of beach mining, next after the Indian difficulties,
was the more perfect exploration of the Coos Bay country, which resulted from
the passing back and forth of supply trains between the Umpqua and the Coquille
rivers. In May 1853, Perry B. Marple,21 after having examined the
valley of the Coquille, and found what he believed to be a practicable route
from Coos Bay to the interior,23 formed an association of twenty men
called the Coos Bay Company, with stock to be divided into one hundred shares,
five shares to each joint proprietor,23 and each proprietor being
bound to
13 Indian Agent F. M. Smith, after due
investigation, pronounced the kill ing an unjustifiable massacre. U. S. H. Ex.
Doc. 70, 268-71, 34th cong. 3d seas.
2('See
Parriih’s Or. Anecdotes, MS., passim; Ind. AjT. Itept, 1834, 254-60.
21 lie was
an eccentric genius, a great talker, of whom bis comrades used to say that he ‘
came within an ace of being a Patrick Henry, but just missing it, missed it
entirely.’ He was a man o£ mark, however, in his county, w Iiich he represented
in the constitutional convention—a bad mark, in some respects, judging from
Deady’s observations on disbarring him: ‘I have long since ceased to regard
anything you assert. All your act } shcv a degree of mental and inoral
obliquity which renders you incapable of discriminating between truth and
falsehood or right and wrong. You have no capacity for the practice of law, and
in that profession you will ever prove a curse to yourself and to the
community. For these reasons, and altogether overlooking the present allegations
of unprofessional conduct, it would bo an act of mercy to strike your name from
the roll of attorneys.’ Marple went to the Florence mines in eastern Oregon on
the outbreak of the excitement of 1801, and there died of consumption in the
autumn of 1862. Or. Statesman, Dec. 8, 1S02, and .Ian.
12, 1888.
52 The first settlement was made on Coos Bay
in the summer of 1S53, and a packer named Sherman took a provision train over
the mountains from Grave Creek by a practicable route. He reported discoveries
of coal. Or. Statesman, June 28, 1S53.
“The proprietors were
Perry B. Marple, James C. Tolman, Iiolliu L. Belknap, Solomon Bowermaster,
Joseph H. McVay, J. A. J. McVay, Win H.
proceed
without delay to locate in a legal form all the land necessary to secure town
sites, coal mines, and all important points whatsoever to the company. If upon
due consideration any one wished to withdraw from the undertaking he was bound
to hold his claim until a substitute could be provided. Each person remaining
in the company agreed to pay the sum of five hundred dollars to the founder,
from whom he would receive a certificate entitling him to one twentieth of the
whole interest, subject to the regulations of the company, the projector of
the enterprise being bound on his part to reveal to the company all the
advantageous positions upon the bay or on Co- quille river, and throughout the
country, and to relinquish to the company his selections of land, the
treasures he had discovered, both upon the earth or in it, and especially the
stone-coal deposits by him found.24
The
members of the company seemed satisfied with the project, and lost no time in
seizing upon the various positions supposed to be valuable. Empire City was
taken up as a town site about the time the company was formed,25 and
later Marshfield,20 and the affairs of
Harris, F. G.
Lockhart, C. W. Johnson, A. P. Gaskell, W. H. Jackson, Presly
G. Wilhite, A. P. De Cuis, David Rohrcn,
Charles Pearce, Matthias M. Learn, Henry A. Stark. Charles H. Haskell, Joseph
Lane, S. K. Temple. A rticles of Indenture of the Coos Bay Company, in
Oregonian, Jan. 7, 1854; Gibbs’ Notes on Or. Hist., MS., 15.
2i Articles
of Indenture of the Coos Bay Company, in Oregonian, Jan. 7,
1854. See S. F. Alta, Jan. 3, 1854. ^
25 Empire
City had (in 1855) some thirty board houses, and a half-finished wharf. Van
Tramp's Adventures, 1G0.
261 am
informed by old residents of Marshfield that this was the claim of J. C.
Tolinan, who was associated in it with A. J. Davis. The usual confusion as to
titles ensued. Tolman was forced to leave tho place on account of his wife’s
health, and put a man named Chapman in charge. Davis, having to go away, put a
man named Warwick in charge of his half of the town site. Subsequently Davis
bought one half of Tolman’s half, but having another claim, allowed Warwick to
enter the Marshfield claim for him. in his own name, though according to the
land law he could not enter land for town-site purposes. Warwick, however, in
some way obtained a patent, and sold the claim to H. H. Luce, whose title W'as
disputed because the patent was fraudulently obtained. A long contest over
titles resulted, others^ claiming the right to enter it, because Davis had lost
his right, and Warwick had never had any. Luee held possession, however. The
remaining portion of Tolman’s half of the town site was sold to a man named
Hatch, whose claim is not disputed.
the
company prospered. In January 1854, the ship Demur's Cove from San Francisco
entered Coos Bay with a stock of goods, bringing also some settlers and miners,
and in the same month the Louisiana, Captain Williams, from Portland took a
cargo into Coos Bay for Northup & Simonds of that town, who established a
branch business at Empire City,27 Northup accompanying the cargo and
settling at that place.23
Coal was
first shipped from the Newport mine in April 1855,29 and in 185G a
steam-vessel called the Newport, the first to enter this harbor, was employed
in carrying cargoes to San Francisco,30 and the same year two steam
saw-mills were in operation with
27 In a
letter w ritten by Northup to his partner, and published in the Oregonian of
April 22, 1834, he tells of the progress of affairs. They hail sounded the bay
and found from 12 to 30 feet of water. The laud was level and timbered, but
not hard to clear. The Coquille was ‘one of the prettiest rivers ever seen. Mr
Davis of S. F. was forming a company to build a railroad from the branch of the
bay to the Coquille, the travel going that way to the Randolph mines. Machinery
for a steamer was also coining. The whole of southern Oregon w'as to be
connected with Coos Bay. The miners were doing well, and business was good.
i 28‘Nelson
Northup, a pioneer of Portland, who came to the place in 1851, and soon after
formed the firm of Northup & Simonds, well known merchants of those days.
In 1854 they disposed of their business to E. J. Northup and J. M. Biossom, and
removed to Coos Bay, taking into that port the second vessel from Portland.
Northup remained at Coos Bay several years, and in the mean time opened up, at
great expense, the first coal mines in that locality, now so famed in that
respect. He died at the residence of his sou F. J. Northup, in the 65th year of
his age, on the 3d of July, 1874.’ Portland Oregonian, July 4, 1S74.
J9>S'. P.
Alta, May 4, 6, 12, June 28, and Oct. 7, 1854; Or. Statesman, May 12, 1854.
30 She was a
small craft, formerly the Hartford. Her engines were aftir- ward transferred to
a small teak-wood schooner, which was christened The Fearless, and was the
first and for many years the only tug-1 loat on the bay. She was finally lost
near Coos Head. A story has been told to this effect: By one of the early trips
of the Newport an order was sent to Estell, her owner, to forward a few
laborers for the Newport mine. Estell had charge of the California state
prison, and took an interest, it was said, in its occupants, so far as to let
them slip occasionally. On the return of the Newport, a crowd of forty hard
cases appeared upon her deck A few only were required at the mine, and the
remainder dropped ashofe at Empire City. The unsuspecting citizens scanned them
curiously, and then retired to their domiciles. But consternation soon
prevailed. Hen-roosts were despoiled and clothes-lines stripped of gracefully
pendent garments. Anything and everything of value began to disappear in a
mysterious manner. The people began to suspect, and to ‘go for’the strangers,
who were strongly urged o emigrate. The touching recollections connected with
this gang led the citizens always after to speak of them as the Forty Thieves.
Coos Bay Settlement, 10, II.
from three
to five vessels loading at a time with lumber and coal, since which period
coal-mining, lumbering, and ship-building have been carried on at this point
without interruption. Railroads were early projected, aud many who tirst
engaged in the development of coal mines became wealthy, and resided here till
their death.31
Some also
were unfortunate, one of the shareholders, Henry A. Stark, being drowned in
the spring of 1854, while attempting with five others to go out in a small boat
to some vessels lying off the bar.32 Several of the Umpqua company,
after the failure of that enterprise, settled at Coos Bay, prominent among whom
was S. S. Mann, author of a pamphlet on the early settlement of that region,
embellished with anecdotes of the pioneers, which will be of interest to their
descendants.33
Any new
discovery stimulated the competitive spirit of search in other directions.
Siuslaw River was explored with a view to determining whether the
81 P.
Flanagan was one of the earliest of the early settlers. At Randolph his pack
train and store were the pioneers of trade. Then at Johnson's and on The Sixes
in a similar way. Later, he became associated in the partnership of the
Newport coal mine, where his skill and experience added largely to its success.
81 Stark was
a native of New York, emigrated to Cal. m 184!), thence to Or. in 1850. He was
a land claimant for the company at Coos Bay, as well as a shareholder. John
Duhy, a native of New York, emigrated to the S. 1. in 1840, thence to Cal. in
1848, going to Yreka in 1851, and thence to Coos Bay at its settlement in 1853.
John Robertson was a native of Nova Scotia, and a sailor. John Winters was bom
in IVnn., and came to Or through Cal. Alvin Brooks, born in Vt, came to Or. in
ISol. John Mitchell of New York, a sailor, came to Or. in 1851. Portland
Oregonian, March 25, 1854; S.
F. Alta, March ‘22, 1854.
S3C'o<w
Bay Settlement, 18. This pamphlet of 25 pages is made up of scraps of pioneer
history written for the Coon Bay Mail, by S. S. Mann, afterward republished in
this form by the Mail publishers. Mann, being one of the earliest of the
pioneers, was enabled to give correct information, and to his writings and
correspondence I am much indebted for the facts here set down. Mann mentions
the names of T. D. Winchester, H. H. Luse, A. M. Simpson, John Pershbaker,
James Aiken, Dr Foley, Curtis Noble, A. J. Davis, P. Flanagan, Amos and Anson
Rogers, H. P. Whitney, W I). L. F. Snath, David Holland, I. Hacker, II. F.
Ross, Yokam, Landreth, Iiodson, Collver, Bogue, Miller, MeKnight, Dryden,
Hirst, Kenyon, Nasburg, Coon, Morse, Cammann, Buckhorn, and De Oussans, not
already mentioned among the original proprietors of the Coos Bay Company; and
also the names of Perry, Leghnherr, Rowell, Dement, Harris, Schroeder, Grant,
and Ham- block, among the early settlers of Coquille Valley.
course of
the river was such that a practicable communication could be obtained between
it and the Uinpqua through Smith River,34 a northern branch of the
Siuslaw. The exploration was conducted by N. Schofield. The object of the
opening of the proposed route was to make a road from the Willamette Yalley to
the Umpqua, over which t he products of the valley might be brought to
Scottsburg, at the same time avoiding the most difficult portion of the
mountains. But nature had interposed so many obstacles; the streams were so
rapid and rocky; the mountains sarough and heavily timbered; the valleys,
though rich, so narrow, and filled with tangled growths of tough vine-maple and
other shrubby trees, that any road from the coast to the interior could not but
be costly to build and keep in repair. The Siuslaw exploration, therefore, resulted
in nothing more beneficial than the acquisition of additional knowledge of the
resources of the country in timber, water-power, and soil, all of which were
excellent in the valley of the Siuslaw.
Other
explorations were at the same time being carried on. A trail was opened across
the mountains from Rogue River Yalley to Crescent City, which competed with the
Scottsburg road for the business of the interior, and became the route used by
the government troops in getting from the seaboard to Fort Lane.35 Gold-hunting
was at the same time prosecuted in every part of the territory with varying
success, of which I shall speak in another place.38
** This is the stream
where Jedediah Smith had his adventure with the Indians who massacred his party
in 1828, as related in my History of the Northwest Coast.
3j Deady'$
Hist. Or., MS., 25.
36 Mount Hood, Indian name Wiyeast, was
ascended in August 1854, for the first time, by a party consisting of T. J.
Dryer of the Oregonian, G. O. Haller, Olney, Wells Lake, and Travillot, a
French seaman. Dryer ascended Mount St Helen, Loowit Lethla, the previous
summer, and promised to climb Mounts Jefferson, Phato, and the Three Sisters at
some future time. He ascertained the fact that Hood and St Helen were expiring
volcanoes, which still emitted smoke and ashes from vents near their summits.
Oregonian, Feb. 25 and Aug. 19, 1854. The first ascent of Mount Jefferson was
made by P. Loony, John Allphin, William Tullbright, John Walker, and E. L.
The
politics of 1854 turned mainly on the question of a state constitution, though
the election in June revealed the fact that tho democracy, while still in the
ascendant, were losing a little ground to the whigs, and chiefly in the
southern portion of the territory. Of the three prosecuting attorneys elected,
one, P. P. Prim,37 was a whig, and was chosen in the 3d district by
a majority of seven over the democratic candidate, It. E. Stratton,83
former incumbent. P. P. Boise was elected prosecuting attorney for the 1st or
middle district, and X. Hr 1 >er of the 2d or northern district.
The
democratic leaders were those most in favor of assuming state dignities, while
the whigs held up before their following the bill of cost; though none objected
Massey, July 11,
1854, a. party prospecting for gold in the Cascade Mountains. Or. Statesman,
Aug. 22, 1854. Mt Adams was called by the Indians KUchilat, and Mt Rainier,
Takoma. Gold-hunting in the Cascade Mountains, passim.
37 Payne P. Prim was born i.i Tenn. in 1822,
emigrated to Or. in 1851, and went to the mines in Rogue River Valley the
following year. His election as prosecuting attorney of the southern district
brought him into notice, id 'in the division of the state of Oregon into four
judicial districts, and when Deady, chosen judge of the supreme court from that
district, was appointed U. S. dist. judge, the gov. appointed Prim to iill the
vacancy from the 1st district for the remainder of the term, to which office he
was subsequently elected, holding it for many years. A valuable manuscript,
entitled Prim's Judicial Anecdotes, has furnished me very vivid reminiscences
of the manner of administering justice in the early mining camps, and first
organized courts, to which I have occasion to refer frequently in this work.
See Popular Tribunals, passim, this series.
38Riley E.
Stratton wa« a native of Penn., bom in 1821. He was taught the trade of a
millwright, but afterward took a collegiate course, and graduated at Marietta.
Ohio, with the intention of becoming a minister; hia plans being changed, he
studied law , and was admitted to the bar in Madison, Ind., coming to Or. by
way of Cape Horn in 1852, his father, C. 1’. Stratton, emigrating overland in
the tame year. C. I’. Stratton was borx. in New York Dec. 30, 1799. He removed
to Penn, in his boyhood, and again to Ind. iu 1S36. He had twelve children, of
whom C. C. Stratton is a minister of the methodist church, and president of the
University of the Pacilic in California. He settled in the Umpqua Valley, but
subsequently removed to Salem, where he died Feb. 20, 1873. Riley E. Stratton
settled at Scottsburg. He was f leeted prosecuting attorney of the southern
district by the legislative assembly in 1853-4; but beaten by Prim at the
election bj the people, as stated above. When Oregon became a state he was
elected judge of the 2d judicial district, and reflected in 1864. He married
Sarah Dearborn in Madison, Indiana. He left the democratic party to support the
union on the breaki:ig-out of the rebellion. lie wai an affable, honorable, an
I popular man. Ilia death occurred in Deo. 1863. Eugene Slate Journal, Dec. 29,
1865; Or. Reports, vol. ii. 195-9; DcmLy'x Scrap Jiaoi, 77, 170.
to
securing the 500,000 acres of land, which on the day of Oregon’s admission as a
state would be hers, to be applied to internal improvements,39 and
other grants which might reasonably be expected, and which might amount to
millions of acres with which to build railroads and improve navigation.
Judge
Pratt who had strongly advocated state admission, and to whom Oregon owed
much, was put forward for the United States senate and his cause advocated by
the Democratic Standard with marked ability. Pratt was strongly opposed by the
Statesman, whose influence was great throughout the state, and which carried
its points so far as electing its candidates, except iu a few instances,
against the whigs, and also against the prohibitionists, or Maiue-law party.40
But the majority against a state constitution was about one hundred and fifty,
a majority so small, however, as to show that, as the democrats had intimated,
it would be reduced to nothing by a year or two more of effort in that dix
i-ction.
In the
spring of 1854 there were complaints of hard times in Oregon, which were to be
accounted for partly by the Indian disturbances, but chiefly by reason of
neglect of the farming interests and a fa.ll- ing-oft' in the yield of the
mines. The great reaction was at hand throughout the coast. Business was
prostrated in California, and Oregon felt it, just as Oregon had felt California’s
first flush on finding gold. Tu counteract the evil, agricultural societies
began to be formed in the older counties.41 The lumbering interest
had greatly declined also, after the erection
5,9 Hee the
8th section (if an act of congress in relation thereto, passed in 1S41.
‘"The Maiue-law
candidates for seats in the legislature -Here Elisha Strong and O. Jacobs of
Marion; S. Xelson, P. H. Hatch, E. I). Shattuek of Clackamas; D. W. Ballard of
Linn; Ladd and Gilliam of I’olk; J. H. D. Henderson and G. W. Burnett of
Yamhill.
11 The constitution of the Yamhill
\grieultnral Society, F. Martin, president, A. S. Watt, secretary, was
published July 23, 1634, in the Or. Statesman.
Hist
Ob., Vol. II. 23
of mills
in California, and lumber and Hour being no longer so much sought after, caused
a sensible lessening of the income of Oregon. But the people of Oregon well
knew that their immense agricultural resources would bring them out of all
their troubles if they would only apply themselves in the right direction and
in the right way.
The
counties which led in this industrial revival were Washington, Yamhill, Marion,
and Polk., The iirst county fair held was in Yamhill on the 7th of October,
1854, followed by Marion on the 11th, and Polk on the 12th The exhibit of
horses, cattle, and fruit was fairly good, of sheep, grain, and domestic
manufactures almost nothing;42 but it was a beginning from which
steadily grew a stronger competitive interest in farm affairs, until in 1861 a
state agricultural society was formed, whose annual meeting is the principal
event of each year in farming districts.43
The first
step toward manufacturing woollen fabrics was also taken in 1854, when a
carding machine was erected at Albany by E. L. Perham & Co. Farmers who had
neglected sheep-raising now purchased sheep of the Hudson’s Bay Company.14
Early in the spring of 1855 Barber and Thorpe of Polk county erected machinery
for spinning, weaving, dying, and dressing woollen cloths.45 In 185G
a company was organized at Salem to erect a woollen-mill at that place, the
first important woollen manufactory on the Pacific coast. It was followed by
the large establishment at Oregon City and several smaller ones in the course
of a few years.40
<2 Or,
Statesman, Oct. IT, 1854. Mrs R. C. Geer entered two skeins of yarn, the first
exhibited and probably the first made in Oregon. The address was delivered
t< the Marion county society, which met at Salem, by Mr Woodsides. L. F.
Grover, in his Pub. Life in Or., MS., says he delivered the first Marion county
address, but he ia mistaken. He followed in 1855.
43 Brown’s Salem Directory, 1871, 37-77.
41 Or.
Stat., May 23 and Oct. 10, 1854; Tolmie’s Puget Sound, MS., 24.
Or.
Statesman, March 20, 1855. R. A. Gessuer received a premium in 1855 from the
Marion county Bociety for the ‘best jeans.’
16Grover,
Pub. Life in Or., MS., 68-9, w&soneof the first directors in ths Salem
mill. See also Wftll’t Pint Things, MS., 8-10.
The first
proposal to establish a telegraph line between California and Oregon was made
in October of 1854. Hitherto, no more rapid means of communication had existed
than that afforded 1 >y express companies, of which there were several. The
practice of sending letters by express, which prevailed all over the Pacific
coast at this time, and for many years thereafter, arose from the absence or
the irregularity in the carriage of mails by the government. As soon as a
mining camp was established, an express became necessary; and though the
service was attended with many hardships and no small amount of danger, there
were always to be found men who were eager to engage in it for the sake of the
gains, which were great.47 The business of the country did not
require telegraphic correspondence, and its growth was delayed for almost
another decade.43
47 The first express company operating in
Oregon was Todd & Co., fol lowed very soon by Gregory & Co., both
beginning in 1851 Todd & Co. sold out to Newell & Co. in 1852. The same
year Dugan & Co., a branch of Adains&Co., began running in Oregon;
.ilso T’Vault's Oregon and Shasta express, and McClaine & Co. s Oregon and
Shasta express. In the latter part of 1852 Adams & Co. began buainess in
Oregon; but about the beginning of 1853, with other companies, retired and left
the field to Wells, Fargo A; Co., improved mail communication gradually
rendering the services of the companies, except for the carrying of treasure
and other packages, superfluous. The price fell from fifty cents on a letter in
a gradually declining scale to ten cents, where it remained for many years, and
at last to five cents; and packages to some extent in proportion. Besides the
regular companies, from 1849 to 1852 there were many private express riders who
picked up considerable money in the mountain camps.
48 Charles F. Johnson, an agent of the Alta
California Telegraph Company, first agitated the subject oJ a telegraph line to
connect Po>tland with the cities of California, and so far succeeded as to
have organized a company to construct such a line from Portland to Corvallis,
which was to be extended
i i time to meet one from Marysville,
California, to Yreka on the border. The Oregon line was to run to Oregon City,
Lalayette, Dayton, Salem, and Corvallis. It was finished to Oregon City Nov,
15, 1855, the first message being sent over the wires on the 16th, and the line
reached Salem by Sept. 1856, but it was of so little use that it was never
completed nor kept in repair. Neither the interests of the people nor their
habits made it requisite. In 1868 the California company had completed their
line to Yreka, for which during the period of the. civil war, the Oregonians
had reason to be thankful, and having taken some long strides in progress
during the half-dozen years between 1855 and 1861, they eagerly subscribed to
build a line to Yrtka fr^m Portland, on being solicited by J. E. Strong, former
president of the same company. Of the Oregon company, W. S. Lada wac elected
president; S.
G. Keed, secretary; H. W. Corbett, treasurer:
John McCracken, supeiin tendent; W. S. Ladd, D. F Bradford, A. G. lliehardson,
C. N. Terry and
Steam
navigation increased rapidly in proportion to other business, the principal
trade being confined to the Willamette River, although about this time there
began to be some truflic on the Columbia, above as well as below the mouth of
the Willamette.49 Ocean
A. L. Lovejoy,
directors. Strong, i >ntr*ctor, owned considerable stock in it, which he
sold to the California State Telegraph Company in 1863, the line being
completed in March. In 1868 a line of telegraph was extended to The Dalles, and
eastward to Bois6 City, by the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, in 18G9. A new
line to the oast was erected in 1876, which was extended to S. F., and a line
to Astoria at the mouth of the Columbia.
,9The
Gazelle v, as a side-wTlieel boat built for the upper Willamette in
1853 by the company which constructed the basin and
hoisting ■works at
the falls, and began to run in March 1804, but in April exploded her boiler
while lying at her wharf, causing the most serious calamity which ever occurred
on Oregon waters. She had on board about 50 persons, 22 of whom were killed
outright and many others injured, some of whom died soon after. Among the
victims were some of the principal persons in the territory: Daniel D. Page,
superintendent of the company owning the Gazelle, whose wife und daughter were
killed by the explosion of the Jenny Lind in San Francisco Bay April li, 1853;
Rev. James 1\ Millei, father of Mrs E. M. Wilson of The Dalles; David Woodhull,
and Joseph Hunt of Michigan; Judge Burch, David Fuller, C. Woodworth. James
White, Daniel Lowe, John Clemens, J. M. Fudge, Blanchet, Hill, Morgan, Jomi
Blaimer, John Daly, John K. Miller, Michael Hatch, Michael McGee, Charles Knaust,
David McLane, l’iaut, and an untnown Spanish youth. Or. Statesman, April 18,
1854; Armstrong’s Or., 14; Hr own'* Salem, Directory, 2 ST 1, 35. Among the
wounded were Mrs Miller, Charles Gardiner, son of the surveyor-general, Robert
Pentland, Miss Pell, C. Dobbins, Robert Shortess, 15. F. Newby, Captain
Hereford of the Gazelle, John Boyd, mate, and James Partlow, pilot. The chief
engineer, Tonie, who was charged with the responsibility of the accident,
escaped and tied the territory. Portland Oregonian, Jan. 29, 1870. The Oregon,
another of the company’s boats, was sunk and lost the same season. The wreck of
the Gazelle was run over the falls, after being sold to Murray, Hoyt, and
Wells, who refitted her and named her the Sehorita, after which she was
employed to carry troops, horses, and army stores from Portland to Vancouver
and the Cascades. In 1857 the machinery of this boat was put into the new
steamer Hassalue, while the Sehorita was provided witn a more powerful engine,
and commanded by L. Hoyt, brother of Richard Hoyt. In
1854 the pioneer steamboat men of the upper
Willamette, captains A. F. Hedges and Charles Bennett, sold their entire
interests and retired from the river.
In 1855 a new class
of steamboats was put upon the Willamette, above the falls, stern-wheels being
introduced, wldeb soon displaced tne side-wheel boats. This change was effected
by Archibald Jamieson, A. S. Murray, Amory Hoi brook, and John Torrence, w ho
formed a company ami built the Enterprise, a small wtem-wheel boat commanded by
Jamieson. This boat ran for 3 years on the Willamette, and was sold during the
mining rush of 1858, taken over the falls and to Fraser River by
Thomas Wright. She finished her career on the Chehalis River. Her first
captain, Jamt-ison, was ont. of a family of five steamboat men, who were doomed
to death by a fatality sad and remarkable. Arthur Jamieson was in command of
the steamer Portland, which wa» carried over the falls of the Willamette in
March 1857; another brother died of a quick consumption from -i cold contracted
on the river; another by the explosion of the steamer Yale on the Fraser
River; ami fiually Archibald and another brother by the blowing up of the
Carihoo at Victoria.
Another company,
consisting of captains Cochrane, Gibson, and Cassady,
navigation,
too, was increasing, but not without its drawbacks and losses.50 In
the midst of all, the young and vigorous community grew daily stronger, and
more able to bear the misfortunes incident to rapid progress.
In July
1854 there was a raid in Rogue River Valley by the Shastas; unattended,
however, by seri-
forrned in 1856,
built the James Clinton and Surprise, two fine stern-wheel boats. In 1857 the
Elk was built 'for the Yamhill River trade by Switzler, Moore. and Marshall:
and in 1858 the first owners of the Enterprise built the Onward, the largest
steamboat at that time on the upper river.
In 1800 another
company was incorporated, under the name of People’s Transportation Company,
composed of A. A. McCully, S. T. Church, E. N. Cook, D. W. liurn^ide, and
captains John Cochrane, George A. Pease, Joseph Kellogg, and E. W. Baughman,
which controlled the Willamette River trade till 1871. Thin company built the J
Jay ton., Reliance, Echo, E. D. Baker, Iris, A.bany, Shoo Fly, Fannie Patton,
and Alice, and owned the Ilival, Senator, Alert, and Act 'me. It ran its boats
on the Columbia as well as the Willamette until 1803, when a compromise was
made with the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, then in existence, to confine
its trade to the Willamette River above Portland. In 1805 this company expended
§100,000 in building a dam and basin above the falls, which enabled them to do
away with a portage, by simply transferring passengers and freight from one
boat to another through a warehouse at the lower end of the basin. The P. T.
Co. sold out i.i 1S71 to Ben Holladay, having made handsome fortunes in 11
years for all its principal members. In the next two years the canal and locks
were built around the west side of the falls at Oregon City, but the P. T. Co.
under Holladay’s management refused to use them, and continued to reship at Oregon
City. This led to the formation of the Willamette Lochs and Transportation
Company, composed of Joseph Teal, B. Goldsmith, Frank T. Dodge, and others, who
commenced opposition in 1873, and pressed the P. T. Co. so hard that Holladay
sold out to the Oregon Nav. Co., which thus was enabled to resume operations on
the Willamette above Portland, with the boats purchased and others which were
built, and became a powerful competitor for the trade. The Looks anil
Transportation Co. built the Willamette Chief expressly to outrun the boats of
the P. T. Co., but found it ruinous work; and in 1870 a consolidation was
effected, under the name of Willamette Transportation and Locks Company,
capital J?l,000,00u. Its property consisted of the locks at Oregon City, the
water front at Astoria belonging formerly to the O. S. N. Co., and the Farmers’
warehouse at that place, and the steamboats Willamette Chief, Gov. Grover,
Beaver, Annie Stewart, Orient, Occident, with the barges Autocrat, Columbia,
and Columbia’s Chief. This secured complete monopoly by doing aw ay with
competition on either river, except from independent lines. Salem. Will.
Farmer, Jan. 7, 1870: Adams’ Or., 37-8
luThe
steam-tug Fire-Fly was lost by springing aleak on the bar in Feb.
1S54. Thomas Hawks, captain, L. H. Swaney, Van Dyke,
Wisenthral, and other persons unknown were drowned. At the close of the year
the steamship Southerner, Capt. F. A. Sampson, was wrecked on the Washington
eoast. The steamer America, bound to Oregon and Washington ports, was burned in
the harbor of Crescent City the following summer.
The steamships
engaged in the carrying trade to Oregon from 1850 to
1855 were the Carolina, which I think mad; but one
trip, the Seagull, Panama, Oregon, Gold Hunter, Columbia, Quickstep, General
Warren, Fremont, America, Peytonia, Southerner, and Republic. Three of these
had been " recked, the Seagull, General Warren, and Southerner, in ad many
years. Others survived unexpectedly.
ous
damage. The treaty Indians of Rogue River sickened 111 the reservation, and the
agent permitted them to roam a little in search of health. Some of them being
shot by white men, their chiefs demanded that the murderers be brought to
justice, as had been promised them, but it was not done. Few of such cases ever
came into the courts,61 and it was as rare an occurrence for an
Indian to be tried by process of law.6*
So great
had been tlieii wrongs durmg the past five years, so unbearable the outrages of
the white race, that desperation seized the savages of the Klamath, Scott, and
Shasta valleys, who now took the war-path toward the country of the Modocs, to
join with them in a general butchery of immigrants and settlers.
In the
absence of a regular military force, that at Fort Jones, consisting of only
seventy men, wholly insufficient to guard two hundred miles of immigrant road,
the governor was requested to call into service volunteers, which was done.
Governor Davis also wrote to General Wool for troops. Meanwhile a company was
sent out under Jesse Walker, who kept the savages at bay, and on its return
received the commendations of Governor Curry, Davis having in the mean time
resigned.
This
expedition was used by the dominant party for many years to browbeat the
influential whigs of southern Oregon. The Statesman facetiously named it the
“expedition to fight the emigrants;” and in plainer language denounced the
quartermaster-general and others as thieves, because the expedition cost
forty-five thousand dollars.63
In Judge Deady’s
court the following year a white man was convicted of manslaughter of an
Indian, and ■was
sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. Or. Statesman, June 2, 1853.
>JThe
slayers of Edward Wills and Kyle, and those chastised by Major Kearney in 1851,
are the only Indians ever punished for crime by cither civil or military
authorities in southern Oregon. U. S. II. Misc. Doc. 47, 58, 35th cong. 2d
sess. _ _ ,
53 Grasshoppers had destroyed vegetation
almost entirely in tho southern \alleys tiiid year, which led to a great
expense for forage.
Drew in
his report seemed to apologize for the great cost, and pointed out that the
prices were not so high as in 1853, and that many expenses then incurred had
been avoided; but he could not prevent the turning into political capital of so
large a claim against the government, though it was the merchants of Yreka and
not of Jacksonville who overcharged, if overcharging there was.8i
The attacks made on the whigs of southern Oregon led to the accumulation of a
mass of evidence as to prices, and to years of delay in the settlement of
accounts. On the side of the democrats in this struggle was General Wool, then
in command of the division of the Pacific, who wrote to Adjutant-general Thomas
at New York that the governor of Oregon had mustered into service a company of
volunteers, but that Captain Smith was of opinion that they were not needed,
and that it was done on the representations of speculators who were expecting
to be benefited by furnishing supplies.53
There was
a massacre of immigrants near Fort Boise in August, that caused much excitement
on the Willamette. The party was known as Ward’s train, being led by Alexander
Ward of Kentucky, and consisting of twenty-one persons, most of whom were
slain.03 Not only was the outrage one that could not be oveilooked,
or adequately punished by civil or military courts, but it was cause for alarm
such as was expressed in the report of Quartermaster Drew, that a general
Indian war was about to be precipitated upon the country, an apprehension
strengthened by reports from many sources.
In order
to make plain all that followed the events recorded in this chapter, it is
necessary to revert to
54 The merchants and traders of
Jacksonville, who were unable to furnish, the necessary supplies, which were
drawn from Yreka, testified as to prices.. U. S. II, Misc. Doc. 47, 32-5, 35th
cong. ‘2d sess.
5i* Message
of President Pierce, with correspondence of General Wool, in, U. S. Sen. Ex.
Doc. 16, 33d cong. 2d sess.
56 For particulars see California Inter
Pocula, this series, passim.
statements
contained in tho correspondence of tlie war department. That which most
concerned this particular period is contained in a document transmitted to the
senate, at the request of that body, by President Pierce, at the second
session of the thirty-third congress. In this document is a communication of
General Wool to General Cooper at Washington City, in which is mentioned the
correspondence of the former with Major Pains of the 4th infantry, in command
of Fort Dalles, and of Major Alvord, U. S. paymaster at Vancouver, who had each
written him on the subject of Indian relations. As the report of Rains has
been mentioned in another place, it is not necessary to repeat it here. Colonel
George Wright had contributed his opinion concerning the “outrages of the
lawless whites” in northern California, and to strengthen the impression, had
quoted from the report of indian Agent Culver concerning the conduct of a party
of miners on Illinois Piver, who had, as he averred, wantonly attacked an
Indian encampment and brutally murdered two Indians and wounded others.67
The facts were presented to Wool, and by Wool to headquarters at Washington.
The general wrote, that to prevent as far as possible the recurrence of further
outrages against the Indians, he had sent a detachment of about fifty men to reenforce
Smith at Fort Lane; but that to keep the peace and protect the Indians against
the white people, the force in California and Oregon must be increased. This
letter was written in March 1854.
On the
31st of March, Wool again wrote General Scott, at New York, that the difficulty
of preserving
67 U. S. Sen. Ex. Doc. '0, 14-15, 33d cong.
2d sess. Lieut J. C. Bonny- castle, commanding Fort Jones, in relating the
attack on some of the Shastas whom he was endeavoring to protect, and whom
Captain Goodall was escorting to Scott’s Valley to place in his hands, says:
‘Most of tho Indians having escaped into the adjacent chapparal, where they
lay concealed, tho whites began a search for them, during which an Indian from
behind his bush fortunately shot and killed a white man named McKaney.’ In the
same report he gives the names of the men who had fired on the Indians, the
list not including the ni-.me of MoKaney. U. S. Sen. Ex. Doc. 10, p. 81, 33d
cong. 2d sess.; U. S. II. Ex. Doc. 1, 440-00, vol. i. pt i., 33d cong. 2d sess.
peace,
owing to the increase of immigration and the encroachments of the white people
upon the Indians, which deprived them of their improvements, was continually
increasing. There were, he said, less than a thousand men to guard California,
Oregon, Washington, and Utah, and more were wanted. The request was referred
by Scott to the secretary of war, and refused.
In May,
Wool sent Inspector-general J. K. P. Mansfield to make a tour of the Pacific
department, and see if the posts established there should be made permanent;
but expressed the opinion that those in northern California could be dispensed
with, notwithstanding that the commanders of forts Reading and Jones were
every few weeks sending reports filled with accounts of collisions between the
white population and the Indians.
At this
point I observe certain anomalies. Congress had invited settlers to the Pacific
coast for political reasons. These settlers had been promised protection from
the savages. That protection had never to any practical extent been rendered;
but gradually the usual race conflict had begun and strengthened until it
assumed alarming proportions. The few officers of the military department of
the government, sent here ostensibly to protect its citizens, had found it
necessary to devote themselves to protecting the Indians. Over and over they
asserted that the wdiite men were alone to blame for the disturbances.
Writing to
the head of the department at New York, General Wool said that the emigration
to California and Oregon would soon render unnecessary a number of posts which
had been established at a great expense, and that if it were left to his
discretion, he should abolish forts Reading and Miller in California, and
establish a temporary post in the Pit River country; also break up one or two
posts in northern California and Oregon, which could only mean forts Jones and
Lane, and establish another on Puget Sound,
and, if
possible, one in the Boise country; though his preference would be given to a
company of dragoons to traverse the Snake River country in the summer and
return to The Dalles in the winter.
Governor
Curry, on learning that the expedition under Haller had accomplished nothing,
and that the whole command numbered only sixty men, and thinking it too small
to accomplish anything in the Snake Iliver country should the Indians combine
to make war on the immigration, on the 18tli of September issued a proclamation
calling for two companies of volunteers, of sixty men each, to serve for six
months, unless sooner discharged, and to furnish their own horses, equipments,
arms, and ammunition; the companies to choose their own officers, and report
to Brig - adier General Nesmith on the 25th, one company to rendezvous at Salem
and the other at Oregon City.
Commissions
were issued to George K. Sheil, assistant adjutant-general, John McCracken,
assistant quartermaster-general, and Victor Trevitt, commissary and
quartermaster. A request was despatched to Vancouver, to Bonneville, to ask
from the United States arms, ammunition, and stores with which to supply the
volunteer companies, which Bonneville refused, saying that in his opinion a
winter campaign was neither necessary nor practicable. Nesmith being of like
opinion, the governor withdrew his call for volunteers.
When the
legislative assembly convened, the governor placed before them all the
information he possessed on Indian affairs, whereupon a joint committee was
appointed to consider the question. Lane had already been informed of the
occurrences in the Boise country, but a resolution was adopted instructing the
governor to correspond with General Wool and Colonel Bonneville in relation to
the means available for an expedition against the Shoshones. The total force
then in the Pacific department was 1,200, dragoons, artillery, and infantry;
of which nine compa
nies of
infantry, 335 strong, were stationed in Oregon and Washington, and others were
under orders for the Pacific.
Governor
Davis had written Wool of anticipated difficulties in the south; whereupon the
latter instructed Captain Smith to reenforce his squadron with the detachment
of horse lately under command of Colonel Wright, and with them to proceed to
Klamath Lake to render such assistance as the immigration should require.
About a month later he reported to General Thomas that he had called Smith’s
attention to the matter, and that he was informed that all necessary measures
had been taken to prevent disturbances on the emigrant road.
In
congress the passage of the army bill failed this year, though a section was
smuggled into the appropriation bill adding two regiments of infantry and two
of cavalry to the existing force, and authorizing the president, by the consent
of the senate, to appoint one brigadier general. It was further provided that
arms should be distributed to the militia of the territories, under
regulations prescribed by the president, according to the act of 1808 arming
the militia of the states. No special provision was made for the protection of
the north-west coast, and Oregon was left to meet the impending conflict as
best it might.
1854-1805.
Resignation
of Governor Davis—His Sctccessor,
George Law Curry— Legislative Proceedings—Waste of Congressional Appropriations—State
House—Penitentiaky—Relocation of tiie Capital and University—Legislative and
Congressional Acts Rllat ve Thereto—More Counties Made—Finances—Territorial
Convention—Newspapers—The Slavery Sentiment—Politics or the Period—Wiugs, Democrats, and
Know-nothings—A New Party— Indian Affairs—Treaties East of the Cascade
Mountains.
In August 1854 Governor Davis resigned. There
was no fault to be found with him, except that he was imported from the east.
In resigning, he gave as a reason liis domestic affairs. He was tendered a parting1
dinner at Salem, which was declined; and after a residence of eight months in
the territory he returned to the states with a half-declared intention of
making Oregon liis home, but he died soon after reaching the east. Although a
good man, and a democrat, he was advised to resign, that Curry might be
appointed governor, which was done in November following.1
Curry was
the favorite of that portion of the democratic party known as the Salem
clique, and whose organ was the Statesman. He followed the Statesman’s lead,
and it defended him and his measures, which were really its own. He was a
partisan more through necessity than choice, and in his intercourse with the
people he was a liberal and courteous gentle-
1 Lane’s
Antobiot/raphy, MS., 59; Or. Statesman, Duo. 12, 1854; Amtr. Almanac, 1855-6.
1857-9.
man.
Considering his long acquaintance with Oregon affairs, and his probity of
character, lie was perhaps as suitable a person for the position as could have
been found in the party to which he belonged.2 He possessed the
advantage of being already, through his secretaryship, well acquainted with the
duties of his office, in which he was both faithful and industrious. Such was
the man who was chosen to be governor of Oregon during the remaining years of
its minority, and the most trying period of its existence.
The
legislature met as usual the first Monday in December,3 with James
K. Kelly president of the council, and L. F. Cartee, speaker of the lower
house.
2 George Law Curry, born in Philadelphia,
July 2, 1820, was the son of George Curry, who served as captain of the Washington
Blues in the engagement preceding the capture of Washington city in the war of
1812; and grandson of Christopher Curry, an ( migrant fr-un England who settled
in
1 iiiladelphia, and lies in the Christ
Church burial-ground of that city. He visited the republic of Colombia when u
child, and returned to the family homestead near Harrisburg, Penn. His father
dying at the age of 11, he went to Boston, where he was apprenticed to a
jeweler, landing time for study and literary pursuits, of which he was fond. In
1838 he was elected and served two terms as president of the Mechanic
Apprentices’ Library, upon v, hose records may be found many of his addresses
and poems. In 1843 lie removed to St Louis, and there joined with Joseph M.
Field and other theatrical and literary men in publishing the Reveille,
emigrating to Oregon in 1846, after which timis liis Listory is a part of the
history of the territory. His private life was without reproach, and his habits
those of a man of letters. He lived to see Oregon pass safely through tht;
trials of her probationary period to be a thriving state, and died July *28,
1878. Biography of George L. Curry, MS., 1-3; Seattle Pacific Tribune, July 31,
1S78; Portland Standard, July 13, 1878; iS. F. Post, July 30, 1878; Ashland
Tidings, Aug. 9,1878; Salem Statesman, Aug. 2, 187S; Portland Oregonian, July
29, 1878.
The members elect of
the council were: J. C. Peebles of Marion; J. K. Kelly, Clackamas and Wasco; Dr
Cleveland of Jackson; L. W. Pholps of Linn; Dr Greer, Washington and Columbia;
J. M. Fulkerson, Polk »n 1 Tillamook; John Richardaon, Yamhill; A. L. Humphrey,
Benton and Lane; Levi Scott, Umpqua. The lower house consisted of G. W.
Coffinbury, of Clatsop; E. S. Tanner, David [.ogan, D. H. Belknap, Washington; A.
J. Hembree, A. G. Henry, \amhill; H. X. V. Holmes, Polk and Ti.lamuok; I. F. M.
Butler, Polk; R. B. Hinton, Wayman St Clair, Benton; L. F. Cartee, W. A. Starkweather,
A. L. Lovejoy, Clackamas; C. P. Crandall, R. C. Geer, X. Ford, Margin; 1 uther
Elkina, Delazon Smith, Hugh Brown, Linn; A. W. Patterson, Jacob Gillespie,
Lane; James F. Gazley, Doiaglas; Patrick Dunn, Alexander Mclntire, Jackson; O.
Humason, Wasco; Robert J. Ladd, Umpqua; J B. Condon, Columbia; J. H. Foster,
Coos, elected but not present. Two other names, Dunn and W alkcr, appear in the
proceedings and reports, but no clew is given to their residence, Ur. Jour.
Council, 1S54-5; Or. Statesman, Dec. 12, 1854. The clerks of the council were
B. Genois, J. Costello, and M. C. Edwards. Sergeaiit-at-anns, J. K. Delashmutt;
doorkeeper, J. L. Guinn. The clerks of the lower house were Victor Trevitt,
James Elkins, S. M. Hammond. Sergeant-at-arms, G. L. Russell; doorkeeper,
Blevins.
The
session was begun and held iu two rooms of the state house, which was so far
finished as to be used for the meetings of the assembly. The principal business,
after disposing of the Indian question, was concerning the public building#
and their location. The money for the state house was all expended, and the
commissioners were in debt, while the building was still unfinished. The
penitentiary fund was also nearly exhausted, while scarcely six cells of the
prison were finished,4 and the contractors were bringing the government
in their debt. The university commissioners had accepted for a site five acres
of land tendered by Joseph P. Friedley at Corvallis, and had let the contracts
for building materials, but had so far only expended about three thousand
dollars; while the commissioners appointed to select, protect, sell, and
control the university lands had made selections amounting to 18,000 acres, or
less than one township. Of this amount between 3,000 and 4,000 acres had been
sold, for which over $9,000 had been realized. In this case there was no
indebtedness. No action had yet been taken concerning the Oregon City claim,
which was a part of the university land, but proceedings would soon be begun to
test the validity of titles.5 To meet the expense of litigation, an
act was passed authorizing the employment of counsel, but with a proviso that
in the event of congress releasing this claim to
‘The
territorial prisoner* were placed in charge of tne penitentiary commissioners
about the beginning of 1854. There were at that time three convicts, six
others being added during the year. It is shown by a memorial from the city of
Portland that the territorial prisoners had been confined in the city piison,
which they had set on fire and some escaped. The city claimed indemnity in
$12,000. recovering §600. A temporary building was then erected by the
commissioners foi the confinement of those who cculd not be employed on the
penitentiary building, some of whom were hued out to the highest bidder. It was
difficult to obtain keepers on account of the low salary It was raised at this
session to $1,000 per annum, with SGOOfor each assistant. G. D. R. Boyd, the
first keeper, received $716 for 7 months' service. .
6 A
memorial had been addressed to congress by Anderion of the legislature of
1852-3, praj mg that the Oregon City claim might be released to McLoughlin,
anil a township of land granted that would not be subject to litigation.
Whether it was forwarded is uncertain; but if so, it produced no effect.
McLouglilin,
the money obtained from the sale of lots should be refunded out of the sale of
the second township granted by congress for university purposes in the last
amendment to the land law of Oregon.6 Such was the condition of the
several appropriations for the benefit of the territory, at the beginning of
the session.
And now
began bargaining. Further appropriations must be obtained fur the public
buildings. Corvallis desired the capital, and the future appropriations. At
the same time the members from southern Oregon felt that their portion of the
state was entitled to a share in the distribution of the public money. An act
was passed relocating the seat of government at Corvallis, and removing the
university to Jacksonville.7 It was not even pretended that the
money to be spent at Jacksonville would benefit those it was intended to
educate, but only that it would benefit Jackson county.8
The act
which gave Corvallis the capital ordained that “every session of the
legislative assembly, either general or special,” should be convened at that
place, and appointed a new board of commissioners to erect suitable public
buildings at the new seat of government.9 Congress made a further
appropriation of $27,000 for the state house, and $40,000 for the penitentiary,
to be expended in such a manner as to insure completion without further aid
from the United States.10 Then it began to be understood that the relocation
act, not having been submitted to congress as required by the organic act, was
not operative, and
6 This is
an allusion to a memorial fdmilar to Anderson's passed at the previous session.
1 Or. Laws, in Statesman, Feb. G and
13, 1S55.
pIn the
bargain between Avery and the Jaekson county member, said the Statesman, the
l_ttf remarked that he ‘did not expect it [the university] to remain there, but
there would be about S12.000 they could expend before it coull be removed,
which would put up a building that would answer fora, cour: house.’
“11. R. Biddle, J. S.
Mcltuney. and Fred. Waymire constituted the new board. Or. Statesman, Feb. 6,
1855.
10 Cong, tilobe, 183-4^5, app. 3S0, 33d
cong. 2d sess.
that the
seat of government was not removed from Salem to Corvallis by that act, nor
would it be until such times as congress should take action. JSTor could the
governor pay out any part of the appropriation under instructions from the
legislature, except under contracts already existing. The executive office,
moreover, should not be removed from Salem before congress should have approved
the relocation act.u So said the comptroller; but the governor’s
office was already removed to Corvallis when the comptroller reached this
decision. The Statesman, too, which did the public printing, had obeyed the
legislative enactment, and moved its office to the new seat of government.12
When the
legislature met in the following December, Grover introduced a bill to
relocate the capital at Salem, which became a law on the 12th of December,
1855. But this action was modified by the passage of an act to submit the
question to the people at the next election. Before this was done, and perhaps
in order that it might be done, the almost completed state house, with the
library and furniture, was destroyed by lire, on the night of the 30th of December,
which was the work of an incendiary. The wliigs charged It upon the democrats,
and the democrats charged it upon “some one interested in having the capital
at Corvallis.’’13 However that may have been, it fixed the fate of
Corvallis in this regard.14 Further than this, it settled definitely
the location question by exhausting the patience of the people.15
11 Or. Jour. Council, 1855-6, app. 12.
12 Corvallis had at this time a court-house,
two taverns, two doctors, and several lawyers’ offices, a school-house, the
Statesman office, a steam saw mill, and two churches The methodwt church was
dedicated Dec. 10, 1855, G. Hines officiating. Or. Statesman, Oct. 13 and Dec.
8, 1855; Speech of Grover, in Id., Dec. 18, 1855.
l% Deady's
Hint. Or., MS., 26; Grover's Pub. Life in Or., MS., 51-4; Or. Statesman, Jan.
29, 1850; Id., July 29 and Sept. 30, 1856; Or. Argus, Jan. 5, 1850; Or. Jour.
House, 1855-0, app. 105-70; Armstrong’s Or., 17.
14 At the election in June 1856, the votes
for the capital between the principal towns stood, Portland, 1,154; Salem,
2,049; Corvallis, 1,998; Eugene, 2,310.
15 At the tinal election between these
places the people refused to vote,
The
legislature was reduced to the necessity of meeting in hired apartments for
nearly twenty years before the state was able to erect a suitable structure.
The
$40,000 appropriated to complete the penitentiary was expended on a building
which should not have cost one third of the two appropriations, the state a
dozen years later erecting another and better one at Salem.
To return
to the legislative proceedings of L854—5. Another partisan act of this body was
the passage of a bill in which voting viva voce was substituted for voting by
ballot—a blow aimed at anticipated success of the new party; and this while
the Statesman made war on the anti-foreign and anti-catholic principles of the
know-nothings, forgetting how zealously opposed to foreigners and catholics the
first great democratic leader of Oregon, S. R. Thurston, had been. Specious
reasons were presented in debate, for the adoption of the new rule, while the
Statesman openly threatened to deprive of public patronage all who by the viva
vocc system were discovered to be opposed to democratic principles. In view of
the coming election, the viva voce bill possessed much significance. It
compelled every man to announce by voice, or by a ticket handed to the judge,
his choice, which in either case was cried aloud. This surveillance was a
severe ordeal for some who were not ready openly to part company with the
democracy, and doubtless had the effect to deter many. As a coercive measure,
it was cunningly conceived. Every whig in the house voted against it, and one
third of the democrats, and in the council the majority was but two. This bill
also possessed peculiar significance in view of the passage of another
requiring the people to vote at the next election on the question of a
bou.fr, as the
Statesman said, 'tired of thf* subject.’ Avery who was elected to the
legislature in 1856, agam endeavored to bring the bubject before them, but the
bill was defeated.
Hist.
Ob.,
Vol. II. 23
state
constitutional convention, for which the ruling party, foreseeing that
appropriations for the territory were about exhausted, was now ripe. The three
measures here mentioned comprise all of the important work of the session.16
An effort
was made in the election of 1854 to get some temperance men elected to the
legislature, in order to secure a prohibitory liquor law; and for this purpose
a third party, called the Maine-law party, had its candidates in the field.
None were elected on this issue, but much opposition was aroused.17
16 Multuotanh county was created at this
session out of portions of Washington and Clackamas, making it comprise a
narrow strip lying on both sides oi the Willamette, including San v6 Island,
and fronting on the Columbia River, with the county-seat at Portland. The tirst
county court was organized Jan. 17, 1855; the board consisting of G. W.
Vaughn, Ainslee R. Scott, and James Bybee. The bonds of Shubrick Norris,
auditor, of William Mc- Millen, sheriff, and A. I). Fitch, treasurer, were
presented and approved. Rooms were rented in the building of Coleman Burrell,
on the corner of First and Salmon streets, for a court-house. R. B. Wilson was
appointed coroner at the second meeting ol the board. The first board elected
at the polls was composed of David Powell, Ellis Walker, and Samuel Farman,
which mot July 2, 1855. The first term of the district court was held April
16th, Olney presiding. The first grand jury draw 11 consisted of J. S.
Dickinson, Clark Hay, Felix Hicklin. K. A. Peterson. Edward Allbright, Thomas
II. Stallard, William L. Chittenden, George Hamilton, William Cree, Robert
Thompson, William H Frush, Samuel Farman, William Hall, William Sherlock, W. P.
Burke. Jacob Kline, Jackson Powell, John Powell. The first cause entered on the
docket was Thomas V. Smith vs William H. Morton, David Logan, and Mark Chinn.
An act of
this legislature authorized the location of county seats by a majority of
votes at the'annual elections. Che county seat of Umpqua w as thus fixed at
Elkton, on the land claim of James F. Levens. An act was passed, for the
support of indigent insane persons. There were a number of applications made
to the legislature to have doubtful marriages legalized; but the judiciary
committee, to whom they were referred, refused to entertain the petitions, on
the ground that it was not their duty to shelter persons committing crimes
against the laws and public sentiment. Notwithstanding, a special act was
passed in the case of John Carey, who had a wife and children in the States, to
make legitimate the children of a woman whom he bad in formally taken to wife
while crossing the plains. Or. Statesman, April 3, 1855. ... .
17 Notwithstanding the antagonism exhibited
at the opening of thi session, the Maine-law bill being withdrawn, an act was
passed of the nature of a local- option law, requiring retail dealers, or those
who wished to sell by any quantity less than a quart, to obtain the signatures
of a majority of the legal ^ oters in their respective precincts to
petitions praying that licenses should be granted them; if in a city, the
signatures of majority of the legal voters ir the ward where it was designed to
sell. Before proceeding to obtain the signatures, the applicant was required
to post notices for ten days of his intention to apply for > license, in
order to afford an opportunity for remonstrances to be signed. There were two
many ways of evading a law of this nature to make it serve the purpose of
prohibition, even in a temperance community;
The report
of the territorial auditor showed that whereas at the beginning of the present
fiscal year he had found $4.28 in the treasury, at its close, after balancing
accounts, there were $G8.94 on hand. The territory was in debt between $7,000
and $8,000; but the estimated revenue for the next year would be over §11,000,
which would not only discharge the debt, but lessen the present rate of
taxation. Encouraged by this report, the legislature made appropriations
which amounted to nearly as much as the anticipated revenue, leaving the debt
of the territory but little diminished, and the rate of taxation the same—a
course for which, when another legislature had been elected, they received the
reproaches of their own organs.18
There
began in April 1855, with the meeting of the democratic territorial convention
at Salem, a determined struggle to put down the rising influence of whig
principles.19 At the first ballot for delegate to congress, Lane
received fifty-three out of fifty-nine votes, the six remaining being cast by
Clackamas county for Pratt. A movement had been made in Linn county to put
forward Delazon Smith, but it was prudently withdrawn on the temper of the
majority becoming manifest. Lane county had also instructed its delegates to
vote for Judge George H. Williams as its second choice. But the great personal
popularity of Lane threw all others into the background.
On the
18th of April the whigs held a convention at Corvallis, for the purpose of
nominating a delegate,
and for this very
reason it wm possible to pass it
in a legislature unfrit nuly to prohibition.
18 Or. Jour. Council, 1854 5, app. 21-7. Thu
territorial officers elected by the assembly were Nat, II. Lane, treasurer;
Jamns A. Bennett, auditor; and Milton Shannon, librarian.
19Said the
Statesman of April 17th: ‘Defeat ana disgrace to know-nothing whiggery and
canting hypocrisy was a decree whiiijk went forth from that meeting.. .The
hauuwnting is upon the wall, and it reads, “Jo Lcne, a democratic legislature,
democratic prosecutors, democratic everything.’”
and made
clioice of Ex-governor Gaines, against four other aspirants. The majority being
for Gaines on the lirst ballot, T. J. Dryer and A. G. Henry withdrew, leaving
M. A. Chinn and A. llolbrouk. Gaines then received sixty-three votes and Chinn
three. The convention adopted as its platform, “General Gaines against the
world,” and the campaign opened.23 A movement was put on foot by the
religious portion of the community to form a temperance party, and to elect
members to the legislature on that issue; and a meeting was held for that
purpose April 16th, which was addressed by George L. Atkinson, H. X. Hines, and
W. L. Adams, the last named a rising politician, who in the spring of 1855
established the Oregon Argus, and advocated among other reforms a prohibitory
liquor law. As the paper was independent, it tended greatly to keep in check
the overweening assumption of the Statesman, and was warmly welcomed by the
new party.21
z0 As t.ie
reader has been so long familiar w ith the* names of the democratic leaders,
it will lie proper here to mention those of the territorial whig committee.
They were E. N. Cooke, Janies D. McCurdy, Alex. McIntyre, C. A Reed, and T. J.
Dryer. Oregonian, April 14, 1855.
21 The
Oregon Argus was printed on the press and with the materials of the old
Spectator, which closed its career in March 1855. The editor and publisher, Mr
Adams, possessed the qualifications necessary to conduct an independent
journal, having self-esteeir; united with argumentative powers; moreover, he
had a conscience. In politics, he leaned to the side of the whigs, and in
religion was a eampbellite. This church had a respectable membership in Oregon.
Adams sometimes preached to its congregations, and was known pretty generally
as Parson Billy. The mistakes he made iu conducting his paper were those likely
to grow out of these conditions. Being independent, it was open to everybody,
and therefore liable to take in occasionally persons of doubtful veracity
Being honest, it sometimes betrayed a lack of w 'rldly w isdom. The Statesman
called it the ‘ Airgoose; ’ nevertheless, ‘ it greatly assisted in forming into
a consistent and cohesive body the scattered materials that afterward composed
the republican party. The Argus continued to be published at Oregon City till
May 18(33, D. W. Craig being associated with Adams in its publication. Six
months after its removal, having united with the Republican of Eugene City, the
two journals passed into the hands of a company who had purchased the
Statesman, the political status of the latter having undergone a change. Salem
Directory, 1871, p. 81 Adams had in the1 mean time been appointed
collector of customs at Astoria by Lincoln, in 1861, and held this position
until he resigned it in 1806. In 1SGS be travelled in South America, anrl
finally went to New England, where he delivered a lecture on Oregon and the.
Pacific Coast, at Tremont Temple, Oct.
14, 18G9, which was published iu pamphlet form
at Boston the same year The pamphlet contains many interesting facts, presented
iu the incisive and yet often humorous style which characterized the author’s
writings as a jour-
The Argus,
however, placed the name of Gaines at the head of the editorial columns as its
candidate for delegate to congress. The Portland Times11 was
« • • « n
strongly
democratic, and sustained the nomination of Lane. The Portland Democratic
Standard labored earnestly for the election of Judge O. C. Pratt, but Lane was
destined to secure the prize and received the nomination from the Salem
convention, which was a great disappointment to Pratt’s friends.1*
Lane
arrived iu Oregon early in April, and soon after the convention the campaign
began, the whigs and know-nothings, or native Americans, uniting on Gaines and
against the democracy.
The native
Americans, it may be here said, were largely drawn from the missionary and
anti-Hudson’s I jay Company voters, who took the opportunity furnished by the
rise of the new party to give utterance to their long-clierislied antipathies
toward the foreign element in the settlement of Oregon. Some of them were men
who had made themselves odious to right- thinking people of all parties by
their intemperate zeal against foreign-born colonists and the catholic
religion, basing their arguments for know-nothing
naltet. He studied
medicine while in the east, and practised it after returning to Oregon. In the
West Shore, a monthly literary paper began at Portland in 1875 by L. Samuels,
are Rambling Notes of Olden Times by Adams, in which are some striking pictures
of the trials and pleasures of pioneer life, besides many other articles; but
his principal work in life waa done as editor of the paper he originated.
220f the two
papers started in 1850, the Star was removed to Portland in 1851, where it
became the Times, edited lirst by Waterman, and subsequently by Hibbeu,
followed by Russell I). Austin. It ran until 1S58 in the interest of the
democratic party. West Shore, Jan. 1870. Austin mar ried Miss Mary A. Collins
of Holyoke, Mass. Oregon Argus, Oct. 13, 1855.
23 Portland Oregonian, April 15, 1870.
Another paper that came into being in 1S55 was the Pacific Christian Advocate.
It was tirst called the North Pacific Christian Herald, and had for publishers
A. F. Waller, Thos H. Peame, P. G. Buchanan, J. R. Robb, and C. S. Kingsley,
with Thos H I'eame for manager. See Or. Statesman, June 10. 1S55. It soon
afterward changed its name to Pacific Christian Advocate, published by A. F Waller,
J. L. Parrish, J. D. Boon, C. S. Kingsley, and H. K. Hines, with Thos H. Peame
editor. The following year the methodist general conference, in session at
Indianapolis, resolved to establish a book depository and publish
i weekly paper in Oregon; anti that the
book agents at New York be advised to purchase the Pacific Christian Advocate,
already started, at §3,500, and to employ an editor with a fixed salary Or. and
its Institutions, 107-8.
principles
upon the alleged participation in the Whitman massacre of the catholic
priesthood.24
Anything
like cant entering into American politics has always proven a failure; and the
democratic party were not too refined to give utterance to an honest disgust of
the bigotry which attempted it in Oregon. The election resulted in the complete
triumph of democracy, Lane’s majority being twenty-one hundred and forty-nine.25
There were but four whig* elected to the assembly, two in each house. A democratic
prosecuting attorney was elected in each judicial district.26 The
party had indeed secured everything it aimed at, excepting the vote for a
state constitution, and that measure promised to be soon secured, as the
majority against it had lessened more than half since the last election.
In spite
of and perhaps on account of the dominance of democratic influence in Oregon,
there was a conviction growing in the minds of thinking people not governed by
partisan feeling, which was in time to revolutionize politics, and bring
confusion upon the men who lorded it so valiantly in these times. This
was, that
the struggle for the extension of slave ter. » OO *11
ritory
which the southern states were making, aided and abetted by the national
democratic party, would be renewed when the state constitution came to be
formed, and that they must be ready to meet the emergency.
In view of
the danger that by some political jugglery the door would be left open for the
admission of slavery, a convention of free-soilers was called to meet at Albany
on the 27th of June, 1855. Little more was done at this time than to pass
resolutions
24 Or. Am.
Erang. Unionist, Aug. 2, 1848.
25 Official, in Or. Statesman, June 30,
1855. The Tribune Almanas for 1856 gives Line’s majority as 2,235. The entire
vote cast was 10,121. There were believed to be about 11,100 voters 111 the
territory. _
26George K.
Sheil in the 1st district: Thomas S. Brandon in the 2d; R. E. Stratton in the
3d; and W. G. T’Vault in Jackson county, which was allowed to constitute a
district.
expressing
the sentiments and purposes of the members, and to appoint a committee to
draft a platform for the anti-slavery party, to be reported to an adjourned
meeting to be held at Corvallis un the 31st of October.27 This was
the beginning of a movement in which the Argus played an important part, and
which resulted in the formation of the republican party of Oregon. It was the
voice crying in the wilderness which prepared the way for the victory of free
principles on the Northwest Coast, and secured to the original founders of the
Oregon colony the entire absence of the shadow and blight of an institution
which when they left their homes in the States the earliest immigrations
determined to leave behind them forever. With regard, however, to the progress
of the new party, before it had time to complete a formal organization, events
had occurred in Oregon of so absorbing a nature as to divert the public mind
from its contemplation.
I have
already spoken of the round of visits which Indian Superintendent Palmer made
in 1854, about which time he concluded some treaties—none of those made by
Gaines ever having been ratified—with the Indians of the Willamette Valley.28
It was not until October that he was able to go to the Indians of south-
27 Tho committee were John Conner, B. F.
Whitson, Thomas S. Kendall, Oiigen Thomson, and J. P. 5ate. Or. Argus, July 7,
1855. The members of this first anti-slavery meeting of Oregon were Origen
Thomson, H. II. Hicklin, T. S. Kendall, Jno. I’i. McClure, Wm T. Baiter, Wilson
Blain, Jno. McCoy, Samuel Hyde, W. L. Coon, Wm Marks, W. C. Hicklin, H. F.
McCuUy, David Irwin, John Smith, Isaac Pest, J. VV. Stewart, G. W. Lambert, J.
B. Forsyth, J. M. McCall, John Conner, Thos Cannon, B. F. Whitson, W. C.
Johnson, Hezekiah Johnson, J. T. Craig, I). C. Hackley, S. R. JlcClelland,
Robert A. Buck, Samuel Bell, J i‘. Tate, U. 11. Dunning. Altred W'lieeler,
Samuel Colver, D. H. Bodinn, W. C. Garwood, D. Beach, Charles Ferry, J. F.
Thompson, Milton B. Starr. Or. Argus, July 7, 1855.
28 A treaty was made with the Tualatin band
of Calapooyas for their land lying in Washington and Yammll counties, for which
they received §3, 300 in goods, money, and farm tools; also provisions for one
year, and annuities of goods for twenty years, besides a tract of 40 acres to
each family, two of Vi hich were to be ploughed and fenced, and a cabin erected
upon it. Teachers of farming, Milling, blacksmithing, etc., were to be
furnished with manual- labor schools for the children. The provisions of all of
Palmer’s treaties were similar.
ern Oregon
with the assurance that congress had ratified the treaties made at the close
of the war of 1853, with some amendments to which they consented somewhat
unwillingly,29 but were pacified on receiving their first instalment
of goods. S. H. Culver was removed, and George H. Ambrose made agent on the
Hogue River reservation.30 By the 1st of February, 1855, all the
lands between the Columbia River and the summit of the Calapooya Mountains, and
between the Coast and Cascade ranges, had been purchased for the United States,
the Indians agreeing to remove to such localities as should be selected for
them, it being the intention to place them east of the Cascades. But the
opposition made by all natives, to being forced upon the territory of other
tribes, or to having other tribes brought into contact with them, on their own
lands, influenced Palmer to select a reservation on the coast, extending from
Cape Lookout on the north to a point half-way between the Siuslaw and Umpqua
rivers, taking in the whole country west of the Coast Range, with all the
rivers and bays, for a distance of ninety miles, upon which the Willamette and
coast tribes were to be placed as soon as the means should be at hand to remove
them.
No attempt
to treat with the Oregon tribes east of the Cascade Mountains for their lands
had ever been made, and except the efforts of the missionaries, and the
provisional government, for which White may be considered as acting, nothing
had been done to bring them into friendly relations with the citizens of tho
United States. The Cay use war had left that tribe
29 Tho amendment most objected to was one
which allowed other tribes to be placed on their reservation, and which
consolidated all the Rogue River tribes.
su Palmer
appears to have been rather arbitrary, but being liked by the authorities, in
choosing between hiin and an agent whom ne disliked, they dismissed the agent
without inquiry. Sub-agent Philip F. Thompson of Umpqua having died, E. P. Drew
succeeded him. Nathan Olney superseded Parrish. There remained R. 11. Thompson,
WT. W. Raymond, and William J. Martin, who resigned in the spring of
1855, and was succeeded by Robert B. Metcalfe. These frequent changes were due,
according to Palmer, to insufficient salariea.
imllittered
toward the American people. Governor Stevens of Washington Territoy, when
exploring for the Pacific railroad, in 1853, had visited and conferred with the
tribes north and east of the Columbia concerning the sale of iheir lands, all
of whom professed a willingness to dispose of them, and to enter into treaty
relations with the government.31 Stevens had reported accordingly to
congress, which appropriated money to defray the expense of these negotiations,
and appointed Stevens and Palmer commissioners to make the treaties. Put in the
mean time a year and a half had elapsed, and the Indians had been given time to
reconsider their hasty expressions of friendship, and to indulge in many
melancholy forebodings of the consequences of parting with the sovereignty of
the country. These regrets and apprehensions were heightened by a knowledge of
the Indian war of 1853 in Pogue River Valley, the expedition against the Mo-
docs and Piutes, and the expedition of Major Haller then in progress for the
punishment of the murderers of the Ward company. They had also been informed by
rumor that the Oregon superintendent designed to take a part of the country
which they had agreed to surrender for a reservation for the diseased and degraded
tribes of wTestern Oregon, whose presence or neighborhood they as
little desired as the white inhabitants. At least, that is what the Indians
said of themselves.
Aware to
some extent of this feeling, Stevens sent in January 1855 one of his most
trusted aids, James Doty, among the Indians east of the mountains, to ascertain
their views before opening negotiations for the purchase of their lands. To
Doty the Indians made the same professions of friendship and willingness to
sell their country which they had made to Stevens in 1853; and it was agreed to
hold a general council of the Yakimas, Nez Pcrces, Cayuses, Walla
311. I.
Stevens, in Ind. Aff. Itept, 1854, 184, 248; U. S. II.
Ex. Doc. 55, 2, 33d cong. 1st sess.
Wallas,
and their allies, to be convened in the Walla Walla Valley in May. The place of
meeting was chosen by Kamiakin, head chief of the Yakimas, because it was an
ancient council-ground of his people, and everything seemed to promise a
friendly conference.
A large
amount of money was expended in Indian goods and agricultural implements, the
customary presents to the head men on the conclusion of treaties. These were
transported above The Dalles in keel boats/2 and stored at Fort
Walla Walla, then in charge of James Sinclair of the Hudson’s Bay Company. A
military escort for the commissioners was obtained at Fort Dalles, consisting
of forty dragoons under Lieutenant Archibald Gracie,33 the company
being augmented to forty-seven by the addition of a detachment under a corporal
in pursuit of some Indian murderers whom they had sought for a week without
finding.
On the
20th of May the commissioners, who had hastened forward, arrived at Walla
Walla, and proceeded to the council-grounds about five miles from Waiilatpu,84
where the encampment was made before the escort arrived.35 The
Indians, with their accus
32 Stevens speaks of this as the opening of
navigation above The Dalles. They were succeeded, he saya, by sailing vessels
of 00 tons freight, and soon by a steamer. Pac. R. R, Rept, xii. 196- -7.
85 Lieut
Lawrence Kip, of the 3d artillery , who accompanied Gracie on this occasion as
a guest and spectator, afterward published an account of the expedition and
transactions of the commission, under title of The Indian Council ai Walla
Walla, San Francisco, 1855, a pleasantly told narrative, in which there is much
correct information, and some unimportant errors concerning mission matters of
which he had no personal knowledge. He gives pretty full reports of the
speeches of the chiefs and commissioners. Lieut Kip also wrote a little book,
Army Life on the Pacific Coast, A Journal of the Expedition against the
Northern Indians in the Summer of 1S08, New York, 1S39, in which the author
seeks to defend the army officers from aspersions cast upon them in the
newspapers, and even in speeches on the floor of congress, as ‘ the drones of
society, living on the government, yet a useless encumbrance and expense. ’
81 Kip
speaks of visiting some gentlemen residing on the site of the old mission, w ho
w ere ‘raising stock to sell to emigrant-) crossing the plains, or settlers w
ho will soon be locating themselves through these valleys. ’ Indian Council,
l(i.
30 Kip also describes the council-ground a*?
a beautiful spot, and tells ’-a that an arbor had been erected for a dining
Ixall for the commissioners, with
tomed
dilatoriness, did not begin to come in until the 24th, when Lawyer and Looking
Glass of the Xez Perces arrived with their delegation, and encamped afc no
great distance from the commissioners, after having passed through the fantastic
evolutions, in full war costume, sometimes practised on such occasions.58
The Cayuses appeared in like manner two days later, and on the 28th the
Yakimas, who, with others, made up an assemblage of between four and tive
thousand Indians of both sexes. An attempt was made on the day following to
organize the council, but it was not until the 30th that business was begun.
Before the
count'd opened it became evident that a majority of the Indians were notin
favor of treating,37 if indeed they were not positively hostile to
the people represented bjr the commissioners; the Cayuses in
particular regarding the troops with scowls of anger, which they made no
attempt to conceal. Day after day, until the 11th of June, the slow and
reluctant conference went on. The chiefs made speeches, with that mixture of
business shrewdness and savage poetry which renders the Indian’s eloquence so
effective.33
a table of split
logs, with the flat side up. The troops, too, were sheltered in arbors, and but
for the showery weather the comfort uf the occasion would have equalled its
picturcsqueness. •
6 See Hint.
Or., i. 130-1, this series.
31 Kip’s Indian Council, 21.
38 The chief of the Cayuses thought it was
wrong to sell the ground given tftem by the great spirit for their support. ‘ I
wonder if the ground has anything to sayS I wonder if the ground is listening
to what is said.. .1 hear what the ground says. The ground says, “It is the
great spirit that placed me here. I"ie great spirit tells me to take care
of the Indians, to feed them aright. The great spirit appointed the roots to
feed the Indians on. ” The water says the same thing. The great spirit directs
me, “Peed the Indians well.” The grass says the same, thing, “Feed the horses
and cattle.” The ground, water, and grass say, “ The great spirit has given us
our names. We have these names and hold these names. Neither the Indians nor
the whites hav e a right to change these names. ” The ground says, “ The great
spirit has placed me here to produce all that grows on me, trees and fruit.”
The same way the ground says, “It was from me man was made.” The great spirit
in placing men on the earth desired them to take good care of the ground, and
do each other no haini. The great spirit said. “You Indians who take care of
certain portions of the country should not trade it off except you get a fair
price.” ’ Kip’s Indian Council, 22-0. In this argument was an attempt to
enunciate a philosophy equal to the white man's. It ended, as all savage.
The
commissioners exhausted their store of logic in convincing their savage hearers
that they needed the benefits of the culture which the white race could impart
to them. Over and over again, the motives of the treaties and the treaties
themselves were explained in the most painstaking manner. The fact was patent
that the Indians meant to resist the invasion of their lands by the people of
the United States. The Cayuses were against any sale. Owhi, chief of the
Umatillas, and brother-in-law of Kamiakin, was opposed to it. Peupeumoxinox,
usually so crafty and non-committal, in this matter was decided; Kamiakin would
have nothing to do with it; Joseph and Looking Glass were unfriendly; and only
Lawyer continued firm in keeping his word already pledged to Stevens.33
But for him, and the numerical strength of the Nez Perces, equal, to that of
all the other tribes present, no treaty could have been concluded with any of
the tribes. His adherence to his determination greatly incensed the Cayuses
against him, and some of his own nation almost equally, especially Joseph, who
refused to sign the treaty unless it secured to him the valley which he
claimed as the home of himself and his people.40 Looking Glass, war
chief
arguments do, in
showing the desire of gain, and the suspicion of being cheated.
33 ‘I think
it is doubtful,’ says Kip, ‘if Lawyer coul.l have held out but for his prido in
his small sum of book lore, which inclined him to cling to his friendship with
the whites. In making a speech, he was able to refer to the discovery of the
continent by the Spaniards, and the story of Columbus mat ing the egg stand 011
end. He related how the red men had receded before the white men in a manner
that was hardly calculated to pour oil upon the troubled waters; yet as his
father had agreed with Lewis and Clarke to live
111 peace with the w'hites, he was in favor of
making a treaty!’
*°Concerning the
exact locality claimed by Joseph at this time as his home, there has been much
argument and investigation. At the beginning of this history, Joseph was living
uearLapwai, but it'is said he was only there for the purpose of attending
Spalding’s school; that his father was a Cayuse, who had two wives, one a Nez
PercS, the mother of Joseph, and the other a Cayuse, the mother of Five Crows;
that Joseph was born on Snake Iliver, near the mouth of the Grand Rond where
his father lived, and that after the Lapwai mission was abandoned he went back
to the mouth of the Grand Rond, where he died in 1871. These facts are gathered
from a letter of Indian Agent J110. B. Monteith to H. Clay Wood, and is
contained in a pamphlet published by the latter, called The Status of Young
Joseph and his Band of Nez I'trce, Indians under the Treaties, etc., written to
settle the
of the Nez
Perces, showed his opposition by not coming to the council until the 8th, and
behaving rudely when he did come.41 Up to almost the last day,
Palmer, who had endeavored to obtain the consent of the Indiatis to one common
reservation, finding them determined in their refusal, finally offered to
reserve lands separately in their own country for those who objected to going
upon the Nez Perce reservation, and on this proposition, harmony was apparently
restored, all the chiefs except Kamiakin agreeing to it. The haughty Yakima
would consent to nothing; but when appealed to by Stevens to make known his
question of Joseph's
right to the Wallowa Valley in Oregon, his claim to which brought on the war of
1877 with that band of Nez Perces. Wood’s pamphlet, which was written by the
order of department commander Gen.
O. 0. Howard, furnishes much valuable
information upon this rather obscure subject. Wood concludes from all the
evidence that Joseph was chief of the upper or Salmon River branch jf the Nez
Perots, and that his claim to the Wallowa Valley as his especial home was not
founded in facts as they existed at the time of the treaty of 1855, but that it
was ‘possessed in common by the Nez Perces as a summer resort to fish. ’ As the
reservation took in both sides of the Snake River as far up as fifteen miles below
the mouth of Powder River, and all the Salmon River country to the Bitter Root
Mountains, and beyond the Clearwater as far as the southern branch of the
Palouse, the western line beginning a little below the mouth of Alpowa Creek,
it included all the lands ever claimed by the Nez Perct?s since the
ratification of the treaty, mijeh of which was little known to white men in
1855, and just which portion of it 'was reserved by Joseph is a matter of
doubt, though Supf rintendent Palmer spoke of Joseph’s band as ‘the Salmon
River band of the Nez Perces.’ Wood's Young Joseph ami the Treaties, 35.
Joseph had perhaps
other reasons for objecting t1' Lawyer’s advice. He claimed to be
descended from u long line of chiefs, and to be superior in rank to Lawyer. The
missionaries, because Joseph was a war chief, and because Lawyer exhibited
greater aptitude in learning the arts of peace, endeavored to build up Lawyer’s
influence. When White tried his hand at managing Indians, he appointed over the
Nez Perces a head chief, a practice which had been discontinued by the advice
of the Hudson’s Bay Company. On the death of mis, the head chief, whose
superior acquirements hail greatly strengthened his influence with the Nez
Perces, it was Lawyer who aspired to the high chieftainship, on the ground of
these same acquirements, and who had gained so rnucu influence as to be named
head chief when the commissioners interrogated the Nez PerciSs as to whom they
should treat with for the nation. This was good ground for jealousy and discord,
and a weighty reason why Joseph should not readily consent to the advice of
Lawyer, even if there were no other.
11 (’ram says that Lawyer and Looking Glass
had arranged it between them to cajole the commissioners: that the sudden
appearance and opposition of the latter were planned to give effect to Lawyer’s
apparent fidelity; and at the same time by throwing obstacles in the way, to
‘prevent a clutch upon their lands from being realized. In these respects
events have shown that Lawyer was the ablest diplomatist at the council; for
the friendship of his tribes has -emained, and no hold upon their lands has yet
inured to the whites.’ Top. Hem., 84.
wishes,
only aroused from his sullen silence to ejaculate, “What have I to say?” This
was the mood of the Indians on Saturday, the 9th; hut on Monday, the 11th,
every chief signed the treaties, including Kamia- kin, who said it was for the
sake of his people that he consented. Having done this, they all expressed satisfaction,
even joy and thankfulness, at this termination of the conference.42
The Nez
Perces agreed to take for their lands outside the reservation, which was ample,
$200,000 in annuities, and were to be supplied besides with mills, schools,
millers, teachers, mechanics, and every reasonable aid to their so-called
improvement. The Cayuses, Walla Wallas, and Umatilias were united on one
reservation in the beautiful Umatilla country, where claims were already
beginning to be taken up.43
They wore
to receive the same benefits as the NVz Perces, and $150,000 in annuities,
running through twenty years. The Yakimas agreed to take $200,000, and were
granted two schools, three teachers, a number of mechanics, a farmer, a
physician, millers, and mills.44 By an express provision of the
treaties, the country embraced in the cessions, and not included in the
reservation, was open to settlement, except that the Indians were to remain in
possession of their improvements until removed to the reservations, when they
were to be paid for them whatever they were worth. When the treaties were
published, particular attention was called to these provisions protecting the
Indians in the enjoyment of their homes so long as they were not removed by
authority to the reserves.
n Kip’s
Army Life, 92; Stevens, in U. S. Sen. Ex. Doc. 66, 24, 34th cong. 1st sess.
One Whitney waa
living about a ruile from the crossing of the Umatilla River with William
McKay, on claim he was cultivating, belonging to the latter. Kip’s Indian
Council, 29. This William McKay was grandson of Alexander McKay of Astor’s
company. He resided in eastern Oregon almost continually since taking this
clain. on the Umatilla.
Palmer’s
Wagon Trains, MS., 51; Or. Statesman, June 30 and July 21, 1853; Puget Sound
Herald, May 6, 1859; Wood's Young Joseph and the Treaties, 10-12; PendUton
Tribune, March 11, 1874; S. P. Alta, July 16, 1850; Sac. Union, July 10, 1855.
And
attention was also called to the fact that the Indians were not required to
move upon their reserves before the expiration of one year after the
ratification of the treaties by congress; the intention being to give time for
them to accustom themselves to the idea of the change of location.
As soon as
these apparently amicable stipulations were concluded, the goods brought as
presents distributed, and agents appointed for the different reservations/-'
the troops returned to The Dalles. That night the Indians held a great
scalp-dance, in which 150 of the women took part. The following day they broke
up their encampments and returned to their several habitations, the
commissioners believing that the feelings of hostility with which several of
the chiefs had come to the council had been assuaged On the 16th Stevens
proceeded north-eastward, toward the Black- foot country,being directed by the
government to make treaties with this warlike people and several other tribes
in that quarter.
Palmer in
the mean time returned toward The Dalles, treating with the John Day, Des
Chutes, and Wascopan Indians, and purchasing all the lands lying between the
summit of the Cascade Range and the waters of Powder River, and between the
44tli parallel and the Columbia River, on terms similar to those of the
treaties made at Walla Walla. A reservation Avas set apart for these tribes at
the base of the Cascades, directly east of Mount Jefferson, in a well watered
and delightful location,48 including the Tyghe Valley and some warm
springs from which the reserve has been named.
Having
accomplished these important objects, the superintendent returned home well
pleased with the results of his labor, and believing that he had secured the
peace of the country in that portion of Oregon.
*5R. R.
Thompson wa,4 appointed to the Umatilla reservation, and \V. H. Tappan for the
Nez Percfe
•6Ind
Aff. Kept, 1857, 370; Letter of Palmer, in Or. Statesman, July 21, 1805; Puget
Sound Herald, May 6, 1859.
The Nez
Pcrces afterward declared that during the council a scheme had been on foot,
originating with the Cayuses, to massacre all the white persons present,
including the troops, the plan only failing through the refusal of Lawyer’s
party to join in it, which statement may be taken for what it is worth. On the
other hand, it has been asserted that the treaties were forced;47
that they were rashly undertaken, and the Indians not listened to; that by
calling a general council an opportunity was furnished for plotting; that
there were too few troops and too little parade.13 However this may
be, war followed, the history of which belongs both to Oregon and Washington.
But since the Indians involved in it were chiefly those attached to the soil
and superintendency of the latter, I shall present the narrative in my volume
011 Washington.
47 Wood'd
Yovng Joseph and the. Treaties.
*Tolmie’s Hist. Puget
Sound, MS., 37; Roberts’ Recollections, MS., 95.
FURTHER INDIAN WARS.
1855-1856.
Indian
Affairs in Southern Oregon- The Roo.ru River
Peoplf—Ex TERMINATION
ADVOCATED—MTLITIA COMPANIES—SURPRISES AND SkIR- misiiis—Reservation and
Friendly Indians Protected by the U. S. Government against Miners and Settlers—More
Fighting— Volunteers and Regulars—Battli, op Grave Creek— Formation of the
Northern and Southern Battalions—Affair at tiil Meadows—Ranging by the
Volunteers—The Ben 'Wright Massacre.
Before
midsummer,
1855, war was again browing' in southern Oregon, the Applegate Creek and Illinois
Valley branches of the Rogue River nation being the immediate cause. On one
pretence or another, the former spent much of their time oft' the reservation,
and in June made a descent on a mining camp, killing several men and capturing
considerable property; while the murder of a white man on Indian Creek was
charged to the latter, of whom a party of volunteers went in pursuit.
On the
17th of June a company styling themselves the Independent Bangers, H. B. Hayes,
captain, organized at Wait’s mills in Jackson county, reporting to Colonel
Boss for his recognition,1 this being
'The
original ropy of the application is oontained iu the first volume ot DouvlFs
Oregon Indian Wars, MS., 13. This is a valuable compilation of original
documents and letters pertaining to the wars of 1835-6 in southern Oregon, and
furnishes conclusive proof ef the invidious course of the Salem clique toward
that portion of the territory, Dowell has taken much pains to secure and
preserve these fragments of history, ami in doing so has vindicated his
section, trom which otherwise the blan.e of certain alleged illegal acts might
never have been removed. Then there are his Indian Wars, Hisi. ob„ Y jl. II 21 ( 3ti9)
tlie first
movement toward the reorganization of military companies since the treaties of
September 1853.3 Knowledge of these things coming to Ambrose, in
charge of the reservation Indians, Smith of Fort Lane started olf with a
company of dragoons, and collecting most of the strolling Indians, hurried them
upon the reservation. Those not brought in were pursued into the mountains by
the volunteers, and one killed. The band then turned upon their pursuers, and
wounding several horses, killed one man named Philpot. Skirmishing was
continued for a week with further fatal results on both sides.3
A party of
California volunteers under William Martin, in pursuit of hostile Indians,
traced certain of them to the Hogue lliver reservation, and made a demand for
their surrender, to which Commander Smith, of Fort Lane, very properly refused
compliance. Let the proper authorities ask the surrender of Indians on a
criminal charge, and they should be forthcoming, but they could not be
delivered to a mere voluntary assemblage of men. Afterward a requisition was
made from Siskiyou county, and in November two
Scrap-Book;
Letters; Biographiw, and various pamphlets which contain almost a complete
journal of the events to which this chapter is devoted.
3ienjun -i .Franklin
Dowell emigrated from New Franklin, Mo., in 1850, taking the California, road,
but arriving in the 'Willamette Valley in Nov. He had studied law. but now
taught a school in Polk county in the summer of 1851, and afterward in the
Waldo hills. It was slow work for an ambi tious man; so borrowing some money
and buying a pack-train, he began trrding to the mines in southern Oregon and
northern California, following it successfully for four years. He purchased
fluar of T W. Nesmith at his mills in Polk county at 10 cents per lb., and sold
it in the mines at §1 and $1.25. He bought butter at 50 cents per lb., and sold
it at §1.50; salt at 15 cents per lb., and sold it at §2 and $3 per lb., and
other articles in proportion. When Scottslmrg became the base of supplies,
instead of the Willamette Valley, he traded between that place ami the mines.
When war broke out, Dowell was ‘the first in ami the last out’ of the fight.
After that he settled in Jacksonville, and engaged in the practice of law and
newspaper management.
2 Or. Argils, June 16, 1855; Sac. Union,
June 12, 1855; S. F. Chronirle, June 15, 1855; S. F. Alta, June 18, 1855.
3 A bottle of whiskey sold by a white man
to an Indian on the 2(ith of July caused the deaths, besides several Indians,
of John Pollock V\ illiara Hennessey, Peter Heinrich, Thomas Gray, John L.
Fickas Edward Parrish, F. D. Mattiee, T. D. Mattice, Itaymond, anil Pedro.
Dowell'* Or. hid Wars, MS., 39; Or. Argus, Aug. 1855, 18; S. F. Alta, Ang* 13
and 31, 1855.
Indians
wore arrested for murder on the reservation, aud delivered up,4
On the
2Gth of August, a Rogue River Indian shot and wounded James Buford, at the
mouth of Rogue River in the Port Orford district, then in charge of Ben Wright,
who arrested the savage and delivered him to the sheriff of Coos county. Having
no place in which to secure his prisoner, the sheriff delivered him to a squad
of soldiers to be taken to Port Orford; but while the canoe in which the Indian
was seated with his guard was passing up the river to a place of encampment, it
was followed by Buford, his partner, Hawkins, and O’Brien, a trader, who tired
at and killed the prisoner and another Indian. The fire was returned by the
soldiers, who killed two of the men, and mortally wounded the third.5
The
excitement over this affair was very great. Threats by the miners of giving
battle to the troops were loud and vindictive, but the more conservative
prevailed, and no attack was made. The savages were aroused, and matters grew
daily worse.6
Agent
Ambrose wrote several letters which appeared in the Statesman, over the
signature of ‘A Miner,’ in one of which, dated October 13th, he declared that
no fears were to be entertained of an outbreak of the Rogue River Indians,
affirming that they were peaceably disposed, aud had been so
‘These particulars
are lound in a letter written by William Martin to C. S. Drew, and is contained
in Dowell’s collection of original documents of the Or. Ind. Warn, MS., vol.
ii., 3:2- 0.
5Letter of
Arago, in Or. Statesman, Sept. 22, 1855; Sac. Union, Sept 12, 1855; Coos Bay
Mail, in Portland Standard, Feb. 20,1880; Id., in S. P. Bui letin, Feb. (i,
1880.
* See Nichols’ Rogue
River War, MS., 14--13. On the 2d or September, Granville Keene, from Term ,
was killed on the reservation while assisting Pred. Alberding, J. Q. Taber, and
a fourth man to reclaim some sr >len horses. Two others were wounded and
obliged to retreat. About the. last ,'f the month, Calv in Fields of Iow a, and
John Ouningham of Sauvg Island, Oregon, were killed, and Harrison Oatman and
Daniel Britton wounded, while crossing the Siskiyou Mountains with loaded
wagons drawn by eighteen oxen, which were also kdled. An express being sent to
Fort Lane, Captain Smith ordered out a detachment of dragoons, but no arrests
were made. Of the Indian? killed in the mean time no mention is made.
throughout
the summer. “ God knows,” he said, “ I would not care how soon they were all
dead, and I believe the country would be greatly benefited by it; but I am
tired of this senseless railing against Captain Smith and the Indian agent for
doing their duty, obeying the laws, and preserving our valley from the horrors
of a war with a tribe of Indians who do not desire it, but wish for peace, and
by their conduct have shown it.”
To prevent
the reservation Indians from being suspected and punished for the acts of
others, Superintendent Palmer issued an order October 13tli that the Indians
with whom treaties had been made, and who had reservations set apart for them,
should be arrested if found off the reservations without a permit from the
agent. Every male over twelve years of age must answer daily to the roll-call.
Early in October it became known that a party of wandering Indians were
encamped near Thompson’s Ferry, 011 Rogue River, and that among them were some
suspected of annoying the settlers. A volunteer company of about thirty,
under J. A. Lupton, proceeded at a very early hour of the morning of October
8th to the Indian camp at the mouth of Butte Creek, and opened fire, killing
twenty-three and wounding many. The Indians returned it as well as they were
able, and succeeded in killing Lupton, and in wounding eleven others.7
When daylight came it was found by the mangled bodies that they were mostly old
men, women, and children, whom these brave men had been butchering! The
survivors took refuge at the fort, where they exhibited their wounds and made
their lamentations to Captain Smith, who sent his troops to look at the
battle-field and count the slain. It was a pitiful sight, and excited great indignation
among the better class of white men.8
’Among them Shepard.
Miller, Pelton. Hereford, Gates, and Williams. Letter of (J. S. Drew, in
Dowtll’x Or. Ind. Wars, MS., 29; Nottarts, in Or. Statesman, Oct. 27, 1855;
NichoW Ind. Affairs, MS., 20.
8dram'a
Top. Mem,., 41; Letter of Palmer to General Wool, in U. S. II.
On the
morning of the 9th of October the Indians appeared in the upper part of the
Rogue River Valley in considerable numbers. They were first seen at Jewett’s
ferry, where during the night they killed two men in charge of a train and
wounded another. After firing upon Jewett’s house, they proceeded to Evans’
ferry about daybreak, where they mortally wounded Isaac Shelton of the
Willamette A'alley on his way to Yreka. Pursuing their way down the valley to
the house of J. K. Jones, they killed him, wounded his wife so that she died
next day, and burned the house after pillaging it. Prom there they went to
Wagoner’s place, killing four men upon the way. Wagoner had a short time before
left home to escort Miss Pellet, a temperance lecturer from Pufi'alo, New
York,® to Sailor Diggings, where she was to lecture that eveiiincr. Mrs Wagoner
was alone
o
with her
child four years of age, and both were burned in the house. They next proceeded
to the house of George W. Harris, who seeing their approach, and judging that
they meant mischief, ran into the house, seized his gun, and fired two shots,
killing one and wounding another, when he received a fatal shot. His wife and
little daughter defended themselves with great heroism for twenty-four hours,
when they were rescued by Major Fitzgerald. And there were many other heroic
women, whose brave deeds during these savage wars of southern Oregon must
forever remain unrecorded.1'’
As soon as
the news reached Jacksonville that the Rogue River settlements were attacked, a
company of some twenty men hastened to take the trail of the Indians down the
river. An express was despatched
Ex. Doc.
93, 112, 34 th cong. 1st sess.; Sober Sense, in Or. Statesman, Oct. 27, 185.5;
Letter of Wool, in U. S. Sen. Ex. Doc. CG, 59; 34th cong. 1st sess.
9 Or. Argus, Sept. 29, 1835.
10 Sec California Inter Pocula, this series,
passim. ‘It was stated that Mrs Harris, when relieved, was so marked with
powder and blood as to be hardly recognizable. * Or. Statesman, March 3, 185G.
Mrs Harris afterward married Aaron Chambers, who came to Oregon in 1852, was
much respected, and died in 1800. Jacksonville Or. Sentinel, Sept. 18, 18G9.
to Fort
Lane, to Captain Smith, who sent a detachment of fifty-five mounted men, under
Major Fitzgerald, in pursuit of the savages.11
The
volunteer and regular forces soon combined to follow, and if possible to have
battle with the Indians. Passing the bodies of the slain all along their route,
they came to Wagoner’s place, where thirty of the savages were still engaged in
plundering the premises. On the appearance of the volunteers, the Indians,
yelling and dancing, invited them to fight,12 but when the dragoons
came in sight they fled precipitately to the mountains. After pursuing for
about two miles, the troops, whose horses were jaded from a night march of
twenty-five miles, being unable to overtake them, returned to the road, which
they patrolled for some hours, marching as far as Grave Creek, after which they
retired to Fort Lane, having found no Indians in that direction.13
The volunteers also returned home to effect more complete organization before
undertaking such arduous warfare against an implacable foe who they now were
assured was before them. There were other parts of the country which likewise
required their attention.
About the
10th of October, Lieutenant Ivautz left Port Orford with a small party of
citizens and soldiers to examine a proposed route from that place to
Jacksonville. On arriving at the big bend of Rogue River, about thirty miles
east from Port Orford, he fuund a party of settlers much alarmed at a
threatened
11 At that very moment an express was on
its way from Vancouver to Fort Lane, calling for Major Fitzgerald to reenforce
Major Haller in tho Yakima country. Or. Statesman, Oct. ‘20, 1855. Peupeumoxmox
was threatening the Walla Walla Valley, anil the Indians on Puget Sound
preparing for the blow which they were to strike at tho white settlements two
weeks later, a coincidence of events significant of combination among the
Indians Dowell's Letters, MS., 35; Grover's Pub. Life, MS., 74; Autobiog. if
II. C. Huston, in Brown’s Or. Misc., MS., 48; Dowell’s Or. Ind. War, MS., 33-9;
Or. Anjus, Oct. 27; Evans’ Fourth of July Address, in New Tacoma Ledger, July 9,1880.
12 Hayes' Ind. Scraps, v. 145; Yreka Union,
Oct. 1855.
13 Three men were killed on Grave Creek, 12
miles below the roau, on the ni^ht of the 9tli. J, W. Drew, in Or. Statesman,
Oct. 20, 1855.
attack
from Applegate Creek. Kautz returned to the fort for a better supply of arms
and ammunition, intending to resist the advance of the hostile party, should
lie fall in with it. A few days after resuming his march he was attacked by a
portion of the band, losing iive of his men, two soldiers and three citizens.
The
Indians were only prevented from securing a considerable amount of ammunition
by the precaution of Kautz in unloading the pack-mules at the beginning of the
battle. He was able to secure an orderly retreat with the remainder of his
party.14 The only Indians in the whole country, from Yreka to the
Umpqua canon, who could be regarded other than enemies were those under Ilogue
Iliver Sam, who since the treaty of 1853 had kept faith with the white people;
the Sliastas, the natives of Scott Valley, and many of the people about Grave
and Cow creeks, and the Umpquas being concerned in the war, in which the
Shastas were principals, under the leadership of Chief John. The Klamaths were
also hostile.15
To meet a
savage enemy, well armed and prepared for war, knowing every mountain fastness,
and having always the advantage of chosen positions, was not practicable with
anything like equal numbers. Estimating the fighting men of the enemy at no
more than 400, it would require three or four times that number to engage them,
because of their ability to appear unexpectedly at several points; at the same
time to disappear as rapidly; and to wear out the horses and men of the white
forces in following them. The armed men that were mustered in Rogue River
Valley between the 9th and lltli of October amounted to only about 150, not
from any want of courage, but from want of arms.10 No attempt at
permanent organiza-
14 Henry's Rogue River War Speech, 14.
15 Letter of Ambrose to Palmer, in IT. S.
II. Ex. Doc. 93, 62-65, 34th eong. 1st sess.
16 Says Ambrose; ‘As in the war of 1853, the
Indians have all the guns in the country. Those Indians have each a good rifle
and revolver, and are skilful in the use of them*’
tion was
made by the territorial militia before the 12tli, the armed companies being
governed by the apparent necessities of the case.17
On the
12tli of October Colonel Ross began the organization of a volunteer force
under the laws of the territory18 by ordering James Ii. Russel,
major of the 9th regiment, to report to him immediately. Some of the captains
of the militia were already in the field; other companies were headed by any
one who had the spirit of a leader. These on application of the citizens of
their neighborhoods were duly commissioned.19
17 A company under Rinearson was divided
into detachments, and aont, on the evening of the 10th, ten to the mouth of the
Umpqua cafion, five three miles south to Leving’s house, five to Turner’s seven
miles farther south, six to the Grave Creek house. On tho next day thirty men
made a scout down Grave Creek, and down Rogue River to the mouth of Galice
Creek, the settlers placing at their disposal whatever supplies of blankets,
provisions, or arms they were able to furnish; yet twelve of ltinearson’s
company had no other weapons than pistols. A. O. Henry, in Or. Statesman, Oct.
20, 1855. The troops in southern Oregon at this time were two full companies of
dragoons at Fort Lane under Smith and Fitzgerald, and sixty-four infantry at
Winchester, in the Umpqua Valley, under Lieut Gibson, who had been escorting
Williamson on his survey of a railroad route from the Sacramento to the
Willamette Valley, and who now retraced hi* steps to Fort Lane. The small
garrison at Fort Orford was not available, and Fitzgerald’s company was during
the month ordered to reenforce JIajor Rains at The Dalles; hence one company of
dragoons and one of infantry constituted the regular force which could be
employed in the defence of the south country during the coming winter.
18The original
orders are to be found in iJoicell’s Or, Ind. Warn, MS., vol. i 45, 47, 53.
’ 18 M. C.
Barkwell wrote Ambrose that at his request II. L. Williams would raise a
company for the protection of that locality. The settlers about Althouse, on
Illinois River, petitioned to have Tlieoron Crook empowered to raise a company
to range the mountains thereabout ; signed by Iliram Rice, J. J. Rote,
Frederick Rlnda, Lucius D. Hart, S. Matthews, Charles F. Wilson, Elias
VVinkleback, S. P. Duggan, John Morrow, Allen Ivn.'pp, W. II.
15. Doujjlas, ffm Lane, J. T. Maim, Geo. II.
Grayson, R. T. Biickiey, J. II. Huston, L. Coffey, H. Kaston, John Murphy, B.
B. Brockway, A. L. Scott, Geo. W. Gomegys, James C. Castleman, D. D. Drake,
John R. Hale, E. R. Crane, Alden Whitney, Joshua Ilarlan, S. H. Harper, M. P.
Howard, R. S.
A. Colwell, George Lake, Thomas Lake, George
Ivoblence, Jacob Randbush, Peter Colean, U. S. Barr, William Lance, Robert
Rose, N. D. Palmer, James Hole, E. D. Cohen, Sigmund Heilncr, Wm Chapman, John
E. Post John W. Meridetli, A. More, TliosFord, and Gilharts. Dowell’s Or. Ind.
tt'urs, MS., vol. i. 33-5.
The white men of
Phosnix mills, Illinois Valley, of Deer Creek, and Galice Creek also petitioned
for permission to raise companies for defence, and the outlying settlements
prayed for armed guards to be sent them. The petition from Plirenix mills was
signed by S. M. Waite, S. Colver, Joseph Tracy, Jarius F. Kennedy, M. M.
Williams, and J. T. Gray; that from Illinois Valley and Deer Creek by John D.
Post, William Chapman, G. E. Briggs, J. N.
Where the
people in remote or isolated situations asked for armed guards, a few men were
despatched to those localities as soon as they could be armed.20 Two
young women, Miss Hudson and Miss Wilson, having been murdered21
while travelling on the Crescent City road, October 10th, A. S. Welton was assigned
the duty of keeping open a portion of that highway, over which was carried most
of the goods which entered the Illinois and Rogue Iliver valleys at this time;
guards being also afforded to pack-trains on the various routes to prevent
their capture by the Indians. Considering the obstacles to be overcome, and the
nature of the service, the organization of the 9th regiment was remarkably
expeditious and complete, and its operations were well conducted.
The first
engagement between the volunteers and Indians was on Iiogue Iliver, where W. B.
Lewis of company E was encamped on Skull bar, a short distance below the mouth
of Galice Creek. Scouts reported the enemy near, and evidently preparing an
attack. In camp were all the miners from the diggings in the vicinity,
including nine Chinamen, who had been robbed and driven from their claims, and
several Indian women and boys who had been captured.
The bar is
on the south side of the river, with a high mountain in the background, covered
with a dense growth of hazel and young lirs. Around the camp for some distance
the thickets were cut away, so as to afford no harbor for lurking savages, aud
a
Knight, A. J.
Henderson, William B. Hay, L. Reeves, Joseph Kirby, R. T. Olds, Samuel White,
William E. Randolph, Frederick Iihoda, L. I), Hart, Alexander McBride, C. C.
Luther, S. Scott, O. E. Riley, J. T. L. Mills, and Coltinell. On the 2<3th a
company was organized in Illinois Valley. Orrin T. Root was chosen captain, and
sent to Jacksonville for his commission. In this way most of the companies were
formed.
20On the 5th
of Nov. Ross ordered (Gardner with 10 men to protect Thompson’s place on
Applegate Creek. F. R. Hill was ordered to raise a company for Grave Creek,
etc.
21 Evans' Protection to Immigrants, 59. This
is a compilation of documents on the subject of the protection afforded by
Walkers company in 1854, with statistics of Indian outrages. The same matter is
in U. S. Sen. Ex. Doc. 46, 35th cong. 2d sess.
breast-work
of logs thrown up on the side most exposed to attack.
On the
17th of October the bushes were found to be alive with savages. J. W. Pickett
made a charge with six men. who were so warmly received that they were glad to
retreat, Pickett being killed. Lieutenant Moore then took a position under a
bank, on the side attack was expected, which he held four hours, exposed to a
heavy lire; he and nearly half of his men were wounded, when they were
compelled to retreat. One of the men, being mortally shot, fell before
reaching the shelter of the camp, and a comrade, Allan Evans, hi the effort to
bring him in, was severely wounded. Captain Lewis was three times struck.
The
Iudians, discovering that the weak point of the volunteer force was on the
left, made a bold attack, in which they lost one of their most noted Shasta
warriors. Finding they could not dislodge the volunteers with balls, they shot
lighted arrows into their camp. All day the firing was kept up, and during the battle
every house in the mining town of Galice Creek was burned except the one occupied
as the company’s headquarters. 13y night one third of the company of
thirty-live were killed and wounded.22 Thereupon the enemy retired,
their loss not ascertained.
“I am
proud to say,” wrote Lewis to his colonel, “that we fought the hardest battle
ever fought this side of the Rocky Mountains. More than 2,500 shots from the
enemy, but every man stood his ground, and fought the battle of a lover of his
country.” _
On the day
of the battle Ross wrote Smith, at Fort Lane, that Chief John of Scott Valley
had gone up Applegate Creek with eighty warriors; and that Williams was in that
vicinity with a limited
22 Killed, J. W. Pickett, Samuel Saunders;
mortallywounded, Ben ; min Taft, Israel D. Adams; severely wounded, Lieut Wm A.
J. Moore, Allan Evanw, Milton Blacklcdge, Joseph Umpt|ua, John Erieson, and
Captain W.
B. Lewis. Report of Capt Lewis, in Ijoweli’s
Or. Ind War., MS., ii, IS.
force;23
also that J. B. Wagoner24 and John Hillman had on the 13th been
despatched to Galice Creek.
It was all
of no use. Let them kill and steal and burn never so bravely, the fate of the
savages was fixed beforehand; and that not by volunteers, white or black, but
by almighty providence, ages before their appearing, just as we of the present
dominant race must fade before a stronger, whenever such a one is sent.
The red
men continued their ravages, and the white men theirs, sending their bands of
volunteers and regulars hithei and thither all over the country in constantly
increasing numbers; and to the credit of government officers and agents, be it
said that while the miners and settlers were seeking the shortest road to end
the difficulties, they interposed their strength and influence to protect
innocent red men while defending the white.
Meantime,
those who had in charge the duties of providing subsistence and transportation
for the volunteers were not without serious cares. Assistant quartermasters
and commissaries were appointed in different sections, but owing to their
inexperience or inability, the service was very unsatisfactory. Fifteen
companies23 were in the field by the 20th of October, but the
Indians kept them all employed
23Dowell’s
Or. Ind. Wars, MS.. i. 57.
21 J. B. Wagoner
was employed as express rider from Oct. 13th, five days after tbe murder of his
wife and child, as long as first volunteer service lasted-- -a service full of
danger and hardship. See instructions in Dowell’s Or. Ind. Warn, MS., i. 63.
25 Report of Capt. ltinearson, in Dowell’s
Or. Ind. War, MS., i. 77. I car. name 12 of them. Co. A, T, S. Harris capt.;
Co. B, Jame3 Bruce capt.; Co. C, J. S. ltinearson capt., lieuts W. 1’. Wing, I.
N. Bently, R. W. Henry; Co. D, R. L. Williams capt., E. B. Stone 1st lieut,
sergeant E. K. Elliott; Co. E, W. B. Lewis, capt., lieuts W. A. J. Moore,
White; sergt I. D. Adams; Co. F, A. S. Welton capt.; Co. G, Miles T Alcorn
capt., lieut J. M Osborne; Co, II, W A. Wilkinson capt.; Co. I, T. Smith capt.;
Co. K, S. A. Frye capt.; Co. L, Abel George capt.; Co. M, F. R. Hill capt. The
names of T. J. Gardner, Orrin Root, M. M. Williams, Hayes, and M. P. Howard
appear in the official correspondence as captains; Daniel Richardson, Morrison,
ami H. P. Conroy as lieutenants; and W. M. Evans as orderly sergeant. C. S.
Drew was appointed adjutant; C. Westfeldt quartermaster and commissary, and C.
B. Brooks surgeon.
Not a
pack-train could move from point to point without a guard;. not a settlement
but was threatened. The stock of the farmers was beinof slaughtered
O O
nightly in
some part of the valley; private dwellings were fortified, and no one could
pass along the roads except at the peril of life. I might fill a volume with
the movements of the white men during this war; the red men left no record of
theirs.
Gardiner (Cyy Umpfpja
Cy.l
LIGHT
Clear
MMdleton
j j\A^\Coos
■4
EMPIRtlCITY
I Coal Mines c>^
Portage
C.Arayo
Winchester DeurC£_
Randolph
frtt.Arrington
~ North ffc. J
/ROSEBUftG <J>‘
rr.iA
CoqttillH.
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&
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■*% Vi!:
* St&tfefft
OAithouse'l.
RuGFE Riveb and Umpqda VaLLuYS.
While both
regulars and volunteers were exploring the country iu every direction, the
Indians, familiar with trails unknown to the white men, easily evaded them, and
passed from point to point without danger. At the very time when Judah of the
regulars, and
Bruce and
Harris of the volunteers, had returned exhausted from a long and fruitless
pursuit, and when Ross expressed the opinion that the main body of the enemy
was still in the vicinity of The Meadows, and below Galice Creek on Rogue
River, the Indians suddenly appeared October 23d in the Cow Creek val- le}% and
began their depredations. Their first act of hostility in this quarter was to
tire upon a party of wagoners and hog-drovers at the crossing of Cow Creek,
instantly killing H. Bailey of Lane county, and wounding Z. Bailey and three
others. The remaining men retreated as rapidly as possible, pursued by the
savages, who followed and harassed them for two or three hours. The same day
they attacked the settlements on Cow Creek, burning the houses of Turner, Bray,
Redfield, Fortune, and others.
On the
28th of October Fitzgerald being in the vicinity of Grave Creek discovered
Indians encamped a few miles south of Cow Creek in the Grave Creek hills,28
and determined to attack them. Ross, on receiving a despatch from Fitzgerald,
set out on the 29th for the rendezvous, having sent to captains Harris, Welton,
George, Williams, and Lewis. Bruce and Ri- nearson, who had but just come in,
were directed to join the combined forces at Grave Creek, where were
concentrated on the 30th about 250 volunteers27 and 105 regulars,
only a portion of Fitzgerald’s troop being available on account of the illness
of its commander. Two companies of a battalion called out by Governor Curry
were lying at a place about a day’s march south of Umpqua canon, under the
command of captains Joseph Bailey and Samuel Gordon.
When Ross
reached the rendezvous late at night, he found the captain of the 1st dragoons
awaiting him, impatient for an attack.28 Spies from his own
This band had
attacked K&utz and his surveying party a few days previous, killing two
soldiers and three settlers.
27 Letter of L. C. Hawley in Or. Statesman,
Nov. 24, 1855. Another gives the number at 387. Dowell's Or. Ind. War*.
28 Letter of -TohnE. Ross to C. S. Drew in
Dowtll's Or. Ind. Wars, MS.,
i. 93.
and
Captain Bruce’s company had reconnoitred the enemy’s position, which was found
to be on a hill, well fortitied, and extremely difficult of approach. A map of
the country was prepared, and a forced march determined upon. Orders were
issued to be ready to march at eleven o’clock, though it w as already halfpast
ten. The plan of attack was to plant howitzers upon an eminence three fourths
of a mile from that on which the Indians were encamped, and after having
divided the companies into three columns, so stationed as to prevent the escape
of the Indians, to open upon the enemy with shell and grape-shot. It was hoped
by this night march, which was continued till morning with occasional halts,
to surprise the enemy, but some one having set tire to a tree, that idea was
abandoned. On arriving at the edofe of a ravine in
. . . . ® o
t ^
front of
their position, instead of planting the howitzers and shelling the Indians as
was intended,, a charge was made, In which Binearson and Wei ton led with their
companies, augmented by portions of several others, and a part of the regulars
rushing in disorder down into the ravine, through the thick bushes, and up the
ascent on the other side, volunteers and regulars all eager for the first
shot. The Indians occupied a mountain, bald on the side by which the troops
were approaching, and covered with heavy forest on the opposite or north side.
Boss had directed Bailey and Gordon to flank on the north, that when the men in
front should drive the Indians to this cover, they might be met by them and
engaged until the main force could come up. The attempt was made, but they
found it impossible to pierce the tangled undergrowth which covered the steep
acclivity, with the Indians fortified above them,39 and after having
had several men wounded, returned to the point of attack. Bruce and Harris lay
concealed a few hundred yards to the south of the attacking party, to be in
readiness to in-
29 Lieut Withers says the Indians had cut
down trees to form an obstruction to any attack on that side. U. S. Sen. Ex.
Doc., 26, 34th cong. 1st sess.
tercept
the enemy in that quarter; but finding that no enemy came their way, they too
joined the army in front. In the mean time the Indians had retreated, as was
anticipated, to the cover of the woods, and could not be approached without
great peril from the open ground. The day wore on with vain endeavors to get at
them; and at 3 p. m. Smith made
a charge with a small force of dragoons, who after firing several rounds with
musketoons, utterly useless against the rifles of the Indians, and having
several killed and wTou tided, fell back to their first position.
When
darkness ended the firing, the troops wTere encamped a short
distance from the battle-ground, at a place called by them Bloody Spring, where
the wounded were cared for. At sunrise next morning the camp was attacked from
all sides, the Indians engaging the troops until about the middle of the
forenoon, when being repulsed they withdrew, and the troops took up their march
for Grave Creek and Fort Bailey, carrying their wounded on litters. As to the
results of the battle, the white men had little cause for congratulation. The
volunteers had twenty- six killed, wounded, and missing; and the regulars four
killed, and seven wounded, including Lieutenant Gibson, who was hit in the
attack on the camp on the morning of the 1st of November.30 The
number of Indians killed was variously estimated at from eight to twenty. The
number of Indians engaged in the battle was also conjectured to be from 100 to
10 (’apt. Rmearson’s co., killed, Henry
Pearl, Jacob W. Miller; missing ami believed tr be killed, James Pearsy;
wounded, Enoch Miller, AY. H. Croueh. and Ephraim Yager. Capt. Gordon's co.,
wounded, Hawkins Shelton, James M. Fordyce, William Wilson. Capt. ISailey’s
co., killed, John Gillespie; wounded, John Walden, John C. Itichardson, James
Laphar. Thomas J, Aubrey, John Pankej Capt. Harris’ co., wounded, Jonathan A.
Petigrew, mortally, Ira Mayfield L. F. Allen, William Purnell, William Ilaus,
John Goldsby, Thomas Gill. Capt. Knioe's co., wounded mortally, Charles Godwin.
Capt. Welton's co., wounded mortally, John Kennedy. Capt. William’s co.,
killed, John Winters; wounded, John Stauner, Thomas Ryan. Of the regular troops
threo were killed in action on the field, and one by accidentally shooting
himself; among the seven wounded was Lieut Gibson. Report of A. G. Henry in
Dowell's Gr. hid. Wars, MS. ’ 100-7 Or. Statesman, Nov. 17, 18j5; Athiand
Tidinys, Nov. 2, lo7"
300. Such
was the unfortunate termination of a combined effort on the part of the regular
and volunteer troops to check the war in its incipiency, and signified that
time, money, and blood must be spent in bringing it to a close. “God only
knows,” writes a correspondent of the Statesman, “when or whore this war may
end.. .These mountains are worse than the swamps of Florida.”
Immediately
upon information reaching the Umpqua of the onslaught of the 9th of October, 1855,
at Rogue River, a petition was forwarded to Governor Curry, asking for five
hundred volunteers for defence. The messenger, S. B. Hadley, giving notice en
route, among other places at Eugene City, a request was sent the governor to
permit Lane county to organize a company for the war. The effect of such
petitions, and of the letters received from Rogue River, was to cause a
proclamation by the governor, October 15th, calling for five companies of
mounted volunteers to constitute a Northern battalion, and four companies of
mounted volunteers to constitute a Southern battalion, to remain in force
until discharged; each company to consist of sixty men, with the usual complement
of officer#, making a total of seventy-one, rank and file; each volunteer to furnish
his own horse, arms, and equipments, and each company to elect its own
officers, and thereafter to proceed without delay to the seat of war.
The
proclamation declared that Jackson county would be expected to furnish the
number of men required for the southern battalion, who would rendezvous at
Jacksonville, elect a major to command, and report to headquarters. The
northern battalion was to consist of two companies from Lane, and one each from
Linn, Douglas, and Umpqua counties, to rendezvous at Iloseburg. At the same
time an order was issued from the office of E. M. Barnum, adjutant- general,
leaving the movements of the two battalions to the discretion of their
respective commanders, but
directing
that all Indians should be treated as enemies who did not show unmistakable
signs of friendship. No other instruction was given but to advise a concert of
action with the United States forces which might be engaged in that section of
the territory.81
Meanwhile,
communications from democrats at Rogue River had reached the capital, and immediately
the war became a party measure. It was ascertained that Ross in calling out the
militia had made several whig appointments contrary to the will of the ruling
party, which had attacked the governor for appointing whig surgeons in the
northern battalion; so paramount were politics in ministering to the wants of
wounded men! The governor, unfortunately for his otherwise stainless record,
was unable to stem the tide, and allowed himself to become an instrument in the
hands of a clique who demanded a course of action disgraceful to al) concerned
Five days after issuing the proclamation, the governor ordered disbanded all
companies not duly enrolled by virtue of said proclamation, information having
been received that armed parties had taken the field with the avowed purpose of
waging a war of extermination against the Indians without respect to age or
sex, and had slaughtered a band of friendly natives upon their reservation,
despite the authority of the agent and the commanding officer of the United
States troops stationed there.3* The immediate effect of the
proclamation was to suspend volunteering in Douglas county, to which Ross had
written to have another company raised,33 and to throw discredit on
those already in the field.
31 See pro< lamatii in an.l general or
Jer, in Or. Statesman, Oct. 20, 1855; Or. Argus, Ont. 20, 1855.
32 Grover in the legislature oi 1850--7
found it necessary to explain the course of Governor C urry by saying thai
‘news was brought to nil of the slaughter of Indians by a rabble from the neigh
borhooil of Yreka; which in formation proved incorrect, some of the best
citizens being engaged m the ati'iir nat of self-defence.’ Or. Statesman, Jan.
27, 1857 This explanation referred to Lupton’* attack on the Indians. Cram's
Top. Mem... 44; Dowell’s Or. Ind. Wart, MS., i. 117.
33 See Letter of Capt. F. R. Hill, in
Dowell’s Or. Irul. Wars, 177-8, vol. l„
Hist. O.i., Vol. II. 25
The first
companies enrolled under the governor’s proclamation were the two called for
from Lane county,34 one of which, under Captain Bailey, was present
at the action of October 31st and November 1st, as already stated. The next
companies to respond to the governor’s call were those from Linn, Douglas, and
Umpqua counties.85 These constituted the northern battalion. The
companies contained from 87 to 111 men each, and were quickly organized,
William J. Martin being chosen major.
On the 7th
of November Colonel Boss ordered the assembling of the 9th regiment at Fort
Vannoy, in order that all who desired should be mustered into the territorial
service as members of the southern battalion. On the 10th captains James Bruce,
R. L. Williams, William A. Wilkinson, and Miles F. Alcorn offered and were
accepted, in the order named, and an election for major resulted in the choice
of Bruce.36 Complaint reaching the governor that by disbanding
MS., where he says:
‘I -was just on the eye of getting a company to make a start, when tlie word
was out that it was not legal, and the governor's proclamation did not call for
but one company from Douglas and one from Umpqua.’
81 Co. A,
North Battalion 0. M. Vols, i,ane county, enrolled Oct. 23d: capt., .Joseph
Hailey; lstlieut., Daniel VV. Keith; 2d lieut, Cyrenus Mulkey, resigned Dec.
3'Jth; Charles W. McClure elected in his place. Co. B, Lana county, enrolled
Oct. 23d: capt., Laban Buoy; 1st lieut, A. W. Patterson, resigned and
transferred to medical department, L. Poindexter being elected in fais place;
2d lieut, 1’. C. Noland. Or. Jour. Haute, 1855-6, ap. 145.
35 Co. C,
Linn county, enrolled Oct. 24th: capt., Jonathan Keeney; 1st lieut, A. W.
Stannard; 2d lieut, Joseph Yates. Co. D, Douglas count}1, enrolled
Oct. 2Bth: capt., Samuel Gordon; ,st lieut, S. B. Hadiey; 2d lieut, T. I’rater.
Co. E, Umpqua county, enrolled Nov. 8th: capt., W. \V. Chapman; 1st lieut, Z.
Dimmick; 2d lieut, J M. Merrick. Ur. Jour. Council, 1855-6, ap. 146.
36Co. A:
capt., James Bruce; 1st lieut, E. A. Rice, who was elected capt. after the
promotion of Bruce; 2d lieut, John S. Miller; 2d lieut, ‘. F. Anderson. Co. B:
capt., R. L. Williams; lstlieut, Hugh O’Neal; 2d lieut, M. Bushey. Co. C:
capt., Wm A. Wilkinson; 1st lieut, C. F. Blake; 2d lieut, Edwin Hess. Co. D:
capt., Miles F Alcorn; 1st lieut, James M. Matney; 2d lieut, John Osborn. Or.
Jour. House, 1855-6, ap. 146-7. The militia organization as it now stood
comprised the following officers: A. P. Dennison and Iienj. Stark, aids de camp
to the gov.; John F. Miller, quartermaster gen.; A. Ztiber and S. S. Slater,
asst quartermaster general; M. M. McCarver, commissary gen.; B. F. (Joodwin and
J. S. Ruckle, asst com. gen Wm J. Martin maj. north bat.; J. W. Drew and R. E.
Stratton, adj. north bat.; Wm C. Hill b,ud I. N. Smith, aids to major north
bat.; James Bruce, maj. of south bat.; 0. D. Hoxie, adj. soutu bat.; J. K.
Lamerick, mustering officer for Bouthern Oregon. Or. Jour, llov.'te, 1855-6,
ap. 143- 7.
the 9th
regiment several sections were without defpnce, Curry, with Adjutant General
Barnurn, answered in person, arriving on the field about the last of November.
The only change made, however, bv the governor’s visit was the consolidation
of the northern and southern battalions into one regiment, to be called the 2d
Regiment of Oregon Mounted Volunteers. This change necessitated an election for
regimental officers, and It. L. Williams was chosen colonel, while Martin was
obliged to content himself as second in command.
*
Immediately
after the battle of Grave Creek hills, Major Fitzgerald proceeded to Fort
Vancouver and thcnce to The Dalles, and his troops remained in garrison during
the winter. This reduced the regular force 011 Rogue River to Smith’s command.
An agreement was entered into between the regular and volunteer commanders to
meet at the Grave Creek house about the 9th of November, prepared to pursue
and attack the Indians. In the mean time a scouting party of Bailey’s company
was to find the Indians, who had disappeared, according to custom, from their
last battle-ground.37
On the
17th of November Bruce, learning that a number of houses on Jump Off Joe Creek
had been burned, sent a request to Martin to join him there. Communications
were also sent to the commanders at Fort Lane and Fort Jones, and Judah with a
small force joined in pursuit of the savages. Shortly after, Williams fell in
with a small band at the mouth of Jump Oif Joe Creek and killed eight.33
87 ‘ J'lat
before they took their departure they went on the reserve, burned ail the
boards and shingles there, and every article of value belonging to chief Sam’s
people; a temporary house I l.ail erected for the accommodation of persons
laboring r.n the reserve, shared the same fate; they also killed or drove away
seven of the cattle belonging to the agency.’ Agcint Ambrose to Supt. Palmer,
Nov. 30, 1853, in U. S. II. Ex. Hoc., 93, p. 119, 31th cong. 1st seas.
!*(V.
Statesman, Dec. 1,1853; Rept of Major Martin. Dec. 10,1855, in Or. Jour. House,
1855-6, ap, 122.
The 21st
saw the white men in full force en route down Rogue River, some on one side and
some on the other. After four days, and encountering many difficulties, they
came upon the enemy at The Meadows and found them well fortified. While
preparing to attack, on the 26th, the Indians opened fire from a dense covert
of timber bordering the river, which caused them to fall back. Being short of
food and clothing for a winter campaign, they determined for the present to
abandon the enterprise.
While the
southern army was returning to headquarters, roving bauds of Indians were
committing depredations in the Umpqua Valley. On the 3d of December a small
party of the Cow Creek Indians attacked the settlements on the west side of the
south Umpqua, destroying fifteen houses and much other property, compelling the
settlers to shut themselves up in forts. ()n the 24th Captain Alcorn found and
attacked a camp of Indians on the north branch of Little Butte Creek, killing
eight warriors and capturing some animals. About the same time Captain Rice,
hearing of another camp on the north bank of Rogue River, probably driven out
of the mountains by the weather, which was exceedingly severe that winter,
proceeded with thirty men to attack them, and after a battle lasting for six
hours killed the most of them and took captive the remainder.31
About the
1st of January, 185G, it was ascertained that a party of Indians had taken
possession of some deserted ca1 >ins on Applegate Creek, and
fortified them. Major Bruce immediately ordered Captain Rice to proceed to that
place and attack them. ()thers joined. About two miles from Jacksonville they
were fired on
39 * These two fights have blotted out
Jake’s band. ’ Corr. Or. Statesman, Jan. 15, 1856. General Wool, in his
official report of May 30, 1856, calls Jake * a friendly old chief,’ and says
that his band comprising 30 or 40 males was destroyed by the volunteers, with
all their huts and provisions, (expos* ing the women and children to
the cold of December, who in making their way to Fort Lane for protection,
arrived there with their limbs frozen/ See Oram's Top. Mem45,
ancl one
man killed.40 On arriving at the cabins, three of which were
occupied by the Indians, late in the afternoon of the 4th, the howitzer wras
planted and a shell dropped through the roof of one, killing two of the
inmates. The white men had one killed and five wounded. There matters rested
till next morning, when the cabins wTere found to be empty, the
Indians of course having found means to escape. These savages made good shots
at 400 yards.
Toward the
middle of the month Bruce’s command had a tight with one hundred natives on a
branch of Applegate Creek, the latter retreating with four killed. And thus the
winter wore away, a dozen bands each of wdiite men and red, roaming up and down
the country, each robbing and burning, and killing as best they were able, and
all together accomplishing no great results, except seriously to interfere with
traffic and travel. Exasperated by a condition so ruinous, the desire to
exterminate the savages grew with the inability to achieve it. Such wTas
the nature of the conflict in w’hich, so far, there had been neither glory nor
success, either to the arms of the regular or volunteer service; nor any
prospect of an end for years to come, the savages being apparently omnipresent,
with the gift of invisibility. They refused to hold any communication with the
troops, who sought sometimes an opportunity to reason with them.
The men
composing the northern battalion having no further interest in the war than at
first to gratify an evanescent sympathj^, or a love of adventure, were becoming
impatient of so arduous and unprofitable a service, and so demanded and
received their discharge. General Wool was then petitioned for aid, and he
immediately despatched two companies under Colonel Buchanan. In the mean time
the legislative assembly had elected J. Iv. Lamerick brigadier-gen-
i0 Dowell'.*
Or. Ind. II'arn, MS , ii. 10; Lane’s Autobiography, MS., 107; Brown's
Autobiography, MS., 40-1.
eral of
Oregon territory; and in conformity with a proclamation of the executive, he
issued a call for four companies of mounted volunteers to supply the place of
the northern battalion,41 who were ordered to report to
Lieutenant-colonel Martin at Itoseburg. These companies were enrolled more
rapidly than might have been anticipated, after the tedious and fruitless
nature of the war had become known.42
Captain
Buoy’s company remained in the field under the command of its former 2d
lieutenant, P. C. Noland, now its captain. The southern companies were
recruited, and kept the field; so that after a month of suspense, during which
many of the inhabitants who up to this time had remained at their homesteads
unwilling to abandon all their property, left their claims and removed to the
Willamette Valley, or shut themselves up in fortified houses to await a turn
in events. That turn it was hoped General Lamerick, being a good democrat and
an experienced lndian-fighter, wou 1 be able to give, when spring made it
possible to. pursue the Indians into the mountains. It has been said that
Williams was incompetent; but Lamerick was not guiltless of a blunder in
ordering all the new companies concentrated in the Umpqua Valley; and the
headquarters of the southern companies changed from Vannoy Ferry to Forest
Dale, a place not in the line of the hostile incursions. Taking advantage of
this disposition of the forces, Limpy, one of the hostile chiefs, with a party
of thirty warriors, made a visit to Fort Lane, bearing a flag of truce; the
object of the visit being to negotiate for the release of some of the women held
as prisoners at the fort.
41 The enrolling officers appointed by
Lamerick ■were AVm
II. Latshaw, A. W. Patterson, Nat. H. Lane, Daniel Barnes, .Tames A. Porter,
for companies to be drawn from Lane, Benton, Douglas, and Linn counties. Or.
Utalesman, Feb. 12, 1856.
42 Wm H. Latshaw -w as elected capt. of the
Lane county co.; John Kelsey of the Benton county co.; and Daniel Barnes of
the Douglas county co. Or. Statesman, Feb. 19, 1856. Of tlie co. of 50 raised
at Deer Creek (Rose- barg) in February, Edward Sheffield was elected capt.; S.
H. Blunton 1st lieut; Elias Capran 2d lieut. Id.
Following
the outbreak in October, the agents on the coast, at Port Orford, the mouth of
Rogue River, and the mouth of the Umpqua, used many precautions to prevent the
Indians in their charge from becoming infected with the hostile spirit of
their brethren of the interior. The superintendent sent his agents a circular
containing regulations and precautions, among which was the collecting of the
Indians on the several temporary reserves, and compelling them to answer to
roll-call
The agent
in charge of the Indians below Coos Bay was Ben Wright, a man admired and
feared by them. Learning that overtures had been made to the Co- quiiles and
other coast tribes to join the hostile bands, Wright hastened to % isit those
under his charge, who lived up about the head waters of the several small
rivers emptying into the ocean between the mouth of the Rogue and the Coquille
rivers, lie found, as he expected, emissaries of the hostile bands among these
011 the lower Rogue River, who, though insolent, took their departure when
threatened with arrest; and he was able, as he supposed, to put a stop to
further negotiations with the enemy, the Indians promising to follow his
advice.
On returning
to the mouth of the river, he found the people alarmed by rumors of anticipated
trouble with the Coquilles, and again hastened to arrest any mischief that
might be brewing in that quarter. He found these Indians quiet, and expressing
great friendship, but much in fear of an attack from the settlers of the Umpqua
Valley, who they had been told were coming to kill them all. Their uneasiness
appeared to be increased by discovering in their neighborhood a large camp of
the families, women and children, of the hostile bauds, with a few men to
guard them, knowing that such a circumstance would be liable to be construed
against them. They were promised an agent to remaiu with them and ward off
trouble until tho excitement should have abated.
Returning
to the coast, Wright fell in with a party of armed men from Coos Ray going
toward the Indian camp with the determination to destroy it. To these men he
represented that the Coquilles were friendly, and returned with them to their
camp, where he succeeded in convincing each that neither had any occasion to
fear the other; and appointing one of their number sub-agent on the spot, again
returned to the coast with the others. At Randolph he found the settlers
greatly excited by the news from the interior. Having concealed their portable
property, they were removing to Port Orford for safety. At the mouth of Rogue
River defences had been built, and in their wrath the white men were
threatening to kill or disarm all the Indians in the vicinity. A few cool and
reflecting minds were able, however, to maintain a more prudent as well as
humane policy, the excitement on both sides seemed gradually to abate,43
and Wright believed that with the assistance of the troops at Port Orford he
should be able to preserve the peace and secure the public good.
About the
middle of November Agent I1! P. Drew, who had in charge the Coos Bay
and Umpqua Indians, became convinced that the former were in communication
with those at war, and hastily collecting the Umpquas on the reservation at the
mouth of the river, and placing over them a local agent, went to Coos Bay. At
Empire City he found congregated the settlers from the upper Coquille and Coos
rivers, in anticipation of an outbreak. A company was formed and the savages
attacked at Drollcy’s, on the lower branch of the Coquille, four being killed,
and four captured and hanged. There were few troops at Poi’t Orford when the
war broke out, and these would have been removed to the north on the call of
Major
13 Collector
Dunbar at Port Orford wrote to Palmer that there was no doubt that Wright could
maintain peace in hiss district. ‘Ben is on the jump day and night, I never saw
in my life a more energetic agent of the public. His plans are all good, there
can be no doubt of it. ’ U. S. II. Ex. Doc., 93, 34th cong. 1st sess.
Raines had
not Wright represented so powerfully to Major Reynolds, who came to take them
away, the defenceless condition of the settlements in that event, that Reynolds
was induced to remain. Still feeling their insecurity, the white inhabitants of
Whaleshead, near the moutli of Rogue River, as I have mentioned, erected a rude
fort upon an elevated prame on the north bank of that stream. A company of
volunteers was also organized, which had its encampment at the big bend of
Rogue River during the winter; but on the proclamation of the governor in
February, calling for new companies to reorganize, the 1st regiment of Oregon
Mounted Volunteers had moved down near the settlement in order to fill up its
ranks to the standard fixed by the proclamation, of sixty privates and eleven
officers.
The
conduct of the Iudians under Wright had been so good since the punishment of
the Coquilles in the ear1 y part of the winter that no apprehensions
were felt beyond the dread that the fighting bands might some time make a
descent upon them; and for this the volunteers had been duly watchful. Rut what
so subtle as savage hate? On the night of the 22d of February a dancing-party
was given at Whaleshead in honor of the day, and part of the volunteer company
wras in attendance, leaving but a few men to guard the camp. Early
on the morning of the 23d, before the daucers had returned, the guard was
attacked by a large body of Indians, who fell upon them with such suddenness
and fury that but two out of fifteen escaped. One, Charles Foster, concealed
himself in the woods, where he remained an undiscovered witness of much that
transpired, and wras able to identify the Indians engaged in the massacre,
who were thus found to be those that lived about the settlement and were
professedly friendly.
While the
slaughter was going on at the volunteer camp some Indians from the native
village on the south side of the river crossed over, and going to the
house of
J. McGuire, where Wright had his lodgings, reported to him that a certain
half-breed named Enos/1 notoriously a bad man, was at the village,
and they wished the agent to arrest him, as he was making trouble with the
Tootootonies. Without the slightest suspicion of treachery, Wright, with
Captain Poland of the volunteers, crossed the river to look into the matter,
when both were seized and killed.45 The bodies were then so
mutilated that they could not be recognized.
The death
of Wright is a sad commentary on these sad times. He was a genial gentleman,
honest, frank, brave, the friend and protector of those who slew him. It is a
sad commentary on the ingratitude of man, who in his earlier and lower estate
seems fitted to be ruled by fear rather than by love. During these troublous
times in southern Oregon, I am satisfied that the United States government
endeavored to do its best in pursuing a moderate and humane policy; and it was
singularly fortunate about this time in having as a rule conscientious and
humane men in this quarter, determined at the peril of their lives to defend
their charge from the fury of the settlers and miners, who were exasperated
beyond endurance by having their houses burned and their wives and children
captured or slain. And to none is the tribute of praise more justly due than to
Benjamin Wright, who died at his post doing his duty.
“This half-breed Enos
was formerly one of Fremont's guides, ancl is spoken of by Fremont as a very
brave and daring Indian, dorr. Or. Statesman, March 11, 1856; Indian Ajf Heft.,
1856, p. 201-2; Orescent OVy Herald Extra, Feb. 25, 1856. He was hanged at Fort
Oi ford in 1857, for his part in the massacre. Or. Statesman, March 31, 1S57;
Tlthenor’s Historical Correspondence, MS.
45Parrish.
Or. Anecdotes, MS., 81-3, says that AVright was at a dance in a log cabin on
Rngue River, about Christinas 1854! and that with others he whs killed for his
treatment of the women. Dunbar and Nash state that the agent kept a native
woman, Chetcoe Jennie, who acted as interpreter, ami drew fi ora the government
$500 a year for th: t service, and who betrayed him to liis death, and
afterward ato a piece of l.is heart. Dowell's Or. Ind. I Pars, MkS., ii. 27;
Ind. Ajf. Kept., 1853, 201-2; Or. Statesman, March 11, 1856; Crescent City
Herald, Feb. 26, 1856; U. S. H. Ex. Doc., 39, p. 47-8, 35th eong. 1st sess.
Nor did
this horrible and dastardly work end here. Every farmer in the vicinity of
Whaleshead was killed, every house burned but one, and every kind of property
destroyed. The more distant who escaped the massacre, to the number of 130,
fled to the fort, but being poorly armed, might still have fallen a prey to the
savages, had they not with their customary want of persistence, drawn off*
after the first day’s bloody work. At nightfall on the 23d a boat was despatched
to Port Orford to inform Major Reynolds of the fate of the settlement. But
Reynolds could not go to the relief of Whaleshead without leaving exposed Port
Orford, that place containing at this period but fifty adult male citizens and
thirty soldiers. A whale-boat was, however, despatched for the purpose of
keeping open communication with the besieged; but in attempting to laud, the
boat was swamped in the surf, and the men in it, six in number, were drowned,
their bodies being seized by the savages and cut in pieces. Captain Tichenor
with his schooner Nelly went to bring off the people of Whaleshead, but was
prevented by contrary winds from approaching the shore. On the morning of the
24th the schooner Gold Beach left Crescent City w itli a volunteer company,
whose design was to attack the Indians. They, too, were prevented from landing,
and except at the fort the silence of death covered the whole country.
When the
facts of the outbreak came to light, it was ascertained that the Indians
attacked no less than seven different points within ten or twelve hours, and
within a distance of ten miles down the coast on the south side of Rogue River,
and also that a general fresh uprising occurred at the same time in other
localities.16
6 Tht.
persons killed in the firs, attack were Benjamin Wright, John Poland, John
Idles, Henry Lawrence, Patrii k McCullough, George McClusky, Barney Castle, Guy
C. Holcomb, Joseph Wilkinson, Joseph Wagner, E. W. Howe, J. H. Braun, Martin
Reed, George Reed, Lorenzo Warner, Samuel Hendrick, Nelson Seaman, W. R.
Tulles, Joseph Seroc and two sons, John Geisell and four children, Mrs Geisell
anil three daughters being taken prisoners; and subsequently to the first
attack, Henry Bulltn, L. W. Oliver,
Those who
took refuge in the fort were kept besieged for thirty-one days, when they were
rescued by the two companies under Colonel Buchanan sent by General Wool, as
before mentioned. A few days after the arrival of the troops a schooner from
Port Orford effected a landing, and the women and children at the fort were
sent to that place, while Buchanan commenced operations against the Indians, as
I shall presently relate more in detail
Daniel Richardson,
George Trickey add Adolf Schmoldt—in all thirty-one. Warner was from Livonia,
N. Y , Seaman from Cedarville, N. Y. The drowned were H. C. Geruw. a merchant
of Port Orford, and formerly of N. Y.; John O’Brien, miner; Sylvester Long,
farmer; William Thompson and Richard Gay, boatmen; and Felix MeCue. Letter of
James 0. Franklii, ij Or. Statesman, March IS, 1806; Crescent City Herald, Feb.
25 and May 21, 1836; Con. Coos Bay Mail; liovxWt Ur. hid. Wars, MS., ii. 27;
Or. Arr/us, March 8, 1856; Or. Statesman, April 20, Jla" 13 and 20, 1850;
S. F. Alta, March 4, 1850; S. F. Bulletin, March 12, 1856; Cong. Globe, 1855-6,
pt i., 780, 34th cong. 1st sess.; Sac. Union, March 1, 1856.
EXTERMINATION
OF THE INDIANS.
IS56-1857.
Grande
Ronds Military Post and ReskrviTTON—Driving
in and Caging the Wild Men—More Soldiers Required—Other Battalions—Down upon
the Red Men—The Spring Campaign—Affairs
ALONG TIIE
RlVER—HUMANITY OF THE United STATES
OFFICERS AND Agents- -Stubborn Bravery of Chief John—Councils and Surren-
ders—Battle of the Meadows —Smith’s Tactics—Continued Skirmishing—Giving-up
and Coming-in of the Indians.
When Superintendent Palmer determined to remove
from the Rogue River and Umpqua reservations the Indians who had observed the
treaties, to an encampment in the small and beautiful valley on the western
border of Yamhill and Polk counties, known as the Grand Rond, so great was the
anger and opposition of the white people of the Willamette in thus having
these savages brought to their door, so loud their threats against both Indians
and agents, that it was deemed prudent to ask General Wool for an escort and
guard. Palmer w rote Wool that he believed the war was to be attributed wholly
to the acts of the white population, and that he felt it his duty to adopt such
measures as would insure tho safety of the Indians, and enable him to maintain
treaty stipulations,1 recommending the establishment
1 The future will prove,’ said Palmer,
‘that this war has been forced npon those Indians against their will, and that,
too, by a set of reckless vagabonds, for pecuniary and political objects, and
sanctioned by a numerous population who regard the treasury of the United
States a legitimate subject of piun der.’ II. S. H. Ex. Doc., 93, 24, 31th
cong. 1st sess. See also Dowell’s Letters, MS., 42. Dowell takes a different
view.
of a
military post, and asking that a competent officer be directed to assist him in
locating the proposed encampment, and making the improvements designed for the
benefit of the Indians. Having once conceived the idea of removing the Indians
from the southern reservations, Palmer was not to be deterred either by the
protests of the people or the disapprobation of the legislative assembly.2
About the
last of January 300 Umpquas and 200 Calapooyas were brought from the south and
placed upon the Grand Ilond reservation. As these bands had not been engaged in
the recent hostilities, the feeling of alarm was somewhat softened, and much as
their presence in the valley was deprecated, they were suffered to go upon the
reserve without molestation, although no troops were present to intimidate the
people.3 At the same time Palmer gave notice that he intended to
carry out his first design of removing all the other tribes whenever the
necessary preparations had been made for their reception;4 a
2 During the debate over Palmer’s course
in the legislature, Waymire accused Palmer of being the causc of the war, and
willing to bring about a collision between the United States troops and the
citizens of the Willamette valley. ‘Not only that,.. .but he actually proposes
to bring 4,000 savages, red from the war, and plant them in one of the counties
of this valley, with a savage and barbarous foe already upon its borders. “I
will do it,” said he, “and if you resist me, I 'will call upon General Wool for
soldiers to shoot down the citizens.’” Or. Statesman, Jan. 15,1836. And on the
hesitation of Colonel Wright, who was first applied to to furnish it without
the sanction of General \\ ool, then is California. Palmer thus wrote
Commissioner Man- nypenny: ‘ To be denied the aid of troops at a critical
moment, upon flimsy pretences or technical objections, is to encourage a spirit
of resistance to authority and good order., and effectively neutralize all
efforts to reduce the Indians and lawless whites to a state of subordination.’
U. S. II. Ex. Doc., 93, 131-2, 34th cong. 1st sess.
“The Indians were
moved in a heavy storm of ra^u and snow, Capt. Bowie of the northern battalion
with 20 men being ordered to escort Metcalfe and his charge. At Elk Creek the
Indians were seized with a panic on account of rumors of the removal of Palmer
from the superintendency, and refused to go farther. Palmer called upon Colonel
Wright for troops, and was referred, asl have said, to General Wool, when,
without waiting, Mdcalfe proceeded alone to the reservation, having quieted the
fears of the Indians.
4 The opposition of the white population
was not til that was to be over come, as Palmer had been warned by his agents.
In order to induce the Umpquas to leave their homes, it was agreed by treaty
that each Indian should be given as much land as he had occupied in the Umpqua
Valley, with a house as good or better than the one he left, with pay for all
the property abandoned, and clothing and rations for himself and family up til all were
promise
which wad partly carried out in March by the removal of the Rogue River Indians
from Fort Lane to the Grand Rond, none of that resistance being offered which
had been feared. Preparations were then made for bringing all the tribes from
Coos Bay south to the California line upon the coast reservation selected in
1854. The legislature had asked for the removal of the superintendent on this
ground;® though in reality it was a political dodge; and his removal was
accomplished before he had fairly finished the work in hand.®
Immediately
after the massacre of Whaleshcad Governor Curry issued still another
proclamation, calling for another battalion for service in the south.7
The governor also sought to modify his error in disbanding all unauthorized
companies, by advising the organization in all exposed localities of new
companies of minute-men, the captains ofw hich were ordered to report to the
adjutant-general, and recognizing those already formed as belonging to this
branch of tho service.
settled iu their in w
h >iues; nor were any ot these things to be deducted from their annuities.
Granua Ronde reservation contained about 0,000 acres, and was purchased of the
original claimants for §35,000, Letter of citizens of Yamliil county, in Or.
Statesman, April 29, 1856.
5 ‘ We the undersigned, democratic
members,’ etc. Then iollnwed charges that Joel Palmer had been instrumental in
provoking the Indian war, and what was more to the point, ‘ while representing
himself as a sound national democrat, he had perfidiously joined the
know-nothings, binding himself with oaths to that dark ami hellish secret
pulitical order.’ They asked for these reasons that Palmer be removed and
Edward R. Geary appointed in his place. Signed by the speaker of the house, and
31 members of the house and council. II. S. II. Ex. Doc., 93, 133-5, 31th
cong. 1st sess.
e E. R.
Geary was not his successor, but A. F. Hedges, an immigrant of 184:1.
’ There was at this
tim. a regiment in the Walla- Walla Valley, and one in southern Oregon, besides
several companies of minute-men for defence. The proclamation called for three
new companies, one from Marion and Polk counties, one from Benton and Lane, and
one from Linn. The enrolling officers appointed for the first named were A. M.
Fellov, s and Fred. Waymire; for the other two E. L. Massey and H. L. Brown.
Waymire wrote the governor that Polk co. lad sent over 100 men to the Walla
Walla Valley, 70 to Rogue River, 22 to lill up a Washington regiment; that Polk
co. was Vi i^.ing to go am. fight, but since the importation of southern Indians
to their border they felc too insecure at fcome to leave, and solicited
permission from the e xecutive to raise a company for defence against the
Indians brought to their doors. Or Statesman, April 1, 1856.
Under the
new call two companies were raised; some who had served in the first northern
battalion, after remaining at home long enough to put in a few acres of grain,
reenlisted.8 These were still at Eugene City waiting for arms when
April was half gone.
The
intermission of aggressive operations greatly emboldened the Indians. The 2d
regiment was scattered, guarding isolated settlements.9 Colonel
Williams had resigned on account of the strictures passed upon his official
management,10 and Lieutenant-colonel Martin had resigned for a
different reason.11 By election on the 19 th of March, 1356, Kelsey
was made colonel, Chapman lieutenant-colonel, and Bruce and Lat- shaw majors
of their respective battalions. The southern companies were ordered to
rendezvous at Yannoy Ferry, and the northern at Grave Creek, to be in readiness
to advance on The Meadows, the stronghold of the enemy, and toward which all
the trails seemed to lead. At length, on the lGth of April, Chapman and Bruce
moved with the entire southern battalion down the south side of Rogue River
toward the supposed camp of the enemy, the northern battalion on the 17th
passing down the north side under Lamerick, each division with supplies for
twenty-five days. Three detachments were sent out to drive the Indians to their
retreat, and Lamerick announced his intention to the governor to stay with the
enemy until they were subdued or starved out.
8 H. O.
nuston’s autobiography, in Brown's Mmr-eHany, MS.. 4*-9. Linn county raised one
company of 65 men commanded by James Blakely; Lane and Benton, one of 70 men,
D. W. Keith captain.
9In the
latter part of Feb. they reappeared in the Illinois valley, killing two men and
wounding three others. Hoon aftir they killed one Guess while ploughing Smith’s
farm, on Deer Creek. Guess left a wife and two children. The volunteers under
O’Neil pursued the Indiana and rescued the family, of which there is a
urcumstantial account jn a series of papers by J. M. Sutton, c.alled Scrap* qf
Southern Oregon History, many of which an; dra maticallj interesting, and extend
through several numbers of the Ashland Tidings for 1S77 -8.
10 R. L. Williams was a Scotchman,
impetuous, bravt. and determined. It was aaid that when he joined in the yells
which the volunteers set up in answer to those of the savages, the latter hung
their heads abashed, so successful was he in his efforts to outsavage the
savages.
11 Martin was appointed receiver of the new
land office at Winchester, Or, Statesman, March 11, 1830.
At tlio
same time there was on foot a movement on the part of the regular forces to
close the war by a course independent of that of the volunteer generals, and
directed by General Wool, who by the aid of maps and topographical reports had
arranged his proposed campaign.15. The secretary of war hail deemed
it necessary to administer a somewhat caustic reproof, since which Wool had
three several times visited Vancouver, though he had not made a personal
inspection of the other forts. He came in Xovember 1855, and returned without
making his visit known to the governor of Oregon. He came again in midwinter
to look into the conduct of some of his officers in the Yakima war, and to
censure and insult, as they thought, both them and the governors of Oregon and
Washington. And in March he once more returned; this time bringing with him
the troops which were at once to answer the petition of Jackson county, and to
show volunteers how to fight. On the 8th of March, while on the way to
Vancouver, he left at Crescent City Lieutenant-colonel Buchanan, with officers
and men amounting to 9G rank and file?, the same who relieved the besieged
settlers at the mouth of Ilogue Itiver. On arriving at Vancouver he or-
O t O >
dered to
Port Orford Captain Augur, 4th infantry, to reenforce Major Reynolds, 3d
artillery, who was directed to protect the friendly Indians and the public
stores at that place. Captain Floyd Jones, 4th infantry, of Fort Humboldt, was
instructed to repair to Crescent City to guard supplies and protect friendly
Indians at that place, in compliance with the ret, jest of the superintendent.
Captain Smith of Fort Lane was directed to repair to Port Orford with 80 dragoons,
to make a junction with Buchanan;13 and a
‘I have good reason
to believe,’ wrote Lame rick to the governor, ‘that General Wool hia issued
orders to the United States troops not to act in concert wuh the volunteers.
But the officers at Fort Lane told me that they wouh 1, whenever they met me,
most cordially cooperate with any volunteers under my command.’ Or. Statesman,
April 22, 1856.
13 ‘Our company,’ says one of Smith’s men,
‘was obliged to takn to the mountains on foot, as we had to climb moat of the
wav where our horses Hire. Ob., Vol. II.
28
general
rendezvous was ordered at the inouth of the Illinois River, where Palmer was to
meet iu council the Indians who were being pursued by the volunteers, and lead
them to the reservation on the coast west of the Willamette Valley. Smith moved
from Fort Lane about the 13th of April, a few days earlier than the volunteer
army began its march on The Meadows.
On the 27th
the two battalions were ready to attack. A reconnoissance by General Lame rick
in person had discovered their camp on a bar of Rogue River, where the
mountains rise on either side high and craggy, and densely timbered with
manzanita, live-oak, chinquapin, and chaparral, with occasional bald, grassy
hill-sides relieving the sombre aspect of the scene. A narrow strip of
bottom-land at the foot of the heights, covered with rank grass and brambly
shrubs, constituted The Meadows, where all winter the Indians had kept an
ample supply of cattle in good condition for beef. Upon a bar of the river
overgrown with willows the Indians were domesticated, having their huts and
personal property.
The
morning was foggy, and favorable for concealing the approach of the
volunteers. Colonel Kelsey with 150 men reached the north bank of the river
opposite and a little below the encampment without beiug discovered, while the
southern battalion took position on the south bank, a short distance above the
encampment. When the fog lifted a deadly volley from both sides was poured into
the camp from a distance of no more than fifty yards, killing fifteen or
twenty before they could run to cover, which they did very rapidly, carrying
their dead with them.
could not go We crossed
Rogue River on a raft last Easter Monday, fought the Indiana, drove them from
their village, and burned it .. We suffered great hardships on tho march; there
was a thick fog on the mountain^, and the guide could not make out the trail.
We were seven days stra\ ing about, while it rained the whole time. Our
provisions ran out before the 'weather cleared and we arrived at Fort Orford.
This was the k1TL1 of work the volunteers had been at all winter,
with little sympathy from the regulars.
When they
had had time to recover from the first recoil, the battle fell into the usual
exchange of phots from behind the rocks and trees. It was prolonged till late
in the afternoon, with considerable additional loss to the Indians, and two
white men wounded.1*
Xext day Lamerick
attempted to send across twenty-four men in two canvas boats, but was prevented
by the shots of the enemy. And the day following the Indians could be seen
through the falling snow wending their way over the mountains with their
effects, while a few warriors held the white men at bay; so that when on the
'29th Lameiick’s army finally entered their camp, it was found deserted. All
that remained was the offal of slaughtered oxen, and two scalps of white men
suspended to a limb of a tree.15 Fortifications were then erected at
Big Meadows, eight miles below, and called Fort Lamerick, where part of the
force remained, while the rest returned to headquarters, two companies
disbanding. A month later Major Latshaw led 113 men on the trail of the
Indians, and on the 28th of May a few were overtaken and killed by a
detachment under Lieutenant Hawley; while Captain Blakely in a running fight of
four miles down the river killed half a dozen, and took fifteen prisoners,twro
Rogue River chiefs, George and Limpy, narrowly escaping.10
Skirmishing continued, but I have not space for the multiplicity of detail.
The
Indians lost in the spring campaign fifty warriors killed and as many more
wounded, besides being
14 Elias D. Merctr, mortally. He was a
native of Va., smd resided in Cow Creek valley- was 29 years of age, and
unmarried; a member of Wilkinson’s company; a brave ami worthy younsr man. Or.
Statesman, May 13, 1X56. On the day before tho baitle McDonald llartness, of
Grave Creek ami Wagoner were riding express from Fort Lt land to Lamerick’s
camp, when the; were shot at by Indian=> in ambush. Wagoner escaped, but
Hartness was killed, cut in pieces, and his heart removed He was from Ohio, but
had lived on Grave Creek about a year, and was a man of excellent character.
Volunteer, in Or. Statesman, May 20, 1856; Portland Oregonian, May 17, 1856; 8
i\ Bvlhtin, May 19, 1856; Or. and Wash Scraps, 31.
15 II. C. Huston, in Brown’s Miscellany, MS.
,19.
’■6 liept of
Lamerick, in Or. Statesman, June 24, 1856.
greatly
crippled in their resources of provisions, ammunition, and gold-dust by the
destruction of their caches. Many of them were tired of being driven back and
forth through the mountains, and would have sued for peace but for the
indomitable will of their leader, John. That warrior was as far as ever from
being conquered, and still able to cope with either volunteer or regular
armies.17
Let us
turn to the operations of General Wool’s army. Buchanan had been more than a
month at the mouth of Rogue River endeavoring to induce the Indians to go
quietly on a reservation, but without success. After some manoeuvring, during
which the
17 About this time a person named John
Beeson, a foreigner by birth, but a naturalized citizen of the U. S., who had
emigrated from 111. to Rogue River in 1853, wrote letters to the papers., in
whii.h ho affirmed that the Indians were a friendly, hospitable, and generous
race, who had been oppressed until forbearance was no virtue, and that the war
of 1853 and the present war were justifiable on the part of the Indians and
atrocious on the part of the whites. He supported ids views by quotations from
military officers aud John McLoughlm, and made some good hits at party
politics. He gave a truthful account of the proceedings of the democratic party;
but was as unjust to the people of southern Oregon as he was censorious toward
the governor and his advisers, and excited much indignation on either hand. He
then began w riting for the S. F. Herald, and the fact becoming kuown that he
was siding in the spread of the prejudice already created against the people of
Oregon by the military reports, public meetings were held to express
indignation. Invited to one of these, without notification of purpose, Beeson
had the mortification of ha\ ing read one of his letters to the Ilerald, which
had been intercepted for the purpose, together with an article in the N. Y.
Tribune supposed to emanate from him, and of listening to a series of
resolutions not at all flattering. ‘ Fearing violence, ’ he says, ‘I fled to
the fort for protection. u.nd was escorted by the U. S. troops beyond the
scene of excitement." Beeson published a book of 143 pages in
1858, called A Plea for the Indians, in which he
boasts of the protection given him by the troops, who seemed to regard the
volunteers with contempt, He seemed to have found his subject popular for he
followed up the Plea with A Sequel, containing an Appeal in h half qf the
Indians; Correspondence with tin- British Aboriginal Aid Association; Letters
to Lev. II. IF. Beecher, in which objections are answered; Review of a Speech
delivered by the. Rev. Theodore Parktr; A Petition in behalf of the. Citizens
of Oregon and Washington Territories for Indemnity on account of Losses
through Indian Wars; An Address to the. Women of America, etc. In addition,
Beeson delivered lectures on the ‘Indians of Oregon’ in Boston, where he
advocated his pe- euli i views At one of these lecture* ho was confronted by a
citizen of Washington territory, Saywarrl's Pioneer Reminiscences, MS., 8-10;
and at a meeting at Cooper Institute, New York, by Captain Fellows of Oregon.
Or. Statesman, Dec. 28, 1858. It was t-aid that in 1860 he was about, to start
a paper in New York, to be called the Calumet. Rossi’s Souvenirs. In 1863
Beeson endeavored to get an appointment in the Indian department, but being
opposed by the Oregon senators, failed. Or. Argus, June 8, 1863.
troops
stood on the defensive, Ord was sent with 112 men, on the 26th of April, to
destroy a village of Mackanootenais, eleven miles from Whaleshead, as a means
of inducing them to come to terms, which w as accomplished after some tighting,
with the loss of one man. On the 29th Ord moved from his encampment to escort a
large government train from Crescent City to the mouth of Rogue River His
command of sixty men was attacked at the Clietcoe River by about the same
number of Indians. In the skirmish he lost one man killed and two or three
wounded, and slew live or six of the enemy, the attacking party being driven
from the field.18 And there were a few other like adventures.
In the
mean time the volunteer companies on the coast were not idle. The Coos county
organization under captains W. H. Harris and Creighton, and Port Orford company
under R. Rledsoe, harassed the Indians continually, with the design of forcing
them into the hands of the regulars. The Coquilles at one time surrendered
themselves, and agreed to go
# ' O O
on the
reservation, but finally feared to trust the white man’s word. Lieutenant
Abbott surprised two canoes containing twelve warriors and three women, and
killed all but one warrior and two women.
Again the
Indians gave signs of yielding, ami many of the Coquilles who had been gathered
on the miii- tary reservation at Port Orford by the Indian agents, but who had
run away’ returned and gave themselves up. These declared that Enos and John
had deceived and deserted them. They had been told that the white people in the
interior were all slain, and that if they would kill those on the coast none
would be left.
Early iu
May Buchanan moved his force to the mouth of the Illinois River. With him were
several Indians who had surrendered, to be used as messengers to the hostile
bauds. These, chiefly women,
18 J. C. F., in Or. Statesman, June 10,
1856; Oram’s Top. Mem., 50; Crescent City Herald, June 4, 1S56.
were sent
out to gather the chiefs in council at Oak Flat on the right bank of the
Illinois River, not far above the mouth. In this mission the messengers were
successful, all the principal war-cliiefs being in attendance, including John,19
Rogue River George, Limpy, and the chiefs of the Cow Creek and Galice Creek
bands. The council was set for the 21st of May. On that day the chiefs came to
the appointed place as agreed, and all, with the exception of John, consented
to give up their arms on the 26th, at The Meadows, aud allow Smith to escort a
part of them to the coast reservation by the way of Fort Lane. Others were to
be escorted by different officers to Port Orford, and taken thence to the
reservation by steamer. John, however, still held out, and declared his
intention not to go on the reservation. To Colonel Buchanan he said: “You are
a great chief, so am I. This is my country; I was in it when these large trees
were very small, not higher than my head. My heart is sick with fighting, but I
want to live in my country. If the white people are willing, I will go back to
Deer Creek and live among them as I used to do; they can visit my camp, and I
will visit theirs; but I will not lay down my arms and go with you on the
reserve. I will fight. Good-by.’’ And striding out of camp, he left the council
without hinderance.20
On the day
agreed upon for the surrender, Smith was at the rendezvous with his eighty men
to receive the Indians and their arms. That they did not appear gave him
little anxiety, the day being rainy and the trails slippery. During the
evening, however, two
181 have
before me a photograph of John and nis son John iiaa an ;n telligcnt
face, is dream'd in ctvilieed costume, ■with the
hair cut in the fashion of hij conquerors, and has much the look of an earnest,
determined enthusiast. His features are not like those of Kami&kin,
vindictive and eruel, but firm, and marked with that expression of grief which
is often seen on the
countenances
of savage men in the latter part- ot their lives. In John’s case it was
undoubtedly intensified by disappointment a+ his plans for the extermination
of the white race. His son has a heavy and lumpish countenance, indicative of
dull, stolid intelligence.
20Or.
Statesman, July lo, 1856; Ind. Af, Kept,, i856, ‘214; S. I'1. Alfa,
June 13, 19, 22, 1856; -S'. F. Bulletin, June 14, ‘28, 1856.
Indian
women made liim a visit and a revelation, which caused him immediately to move
his camp from the bottom-land to a position on higher ground, which he imagined
more secure, and to despatch next morning a messenger to Buchanan, saying he
expected an attack from John, while he retained the Indian women in custody.
Smith also asked for reenforcements, and Augur was sent to his relief.
The
position chosen by Smith to fight John was an oblong elevation 250 by 50 yards,
between two small streams entering the river from the north-west. Between this
knoll and the river was a narrow piece of low land constituting The Meadows.
The south side of the mound was abrupt and difficult of ascent, the north side
still more inaccessible, the west barely approachable, while the east was a
gentle slope. On the summit was a plateau barely large enough to afford room
for his camp. Directly north of this mound was a similar one, covered with a
clump of trees, and within rifle-range of the first.
On the
morning of the 27th, the men having been up most of the night and much
fatigued, numerous parties of Indians were observed to gather upon and occupy
the north mound. Soon a body of forty warriors advanced up the eastern slope of
Smith’s position, and signified their wish to deliver their arms to that
officer in person. Had their plan succeeded, Smith would have been seized on
the spot; but being on his guard, he directed them to deposit their arms at a
certain place outside the camp. Thus foiled, the warriors retired, frowning
upon the howitzer which had been so planted as to sweep the ascent from this
side. Lieutenant Sweitzer was stationed with the infantry to defend the crest
of the western acclivity; the dragoons were expected to take care of the front
and rear, aided by the abrupt nature of the elevation on those sides.
Seeing
that the troops were prepared to fight, and that they would nut be permitted to
enter Smith’s
camp under
any pretence with arms in their hands, about ten o’clock the Indians opened
fire, charging up the east and west slopes at once. The howitzer and the rifles
of the infantry repelled them, and they full back to cover. Then was heard the
stentorian voice of John issuing his orders so loud and clear that they were
understood in Smith’s camp and interpreted to him. Frequently during the day he
ordered charges to be made, and was obeyed. Some of his warriors attempted to
approach nearer by climbing up the steep and craggy sides of the mound, only to
be shot by the dragoons and roll to the bottom. Nevertheless, these continued
attempts at escalade kept every man sharply at his work In the matter of arms,
the Indians had greatly the advantage, the musketoons of the dragoons being of
service only when the enemy were within short range; while the Indians, being
all provided with good riiles, could throw their balls into camp from the north
mound without being discovered. Thus the long day wore on, and night came
without relief. The darkness only allowed the troops time to dig rifle-pits and
erect such breastworks as they could without proper implements.
On the
28th the Indians renewed the battle, and to the other sufferings of the men,
both wounded and unwounded, was ‘added that of thirst, no water being in camp
that day, a fact well known to the Indians, who frequently taunted the soldiers
with their sufferings.21 Another taunt was that they had ropes to
hang every trooper, not considering them worth ammunition.22
Up to this
time Augur had not come. At four o’clock of the second day, when a third of
Smith’s command were dead or wounded, and tho destruction
21 They
taunted them with the often repeated question, ‘Mika hias tieka chuck?’ You
very much want water? ‘Tieka chuck?* Want water? ‘Halo chuck, Boston!’ No
water, whiteman! Oor., Or. Statesman, June 17, 1S/56.
n Grover's
Public Life, MS., 49; Or. and Wash. Scraps, 23; Jolin Wallen, in Nichols' Ind.
Aff.< MS., 20; Cram's Top. Mem., T>3; Volunteer, in Or. Statesman, June
17, 1856; Crescent City Herald, June 11, 1856.
of the
whole appeared but a matter of time, just as the Indiaus had prepared for a
charge up the east anti west approaches with a view to take the camp, Smith
beheld the advance of Captain Augur’s company, which the savages in their
eagerness to make the final coup had failed to observe. When they were halfway
up the slope at both ends, he ordered a charge, the first he had ventured, and
while he met the enemy in front, Augur came upon them in the rear. The conflict
was sharp and short, the Indians fleeing to the hills across the river, where
they were not pursued, and Smith was rescued from his perilous situation.23
Augur lost two men killed and three wounded, making the' total loss of troops
twenty-nine.24 The number of Iudians were variously stated at from
200 to 400. No mention is made by any of the writers on the subject of any
loss to the enemy.
This
exploit of John’s was the last worthy of mention in the war. With all his
barbaric strength and courage, and the valor and treachery of his associates,
his career was drawing to a close. His resources were about exhausted, and his
people tired of pursuing and being pursued. They had impoverished the white
settlers, but they had not disabled or exterminated them. The only alternative
left was to go upon a reservation in an unknown region or fight until they
died. John preferred the latter, but the majority were against him.
Superintendent Palmer presently came, and to him the two chiefs George and
Limpy yielded, presenting themselves at camp
23 Cram is hardly justified in calling this,
as he does, a victory for the troops. Brackett's U. S. Cavalry, 171. Smith was
a bravi officer, but he was no match for Indian cunning when he took the
position John intended, where lie couid be surrounded, and within rifle-range
of another eminence, while he had but thirty rifles. This fighting in an open
place, standing up to be shot at, at rifle-range, was what amazed, and at last
amused, the Indians. The well conceived plan of the crafty chief failed; but it
would have failed still more signally if Smith had sent for reenforcements on
first receiving John’s challenge, and had stationed himself where he could run
away if he wished.
21 Cram’s
Top. Hem.; Rcpt of Major Latohay, in Or. Statesman, June 24, isr>0; Rept of
Palmer, in Ind. Ajj. I’ept, 1S.>6, 213.
on tlie
30t.h with their people and delivering up tlieir arms.
During
June a mild species of skirmishing continued, with a little killing and
capturing, some of the Indians surrendering themselves. Smith’s forces on their
march down the river destroyed some villages, and killed and drove to their
death in the river some forty men, women, and children. Even such a fate the
savage preferred to the terrors of a reservation. By the 12th over 400 had
been forced into the regular camp, which was slowly moving toward Fort Orford.
As the soldiers proceeded they gathered up nearly all the native population in
their line of march, Similar policy was pursued in regard to the Cheteoe and
Pistol River Indians, and with 'ike results.
Deserted
by other bands, and importuned by his own followers to submit, John finally, on
the 29th of June, surrendered, and on the 2d of July arrived with his people at
Fort Orford. He did not, however, surrender unconditionally. Before agreeing
to come in, he exacted a promise that neither he nor any of his band should be
in any wise punished for acts they had.com mitted, nor compelled to surrender
the property taken in war. On the 9th, with the remnant of his band, he was
started off for the southern end of the coast reservation. Under the same
escort went the Pistol River and Cheteoe Indians, or such of them as had not
escaped, to be located on the same part of the coast, it being deemed desirable
to keep the most w arlike bands separated from the others. George and Limpy
with the lower Rogue River people were carried 1-y steamer to Portland, and
thence to the northern part of the coast reserve.
To prevent
the Indians from fleeing back to their old homes, Reynolds was ordered to the
mouth of the Siuslaw, and shortly afterward a post was erected on the north
bank of the Umpqua, about four miles below Gardiner. Captain Smith stationed
his company at
the pass
in the Coast Range west and a little north of the town of Corvallis, which post
was named Fort Hoskins. Throughout these troubles considerable jealousy between
the volunteers and the regulars was manifested, each claiming the credit of
successes, and in reverses throwing the blame upon the other.
The war
was now considered as ended in southern Oregon, although there was still that
portion of the Chetcoe and Pistol River bands which escaped with some others to
the number of about 200, and about 100 on Rogue River, who infested the
highways for another year, compelling the settlers again to form companies to
hunt them down. This created much dissatisfaction with the Indian
superintendent, without any better reason apparently than that the patience
of the people was exhausted.
With
regard to Palmer’s course, which was not without some errors, I cannot regard
it in the main as other than humane and just. His faults were those of an
over-sanguine man, driven somewhat by public clamor, and eager to accomplish
his work in the shortest time. He had vanity also, which was offended on one
side by the reproof of the legislature, and flattered on the other by being
associated in his duties with an arbitrary power which affected to despise the
legislature and the governor of Oregon. He succeeded in his undertaking of
removing to the border of the Willamette Valley about four thousand Indians,
the care and improvement of whom devolved upon his successors. For his honesty
and eminent; services, he is entitled to the respect and gratitude of all good
men.23
Early in
May 1865 most of the Rogue River
55 Deady
says: ‘Few men in this or any other country Lav e labored harder or more
disinterestedly for the public good than General Palmer. A man of ardent
temperament, strong friendships, and full of hope and confidence in his fellow
men, he has unreservedly given the flower of his life to the best interests of
Oregon.’ Tram. Or. Pionetr Assoc., 1875, 37-8. Palmer ran for governor of
Oregon in 1870, but was defeated by Grover. He died in 1879 at his home in
Dayton.
people and
Shastas wlio had been temporarily placed upon the Grand Rond reserve were
removed to Siletz, Sam and his band only being permitted to remain as a mark of
favor.
I will not
here discuss further the reservation system. It was bad enough, but was
probably the best the government could devise, the settlers being determined
to have their lands. In theory, the savages thus became the wards of the United
States, to be civilized, christianized, educated, fed, and clothed. In reality,
they were driven from their homes, huddled within comparatively narrow limits,
and after a brief period of misery they were swept from the earth by the white
man’s diseases.26
In March
1857 congress united the supenntenden- cies of Oregon and Washington, and
called for an estimate of the unpaid claims, which were found to aggregate half
a million dollars, and which were finally allowed and paid.27 On the
Siletz reservation many Indians had farms of their own, which they worked, and
many were taught the mechanic arts, for which they exhibited much aptitude; the
women learning housekeeping and the children going to school by the advice of
their parents; considerable progress having been made in the period betweah
1878 and 1887. It is also stated that their numbers increased instead of
diminished, as formerly.
26 It was the unpopular bide to defend or
protect the Indians during this ■war. There
were many among the officers «ud
servants of the United States brave and manly enough to do this. On the other
hand, the government has made many bad selections ( f men to look after the
Indians. Out of an appropriation by congress of $500,000, if the Indians
received ISO,000 or $100,
000 they were fort unate.
27 See letter of Nesmith, in Or, Statesman,
Oct. 20, 1857- The estimated expense of the Indian service for Oregon for the
year ending June 1S5S was $424,000, and for Washington §229,000. U. II. Ex.
Doc., 37 1-27, 12940, 31th cong. 3d sess., and Id., 76, vol. is. 12, 22, 28;
Id., 93, vol. xi. 1-40, 54-73, 81-96. A special commissioner, O. H. Mott, was
sent to examine into the accounts, who could find nothing wrong, and they were
allowed, and paid in 1859.
OREGON
BECOMES A STATE.
1856-1859.
Legislatup.e
of 1855-6—Measures and Mimoriam—Ligi*laturs of 18567—No Slavery in Free, Territory—Republican
Convention—Election Results—Discussions concerning Admission- -Delegate to
Congress—Campaign Journalism- -Constitutional Convention—The Great Question of
Slavery—No Black Men, Bond or
Free—Adoption of a State Constitution—Legislature of 1857-8—State and
Territorial Bodies—Passenger Service—Legislatures of 1S58-9— Admission into the
Union.
During these days Oregon was somewhat soured over the
Indian question, and toward the United States generally. The savages should
have been more quickly and cheaply killed; the regulars could not fight
Indians; the postal service was a swindle and a disgrace; land matters they
could manage more to their satisfaction themselves; better become a state and
be independent. There was even some feeling between northern and southern
Oregon; the former had labored and the latter had suffered, and both were a
little sore over it.
About all
the legislature of 1855-C1 did was to move
Tbt*
councilraen elect were, for Multnomah, A. P. Dennison; Clackamas and Wasco, J.
K. Kelly; Yamhill and Clatsop, John Richardson; Polk and Tillamook, J. M.
Fulkerson; Marion, J C. Peebles; Linn, Charles Draii ; Umpqua, Douglas, and
Coos, II. D. O’Bryant, democrats; and A. A. Smith of Lane and Benton, and E. H.
Cleaveland of Jackson, whigs. Assemblymen, for Clatsop, Philo Callender;
Wasco, N. H. Gates; Columbia, John Harris; Multnomah, G. W. Brow a; Washington,
H.Jyckson; Clackamas, 0. Risley, II. A. Straight, James Officer; Marion, L. F.
Grover, William liar- pule, J. M. Harrison; Yamhill A R. Burbank, Andrew Shuck;
Polk, Fred. Waymire, R. 1’. Boise; Linn, Delazon Smith, II, L. Brown, B. P.
Grant; Benton, John Robinson, H. C. Buckingham; Lane, Isaac P. Moores, A.
(«J)
the
capital from Corvallis to Salem, ask congress to discharge General Wool and
Superintendent Palmer, and send up a growl against Surveyor-general Gardiner
and Postal-agent Avery.2
To prevent
any benefit to southern Oregon from the appropriations, as well as to silence
the question of the relocation acts, it was proposed to ask congress to allow
what remained of the university fund to be diverted to cominon-school purposes;
but the matter was finally adjusted by repealing all the former acts concerning
the university, and making a temporary disposition of the fund.
With
regard to the volunteer service in the Indian wars, Grover introduced a bill
providing for the employment if necessary of the fu I military force of the
territory, not exceeding three full regiments, to serve for six months or until
the end of the war, unless sooner discharged; the volunteers to furnish as far
as practicable their own arms and equipments, and to be entitled to two dollars
a day for their services, and two dollars a day for the use and risk of their
horses; all commissioned officers to receive the same pay as officers of the
same rank in the regular service, besides pay for the use and risk of their
horses; the act to apply to all who had been in the service from the beginning,
including the Oth regiment of Oregon militia. The bill became a law, and the
legislature memoralized congress to assume the expense,3 which
McAlexander;
Umpqua, John Cozad; Douglas, William Hutson; Coos, William Tichenor; Jackson,
M. C. Barkwell, J. A. Lupton, Thos Smith, democrats; and H. V. V. Johnson of
"Washington and Briggs of Jackson, whig3. A vacancy was caused in the
house by the. death of J. A Lupton; a,nd subsequently in the council by the
resignation of E. H. Cleaveland. The first place was filled by Hale, democrat,
and the latter by John E. lloss, wliig. Clerks of the council, Vaomas W. Beale,
A. Bulger, and L. W. Phelps; sergcant-at-arms, M. B. Burke; door-keeper, James
L Earle. Clerks of the lower house, James Elkins and D. Mansfield;
sergeant-at-arms, A. J. Welch; door-keeper, Albert Boiie. Or. Statesman, June
30 and Dec. 8, 1855.
2 The trouble was, with these men, they
were on the wrong side in politics, that they were wliigs and know-nothings,
and everything vile.
3 This legislature wai not over-modest in
its memorials. It asked for the recall of Wool from the di ipartment. of the
Pacific; that Empire City be made a port of entry; that land titles in Oregon
be confirmed; that additional mail routes be established; that two townships of
land be granted in lieu of tho
after much
investigation and delay was done, as we have seen. The last of the political
divisions of western Oregon were made at this session, when Curry and
Josephine counties were established.4 The question of a state
constitution was not discussed at length, an act being passed to take the vote
of the people upon it again at a subsequent election. On the 21st of January
the legislature adjourned.5
Oregon
City claim, that the expenses of the Indian wai be pan 1; that the Indian
superintendent be stayed from locating In.liana in the Willamette Valley; that
the federal government assumo the expenses of the provisional government; that
congress prov ide for the issuance of a patent to land claims; that a
mail-route be established from San Francisco to Olympia; mail service east of
the Cascade mountains; a military road from Oregon City to The Dalles; that the
expenses of the Snake River expedition be paid; that the right of V'usi°ns
be extended to disabled volunteers; that the spoliation claims of 1833 be
liquidated; that congress pay for the services and expenses of the Rogue River
war of 1854; that a military road be established from Olympia via the mouth of
the Cowlitz to intersect the military road leading from Scottsburg to .Myrtle
creek: a military road from Port Orford to Jacksonville; money for a
territorial library; and that congress recognize the office of commissioner to
audit the war claims. Indeed, Philo Callander of Clatsop county Mas eo
appointed, but congrcss did not rccognize him. The Statesman complained in
September that Lane had obtained §3110,000 for the Indian department, and
nothing more for anypuipose except tlie regular appropriation for territorial
exponses, which would have been made without him. A little later it was
ascertained that §300 h»d been obtained for the territorial library, which
money was expended by Gov. Curry when he went to Washington in 1836 to defend
himself from the attacks of Wool
4 It was proposed to name the former
Tichenor, but that member declined, saying that his constitutent* had
instructed him to e ,11 the county after the governor. The second was named
alter Josephine Rollins, whose father first discovered gold on Josephine Creek.
The county seat, Kirbysville, vas named after Joel A. Kirby, who took a land
claim on the site of that town. Dcady's Hist. Or., MS., 77; Prim's Judicial
Affairs, MS., 2-3; U. S. II. Ex. Dor., i. 348, 373, 419, 431, 34th cong. 1st
sess
6 Several charters w ere granted to
societies, towns, and schools. Astoria and Eula in Polk county were chartered.
To-day Eola is a decayed liamlet and Astoria a thriving city by the sea The
Portland Insuiance Company also took i ,tart at this time. Masonic lodges,
Warren No. 10, Temple No. 7, Jennings Xo. 9. Tuality Xo. 6, Harmony No. 12,
received their charters at this session. There is a list of the officers of
Harmony Lodge from 1856 to 1873 in By Lawn, etc., Portland, 1873. Multnomah
Lodge Xo. 1 was incorporated -January 19; 1834; Willamette Lodge
Xo. 2, February 1st; Lafayette Lodge Xo. 3.. January 28; and Salem Lodge Xo.
4, in February 1834. It is said the General George B. McClel'an received the
first three degrees in masonry in Willamette Lodge Xo. ?, at Portland. 0. F.
Grand Lody? of Or., 1836-76. Acts incorporating the Willamette Falls Railroad
Company, the Rockville Canal Company, the Tualatin River Transportation aud
Navigation Con.pany, and no less than 11 road acts were passed. The assembly
ippointed A. Bush, printer; 11 F. Bonham, auditor; J. D. Boon, treasurer; F. S.
Hoyt, librarian; E. Ellsworth, university commissioner. Something should be
here said of John Daniel Boon, who for many years was territorial treasurer.
Dcady calls him a good, plain, unlearned man, and a fervent
The
democratic party, whicli had so long dominated Oregon, and to which whigs and
know-nothings offered but a feeble opposition, had so conducted affairs during
the Indian war of 1855-6 as to alienate some of its original supporters. It
had, however, a strong hold on the people in the war debt, which it was
believed Lane, through his influence with the administration, would be able to
have discharged. So long as this appeared probable, or could be reasonably
hoped for, much that was disagreeable or oppressive at home could be tolerated,
and no steps were taken, at first, to follow t he movement in the Atlantic
States which was dividing the nation into two great parties, for and against
slavery. Southern Oregon, which was never much in sympathy with the Willamette
Valley, the seat of democratic rule, was the first to move toward the formation
of a republican party. A meeting was held at the Lindley school-house, Eden
precinct, in Jackson county, in May 1856, for the purpose of choosing
candidates to be voted for at the .lune election.6
The
meeting declared against slavery in the new states. The democrats might have
said the same, but at this juncture they did not; it remained for the first
republican meeting first to promulgate the sentiment i n the territory. 11 wTas
a spontaneous expressio n of incipient republicanism in the far north-west, not
even the Philadelphia convention having yet pronounced. The election came; none
of the candidates of Eden district were chosen to the legislature, though one knowT-nothing
from the county was elected, and the
methodist
preacher. Scrap-book, 87. He was born at Athena, Ohio, Jan. 8, 1817, and came
to Oregon in 1845. He died at Salem, where he kept a small titore, in June
1804. Salem Mercury, June 27, 1864. On the 13th of Dec. 1877 died Martha J.
Boon, his ■wife, aged 54 years.
Their children were 4 sons and several daughters, all of whom lived in Oregon,
except John, who made his home in San Francisco. Ban Josf Pioneer, 1'cc. 29,
1877.
u The
resolutions adopted were: that freedom was national and slavery sectional; that
congress had no power over slavery iu the states where it already existed; bat
that outside of state jurisdiction the power of the federal
fovernment
should be exerted to prevent its introduction, etc. Or. Anjus, une 7, 185G.
latter
party did not differ, exccpt in its native Americanism, from the republicans.
As time passed, however, the republican sentiment grew, and on the 1 Lth of
October a meeting was held at Silverton in Marion county, when all opposed to
slavery in free territory were im ited to forget past differences and make common
cause against that influence, to escape which many through toil and suffering
had crossed a continent to make a home on the shores of the Pacific.7
Other assemblages soon followed in almost every county.
When the
legislature met in December, it was as it had always been a democratic body,
but there were enough opposition members to indicate life in the new movement.8
Few bills of a general nature were passed, but the drift of the discussions on
bills introduced to allow half-breeds to vote, to exclude free negroes from the
territory,9 to repeal the viva voce bill, and kindred subjects
plainly indicated a contest before tho state constitution could be formed. An act
was onco
7 Paul Crandall, 0. Jacobs, T. W.
Davenport, Rice Dunbar, -nd E. N. Cooke were the movers in this first attempt
at organization in tho Willamette \ alley. The last three were appointed to
correspond with other republicans for the furtherance of the principles of free
government.
8 Members of the council: JohnE. Ross, of
Jackson county; HughD. O'Bryant, Umpijua, Douglas, ami Coos; A. A. Smith, Lane
and Benton; Charles Drain, Linn; Nathaniel Eord, Polk and Tillamook; J. B.
Bayley, Yamhill and Clatsop; J. C. Peebles, Marion; J. K. Kelly, Clackamas and
Wasco; Thos .K. Cornelius, Washington, Columbia, and Multnomah. House: JohnS.
Miller, Thomas Smith, Jackson; A. M. Berry, W. J. Matthens, Josephine; Aaron
Rose, Douglas; A. E. Rogers, Coos and Curry; I). C. Underwood, Umpqua; James
Monroe, II. B. Cochran, Lane; J. 0. Avery, J. A. Bennett, Benton; Delazon
Smith, II. L. Brown, William Roy, Linn; WmM. Walker, Polk and Tillamook; A. J.
Welch, Polk- L. F. Urover, William Ilarpole, Jacob Couser, Marion; William
Allen, A. J. Shuck, Yamhiil; A. L. Lovejoy, W. A Starkweather, F. A. Collard,
Clackamas; G. W. Brown, Multnomah; T. J. Dryer, Multnomah and Washington; H. V.
V. Johnson, Washington; Barr, Col iml.ia; J. W. Muffit, Clatsop; N. H. Gates,
Wasco. Or. Laws, 1830-7, p. 8. James K. Kelly, prest council; L. F. Grover,
speaker of the house, Clerks of the council, A. S. Watt, John Costello, and T.
F. MeF. Patton; sergeant-at-arms, G. W. Holmes; door keeper, J. McClain. Clerks
of the lower house, D. C. Dade, E. M. Bowman, J. Looney; sergeant-at-arms, J.
S. Risley; door-keeper, J. Henry Brown Or. Statesman, Dec. 9, 1830.
8 When the commissioner in 1833-4 made a
list of the former laws of Oregon which were to be adopted into the code, that
one which related to the exclusion of free negroes w as inadvertently left out,
and was thus uninten njly repealed. It ■sias not
revived at this session, owing to the opposition ot the republican and some
other members.
Hisx, Ob., Vol. II. '27
more
passerl at this session to take the sense of the people 011 the holding of a
constitutional convention, and to elect delegates to frame a constitution in
case a majority of the people should vote in favor of it.
Tn order
to met the coming crisis, republican clubs continued to be formed; and on the
11th of February, 1857, a convention was held at Albany to perfect a more
complete organization,10 when the name Free State Republican Party
of Oregon was adopted and its principles announced. These were the perpetuity
of the American Union; resistance to the extension of slavery in free
territory; the prohibition of polygamy; the admission of Oregon into the Union
only as a free state; the immediate construction of a Pacific railway; the
improvement of rivers and harbors; the application of the bounty land law to
the volunteers in the Indian war of 1S55-G; and the necessity for all honest
men, irrespective of party, to unite to secure the adoption of a free state
constitution in Oregon.11 At Grand Prairie, a free state club was
formed January 17th, whose single object was to elect delegates to the
constitutional convention pledged to exclude from the state negroes, slaves or
freemen.
The Oregon
delegate to congress, Joseph Lane, had no objection to slavery, though he dared
not openly advocate it. In conformity to instructions of the legislature, he
had brought a bill for admission, which was before congress in the session of
185G. The
10Delegates:
From Multnomah, Stephen Coffin, Charles M. Carter, L Limerick; Clackmas, W. T.
Matlock W. L. Adams, L. Holmes; Washington* H. H llicklm; Yamhill, JohnR.
McBride, S. M. Gilmore, W, B. Daniels, Brooks, and Odell; Linn, T. S. Kendall,
T. Connor, J. P. Tate, John Smith, James Gray, William Marks, David Lambert;
Polk, John B. Bell; Beiton, William Miller, J. Y oung; Umpqua, E. L. Applegate.
Committee to pre- pcrei an address, Thus Popr, \Y L. Adams, and Stephen Coffin
Executive committee, J. B. Condon, T. S. Kendall, E. L Applegate, Thos Pope.
Or. Argus, Feb. ‘21, 1876. See address in A rgus. April 11, 1857.
11 Among the
tint to promulgate republican doctrines were E D. Shat- tuck, Lawrence Hall,
Levi Andnrson, 11 C, Raymond. Johr IIarrinon, J M. Rolando, S. C. Adams, S. M.
Gilmore G. W. Burnett, G. L. Woods, W. T. Matlock, H. -Tohnson, L. W, Reynolds,
Geo. P Newell, J. 0. ltinearson, F. Johnso*, H J. Davis, JolmTerwilliger,
Matthew Patton, G. W. Lawson, .and W Carey Johnson.
only
objection offered was the lack of population to entitle the state to the
representation asked for in the bill. Its failure, together with the failure of
the Indian war debt bill, was injurious to the popularity of the delegate with
his party. But during the following session a bill authorizing the people of
Oregon to form a constitution and state government passed the lower house, and
was tak^n up and amended in the senate, but not passed. It remained where it
offered a substantial motive for the reflection of the same delegate to
complete his work.
Such was
the position of affairs in the spring of
1857. The territory was half admitted as a state, a
constitutional convention was to be held, a delegate to be elected, and a new
political party was organizing which would contend for a share in the
management of the public interests. It was not expected by the most
enthusiastic republicans that they could elect a delegate to congress, their
aim being different. The democrats for the first time were divided on nominations
;u but after a little agitation the convention settled down to a
solid vote for Lane, who thus became for the fourth time the congressional
nominee of his party. This done, the convention proceeded to pass a resolution
binding their county delegates to execute the will of the party “according to
democratic usages/' repudiating the idea that a delegate could, in pursuance
of the interests or w ishes of his district, refuse to support the nominations
of his party, and still maintain a standing in that party.13 Then
came the announcement, “That we deny the right of any state to interfere with
such domestic institutions of other
11 Other
possible candidates •were Deady, Nesmith, Graver, Bois6, Dilazon Smith, George
H. Williair .. and .lames K. Kelly. Clackamas and Olataop nominated Kelly, but
he declined, knowing that he could not be elccted because ho was not a democrat
of that ‘ vigoious practice’ which the Statesman required; that journal
afterward reproaching him with losing this OJipurt unity through too much
independence of party government. See letter of Kelly, in Or. Statesman, Feb.
17 1857.
13 So well
whipped in we’v tue delegates to the convention that inly the Ll?ckamas members
and J. L. Meek of Washington county voted against the resolution.
states as
are recognized by the constitution;” that in choosing delegates to the
constitutional convention no discrimination should be made between democrats
in favor of or opposed to slavery, because that question should be left to be
settled by a direct vote of the people.
To this
parade of the ruling party the infant republican organization could offer no
opposition that had in it any promise of success. A few of the older counties
chose delegates to the constitutional convention; others had no republican
representation. But there was a visible defection in the democratic ranks from
the bold position taken by the leaders, that it was treachery to question their
mandates, even when they conflicted with the interests and wishes of the sections
of country represented—a doctrine directly opposed iu sentiment to that of
state rights, which the party was commanded to indorse. This was a species of
subordination against which many intelligent democrats protested as strongly
as the republicans protested against negro slavery. One newspaper, the Portland
Democratic Standard, revolted, and was declared to be out of the party.14
The June
election came on. The republican party had no candidate for delegate, but was
prepared to vote for G. W, Lawson, a free soil democrat, who announced himself
as an independent candidate for congress. Lane arrived toward the last of
April, and the canvass began. Hitherto in an election the questions considered
had been chiefly personal and local; or at the most, they involved nothing more
important than a desired appropriation or a change in the land law. But now the
people were called upon to lay the foundation of a state; to decide upon
matters affecting the interests of the commonwealth for all time. The returns
showed that while the principles
11 There
were few persons in Orepon not deeply interested in politics at this time. A
correspondent of a California paper writes: ‘The Oregonians have two
occupations, agriculture and politics. ’ See remarks on tho causes of
lissension in the dtmoi-ratic party, m Or. Statesman, April 14 and 21, 18.37.
of
democracy still retained their hold on the people, a far greater number than
ever before voted an opposition ticket, and that of the delegates chosen to
the constitutional convention more than one third were either republicans or
were elected on the opposition ticket; that the legislature, instead of being
almost wholly democratic as for several preceding years, would at the next
session have a democratic majority of but one in the council; and that there
would be ten republicans among the thirty members of the house.15
During
this important epoch the course of the Statesman was cautious and prudent,
while seeming to be frank and fearless. It published with equal and impartial
tolerance the opinions of all who chose to expound the principles of freedom or
the evils or blessings of slavery. The other leading party journals were not,
and could not afford to be, so calm and apparently indifferent to the issue;
for while they were striving to mould public sentiment, the Statesman had one
settled policy, which was to go whichsoever way the destinies of the democratic
party led it. More than one new campaign journal was established,18
and inlluences were brought to bear, hitherto
15 The official returns for delegate to
congress gave Lane 5,662 votes, and Lawson 3,471. The constitutional convention
vote was 7,617 for and 1,679 against. The counties that gave a republican
majority were Yamhill, Washington, Multnomah, Columbia, and Clatsop. Benton
came within 25 votes of making a tie. In the other counties of the Willamette
there was a large democratic majority. Or. Argus, June 13, 1857; Or. Statesman,
July 7, 1857; Tribune Almanac, 1858, 63*
16 There was The Frontier Sentinel,
published at Corvallis, whose purpose was to give ‘ an ardent and unwavering
support in favor of the introduction of slavery into Oregon/ The publisher was
L. P. Hall from California-, and the material was from the office of the
Expositor, another democratic journal, whose usefulness had expired, and whose
type was about worn out. Or. A rgus, June 20, 1857. The Occidental Messenger,
published at Corvallis, advocated the doctrine that there could be no such
thing as a free state democrat. Or. Statesman, Aug. 25, 1857. ‘The editor of
that paper came to Oregon something less than six months ago, and issued a
prospectus for a weekly newspaper. No one knew where he came from, who sent
him, or how much Avery
paid for
him. In his prospectus he avowed himself in favor of the present national
administration, in favor of the principles enunciated by the Cincinnati
national democratic convention, and in favor of the introduction of
slavery
into Oregon.’ From the remarks of the Jacksonville Herald, it appears that the
Sentinel and the Messenger were one paper, edited by HalL
unknown,
to awaken in the minds of the people, the chief part of whom were descendants
of slave-holders, a desire for unpaid servitude. To meet this apparently well
organized effort of the southern democrats of the United States senate and of
California, the republicans and free-state democrats of Oregon nerved
themselves afresh. All the newspapers of whatever politics or religion were
filled with discussions of the topic now more than any other absorbing the
public mind. George H. Williams made a strong appeal in an article in the
Statesman of July 28th, showing that Oregon wras not adaped to slave
labor. On the other hand. F. B. Martin urged the advantage and even the
necessity of slave labor, both sides presenting lengthy arguments convincing
to themselves.17 With more ardor than discretion, Martin said that
slavery would be a benefit to the negro himself; for if proved unprofitable, it
would die out, and the blacks become free in a fine country. Now there was no
such hater of the free negro as the advocate of slave labor; and unless the
black man could be sure always to remain a chattel, they would oppose his
entrance
Or.
Statesman, Nov. 17, 1S57. It was in this year that the Jacksonville, Herald was
first published, which leaned toward slavery. It was asserted by the California
journals that the pro-slavery party of that state had its emissaries in Oregon,
and that it was designed to send into the territory voters enough to give a
majority in favor of slavery. S. F. Chronicle, Aug. 15, 1S57. Ex-governor Foote
of Mississippi, then in California, visited Oregon in August, which movement
the republicans thought significant. Marysville Herald and S F. Chronicle, in
Or. Statesman, Sept. 8, 1S57. Chas E. Pickett, formerly of Oregon, returned
there from California, and contributed some arguments in favor of slavery to
the columns of the Statesman. Or Argus, Oct. 10, 1857; Or. Statesman, Oct. 6,
1857.
17 See letter of J. W. Mack in favor of
slave labor, in Or. Statesman, Aug. 18, 1857; and of Thomas Norris against, in
the Statesman of Aug. 4, 1857; Or. Argus, Jan. 10, Sept, 5, Oct 10, 1857. The
Pacific Christian Ad vacate, methodist, edited by Thomas 1’e.ame, shirked the
responsibility of an opinion by pretending to ignore the existence of any
slavery agitation, or that any prominent politicians were engaged in promoting
it. Adams retorted: 'We should like to ask the Advocate whether Jo Lane,
delegate to congress; Judge Deady of the supreme court; T'Vault, editor of the
Oregon Sentinel; Avery, a prominent member of tho legislature; Kelsay, an
.influential member of the constitutional convention; Judge Dickey Miller, a
leading man :ri Marion county; Mr Soap and Mr Crisp, leading men in
Yamhill; Judge Holmes and Mr Officer of Clackamas, and fifty others we might
mention, who are all rabid “nigger” men—are not “prominent politicians.” Or.
Argus, Sept. 0, 1857.
into
Oregon to their utmost. That it was a dread of the free negro, quite as much as
a sentiment against slavery, which governed the makers of the constitution and
voters upon it, is made apparent by the first form of that instrument and the
votes which decided its final form.
The
constitutional convention assembled at the Salem court-house on the 17th of
August, and made A. L. Lovejoy president pro tem.ls On the following
day M. P. Deady wTas chosen president of the convention, with X. 0.
Terry and M. C. Barkwell as secretaries.19 The first resolution
offered was by Applegate, that the discussion of slavery w'ould be out of
place; not adopted. The convention remained
18 Members: Marion county. Geo, H. Williams,
L. F. Grover, J C. Peebles, Joseph Cox, Nicholas Shrum, Davis Shannon, Richard
Miller; Linn, Delazon Smith, J. T. Brooks, Luther Elkins, J. H. Brattain, Jas
Shields, Jr, R. S. Coyle; Lane, E. Hoult, W. W. Bristow, Jesse Cox, A. J.
Campbell, +1. R. Moores, +Paul Brattain; Benton, Jolm Kelsay, *H. C. Lewis, *11
B. Nichols, ‘William Matzger; Polk and Tillamook, A. I). Babcock; Polk, R. P.
Boise, F. Waymire, Benj. F. Burch; Yamhill, *W. Olds, *R. V. Short, *R.
C. Kinney, *j. R. McBride; Clackamas, J. K.
Kelly, A. L. Lovejoy, JW. A. Starkweather, H. Campbell, Nathaniel Robbins;
Washington and Multnomah,
' Thos J.
Dryer; Multnomah, S. J. McCormick, William H. Farrar, '“David Logan;
Washington, *E. D. Shaltuck, *John S. White, 'Levi Anderson; Wasco, C. R.
Meigs; Clatsop, tCyrus Olney; Columbia, John W. Watts; Josephine, S.
Hendershott, *W. H. Watkins; Jackson, li. J. C. Duncan, J. H. Reed, Daniel
Newcomb, §P. P. Prim; Coos, *T G. Lockhart; Curry, William H. Paokwood; Umpqua,
‘Jesse Applegate, *Lovi Scott; Douglas, M. P. Deady, S. F. Chadwick, Solomon
Fitzliugh, Thomas Whitted. Those marked (*) were opposition; +, elected on
opposition ticket, but claiming to be democrats, and understood to approve of
the platform uf the last territorial democratic convention; f, elected on the
democratic ticket, but said to be opposed to the democratic organization; §,
position not known. Lockhart’s election was contested by P. B. Marple, who
obtained his seat in tho convention. "
The
nativity of the members is a-) follows: Applegate, Anderson, Bristow, Coyle,
Fitzhugh, Kelsay, Moores, Shields, 8, Kentucky; ISrattain of Linn, Prim. Shrum,
White, Whitted, 5, Tennessee; Brattain "f Lane, Logan, 2, North Carolina,
Babcock, Dryer, Lewis, Olney, Smith, Williams, Watkins, 7, New York; Boise, Campbell
of Clackamas, Lovejoy, Olds, 4, Massachusetts; Burch, Cox of Lane, McBride,
Watts, 4, Missouri; Cox of Marion, Waymire, 2, Ohio; Crooks, Holt, Marple,
Ne-neomb, Robbins, 5, Virginia; Campbell of Lane, Shannon, 2, Indiana;
Chadwick, Meigs, Starkweather, Nichols, 4, Connecticut; Deady, Miller, 2,
Maryland; Duncan, I, Georgia; Elkins, Kelly, Peebles, Reed, Short, 5,
Pennsylvania; Farrar, L New Hampshire; Grover, 1, Maine; Hendershott, Kinney,
Paokwood, Scott, i, Illinois; Matzger, 1, Germany; McCormick, 1, Ireland;
Sbattuck. 1, Vermont.
John
Baker, sergeant-at arms; another John Baker, door-keeper, the latter defeating
a candidate whoso name wa.i Baker.
in session
four weeks, and frequent references to the all-important topic were made
without disturbing the general harmony of the proceedings. The debates on all
subjects were conducted with fairness and deliberation. In order to avoid
agitation, it was agreed to leave to the vote of the people the question of
negroes, free or enslaved, a special provision being made for the addition of
certain sections, to be inserted or rejected according to the vote upon them.20
The
influence of the republican element on the work of the convention was small,
except as recusants.21 Most of the provisions were wise; most of them
were politic if not all liberal. Its bill of rights, while it gave to white
foreigners who might become residents the same privileges as native-born
citizens, gave the legislature the power to restrain and regulate the
immigration to the state of persons not qualified to become citizens of the
United States; thus reserving to the future state the power, should there not
be a majority in favor of excluding free negroes altogether, of restricting
their numbers. The article on suffrage declared that no negro, Chinaman, nor
mulatto should have the right to vote. Another section, somewhat tinged with
prejudice, declared that no Chinaman who
2(1 The
sections reserved for a separate vote read as follows: ‘Section —. Persons
lawfully held as slaves in _ny state, territory, or district of the United
States, under the laws thereof, may bo brought into this state, and such slaves
and their descendants may be held as slaves within this state, and shall not be
emancipated without the consent of their owners. ’ ‘ Section —. There shall be
neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in this state, otherwise than as a
punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.’
‘Section —. No free negro or mulatto, not residing in this state at the time of
the adoption of this constitution, shall ever come, reside, or be within this
state, or hold any real estate, or make any contract, or maintain any suit
therein; and tht legislative assembly shall provide by penal laws for the
removal by public officers of all such free negroes or mnlattoes, and for their
effectual exclusion from the state, and for the punishment of persons who shall
bring them into the state or employ, or harbor them therein.’ Or. Statesman,
Sept. 29,1857; U. S. House Misc. Doc., 38, vol. i. p. 20-1, 35th cong. 1st
sess.; V. S. Sen. Misc. I>oc., 216, vol. iii., 35th cong. 1st sess.;
Deadi/’s Laws Or., 124—5; Or. Laws, 1S57-8. 11-40.
21 Grover,
Public Life in Or., MS., 70—7, says that among others Jesse Applegate, one of
the most talented men in the country, was snubbed at every turn, until, when
the draft of a constitution which he had prepared at home was peremptorily
rejected, he deliberately took up his hat and walked out of the court-house.
should
immigrate to the state after the adoption of the constitution should ever hold
real estate or a mining claim, or work any mining claim therein, and that the
legislature should enact laws for carrying out this restriction. These
proscriptive clauses, however they may appear in later times, were in accordance
with the popular sentiment on the Pacific coast and throughout a large portion
of the United States; and it may be doubted whether the highest interests of
any nation are not subserved by reserving to itself the right to reject an
admixture with its population of any other people who are distasteful to it.
However that may be, the founders of state government in Oregon were fully
determined to indulge themselves in their prejudices against color, and the
qualities which accompany the black and yellow skinned races.
Another
peculiarity of the proposed constitution
was the
manner in which it defended the state ayainst . 1 a
speculation and extravagance. The same party which
felt no
compunctions at wasting the money of the
federal
government was careful to fix low salaries for
state
offices/2 to prevent banks being established under
a state
charter, to forbid the state to subscribe to any
stock
company or corporation, or to incur a debt in
any manner
to exceed fifty thousand dollars, except in
case of
war or to repel invasion ; or any county to
become
liable for a sum greater than five thousand
dollars.
These
limitations may at a later period have hindered the progress of internal
improvements, but at the time when they were enacted, were in consonance with
the sentiment of the people, who were not by habit of a speculative
disposition, and who were at that moment suffering from the unpaid expenses of
a costly war, as well as from a long neglect of the principal resources of the
country, which was a natural consequence of the war.
22The
salaries of the governor and secretary were §1,500 each; of the treasurer,
$800; of the supreme judges, $2,000. The salaries of other officers of the
court were left to be fixed by law. JDeady's Laws Or120.
A clause
of the constitution affecting the rights of married women, though it may have
had its inception in the desire to place one half of the donation claim of each
land owner beyond the reach of creditors, had all the air of being progressive
in sentiment, and probably aided in the growth of that independence among women
which is characteristic of the country.'23 The boundaries of the
state were fixed as at present, except that they were made to include the Walla
Walla Valley; providing, however, that congress might on the admission make the
northern boundary conform to the act creating Washington Territory, which was
done, to the disappointment of many who coveted that fair portion of the
country. The question of the seat of government was disposed of by declaring that
the legislature should not have power to establish it; but at the first regular
session after the adoption of the constitution the legislative assembly should
enact a law for submitting the matter to the choice of the people at the next
general election; and no tax should be levied or money of the state expended
for the erection of a state house before 1865; nor should the seat of
government when established be removed for the term of twenty years, nor in any
other manner than by the vote of the people; and all state institutions should
be located at the capital.24
23 The clause referred to is this: ‘The
property an<l pecuniary rights of every married woman, at the time of
marriage or afterwards, acquired by gift, devise, or inheritance, shall not be
subject to the debts or contracts of the husband; and laws shall be passed
providing for the registration of the wife’s separate property. ’ This feature
of the constitution made the wife absolute owner of 320 acres or less, as the
case might be, and saved the family of many an improvident man from ruin. The
wife had, besides, under the laws, an equal share with the children in the
husband’s estate. The principal adv ocate of the property rights of married
women was Fred Waymire, the ‘old apostle of democracy," w ho stoutly
maintained that the wife hail earned in Oregon an equal right to property with
her husband. See Or. Statesman, Sept. 22, 1857
24 With regard to the school lands which had
been or should bo granted to the state, excepting the lands granted to aid in
establishing a university, the proceeds, with all the money and clear proceeds
of all property that might accrue to the state by escheat or forfeiture, all
money paid as exemption from military duty, the proceeds of all gifts, devises,
and bequests made by any person to the state for eommon-sehool purposes, the
proceeds of all property granted to the state, the purposes of which grant had
not been stated, all
It was
ordered by the convention that, should the constitution be ratified by the
people, an election should be held on the first Monday in June 1858 for
choosing the first state assembly, a representative in congress, and state and
county officers; and that the legislative assembly should convene at the
capital on the first Monday of July following, and proceed to elect two
senators in congress, making also such further provision as should be necessary
to complete the organization of a state government. Meanwhile, the former order
of things was not to be disturbed until in due course of time and opportunity
the new conditions were established.
The 9th of
November was fixed upon as the day
the
proceeds of the oOO.OOO acres to which the state would be entitled by the
provisions of the act of congress of September 4, 1841, and five per cent of the
net proceeds of the sales of the public lands to which the state would be
entitled- should congress not object to such appropriation of the tw o last-
mentioned grants- -should be set apart, with the interest accruing, as a separate
and irreducible fund, for the support of common schools in each school
district, and the purchase ot suitable libraries and apparatus. ZabrUkie's Land
Lau\ Ci.37-9, 659 -03, GG-t-7. The governor for the first five years was declared
superintendent of public instruction; but after five years the legislature
might provide by law for the election of a state superintendent. The governor,
secretary of state, ami state treasurer were made to constitute a board of
commissioners for the sale of school and university lands, aud for the
investment of the funds arising therefrom, with powers and duties to be
prescribed by law. The university funds with the interest arising from their
investment should remain unexpended for a period of ten years, unless congress
should assent to their being diverted to common-school purposes, as had been
requested. The act of congress admitting Oregon allowed the state to select
lands in place of these Kith and 3Uth sections granted ii previous acts, for
school purposes, but which had in many cases been settled upon previous to the
passage of the act making the grant. It also set apart 72 sections for the use
and support of a state university, to be selected by the governor and approved
l>y the commissioner of the general land office, to be appropriated and
applied as the legislature of the state might prescribe, for that purpose, but
for no other purpose. The act of admission by the grant of twelve salt springs,
with six sections of land adjoining or contiguous to each, furnished another
and important addition to the common-school fund, as under the constitution all
gifts to the state whose purpose was not named were contributions to that
fund. Deady’tt Laws Or., 116-17. Congress did not listen to the prayer of the
legislative assembly to take back the gift of the Oregon City cluim and give
them two townships somewhere else in place of it. Neither could they find any
talent willing to undertake the legal contest with McLoughlin, who held
possession up to the time of his death in September 1857, and his heirs after
him. finally, to be no more troubled with the unlucky donation, the legislative
assembly of 1862 reconveyed it to McLoughlin's heirs, on condition that they
should pay into the university fund the *um of $1,000, and interest thereon at
ten per cent per annum forever.
when the
people should decide at the polls upon the constitution and the questions
accompanying it. The interval was filled with animated discussions upon
slavery, on the rostrum and in the public prints; the pro-slavery papers being
much more bitter against the constitution for not making Oregon a slave state
than the opposition papurs for neglecting to make it a free state. The latter
gave the constitution little . support; because, 10 tbe first place, it was
well understood that the party which formed it was bent on admission, in
order to retain in its own grasp the power which a change of administration
might place in the hands of the free-soil party, under the territorial
organization, as well as because they did not wholly approve the instrument.
There was, as could only be expected, the usual partisan acrimony in tbe arguments
on either side. Fortunately the time was short in which to carry on the
contest. Short as it was, however, it developed more fully a style of political
journalism which was not argument, but invective—a method not complimentary to
the masses to be influenced, and really not furnishing a fair standard by
which to judge the intelligence of the people.
The vote
on the constitution resulted in a majority of 3,980 in favor of ’ts adoption.
There was a majority against slavery of 5,082; and against free negroes of
7,559. The counties which gave the largest vote in favor of slavery were Lane
and Jackson. Douglas gave a majority of 29 for slavery, while only 23 votes
were recorded in the.county for free negroes. Indeed, the result of the
election demonstrated the fact that the southern sentiment concerning the black
race had emigated to Oregon along with her sturdy pioneers. Enslaved, the negro
might be endured; free, they would have none of him. The whole number of votes
polled was only about 10,400; 7,700 voted against slavery; 8,600 against free
negroes; the remaining 1,000 or 1,100 were probably indif
ferent,
but being conscientious republicans, allowed the free negro to come or go like
any other tree man.23
The
adoption of the constitution was a triumph for the regular democratic party,
which expected to control the state. Whether or not congress would admit
Oregon at the first session of 1857-8 was doubtful; another year might pass
before the matter was determined. The affairs of the territory in the mean time
must go on as usual, though they should be shaped as much as possible to meet
the anticipated change.
The
legislative assembly28 met on the 17th of December, and on
notifying the governor, received a message containing a historical review from
the beginning. The governor approved the constitution, and congratulated the
assembly on the flourishing condition of the country.
The legislature
of 1857-8 labored under this disad-
O .
vantage,
not altogether new, of not knowing how to conform its proceedings to the will
of the general government. Although not yet admitted to the union, a
25 Grover's Pub. Life,
MS., 53-5; Or. Laws, 1857-8, p. 41; Or. Statesman, Dec. 22, 1857; Or. Argus,
Dec. 5, 1857.
215 Members
of the council- M. Berry. Jackson and Josephine; Hugh I). O’Bryant, Umpqua,
Coos, Curry, anil Douglas; *A. A. Smith, Lane ami Benton; Charles Drain, Linn;
‘Nathaniel Ford, Polk and Tillamook; *Thomas Scott, Yamhill and Clatsop; Edward
Sheil, Marion; A. E. Wait, Clackamas and Wasco; "Thomas R. Cornelius,
Washington, Multnomah., and Columbia. President of council, H. D. O’Bryant;
clerk, Thomas B. Micou; assistant clerk, William White; enrolling clerk, George
A. Eades; sergeant-at-arms, Robert Shortess; door-keeper, William A. Wright.
Members of
the house of representatives: Oeorge Able, E. C. Cooley, J. Woodsides, Marion;
Anderson Cox, N. 1!. Cranor, II. M. Brown, I Aim; Ira F. M. Butler, Polk;
Benjamin Hayden, Polk anil Tillamook; *Beuben C. Ilill,
' James H.
Slater, lien ton; *A. J. Shuck, *Wiliiam Allen, Yamhill; *H. V. V. Johnson,
Washington; Thomas J. Dryer, Washington and Multnomah; * William M. King,
Multnomah; ’"Joseph .letfries, Clatsop; *F. M. Warren, Columbia; N. 11.
(iates, Wasco; S. P. Gilliland, F. A. Collat'd, George Bees, Clackamas; J. W.
Mack, John Wnitaker, Lane; *James Cole, Umpqua; A.
A. Matthews, Douglas; Kirkpatrick, Coos and
Curry; H. H. Brown, Will iam H. Hughes, Jackson; R. S. Belknap, Jackson and
Josephine; J. G. Spear. Josephine. Speaker ot the house, Ira F. M. Butler;
clerk, Charles
B. Hand; assistant clerk, N. T. Caton;
enrolling clerk, George L. Russell; sergeant-at-arms, J. B. Sykes; door-keeper,
J. Henry Brown. Or. Laws, 1857-8, p. 9- 10. * Opposition.
portion of
the members were in favor of regarding their assembly as a state body, and
framing their acts accordingly. Others thought that endless discussions would
arise as to the authority of the constitution before its approval by congress,
and were for making only such local laws as were required. Great efforts were
made to keep the subject of slavery in the background, lest by the divisions of
the democratic party on that issue, the democratic majority at the first state
election should be lessened or endangered. After some miscellaneous business,
and the election of territorial officers,27 the assembly adjourned
December 19th to meet again on the 5th of January. On the day of the
adjournment the democratic central committee held a meeting to arrange for a
state convention, at which to nominate for the June election in
1858.
At the
election of 1858 there were three parties in the field, Oregon democrats,
national democrats,2S and republicans.29 The national
faction could not get beyond a protest against tyranny. It nominated J. K.
Kelly for representative in congress, and E. M. Barnum for governor.30
The republicans nominated an entire ticket, with John R. McBride for congressman
and John Denny for governor. Feeling that
a7Most of
the old officers were continued; Joseph Sloan was elected superintendent of
the penitentiary. Or. Statrsman, Dec. 22, 1857.
sThe
nationals were the few too independent to submit to leaders instead of the
people. Their principal men were William M. King, Nathaniel Ford, Thomas Scott,
Felix A. Collard, Andrew Shuck, George Rees, James H. Slater. William Allen,
and S. P. Gilliland.
:s The
platform of the republican party distinctly avowed its opposition to slavery,
which it regarded as a merely local institution, one which the founders of the
republic deprecated, and tor the abolition of which they made provisions in the
constitution Lt declared the Kansas troubles to be caused by a departure from
the organic act of 1787, for the government of all the territory then belonging
to the republic, and which had been adhered to until 1854, since which a
democratic administration had endeavored to force upon the people of Kansas a
constitution abhorrent to their feelings, and to sustain in power a usurping
ami tyrannical minority—an outrage not to be borne by a free people. Lt called
the Dred Scott decision a disgrace, and denounced the democratic party
generally. Or. Argus, April 10, 1858.
3uThe
remamder of the ticket was E. A. Ilice for secretary; J. L. Bromley,
treasurer; James O’Meara, state printer.
the youth
and inexperience of their candidate for congress could not hope to win against
the two democratic candidates, the republicans, with the consent of McBride,
voted for Kelly, whom they liked, and whom they hoped not only to elect, but to
bring over to their party.31
Meanwhile,
though Kelly ran well, the thorough organization of the democratic party
secured it the usual victory; Grover was elected state representative to
congress; John Whiteaker, governor; Lucien Heath, secretary; J. D, Boon,
treasurer; AsahelBush, state printer; Deady, Stratton, Boise, and Wait,
judge*of the supreme court; A. C. Gibbs, H. Jackson, 1). W. Douthitt, and B.
Hayden, attorneys for the 1st, 3d, 4th, and 5th districts. The only republican
elected for a state office was Mitchell, candidate for prosecuting attorney in
the 2d district.32 The state
31 The
remainder of the republican ticket was Leander Holmes, secretary; E. L.
Applegate, treasurer; D. W. Craig, state printer; C. Barrett, judge of tiie 1st
district, John Kelsaj of the 2d. J. B. Condon of the 3d, and Amory Holbrook of
the 4th; prosecuting attorneys, in the same order, beginning with the 2d
district, M. W. Mitchell, George L. Woods, W. G. Langford, and Brennan. It was
advocated in secret caucus to send to California for E. D. Baker to conduct the
canvass, and speak against the array of democratic talent. The plan was not
carried out, but home talent was put to use. In this campaign E. L. Applegate,
son of Lindsey and nephew of Jesse Apple ■ gate,
first made known liia oratorical abilities. Ilis uncle nscd to say of him that
he got his education by reading the straj leaves of books torn up and throwr
away ol. the road to Oregon He was however provided with
that general knowledge which in ordinary life passes unchallenged for
education, and which, spread over the surface of a campaign speech, .s often as
effective as greater erudition. Another who began his public speaking -with the
forma tion of the republican party in Oregon was George L. Woods. His
subsequent success in public life is the best evidence of his abilities. He was
cousin to Jolm R. McBride, the candidate for congress. Both were friends and
neighbors of W. L. Adams, and the three, with their immediate circle of
relatives and friends, carried considerable weight into the republican ranks
Woods was born in Boone oo., Mo., July 30, 1832, and came to Oregon with his
father, Caleb Woods, in 1847. The family settled in Yamhill co. In 1853 he married
his cousin Louisa A. McBride; their children being two sons Woods was
self-educated; reading law between the labors of the farm and carpenter’s
bench. His career as a politician will appear in the course of this history.
The office
of state printer, so long held by Bush, was only gained by 40(1 majority- the
lowest of any. It was not Craig, how ever, v, ho divided the \otes with him so
nuccessfullj, but James O’Meara, the candidate of the national democrats, who
came from California to Oregon in 1857. In the spring oi 1858 O’Meara succeeded
Alonzo Leland as editor of the Democratic Standard.
legislature
consisted of twenty-nine democrats and five republicans in the lower house, and
twelve democrats atid four republicans in the senate.33 According to
the constitution, the first state legislature was required to meet on the first
Monday in July 1858, and proceed to elect two senators to congress, and make
such other provision as was necessary to complete the organization of a state
government. In compliance with this requirement, the newly elected legislature
met on the 5th of July, and chose Joseph Lane and De- lazon Smith United States
senators.34 On the 8th the inauguration of Governor Whiteaker took
place, Judge Boise administering the oath.35 Little business was
transacted of a legislative nature. A tax of two
33Senate:
Marion county, J. W. Grim, E. F. Colby; Yamhill, J. T.am- son; Clackamas and
Wasco, J. S. Ruckle; Polk, F. Wayniire; Lini., Luther Elkins, Charles Diain;
Lane, W. W. Bristow, A. B. Florence; Umpqua, Coos, and Curry, 1). H. Wells;
Jackson, A. M. Berry: Josephine, S. R. Scott; Washington, Columbia, Clatsop,
and Tillamook, *T. R. Cornelius; Multnomah, V. A. Williams; Benton, John S.
Mclteeney; Douglas, *J. F. Gazley. House: Clatsop ami Tillamook, R. W.
Morrison; Columbia and Washington, Nelson Hoyt; Multuomah, A. D. Shelby, *T. J.
Dryer; Clackamas, A. F. Hedges, B. Jennings, D. B. Hannah; Wasco, Victor
Trevitt; Polk, B. F. Burch, J. K. Wait; Marion, B. F. Harding, B. F. Bonham, J.
II. Stevens, J. II. Lassater; Linn, N. H. Cranor, E. E. Mclnmch, T. T. Thomas,
John T. Crooks; Lane, R. B. Cochran, A. S. Patterson, A. J. Cru- zan; Umpqua,
J. M. Cozad; Douglas, Thomas Norris, *A. J. McGee; Coos and Curry, William
T'ichenor; Jackson, Daniel Newcomb, W. G. T’Vault, *J. W. Cully; Josephine, D.
H. Holton; Washington, Wilson Bowlby; Yamhill, *A. Shuck, J. C. Nelson
(resigned); Benton, J. H. Slater, H. B. Nichols. Luther Elkins was chosen
president of the senate and W. G. T’Vault speaker of the house. * Republicans.
,4Lane wrote
from Washington, May 18, 1858, soliciting the nomination, and promising to do
much if elected; declaring, however, that he did not wish a .seat in the senate
at the expense of harmony in the democratic party, lie added a postscript to
clinch the nail. ‘Dear Bush -The bill for the admission of Oregon has this
moment passed the senate, 35 to 17. All right in the house. Your friend, Lane.’
Or. Statesman, .June 29, 1858. Notwith standing the promises contained in this
letter, and the bait held out by addendum, Lane made no effort to get the bill
through the house at that session He wished to secure the senatoryhip, but he
was not anxious to have Oregon admitted until the time was ripe for the
furtherance of a scheme of the democratic partj, into which the democrats of
Oregon were not yet admitted.
SiJohn
Whiteaker was born in Dearborn co., Ind., m 1820. He earin’ to the Pacific
coast in 1849, and to Oregon in 1852. San Josi Pioneer, Dec. 21, 1878. His
early life vas spent on a farm in his native state. At the age of 25 he married
Miss N. J. Hargrove, of 111., and on the discovery of gold in Cal. came hither,
returning to 111. in 1851 and bringing his family to Oregon. He settled in Lane
county in 1852, where he was elected county judge. He was a member of the
legislature of 1S57. Representative Men of Oregon, 178.
mills on a
dollar was levied to defray current expenses; and an act passed to regulate the
practice of the courts; and an act appointing times for holding courts for the year
1858.SB These laws were not to take effect until tho state was
admitted into the Union.
Four weeks
of suspense passed by, and it became certain that Oregon had not been admitted.
The war debt had made no advancement toward being paid. The records of congress
showed no effort on the part of Lane to urge either of these measures, neither
did he offer any explanation; and it began to be said that he was purposely
delaying the admission of Oregon until the next session in order to draw
mileage as both delegate and senator. It was also predicted that there would be
difficulty in procuring the admission at the next session, as congress would
then be disposed to insist on the rule recently established requiring a
population of 93,000 to give the state a representative; but it was hinted that
if the senators and representative elect should be on the ground at the
convening of congress, there would still be hope.
SB This was
m reference to a law of congress passed in Aug 1836, that the judges of the
supreme court in each of the territories should fix the time and places of
holding courts in their respective districts, aud the duration thereof;
providing, also, that the courts should not hr held in more than three places
in any one territory, and that they should adjourn whenever in the opinion of
the judges their further continuance was unnecessary. This was repaying Oregon
for her course toward the federal judges, and was held to work a hardship in
several ways. Lane was censured for allowing thu act to pass without a
challenge. However, to adjust matters to the new rule, the legislature of 1S56-
7 passed an act rearranging the practice of the courts, and a plaintiff might
bring an action in any court most convenient; witnesses not to be summoned to
the district courts except in admiralty, divorce, and chancery, or special
casua arising under laws of the U. S.; but the district courts should have
cognizance of offences against the lawn of the territory in bailable cases; and
ahould constitute courts of appeal—the operation of the law being to place the
principal judicial business of the territory in the county courts. Or. Laws,
1856-7, p. 17-23. Another act was passed requiting a single term of the supreme
court to be held at Salem on the 6th <>f Aug., 1837, and on the first
Monday in Aug. annually thereafter; and repealing all fnrmer acts appointing
terms of the supreme court. The object of thi.4 act was to put off the meeting
of the judges at the eapifal until atter the admission of Oregon, thus
rendering inoperative the law of congress- as Smith explained to the
legislature at the tim- of its passage. But i. tappened that Oregon was not
admitted in 1857, which failure left the U. S. court* in suspense as to how to
proceed; hence tho action of this legislature.
Hisi Ob , Vol. II. '28
Acting
upon this suggestion, Grover and Smith set out for the national capital about
the last of September, to hasten, if possible, the desired event.37
At this trying juncture of affairs, Lane gave ad\ice, which the Statesman had the
good sense to discountenance, that the state, having been organized, should go
on as a state, without waiting for the authority of congress. He was afterward
accused of having done this with a sinister motive, to bring Oregon into the
position of a state out of the union.
It was
determined not to hold the September term of the state legislature, which might
bring nothing but debt. A few of the members went to Salem at the time
appointed, but they adjourned after an informal meeting. It now became certain
that there must be a session of the territorial assembly at the usual time in
December and January, as the territorial government must go on during the
suspension of the state government. Accordingly, on the 6th of December, the
members of the territorial legislature, who had been elected at the same time
with the state legislature to provide against the present contingency,
assembled at Salem and proceeded to the usual business.38
v Grover's
Pub. Life, MS., 71
“8
Council: Jackson and Josephine, A. M. Berry Umprpu Coos, Curry, and Douglas,
Hugh D. O'Bryant; Lane and Benton, James W. Mack; Linn, Charles Drain; B ilk
and Tillamook, *N. Ford; Yamhill and Clatsop, George H. Steward; Marion, Samuel
Barker; Clackamas and Wasco, A. E Wait; Washington, Multomtih, and Columbia. lThosR.
Cornelius, House- Marion, B. F. Bonham, J II. Stevens, J. H. Lassater; Linn H.
Cranor, E. E. Mclninch, John T. Crooks; Polk, Isaac Smith; Folk and Tillamook,
II. N. V. Holmes; Benton, *Jame« H. Slater, *11. B. Nichols; Yamhill, A. Zieber,
J. H. Smith; Washington, *Wil«on Bowlbj; Washington and Multnomah, *E. D.
Shattuck; Multnomah, *T. J. Dryer; Clatsop, ‘W. W Parker; Columbia, W. K.
Strong; Wasco, N P. Gates; Clai:kdma«, A. F. Hedges, D. B. Hannah, B, Jennings;
Lane, W. W. Chapman, W. S. Jones; Umpqua, ‘James Cole; Douglas, A. E. McGee;
Coos and Curry, Willian Ticbenor; Jackson, W. G. T’Vault, S. Watson; Jackson
and Josephine, D. Newcomb; Josephine, D. S. Holton Officers of council: Charles
Dram, president; N. Hnber, clerk; W. L. White, assistant clerk; II H Howard,
enrolling clerk
D. S. Herren, sergeant at-arms; Janies L.
Steward, door-keeper. Officers of the house of representatives: In H. Gates,
speaker; James M. Pyle, clerk; H. W. Allen, assistant clerk; J. D. Porter,
enrolling clerki E. C. MeClane, sergeant-at-arms; Joseph H. Brown, door-keeper.
Or. Lanes, 1858-9, 7-0.
* Republican.
Governor
Curry's message indicated the Lane influence. It contained some remarks on
what the Statesman called the anomaly of a territorial government, and urged
that the territorial system was unconstitutional, wrong in principle, and not
in harmony with the spirit of American institutions. He declared there was no
provision of the constitution which conferred the right to acquire territory,
to be retained as territory and governed by congress with absolute authority;
nor could the people of the United States who chose to go out and reside upon
the vacant ter- tory of the nation, be made to yield a ready obedience to
whatever laws congress might deem best for their government, or to pay implicit
deference to the authority of such officers as were sent out to rule over
them. No such power, according to Governor Curry’s view, had ever been
delegated to the government by the sovereign people of the sovereign states,
who alone could confer it; and the only authority of congress over the
territories was that derived from a clause in the constitution intended simply
to transfer to the new government the property held in common by the original
thirteen states, together with the power to apply it to objects mutually agreed
upon by the states before their league was dissolved. The power of enlarging
the limits of the U uited States was by admitting new states, and by that
means only. It was contended that California, which had no territorial
existence, came into the union more legitimately than Oregon would do, because
Oregon had submitted itself to the authority of the general government. This
and more was declared, in a clear and argumentative style, very attractive if
not convincing. The Statesman recommended it to the perusal of its readers, at
the same time declining to discuss the question. This was only another
indication of the tendencies of the democratic party in Oregon, as elsewhere.
Curry’s whole argument was an attack on the validity of the ordinance of 1787,
to which the
founders
of the provisional government had tenaciously- clung, and a contradiction of
the spirit of all the petitions and memorials of their legislatures from the
beginning to the then present time. He lost sight of the fact that the states
were not such in the old- world sense of the term, but parts of a compound
state or national confederacy; and as such subject to some general regulations
which they were bound to obey. The doctrine that a body of the people could go
out and seize upon any portion of the territory belonging to the whole union,
and establish such a government as pleased them without the consent of the
nation, was not in accordance with any known system of national polity. The
object of introducing this subject in an executive message under the existing
peculiar political condition of Oregon, and at a time when his connection with
territorial affairs was merely ncidental, must ever remain open to suspicion.
It was fortunate, with leading officials capable of such reasoning, that the
people had already voted upon and decided for themselves the question which lay
at the bottom of the matter, not upon constitutional grounds, but upon the
ground of expediency.
Little was
done at this session of the legislative assembly beyond amending a few previous
acts, and passing a number of special laws incorporating mining improvements in
the southern counties, and other companies for various purposes in all parts of
Oregon. Less than the usual number of memorials were addressed to congress. An
appropriation of $30,000 was asked to build a military road from some point of
intersection on the Scottsburg road, to Fort Boisd; it being represented that
such a highway would be of great value in moving troops between forts I 'mpqua
and Boise, and of great importance to the whole southern and western portion of
Oregon. A tri-weekly mail, by stages between Portland and Yreka, was petitioned
fur;39
and the Oregon delegate was instructed to ask for land offices to be opened at
Jacksonville and The Dalles, for the survey of a portion of eastern Oregon, and
for the establishment of an Indian agency and
S9 The
Pacific Mail Steamship Company procured the removal of the distributing office
for Oregon from Astoria to San Francisco about 1853, as I have before
mentioned, causing confusion and delay in the receipt of mails, the clerks in
San Francisco being ignorant of the geography of Oregon, and the system being
obnoxious for other reasons. A mail arrived after the ordinary delay at Oregon
City, Dec. illat, and lay there until Jan. 1st, with no one. to attend to
forwarding the mail-bag8 to their proper destinations up the valley. Such was
the state of things in 18JO. The legislature petitioned and remonstrated. In
1857, when Lane was in Oregon and was re-elected to congress, he gave as a
reason for not having secured a better mail service that the republicans had a
tnajoritj in congress, when this same republican congress had appropriated §500,000
for an overland mail to California, which was intended to operate as an opening
wedge to the Pacific railroad; but the democrats, by way of favoring the south,
succeeded in establishing the overland mail route by the way of El Paso in M
exico. A contract was concluded about the same time with the P. M. S. S. Co.
for carrying mails between Panamd and Astoria, for $248,250 per annum, and tho
service by sea was somewhat improved, although still very imperfect. In the
mean time the overland mail to California was established, the first coach
leaving St Louis Feb. 16, 1S58. It was some months before it was established,
the second arriving at San Francisco in October, and the first from San
Francisco arriving at Jefferson, Missouri, Oct. 9th, v.ith six passengers, in
23 days 4 hours. This was quicker time than the steamers made, and being more
frequently repeated was a great gain in communication with the east for
California, and indirectly benefited Oregon, though Oregon could still only get
letters tw ice a month.
Before
1857 there was no line of passenger coacbes anywhere in Oregon. One Concord
coach owned by Charles llae was the only stage in the Willamette from IS53 to
1855. A stage line from Portland to Salem was put on tho road in 1857, making
the journey, 50 miles, in oru day. In 1359, a mail and passenger coach ran once
a week from Salem to Eugene, and from Eugene to Jacksonville Weekly and
semi-weekly mails had been carried to the towns on tho west side of the valley,
Hillsboro, Lafayette, Dallas, and Corvallis; but the post-office department in
I860 ordered this service to be reduced to a bi-monthly one, and that the mail
should be carried but once a week to Jacksonville and the towns On the way. ‘If
Lane keeps on helping us,’ said the Argus, ‘we shall soon have a monthly mail
carried on foot or in a canoe.’
On the other hand, the people were clamoring for a daily m,iil from Portland to
Jacksonville, with little p’-ospect of gutting it until the California Stage
Company interposed with a proposition to the postal department to carry the
mail uaily overland to Oregon. This company, formed in 1S5.'> by the
consolidation of the various stage tines in California, had a capital stock of
H,000,000 to begin with, including 750 horses and covering 450 miles of road.
James Birch, president, was the first advocato in Washington of the overland
mail to the east, and by his persistence it was secured. In 1859-00 the
vice-president, F. L. Stevens, urged upon the department the importance of a
daily mail line overland from S. I', to Portland, and succeeded in gaining his
point and the contract. In June 1S60 the California company placed its stock on
the road as far north as Oakland, connecting there with Chase’s line to
Corvallis, which again connected with the Oregon Stage Company’s line to
Portland, making a through line to Sacramento in October. It required a
considerable outlay to put the road in repair for making regular time, and at
the best, winter travel was often interrupted or delayed. Then came the great
flood of 1861-2, which carried away almost all the bridges on
military
post in tho Klamath Lake country.40 On the 22d of January the
legislative assembly adjourned without having learned whether its acts were
invalid, or the state still out of the union; but not without having elected
the usual list of territorial officers.41
the line,
and damaged the road to such an extent that for months no maila were carried ov
er it. But nothing long interrupted the enterprises of the company. In due
course travel was resumed, and in 1865 their coaches ran 100 miles into Oregon.
This year the company demanded $50,OIK) additional for this service, which was
refused, and in 1866 they sold their line to Frank Stevens »nd Louis Mi Lane,
who soon re-sold it to H. W. Corbett, K, Corbett, William Hall, A. O. Thomas,
anil Jesse D. Carr, and it was operated until 1869 under the name of H. W.
Corbett & Co. Carr then purchased the stock, and carried the mail until
1870, when the Cal and Or. Coast Overland Mail co. obtained the contract, and
bought Carr’s stock. They were running in 1S81, since which period the railroad
to Oregon has been completed, and carries the mail.
The first
daily overland mail from St Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento arrived at that
place July 18, 1861 in 17 days 4 hours, having lost but 10 hours running time.
One passenger, Thomas Miller, came directly through to Oregon—the longest trip
by coach ever made- In consequunce of tho civil war, the southern route was
abandoned, and the central route by Salt Lake established, the precursor of
the railroad. Indians and highwaymen caused its discontinuance in 1862, and the
government accepted the services of a regiment of infantry and 5 companies of
cavalry to protect it between Salt Lake and California, while the 0th Ohio
cavalry kept watch on the plains east of Salt Luke.
Contemporary
with the daily overland mail was the Pony Express, a device for shortening the
time of important mail matter, ff. H. llussell of Missouri was the founder, and
ran his ponies from the Missouri to Salt Lake, connecting with the ponies of
the overland mail from there westward. I'lie time made was an average of 8
days, or half the timeof the coachcs. Iu Nov.
1861, the telegraph line from the Missouri to the bay
of San Francisco w as completed, though the pony express continued for some
time afterward. By the aid of telegraph and daily mail, Oregon obtained New
York news iu 4 days, until irx 1864 a telegraph line from Portland to
Sacramento had finally done away with space, and the long year of waiting known
to the pioneers was reduced to a few hours.
40 There was
a clause in the constitution which prohibited the legislature from granting
divorces, which prohibition ou becoming known stimulated in a remarkable manner
the desire for freedom from marital bondage. Thirty- one divorces were granted
at this session of the territorial legislature, which would be void should it
be found that congress had admitted Oregon. Fortunately for the liberated
applicants, the admission was delayed long enough to legalize these enactments.
It was said that as many more application* were received. The churches were
shocked. The methodist conference declared that marriage could be dissolved
only by a violation of the seventh commandment. The congregationalists drew'
the lines still closer, and included the slavery question. Or. Argus, July 28,
1860; Or. Statesman, Sept. 20, 185&
410. Newcomb
was chosen brigadier-general; George H. Steward quartermaster-general; A. L.
Lovejoy commissary-general; I). S. Holton surgeon- general; J. D. Boon
treasurer; B. F. Bonham auditor and librarian. The expense of the territorial
government for 1858 was 818,031.70. To paj the expenses of the constitutional
convention a tax of 1J mills was levied oa all taxaule property. Or. Laws,
1858-9, 40.
Before the
adjournment, letters began to arrive from Grover and Smith relative to the
prospects of Oregon for admission. They wrote that republicans in congress
opposed the measure because the constitution debarred free negroes from emigrating
thither, as well as because the population was insufficient, and that an
enabling act had not been passed. These objections had indeed been raised; but
the real ground of republican opposition was the fact that congress had refused
to admit Kansas with a population less than enough to entitle her to a
representative in the lower house, unless she would consent to come in as a
slave state; and now it was proposed to admit Oregon with not more than half
the required population,42 and excluding slavery. The distinction
was invidious. The democrats in congress desired the admission because it
would, on the eve of a presidential election, give them two senators and one
representative. For the same reason the republicans could not be expected to
desire it. Why Lane did not labor for it was a question which puzzled his
constituents; but it was evident that he was playing fast and loose with his
party in Oregon, whom he had used for his own aggrandizement, and whojai now
he did not admit to his confidence. The hue and cry of politicians now began
to assail him. The idol of Oregon democracy was clay !43
“ In 1856,
when the subject was before congress, Lane said he believed the territory could
poll 15,000 or 20,000 votes. It had been stated in the house, by the chairman
of the committee on territories, on tho 31st of Jan. 1857, that Oregon had a
population of about 90,000. Cong. Globe, xxxiv. 520. But the Kansas affair had
made members critical, and it was well known besides tha t this was double the
real number of w hite inhabitants. Gi'frey's Or., MS., 17— IS; Deady's Mat.
Or., MS., 39. The j><-pulation of Oregon in 185S according to the
territorial census was 12,677. Th< U. S. census in 1860 made it 52.410.
43 In the
ten years since the territory had first sent a delegate to congress, and during
which at every session its legislature had freely made demands which had been
frequently responded to, the interest of congress in the Oregon territory had
declined. Then came the allegations made by the highest military authority on
the Pacific coast that the people of Oregon were an organized armjr
of Indian-murderers and government robbers, in support of which assertion was
the enormous account against the nation, of nearly six million dollars, the
payment of which was opposed by almost the entire press of the union. It is
doubtful if anj man could have successfully contended against
At last,
amidst the multitude of oppugnant issues end factions, of the contending claims
to life and liberty of men—white, red, copper-colored, and black —of the
schemings of parties, and the fierce quarrels of politicians, democrats,
national and sectional, whig?, know-nothings, and republicans, Oregon is
enthroned a sovereign state!
While all
this agitation was going on over the nonadmission of Oregon, toward the close
of March news came that the house had passed the senate bill without any of the
amendments with which the friends of Kansas had encumbered it, few republicans
voting for it, and the majority being but eleven.41 Thus Oregon,
which had ever been the bantling of the democratic party, was seemingly brought
into the union by it, as according to fitness it should have been; although
without the help of certain republicans, who did not wish to punish the waiting
state for the principles of a party, it would have remained out indefinitely.45
The admission took place on Saturday, Feb-
the
suspicion thus created, that the demands of Oregon were in other instances
unnecessary and unjust, But Lane thought that Oregon’s necessity was hia
opportunity, and that by promising the accomplishment of a doubtful matter he
should secure at least his personal ends. Nor ■was he
alone in this determination, Stephens of Georgia, a personal friend of Lane,
who was ehaii man of the committee. (in territories, was generally believed to
be withholding the report on the bill for the admission of Oregon, in obedience
to instructions from Lane, Smith and Grover also appeared to be won over, and
were found defending the course of the delegate. These dissensions in the party
were premonitory of the disruption which was to follow.
41Cong.
Globe, 1858-9, pt i. Kill, 35th cong. 2d sess.; Id., pt ii. ap. 330; S. F.
Bulletin, March 10, 1859; Deady’s Laws Or., 101-4; Poore’s Charters and
Constitutions of U. S., pt ii., 1485-91, 1507-8; Or. Laws, 18G0, 28-30; U. S.
Pub. Laws, 333- i, 35th cong. 2d sess.
4i5 Schuyler
Colfax, in a letter to W. C. Johnson of Oregon City, made this explanation:
‘The president in his message demanded that the offensive restriction against
Kansas should be maintained, prohibiting her admission till she had 93,000
inhabitants, because she rejected a slave constitution, while Oregon, with her
Leeompton delegation, should be admitted forthwith. And the chief of your
delegation, Gen. Lane, was one of the men who had used all his personal
iniuenee in favor of that political iniquity, the Leeompton constitution, and
its equally worthy .snccessor, the English bill. He, of course, refused now to
say whether he would vote ir the U. S. senate, if admitted there, to repeal the
English prohibition v. hich he had so earnestly labored to impose on Kansas;
and its political friends in the house refused also to assent to its repeal in
anj manner or form whatever. This, of course, impelled many republicans to
insist that Oregon, with her Leeompton delegation, should wait for admission
till Kansas, with her republican delegation, was ready to
ruary 12,
1859, the bill was approved by the president on Monday, the 14th, on which day
Lane and Smith presented their credentials to the senate, and were sworn in. On
drawing for their terms, Lane with his usual good luck drew the term ending in
1861, while Smith’s would expire the following month. On the 15th Grover took
his seat in the house, to which he would be ent itled only until the 3d of
March.
The
satisfaction which the friends of state government expected to derive from
admission to the union was much dulled by delay and the circumstances attending
it. Party leaders had taught the people to believe that when Oregon became a
state the war debt would be paid.4'5 The same leaders now
declared that after all they had gained little or nothing by it, and were
forced to solace themselves with pleasant messages from the western states,
from which had gone forth the annual trains of men and means by which Oregon
had been erected into an independent commonwealth.4'’ She had at all
events come into the union respectably, and had no enemies either north or
south.
come in
with her. With a less obnoxious delegation from Oregon, tne votes nf many
republicans would have been different. As it turned out, however, the very men
for -w hose interests Gen. Lane had labored so earnestly—I mean the
ultra-southern leaders—refused to vote for the admission bill, although they had
the v, hole delegation elect of their own kidney. And it would hare been
defeated but for the votes of fifteen of us republicans who thought it better
to disinthrall Oregon from presidential sovereignty, and from the pphere of
I)red Scott decisions; and even in spite of your obnoxious delegation, to admit
the new state into the union, rather than remand it to the condition of a
slave-liolding territory, as our supreme court declares all our territories to
be. Hence, if there is any question raised about which party admitted Oregon,
you can truthfully say that she would not have been admitted but for republican
aid and support; republicans, too, who voted for it not through the influence
of Gen, Lane and Co., but in spite of the disfavor with which they iegarded
them.’ Or. Argus, May 28, 1859; See U. S. H. Rejjt, 123, vol. i., 45th cong. 2d
sess.
‘6See
comments of Boston Journal, in 0). Argus, Sept. 24, 1859.
<7Kansas
City, "Missouri, on the 4th of July, 1859, attached the new star
representing Oregon to its flag amidst a display of enthusiasm aud self aggrandizement.
POLITICS
AND PATRIOTISM.
1859-lsGl.
Appointment
of Ofiicee* of the United States Court—Extra Session OF THE LEGISLATURE—ACTS
AND REPORTS—STATE SKAL—DeLA-
zon Smith—Republican
Convention—Nominations and Elections —Rupture in tiil Democratic Party—Sheil
Elected to Congress —Scheme of a I’acific Republic—Legislative Session of I860—
Nesmith and Baker Elected U. S. Senators—Influence of Southern
Secession—Thayer Elected to Congress- Lane’s Disloyalty —Governor
Whiteaker—Stark, U. S. Senator—Oregon in the War—Nfw
Officials,
The act of congress extending the laws and
judicial system of the United States over Oregon, which passed March 3, 1859,1
provided for one United States judge, at a salary of twenty-five hundred
dollars per annum, Matthew P. Deady being chosen to fill this office.^ Late in
1858 Williams had been appointed chief justice of the territory, with Boisd
associate justice, and \\ alter Forward3 of Marion county United
States marshal, McCracken having resigned. On the 20th of May the judges elect
of the supreme and circuit courts
1 U. 3. Pub. Laws, 437, ftjtb, cong. 2d
sess.
“Grover
says that Hendricks of Indiana, who wa* then commissioner o( the general land
office, and was afterward U. S, senator for G years, and a candidate for the
vice-presidency, -was among the applicants for the place, and personally his
preference, but that the Oregon people were opposed to imported officers, anil
hence he recommended Deady. Pub. Life in Or., MS., 57. It was said at the time
that Lane made the recommendation to keep Deady out of his way in future
elections. However that might l>e, the appointment was satisfactory, and
Judge Deady has done much to support the dignity of the state, and to promote
the growth of moral anil social institutions.
3 He was a nephew of Walter Forward of
Penn, and of Jeremiah Clack U. S. atty-gen. Amer. Almanac, 1857-9; Or.
Statesman, Dec. 21, lhOS.
(4iaj
mot at
Salem to draw lots for their terms of office, Boise and Stratton getting the
six years and Wait the four years term, which made him, as holder of the
shorter term, by the provisions of the constitution, chief justice. The
vacancy created by Deady’s appointment was filled by P. P. Prim of Jackson
county.4 Andrew J Thayer was appointed United States district
attorney in place of W. H. Farrar, and Forward continued in the office of
marshal until September, when Dolph B. Hannah was appointed in his place.
Joseph G. Wilson received the position of clerk of the supreme court,5
and J. K. Kelly was made attorney for the United States.
The
supreme jadges not being able to determine whether their decisions would be
valid under the act passed by the state legislature before the admission of
Oregon, Governor Whiteaker convened the legisla ture on the 16th of May, which
proceeded to complete the state organization and regulate its judiciary. Among
the acts passed was one accepting certain propositions made by congress in the
bill of admission. By this bill, in addition to the munificent dowry of lands
for school and university purposes, the state received ten entire sections of
land to aid in completing the public buildings, all the salt springs in the
state, not exceeding twelve in number, with six sections of land adjoining each,
with five per cent of the net proceeds of the sales of all public lands lying
within the state to be applied to internal improvements; in return for which
the state agreed that nonresidents should not be taxed higher than residents,
and the property of the United States not at all; nor should the state in any
way interfere with the primary disposal of the soil by the United States, or
with any regulations which congress might find necessary for
4Prim's
Judicial Affairs, MS., 11; Ashland Tidings, June 7, 1878. The district court
held its sessions in the niethoJist church in Jacksonville. Or. Argus, Nov. 22.
1856; Overland Monthly, xiv. 377-81.
4 Or. Reports, ii. b-9.
Deady made him special U. S. attorney in tho spring of 18U0.
securing
title in the soil to bona fide purchasers.6 A few acts, general and
special, were passed/ among others, one providing for the seal of the state of
Oregon,8 and one for a special election to be held on the 27th of
June for the choice of a representative to congress, after which the
legislature adjourned.
One thing
they had failed to do, its omission being significant—they had not elected
Delazon Smith to return to the United States senate. Rather than do that, they
preferred to leave his place vacant, which they did, Smith having shown himself
while in Washington not only an adherent of Lane, dethroned, but a man
altogether of whom even his party was ashamed.3
Of their
representative Grover, there was much to be said in his praise. His speeches
were impressive, full of condensed facts, and he conducted himself in such a
way generally as to command respect. It was said that there was more culture
and ability in the one representative than in the two senators. But it was not
upon fitness, but party requirements, that he had been elected; and before he
had returned to offer himself for reelection, new issues had arisen, and
another man had been nominated in his place. Thus both of the men, prime
favorites of the democratic party in Oregon, returned to the new state after
less than one month of congressional honors, to find that their gains were only
pecuniary.1"
&Gcn. Laws
Or., 1859, 29-30.
7 An act providing for the election of
presidential electors, and to prescribe their duties. An act providing for the
registration of the property of married women, according to the constitution.
An act providing for the leasing of the penitentiary. An act raising the state
tax to two mills on a dollar, etc.
8 ‘The description of the seal of the
state of Oregon shall be an escutcheon supported by thirty-three stars divided
by an ordinary, with the inscription “The Union.” ’ In chief—mountains, an elk
with branching antlers, a wagon, the Pacific ocean, on which is a British
man-of-war dej>arting and an American steamer arriving. The second quartering
with a sheaf, plough and pick-axe. Crest, the American eagle. Legend, State of
Oregon. Deady’s Laws Or., 496-7.
9 They used to call him Delusion Smith.
10 The men put in nomination at the
democratic convention in April were W. W. Chapman, George L. Curry, George H.
Williams, L. F. Grover, and Lansing Stout. The contest was between Stout and
Grover, and Stout received 7 more votes in convention than Grover. Lansing
Stout, lawyer,
On the
21st of April the republicans met in convention and brought out their
platform; which was, m brief, devotion to the union, and the right of independent
action in the states, subject only to the constitution of the United States;
declaring the wisdom of the constitution in relation to slavery, yet opposed to
its extension; recognizing the fact that the constitution vested the
sovereignty of the territories in congress, yet not forgetting that congress
might delegate the exercise of that sovereignty partly or wholly to the people
of the territories, and favoring such delegation so far as consistent with free
labor and good government. It declared the intervention of congress for the
protection of slavery in the territories, demanded by leading democrats, a
gross infraction of popular and national rights, which should be resisted by
free men. It was opposed to placing large sums of money in the hands of the
executive with authority to purchase territory as he chose without the
consideration of congress; and while welcoming those of tho white race who came
to the United States to enjoy the blessings of free institutions, held that the
safety of those institutions depended upon the enforcement of the
naturalization laws of the country. These were the real points at issue. But in
order to add strength to the platform, it was resolved by the convention that
the interests of Oregon, as well as the whole union, demanded the passage of
the homestead bill,*1 and the speedy construction of the Pacific
railroad. Internal improvements of a national character, a taritf sufficient to
meet the current expenses of the government which should discriminate in
favor of home industry, a free gift of a
was .
native of N. Y., came to Cal. in 1852, ami waselected to the legislature in
1855. He afterward removed to Portland ami was elected county judge. He had
ability, particularly in the direction of polities. He died in 1871 at the age
of 43 y< ars. Walla Walla Statesman, March 11, 1S71; Olympia Wash. Standard,
March 11, 1871.
11 This had been before congress at the last
session, Lane voting against it. This fait was used by tne republicans against
him; and it is difficult to understand his motive, unless it was simply to
oppose northern senators.
borne to
him who would cultivate and defend it, were announced as the measures which the
republican party pledged itself to support. Lastly, congress was earnestly
invoked to pay the war debt of Oregon, not, holding responsible the people for
any errors or misconduct of officers or individuals, whether truly or falsely
alleged.
On
proceeding to ballot for congressmen, the names of David Logan, B. J. Pengra,
and W. L. Adams were presented, Logan receiving a majority of thirteen over
Pengra. Delegates were chosen to attend the national republican convention of
1800, who were instructed to vote for W. H. Seward for presidential candidate;
but in case this were not expedient, to use their discretion in selecting
another,13
The
republican party of Oregon was now fairly launched on the unknown sea of coming
events. Logan was admitted by his opponents to be the strongest man of his
party, one possessed of positive qualities, and an eloquent and satirical
orator. He had, however, certain moral defects which dimmed the lustre of his
mental gifts, and always stood in the way of his highest success. How near he
came to a victory, which would have been unprecedented, Stout’s majority of
only sixteen votes pointedly illustrates.13
Anything
so near a republican triumph had not been anticipated, and both parties were
equally astonished.14
The
delegates w ere W. Warren, Leander Holmes, and A. G. Horey.
“Stout’s
election was questioned on account of Bome irregularity, hut Logan failed to
unseat him.
“The
county of Marion, hitherto solidly democratic., gave Logan nearly 8<X>
majority. Linn, the home of Delazon Smith, gave Stout hut 10O majority; Po!k,
the home of Nesmith, gave 30 majority for Stout: T.ane gave a majority of 20
for Logan. Multnomah, Clatsop, Washington, Yamhili, and Tillamook, all went for
Logan. The southern counties generally u ent for Stout, mid saved the
democratic party in the Willamette Valley from defeat; for al though they
contained some of the strongest opponents of the democracy, the maiouty were
intensely devoted to I ane, and they had not had the lighton ms recent course
in congress w hi ;h had been given by the Statesman to the north ern counties.
And now
Joseph Lane aspired to the presidency of the United States. Pending the meeting
of a democratic convention in November, which was to elect delegates to the
national convention at Charleston, Grover and Curry made speeches throughout
the state, the object of which was to obtain the nomination to the vacant
senatorship; but dissensions in the party had gone too far to afford a hope of
either being chosen by the next legislature. The mutual abuse heaped upon each
other by the partisans of the two factions only contributed to widen the breach
and complete the disruption of the party. The tyrannical and proscriptive
course of the old Lane-Kush democracy was now practised by the Lane-Stout democracy.
In 1858 the Statesman had upheld the measure of making Lane’s majority the
basis of apportionment in. the several counties. In 1859 the central
committee, following this example, declared that Stout’s majority should be the
basis of apportionment for delegates to the November convention, A general
protest followed, the counties sending as many delegates as they thought fit.
Only four were admitted from Marion, which sent ten, and eight counties
withdrew,13 resolving not to elect delegates to the Charleston
convention, but simply to pledge themselves to support the national nominee.
Upon the
withdrawal of this body of delegates, the delegates of the eleven remaining
counties made known their instructions concerning the presidental candidate,
when it was found that Josephine county had named Stephen A. Douglas, and
Yamhill Daniel S. Dickinson. Other counties refused to nominate Lane. In this
embarrassing position those who had so determined, guided by L. F. Mosher,
Lane’s son-in-law, cut the gordian knot by moving to appoint a committee to
report delegates to the national convention with instructions, which was done.
The report of the committee named Joseph Lane, Lansing Stout,
15 Marion, Polk, Wasco, Clatsop,
Washinjrton, Umpqua, Coos, and Curry.
and
Matthew P. Deady delegates, with John K. Lam eriok, John F. Miller, and John
Adair as alternates; with instructions to use all theii influence to procure
the nomination in the Charleston convention of Joseph Lane for the presidency.
Blinded by partisan zeal and the dangerous flattery of southern men and women,
Lane had staked all on this desperate hazard;
while the
unwise action of his friends in allowing eight ♦ i » » counties
to be driven out of the Eugene convention
apparently
deprived him of any reasonable expectation of carrying his own state should he
receive such nomination.10
Under the
state constitution the legislature and state officers were to be elected
biennially on the first Monday in June. The first election having been held in
1858, there could be no other before June 18GO; therefore, after the democratic
convention of November, the people might have enjoyed exemption from the noise
of politics had it not been that a cloud of party journals had fallen upon the
land,17 The only
'‘Sacramento
Union, in Or, Statesman, Jan. 17, 1860.
17 Concerning the newspapers which sprung
into existence about the time of the admission of Oregon, I have gathered fhe
following chiefly from the Statesman, Art/us, and Oregonian. Many of them had
a, brief existence, or so frequently changed their titles that it is difficult
to follow them. Early in 1858 the Democratic Standard, wLich was established by
Alonzo Leland in 1854, changed hands, and was edited by James O’Meara, as we
have seen. It suspended in January 1859, but resumed publication in Februarj.
Not long after, the press was removed to Eugene City, where a paper called the
Democratic Herald was started by Alex. Blakely, to Vie devoted to the interests
of the Lane democracy. It survived but one year. Previously to this removal to
Eugene, there had been a neutral paper published at that place called the
Pacific Journal. This paper was purchased in 1858 by
B. J. Pengra, and published as a. republican
journal under the name of The People’s Press A semi-weekly, called the Franklin
Advertiser, was for a short time published in Portland by S. J. McCormick.
Subsequently, in 1859, Leland of the Standard stated a paper at Portland,
called tho Daily Advertiser, ‘got up as the Standard to, to crush out the Salem
clique.’ It was pro slavery and anti Bush. Aftei running a few months it passed
into the hands of S. J. McCormick as publisher, Leland withdrawing from the
editorial chair. Geo. L. Curry became connected with it, when it was enlarged
and published weekly as well as daily, McCormick in troducing a steam press
into Lis printing establishment. Previous to starting the Advertiser Leland had
established the Daily News, the first daily paper in Oregon, in connection with
S. A. English & Co., publishers. Hardly had it begun before it passed into
the editorial charge of B D. Shattuck, and a little later into the hands of W.
I). Carter. The News then published a weekly, independent in politics, which
had a brief existence. In December
good thing
that could bo said of thorn was that they provoked free criticism of
themselves, and were thus instrumental in emancipating the thought of the
A
democratic convention for the nomination of a representative was called, to
meet at Eugene in April, the call being declined by Marion, Clatsop, Curry,
Washington, Polk, and Tillamook. George K. Sheil was nominated,18
and the convention adjourned without choosing candidates for presidential
electors, which was a part of the business. Two days later the republicans
held a convention, at which delegates from seventeen counties were present. At
this meeting
IStiO the
Portland Daily Times Issued one or two numbers, and suspended. It was revived
in 1861, and supported the government. In the latter part of 1800 Henry L.
Pittock, the present publisher of the Oregonian, purchased that paper, and
started a daily, which appeared for the first time Feb. 4, 1861. In 1859 a
journal called the Poseburg Express was published in Iloseburg, on the press of
the. Chronicle of Yreka, L. E. V. Coon & Co. publishers, which ran for a
year and failed. Corvallis had had, after the removal of the Statesman, the
Occidental Messenger and Democratic Crisis, both of w hich wero dead in 1859.
T. H. B. Odeneal was publisher of the latter Li place of this a secession paper
called The Union was being issued in 1860 by J. H. Slater. In 1859 W. G.
T’Vault withdrew from the Jackaoni'ille Sentinel, selling to W. B. Treanor
& Co., who employed the ubiquitous O'Meara as editor until 1801, when he
was succeeded by Dellinger and Hand. About the beginning of 1859 The Dalles
Journal was established by A. J. Price, afterward controlled by Thomas Jordan,
an army officer, whose interference with state politics was not regarded with
favor. It passed into the. hands of W. H. N cwell in 1861, who started The.
Mountaineer. About the close of 1859, Delation Smith caused the Oregon Democrat
to be established at Albany for his own purposes. It was published by Shepard,
made war on the Salem clique, and sustained Lane. Early iu 1861 it w as taken
in charge by P. J. Malone, an able writer, and iu 1865 became the State Eights
Democrat, with O'Meara for editor. The Pacific Christian Advocate was removed
from Salem to Portland about this time, its editor, Thomas H. Pearne taking
great interest in politics. In fact, no paper could gain a footing without
politics; and with the exception of the Oregonian, Argus, and People’s Press,
every paper in the state was democratic. At Iloseburg the Oregon State Journal
wai started in Juno 1861 ou the materials of the Posfburg Express, which had
not been long in existence. In August 1861 O’Meara and Pomeroy began the
publication of the Southern Oregon Gazette, a secession journal, which lived
but a brief period. As an evidence of the increased facilities for printing,
it might be here mentioned that T. J. McCormick, who was the publisher of the
first literary magazine in Oregon, styled the Oregon Monthly Magazine, in 1852,
and the Oregon Almanac, in the spring of 1859, published in good style a novel
of 350 pages by Mrs Abigail Scott Duniway, called Captain Gray’s Company. The
Statesman was first published on a power press, May 17, 1859. After this
printing improved rapidly, and newspapers multiplied. The. first daily
Statesman was published July ‘20, 1864.
18 The other candidates before the
convention wert J K Kelly, S. F. Chadwick, John Adair, and J. H. Reed. Or.
Statesman, April 24, 1860.
Kiel. Ob., Vol. II. 29
spoke E.
D. Baker,19 a prominent politician, who came from California, where
his star was not propitious, to Oregon, where he hoped to have a finger in the
new politics. He made many speeches during the summer campaign, Logan being
again the republican candidate for congress, the Seward plank in their
platform, however, being abandoned. Nesmith took the field against Sheil, while
Kelly, who had returned to his party, Smith, and Sheil himself, advocated the
principles of the southern democracy. Whatever the cause, there was a slight
reaction from the congressional campaign of 1839, and Sheil received a majority
over Logan of 104 votes, while the legislature was more solidly democratic than
at the last election.20
The
election was not long past when the final news was received of the proceedings
of the Charleston and Baltimore conventions, the secession of the extreme
southern states, and the nomination by them of Lane to tho vice-presidency,
causing a strong revulsion of feeling among all of the democratic party not
strongly pro-slavery in principle.
Oregon was
still less prepared to receive a scheme of government said to be entertained by
the senators of the Pacific coast, which was to establish a slave- holding
republic, on the plau of an aristocracy similar to the ancient republic of
Venice, which, while providing for an elective executive, vested all power iu
hereditary nobles,21 repudiating universal suffrage.
l9Born in
London in 1811; came to America in 1816; learned cabinet- making, and in 1828
went to Carrollton, 111., where he be^an the study of law. In 1832 he was major
in the Black Hawk war. For ten years he was a member of the 111. legislature,
and in I8t5 of the U. S. house of representatives. During that year ho raised
a regiment for the Mexican war and joined Taylor at the Rio Grande, In Dec.
1846 he returned, made a speech on the war in congress, after which he resigned
and w ent back to Mexico, where he participated in the cai>ture of San Juan
de Tilda and the battle of Cerro Gordo; taking the command iu that battle after
tlie wounding of Gen. Shields. The state of Illinois presented him wkh a sword.
Iu 1849 he was agoin elected to congress; and in 1851 he undertook pome work on
the Pan am4 railway, but v as driven by the fever to Cal. in 1852, where he
practised law and made political speeches. Or. Argus, Jtn. 4, IS62.
2uThere was
an increase in the poll of 1,823 sinco June, 1859. Or. Statesman , June 26,
1860.
a It was
the common belief that Gwin of California was at the bottom of
Labor was
to bo performed bjT a class of persons from any of the dark races,
invited to California, and subsequently reduced to slavery. Such was the bold
and unscrupulous scheme to which Lane had lent himself, the discovery of which
caused mingled indignation and alarm. The alarm was not lest the plan should
succeed, but lest an internecine war should be forced upon them to prevent its
success. But this was not a’-. The war debt still remained unpaid. The next
congress would be largely republican. Oregon was democratic, and with such a
record—of having voted in the Charleston convention for secession—how was the
payment of that debt to be secured? It was thus the people reasoned, wbile those
whose places depended upon the will of the administration, now openly in
sympathy with the seceders, were deeply troubled what course to pursue in the
approaching crisis. In the mean time, the republican national convention at
Chicago had nominated to the presidency Abraham Lincoln, and the keenest
interest was felt throughout the union in an election which was to decide the
fate of the nation. For it was well understood that if the republicans carried
the country against Douglas, as the Breckenridge and Lane nomination seemed to
promise, and as it was believed to be intended, the south would make that a
pretext for disunion.
As soon as
the full results of the Charleston, Baltimore, and Washington conventions
became known, a meeting of the state democratic central committee was heli 1 at
Eugene City, which, having a majority of Lane democrats, proceeded to indorse
the Breckenridge and Lane nominations. This action alarmed
tLis
scheme. Should the southern states succeed in withdrawing from the union and
setting up a southern confederacy, and could a line of nlave territory be kept
open from Texas to the Pacific, the Pacific coast would combine "with the
south. But in view of the probable wars in which the aggressive policy of tho
southern states was likely to involve their 'lies, Gwin was i.i favor of a
separate empire or republic. The plan pointed out the mean s of procuring
Rlaves, which was to invite the immigration of coolies, South Sea Islanders,
aud negroes, who were to be reduced to slavery on their arrival It was the
di?covery of thi-i conspiracy which gave the California Renator the title of
Duke Gwin. S. F. Times, in Or. Statesman, Dec. 10, 1S0Q.
the
opposite faction, which called a convention to protest against the
indorsement, and to nominate presidential electors, to be hold in September.
The convention was iully attended, indorsed the Douglas platform, declared the
Oregon democracy loyal to the union of the states, denouncing secession.
Anything so earnest and unsectional had not been enunciated by the Oregon
democracy in all its previous history. Comparing their new platform with that
of the republicans, there was no essential difference.2*
On the
10th of September the legislature met at Salem, and the preponderance of Lane
men among the democrats caused a fusion between the Douglas democrats and the
republicans, which gave the fuuion- ists a majority la the house of twenty-one
to fifteen.23 An attempt to organize in the senate was defeated by
the difficulty of electing a president, the Douglas men having nominated
Tichenor, and the Lane men Elkins, another Douglas democrat; and the vote
standing seven to seven without change for the first day. On the morning of the
second day it was discovered that six senators, Berry, Brown, Florence, Fit zli
ugh, Monroe, and Mclteeney, had left Salem, and were keeping in concealment,
with the intent to defeat the election of United States senators, which in the
then impending crisis was of unusual importance. The
1:2 See
republican state platform, in Or. Argus, Aug. 25, 1S60.
23Senators:
Clackamas and Wasco, J. K. Kelly; Multnomah, J. A. W ill iams; Washington.
Columbia, Clatsop, and Tillamook, Thos R. Cornelius; Yatnltill, J. R. McBride;
Polk. William Taylor; Marion, J. W. Grim, E. F. Colby; Linn, Luther Elkins, H.
L Brown; Lane, A. B. Florence, James .Monroe; Benton, J. S. Mclteeney;
IJonglas, Solomon Fitzhugh; Uinpqua, Coos, and Curry, William Tichenor;
Josephine, D. S. Holton; Jackson, A. M. Berry. Representatives: Wasco, Robert
Mayes; Multnomah, A. C. Gibbs, B. Stark - Clatsop ind Tillamook, C. J.
Trenchard; Columbia and Washington, E. Conyers; Washington, Wilson Bowiby;
Claikamas, A. Holbrook, W. A. Starkweather, \\ uiiaiu Eddy; Yamhill, S. M.
Gilmore, M. Crawford; Marion, B. F. Harding, S. Parker, 0. P. Crandall, R.
Newell; Polk, Ira F. M. Butler, C. C. Cram; Linn, B. Carl, ,V. A. MeCally, J.
P. Tate, J. Q. A. Worth; L.mc, John Duval, Joseph Bailey, R. B. Cochrane;
Benton, H. M Walken, R. C. Hill: Umpqua, J. W. P. Huntington: Coos and Curry.
S. E. Morton; Douglas, J F. Gazley, R. E. Cowles; Josephine, George T. Vining;
Jackson, J. B. White, G. W Keeler, J. N. T. Miller. Or. Statesman, June 26,
lHtiO. lu the whole body the Lane men numbered l(i, anti-Lane men 24,
republicans 10.
Lane
faction were determined, if not able to elect their favorites, to prevent any
election being held. The aspirants to the senatorship were Smith and Lane,
democrats, Judge Williams and J. W. Nesmith, independents, and E. I). Baker,
repiibliean. Strong influences were brought to bear by the Lane democrats, who
besieged the lobby and had their spies at every street corner.
On the
13th the senate organized without a quorum, Elkins being chosen president. A
motion was made to adjourn sine die, which was defeated, and a resolution
offered authorizing the president to issue warrants for the arrest of the
absconding members, which was adopted. They continued, however, to elude the
sergeant and his assailants for nine days, when after an unsuccessful ballot
for senators in joint convention, in which the Douglas democrats voted for
Nesmith and Williams, and the republicans for Baker and Holbrook, the
legislature, adjourned sine die. Governor Wliiteaker then made an appeal
through the public prints to all the members of that body to reassemble and
attend to their duty; which they finally did 011 the 24th, but it was not until
the 1st of October that balloting for senators was resumed, Deady, Curry, and
Drew being added to the nominees. The contest w7as decreed by the
Lane men to be between Smith and any one of the Douglas democrats on one side,
and any two of the Douglas men 011 the other; but the democratic party iu the
legislature revolted against Smith, and rejected him on any terms. With equal
scorn the Lane democrats rejected Nesmith, whom they hated, but intimated that
they would vote for him if Smith could be elected. The Douglas men offered if
the Lane men would give two votes for Nesmith to elect Curry in place of Smith,
but they
refused.
On the eighteenth ballot the Douglas demoO •
crats
reluctantly gave up the hope of electiug two democratic senators without
accepting Smith, and elected
Nesmith
and Baker, the former for the long and the latter for the short term.
As soon as
practicable after the reassembling of the legislature the house passed a bill
providing for the election of a representative in congress to supersede the
unauthorized election of Sheil, but the measure was defeated in the senate, the
Lane members voting solidly against it. The democratic state central committee
then called a meeting, with the intention of electing another representative in
November, when the presidential election would occur, and nominated A. J.
Thayer.24 This action caused the senate to reconsider their
opposition to a legal election bill; and an act was passed authorizing the
governor to issue a writ of election to till vacancies that might occur in the
office of representative to congress. The law went into effect two days after
the meeting of the state central committee, and the brief interval between the
adjournment of the legislature and the day fixed for the presidential election
was devoted to canvassing for a congressman. Nesmith and Benjamin Hayden, one
of the democratic presidential electors, took part in it, the candidates being
Thayer and Sheil
Before the
6th of November arrived, the pony express began to bring stirring news of
great republican victories in the northern and western states. The successes of
the new party were almost too great to be believed. Even in Oregon the
contagion spread until all other interests were swallowed therein. On the 6th
the vote was cast. Sufficient returns were in by the 9 th to make it certain
that the state had gone republican.25 Not only was there a
republican plural-
liBurn in N.
Y., spent his boyhood or a farm, acquired j, common T!ng- lish education, and
studied and practised law, emigrating to Oregon iii 1853. In 1855 he was
appointed territorial auditor in place of J. A. Bennet, who had declined. Dis
reputation as a lawyer and a man was excellent. In 1870 lie was elected to the
supreme bench, and as a judge was fearless and impartial. His death occurred in
1873. Or. Reports, 4, xi.~xv.; Albany Democrat, May 2, 1S73; Sahm Mercury, May
2, 1873.
“Lincoln’s
plurality was 270. The whole vote of the state was 14,751. Lincoln, 5,344;
Douglas, 4,130; Breekcnndge, 5,074. Bell, of the Bell and Kverett party, had
i97 votes.
ity for
president, but Sheil was defeated.28 On tlie 5 th of December the
republican presidential electors T. J. Dryer, W; II. Watkins, and B. J. Pesgra
met at Salem and cast the electoral vote for Lincoln, appointing Dryer to
carry the vote to Washington. Thus ended the political revolution of I860 in
Oregon.
Slowly,
reluctantly, regretfully came home the truth to the people of Oregon that
Joseph Lane was a secessionist; that he had offered his services and those of
his sons to tight in battle against his government, and against his late
friends in Oregon. The news of the fall of Fort Sumter did not reach Oregon
till the 30th of April, 1861. By the same steaaier that brought the thrilling
intelligence of actual war came Lane back to his home in Oregon. What a pitiful
home-coming! Hatred and insult greeted him from the moment he came in sight of
these Pacific shores. At San Francisco it was so, aud when he reached Portland,
and a few personal friends wished to give a salute in his honor, they were
assured that such a demonstration would not be permitted in that town. Even the
owner of a cart refused to transport his luggage to the house of his
son-in-law. It consisted of two or three stout boxes in which wTere
being conveyed to southern Oregon arms for the equipment of the army of the
Pacific republic! But this fact was not known to the cartman, or it might have
fared worse with the ex-senator. Proceeding south after a few days with these
arms in a stout wagon, but unsuspected, he was met at various parts of the
route by demonstrations of disrespect. At Dallas he wTas hanged in
effigy. A fortunate accident arrested him in the perpetration of the
contemplated folly and treachery,27 and con-
'f!
Tin w hole vote for congressman was a little over 4,000. Of these Lane received
5, Logan 8, Sheil 131, and Ihayer the remainder.
Jesse
Applegate testifies as follows: la crossing the Calapooya Mountain with omy
h?s Irish teamster, by some mischance a pistol was discharged, wounding Lane in
the arm. The Irishman, frightened let>t it should be
signed him
to a life of retirement from which he never emerged.2S
That a
considerable class in Oregon were in favor of secession is undeniable. That
there were some who would have fought for the extension of slavery had they
been upon southern soil is undoubted. But there were few who cared enough for
what they called the rights of the southern states to go to the seat of war and
fight for them.29 On the other hand, there were many who fought for
the uuion.30 Party lines were
thought
that he had inflicted the wound with murderous intent, fled to the house of
Applegate, at Yoncalla, and related what had occurred. Applegate at once went
to Lane’s relief, taking him to his house, where he remained for several weeks.
During this visit Lane revealed to his friend the nature of his scheme
concerning Oregon, and was dissuaded from the undertaking.
28 For many years Lane lived alone with a
single servant upon a mountain farm. In 1878, to gratify his children, he
removed to Roseburg, where, being cordially welcomed by society, the old fire
was awakened, and he nominated himself for the state senate in 1880 at the age
of 79 years. Being rather rudely rejected and reproved, he wept like a child.
His death occurred in May 1881. Whatever errors he may have committed, whatever
vanity he may have displayed concerning his own achievements, he was ever
generous in his estimate of others, and the decline of his life was full of
kindness and courtesy.
29 John Lane, son of Joseph Lane, became a
colonel in the confederate army. Captain Thomas Jordan, for a time U. S.
quartermaster at The Dalles, resigned to take service in the south. He was said
to have accepted a colonelcy in the Culpepper cavalry. Major Garnett, for
several years stationed in Oregon and Washington, also resigned, and was
commissioned brigadier by Jefferson Davis. John Adair of Astoria, Oregon, son
of the collector and postmaster, who graduated from West Point in 1861, was
commissioned lieutenant of dragoons and ordered to join his regiment at Walla
Walla, and afterward to report at Washington, instead of which he deserted,
and went to Victoria, V. I. He was dismissed the service. Or. Statesman, Aug.
25, 188*2. The place left vacant by John Lane at West Point was filled by
Volney Smith, son of Delazon Smith, who failed in his examination. He was appointed
a lieutenant in a New York cavalry regiment, but did not long remain in the
service. Adolphus B. Hannah, who had been U, S. marshal in Oregon, offered his
services to the confederacy. J. B. Sykes, Indian agent at the Siletz
reservation, resigned and went east to serve in the rebel army. He was captured
with a portion of Jackson’s command, and sent to Columbus, Ohio. John K.
Lamerick, once brigadier-general of the Oregon militia, went to Washington to
dispose of his Indian war scrip, and joined the rebel army as a commissary. C.
H. Mott, who in 1858 was sent to Oregon to examine into the Indian accounts,
joined the rebel army and commanded the 19th Mississippi at. Bull Run. He was
killed in front of Hooker’s division May 5,
1862.
30 Notable among whom was Captain Rufus
Ingalls, who came to Fort Vancouver in 1849. He was promoted to the rank of
lieutenant-colonel on McClellan’s staff, and placed in charge of the
quartermaster’s department at Yorktown. Colonel Joseph Hooker, then living at
Salem, offered his services, and was promoted to the rank of brigadier-general.
The other officers who had served in Oregon and were promoted to the rank of
major or brigadier- general were Grant, Sheridan, Augur, Ord, Wright, Smith,
Casey, Russell,
blotted
out as quickly in Oregon as in New York, and soon there was but one party that
amounted to anything—the union party. By reason of lack of sympathy with the
people at this juncture, Governor Whiteaker was requested to resign.
The first
despatches transmitted across the continent entirely by telegraph shocked the
whole Pacific coast with the message that at the battle of Ball’s Bluff, on the
21st of October, 1861, fell Oregon’s republican senator, E. I). Baker31
The seat in the senate left vacant by Baker was filled by the appointment by
Governor Whiteaker of Benjamin Stark, one of the original owners of the
Portland land claim. Information was forwarded to Washington of the disloyal
sentiments of the appointee, and for two months the senate hesitated to admit
him; but he was finally, in February 18G2, permitted to take the oath of office
by a vote of twenty-six to nineteen,-Senator Nesmith voting for his admission.
But the matter was not
Reynolds,
and Alvord, besides Baker and Stevens, who had received a military education,
but were not in the army. Captain Hazen, who was formerly stationed at Fort
Yamhill, was placed in command of a volunteer infantry regiment at Cleveland,
Ohio, in the beginning of the war. Lieutenant Lorraine, who was stationed at
Fort Umpqua, was assigned to a new regiment in the field, and was wounded at
Bull Run. Captain W. L, Dali of the steamship Columbia was appointed a
lieutenant commanding in the U. S. navy, Roswell C. Lampson of Yamhill county,
son of an immigrant of 1845, the first naval cadet from Oregon, and who
graduated about this time, served in the war, and was promoted to the command
of a vessel for gallant conduct at Fort Fisher. At the close of the war he
resigned, returned to Oregon, and became clerk of the U. S. courts. Portland
Oregonian, April 5, 1865; Portland Standard, April 27, 1877. James W.
Lingenfelter, a native of Fonda, N. Y., but residing in Jacksonville, Oregon,
was made captain of a volunteer company, and killed near Fortress Monroe, Oct.
8, 1861. John L. Boon, son of J. D. Boon, state treasurer, and a student at the
Weslyan university, Delaware, Ohio, served in an Ohio regiment, being in the
battles of Shiloh and Corinth, in the division tinder General Lew Wallace. The
major of the 68th Ohio was a former resident of Oregon, named Snooks, of the
immigration of 1844. George Williams, son of Elijah Williams of Salem, was
appointed 2d lieut of the 4th inf., and was in the second battle of Bull Run,
Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg, losing a foot in the last named. _
Frank W. Thompson of Linn county was colonel of the 3d Va. volunteers'in 1863,
and subsequently promoted. Henry Butler of Oakland, Oregon, was a member of
the 86th 111. volunteers; and Charles Harker of Oregon was a lieut in the union
army. Many more would have been in the service but for the apprehensions
entertained of the designs of disunionists on the Pacific coast.
31 When war was declared Baker raised a
regiment in Penn. His remains were deposited in Lone Mountain cemetery, San
Francisco, and a monument erected to his memory.
allowed to
rest there. A committee being appointed to examine the evidence, Stark was
finally impeached, but was not expelled, his term .ending with the meet- 'ng of
the Oregon legislative assembly in September.
A similar
leniency was exercised by congress towards Sheil, who contested the election of
Thayer. The latter was admitted to his seat, and occupied it during most of the
special term of 18Gl,but upon the right to it being contested, Thaddeus Stevens
maintained that since there was at the time no authority for a congressional
election in Oregon, the seat was really vacant. The contestants being thus
placed upon an equality as to legal rights, a preponderance was left of such
right as might be in favor of the first man elected. The republicans in the
house could have kept out Sheil by insisting upon the illegality of his election,
had not congress taken every occasion to show such magnanimity as could be
ventured upon toward men of disunion predilections in the hope of conciliating
the south.
With a
change of administration there was a change in the official list. William L.
Adams of the Argus was appointed collector of customs at Astoria. W. W. Parker32
became his deputy. .13. J. Pengra supplanted W. W. Chapman as
surveyor-general; T. J. Dryer was appointed commissioner to the Hawaiian
Islands; Simeon Francis, paymaster in the army, with the rank .of major;33
W. T. Matlock, receiver of the laud office at Oregon City; aud W. K.
Starkweather,
32 A native of Vt., educated at Norwich
univcrsity. In 1847 be was appointed mining engineer to the Lake Superior
Copper Mining Company, but hearing that the mail steamer California was about
to s;iil for California and Oregon in 1848, he took passage in her for tho
Pacific coast. By the time the steamer arrived, the gold fever was at its
height, and he engaged in mining, at which he was successful, losing his
earnings afterward by lire. Jle was one of the board of assistant alderman m
San Francisco in 1851. In Feb. 1S52 ho removed to Astoria, Oregon.
83 Francis
catne from Springfield, 111,, to Oregon in 1859. After Lincoln’s campaign he
took charge of the Portland Oregonian while Dryer carried tho electoral vote to
Washington. lie afterward resided at Fort Vancouver. His death occurred at
Portland in Nov. 1872, to which place military headquarters had beui remo\ ed.
See Portland Oregonian, Nov. 2, 1872.
registrar
of the same; W. H. Hector received the appointment of superintendent of Indian
affairs, and A. L. Lovejoy the office of pension agent.
When
Nesmith tirst took his seat in the senate he had some feeling in favor of the
south, and spoke accordingly; but in due time- his utterances became more
moderate, and when he returned to Oregon in the autumn of 1861 he was well
received. Stout represented Oregon with fidelity, industry, and ability. At
his first session he introduced a bill to remove the obstructions in the
Missouri and Columbia Rivers, with a view to opening a line of travel across
the continent. He urged the protection of immigrants, and the restoration of
the military department of Oregon, which was depleted by the call for troops,
and labored for the payment of the Indian war bonds, the issuance of which was
delayed by Secretary Chase until the loans necessary for the civil war had been
negotiated.
After
issue, they sold at about ninety cents on the dollar, when the bond amounted to
five hundred dollars, without a market for the smaller bonds. Some of the scrip
exchanged for these bonds had been purchased at thirty, forty, and even as low
as thirteen cents on the dollar.
WAR AX I)
DEVELOPMENT.
1858-1862.
War
Departments and Commanders—Military Administration of General Harney— Wallen’s
Road Expeditions—Troubles with the Shoshones—Emigration on the Northern and
Southern Routes—Expeditions op Steen and Smith—Campaign against the
Shoshones—Snake River Massacre—Action op the Legislature—• Protection of the
Southern Route—Discovery op the John Day and Powder River Mines—Floods and Cold
op 1861-2—Progress op Eastern Oregon.
Is the
summer of 1857 General Wool, who was so much, at variance with the civil
authorities on the Pacific coast, was removed from this department, and the
command given to General Newman S. Clarke. The reader will remember that
Colonel George Wright had been left by Wool in command at Vancouver in the
spring of 185(5. Not long after, on account of the hostilities of those tribes
which had taken part in the Walla Walla treaties of 1855, Wright was removed
to The Dalles, and Colonel Thomas Morris took command at Vancouver. In the mean
time two new posts were established north of the Columbia, one in the Yakima
country, and another in the Walla Walla Valley; and for a period of two years
Wright, embarrassed by the policy of the commanding generals, outnumbered and
outwitted by the Indians, was engaged in a futile endeavor to subdue without
fighting them. The Indians being emboldened by the apparent weakness of the
army, in the spring of 1858 the troops under Colonel Steptoe, while marching to
(4cn j
Colville,
were attacked by a large force of Spokanes and Cu?ur d’Alfines, and sustained a
heavy loss. Awakened by this demonstration of the hostile purposes of the
confederate tribes, Clarke prepared to inflict condign punishment, and in
September of that year Wright marched a large force through their country, slaying
and destroying as he went. This chastisement brought the treaty tribes into a
state of humility. In the mean time E. B. Geary had been appointed
superintendent of Indian affairs in Oregon and Washington, and in the spring of
1859, congress having ratified the treaties of 1855, he made arrangements with
them for their permanent settlement on their reservations, four in number,
namely: Simcoe, Warm Spring, Umatilla, and Lapwai; but unfortunately for the
credit of the government with the Indians, no appropriation was made by
congress for carrying out its engagements until tho following year; nor was
any encouragement given toward treating with other tribes in the eastern
portion of the state.
By an
order of the secretary of war of September 13, 1858, the department of the
Pacific was subdivided into the departments of California and Oregon, the
latter under the command of General W. S. Harney, with headquarters at
Vancouver. This change was hailed with delight by the Oregonians, not only
because it gave them a military department of their own, but because Harney’s
reputation as an Indian-fighter was great, and they hoped through him to put a
speedy termination to the wars which had continuously existed for a period of
five years, impeding land surveys and mining, and preventing the settlement
of the country east of the mountains. Harney arrived at Vancouver on the 29tli
of October, and two days later he issued an order opening the Walla Walla
Valiev, closed against settlement ever since
' O
1855, to the
occupation of white inhabitants.
By this
order Harney’s popularity was assured. A joint resolution was adopted by the
legislature con
gratulating
the people, and asking the general to extend his protection to the
immigration, and establish a garrison at or near Fort Bois^.1 A
considerable military force having been massed in the Oregon department for the
conquest of the rebellious tribes,2 Harney had, when he took
command, found employment for them in explorations of the country. The
military department in 1858 built a steamboat to run between The Dalles and
Fort Walla Walla,3 and about two thousand settlers took claims in
the Walla Walla and Umatilla valleys during this summer. The hostilities which
had heretofore prevented this progress being now at an end, there remained only
the Snake,4 Klamath, and Modoc tribes to be either conquered or
conciliated. Little discipline had been administered in this quarter, except by
the three expeditions previously mentioned of Wright, Walker, and Haller.
Harney, though
more in sympathy with the people than his predecessors, was yet like them
inclined to discredit the power or the will of the wild tribes
1 Clarice and Wright'$ Campaign, 85; Or.
Laws, 1858-9, app. iii.; Or. Statesman, Feb. 8, 1S59.
2 Besides the companies stationed to guard
the Indian reservations in Oregon in 1857, there ■were 3
companies of the 9th inf. at The Dalles, one of tiie 4th inf. at Vancouver, one
of the 3d art. at the Cascades, 3 of the Oth inf. at Fort Simooe in the Yakima
country, and at Fort Wall* Walla 2 companies nf inf., one of dragoons, and one
of art. U. 8. II. Ex. Doc. 2, vol. li. pt ii. 78, 35th cong. 1st sess. In the
autumn of 185S three companies of art. from S. F., one from Fort Umpqua, now
attached to the departm-nt of Cal., and an inf. co. from Fort Jones were sent
into the Indian country east of the Cascade Mountains. Kip’s Army Life, 16-18;
Sac. Union, Aug. 23, 1S5S.
3Tliis
steamer was nwned by R. R. Thompson and L Coe, and was named the Colonel
Wright. Harney mentions in a letter to the adjutant-general dated April 25,
1859, that a steamboat line had been established between The Dalles and Walla
Walla, and that in Juno when the water of the Columbia and Snake rivers should
be high, the steamer should run to the mouth t>f the Tueannon, on the latter
river. U. S. J/ess. and Doc.i., 1859-60, 96, 36th cong. 1st sess.; S. F.
Bulletin, April 28, May 13 and 30, and Sept. 13, 1859. Ic is worthy of remark
that the first steamer to ascend the Missouri to Fort Benton made her initial
trip this year. This was the Chippewa, hi., Sept. 17, 1859; Or. A rgus^ Sept.
3, 1S59.
* I use the term Snake in its popular sense
and for convenience. The several bands of this tribe, the Banna oks, and the'
wandering Pah Utee were ull classed as Snakes by the people who reported their
acts, ;'.ad as it is impossible for me to separate them, the reader v ill
understand that by Snakes is meant in general the predatory bands from the
region of the Snake and Owyhee rivers.
to inflict
serious injfary. Yet not to neglect his duty in keeping up an appearance of
protecting miners, immigrants, and others, and at the same time to carry
forward some plans of exploration which I have already hinted at,6
toward the end of April he ordered into the field two companies of dragoons and
infantry mounted, under Captain D. H. Wallen, to make a reconnoissance of a
road from Tho Dalles to Salt Lake City, connecting with the old immigrant route
through the South Pass, and to ascertain whether such a road could not be constructed
up the John Day River, thence over to the head waters of the Malheur, and down
that stream to Snake River.6 Wallen proceeded as directed and along
the south side of Snake River to the crossing of the Oregon and California
roads at Raft River, meeting on his march with none of the predatory bands,
which, eluding him, took advantage of being in his rear to make a descent upon
the Warm Spring reservation and drive off the stock be
* Harney was much interested in laying out
military roads, and in hia reports to the general-in-chief called the
attention of the war department to the necessity for such roads in this portion
of the United States territory. Among other roads proposed was one through the
south pass to the head of Salmon River, down that stream to the Snake River,
and thence to Fort Walla Wall., Tillich was never opened owing to the roughness
of the country. F. W. Lander made an improvement in the road from the south
pass to the parting of the Oregon and California routes which enabled most of
the immigration to arrive at the Columbia several weeks earlier than usual. The
new route was eailed the Fort Kearney, South Pass, and Honey Lake wagon road,
and appears to have been partially opened in 1838, or across the Wachita mountains.
Appended to Lander’s report is a long list of names of persons en route for
California and Oregon who passed over it in 1858 and 1859. A party left
Fairbault, Minnesota, in July 1858, and tra\ elled by the Saskatchewan route,
wintering in the mountains with the snow in many places twenty feet deep. They
experienced great hardships, but arrived at The Dalles May 1,
1859, in good health. Their names were J. L. Houck,
J. W. Jones, J. E. Smith, E. Hind, William Amesbury, J. Emchiser, J. Schaeffer,
J. Palmer, J. R. Saadford. Olympia Herald, May 27, 1859.
6 Wallen crossed the Des Chutes at the
mouth of Warm Spring River, proceeded thence to the head of Crooked River, 160
miles, finding a good natural road with grass anil water. Ho detached
Lieutenant Bonnycastle with part of his command to explore the country east of
the route followed by himself, who travelled no farther than Ilarney Lake
Valley, to which he probably gave this name in honor of the commanding general,
from v, hich point he turned north to the head waters of John Day River and
followed it down, and back to The Dalles, on about the present line of the road
to Canyon City. Harney reported that Bonnycastle brought a train of 17
o\-wagons from Harney Valley to The Dalles in 12 days without accident. V. S.
ifeis. and Docs, 1859-CO, 113; if. S. Sen. Doc., 34, ix. 51, 36th cong. 1st
sess.
longing to
the treaty Indians.7 A. P. Dennison, the agent, applied to Harney
for a force to guard the reservation, hut the general, instead of sending
troops, ordered forty rifles with ammunition to be furnished, and Dennison
resorted to organizing a company among the reservation Indians, and placing it
under the command of Thomas L. Fitch, physician to the reservation, who
marched up John Day lliver in the hope of recovering a hundred and fifty head
of horses and cattle which had been stolen. His company killed the men
belonging to two lodges, took the women and children prisoners, and recaptured
a few horses, which had the effect to secure a short-lived immunity only. In
August the Snakes made another raid upon the reservation, avenging the
slaughter of their people by killing a dozen or more Indian women and children
and threatening to burn the agency buildings, the white residents fleeing for
their lives to The Dalles. The agent, who was at that place, hastened to the
scene of attack with a company of friendly Indians, but not before sixteen
thousand dollars’ worth of property had been stolen or destroyed.8
It was only then that a small detachment of soldiers was sent to guard the
reservation and induce the terrified Indians as well as white people to
return; and a dragoon company was ordered to make a recounoissance along the
base of the Blue Mountains, to recover if possible the property carried off,
returning, however, empty-handed; and it was not without reason that the old
complaint of the Indian department was reiterated, that the military
department would not trouble itself with the Indians unless it were given
exclusive control.
7 Though
Wallen met 'with no hostile savages iu his march to Camp Floyd, he found no
less than three commands in the field from that post pursuing Indians v. ho
had attacked the immigration on the California roa-1. He mentions the names of
a few persons killed in 1839, S. F. Shtphard, W. F. Shephard, W. C. Riggs, ami
C. Pains. Olympia Herald, Sept. 16, 1839. E. 0. Hall and Mr and Mrs Wright arc
mentioned as having been attackt d. Hall was killed and the others wounded. _
e Ind. Ajf.
Hept, 1859, 389. Indemnity was claimed for tlio losses of private person? and
the Indians.
From a
combination of causes, tlie cliief of which was the agitation of the question
of slavery, the immigration of 1859 was larger than any which had preceded it
for a number of years.9 Owing to the care taken by Captain Wallen to
insure the safe passage of the trains, all escaped attack except one company,
which against his advice turned off the main route to try that up the Malheur,
and which was driven back with a loss of one man severely wounded, and four
wagons abandoned.10 Major Reynolds of the 3d artillery from Camp
Floyd for Vancouver, with one hundred men and eight field-pieces, escorted the
advance of tlie immigration, and Wallen remained to bring up the rear, sending
sixty dragoons four days’ travel back along the road to succor some belated and
famishing people.11
In the
spring of 18G0 General Harney ordered two expeditions into the country
traversed by predatory Snakes, not with the purpose of fighting them, as
Wallen’s march through their country had been uninterrupted, but to continue
the exploration of a road to Salt Lake from Harney Lake, where Wallen’s
exploration in that direction had ceased; and also to explore from Crooked
River westward to the head waters of the Willamette River, and into the valley
by the middle immigrant route first opened by authority of the legislature in
1853.
This joint
expedition was under the command of Major E. Steen, who was to take the
westward march
9 Horace Greeley estimated that 30,000 people
and 100,000 cattle were en route to California. This estimate was not too
large, and instead of all go- in^ to California about one third went to Oregon,
many of them settling in Wal’a Walla Valley—at lea^t 83J. About 23 fomilies
settled in the Yakima Valley, families on the Clickitat. and others in every
direction. Some settled in the Grande I'onde and south of the Columbia, but not
so many a3 in the following years. Olympia Pioneer and Democrat, Sept. 30,
1859; Or. Argun, Oct. 15, 1859.
10Dalles
Journal, in Or. Argus, Sept. 24, 1859; Portland Oregonian, Oct. 15, 1859.
11 See letter in Olympia P. S. Herald,
Sept. 16, 1859. Colonel Wright sent forward from Fort Walla Walla to meet the
later trains which were destitute of provisions 250 sacks of ilour, 50 barrels
of pork, and other necessaries. Or. Statesman, Rept. fl, 1859.
IIisi. Ob., Vol. II.
30
from
Crooked Iliver, while Captain A. J. Smith was to proceed southward and.
eastward to the City of Hocks. About six weeks after Smith and Steen had set
out from The Dalles, news was received that the hostile bands, so far from
hiding from the sight of two dragoon companies, had attacked Smith after his
parting with Steen, when he was within twenty miles of the Owyhee; and that he
had been no more than able to protect the government property in his charge. It
being unsafe to divide his command to explore in advance of the train, he was
compelled to retreat to Harney Lake Valley aud send an express after Steen, who
turned back and rejoined him on the head waters of Crooked River.12
Accompanying, or rather overtaking, Steen’s expedition on Crooked Iliver was a
party of four white men and five Indians escorting Supermtendent Geary and G.
H. Abbott, agent at Warm Springs, upon a search after some chiefs with whom they
could confer regarding a treaty, or at least a cessation of hostilities.
Without the prestige of numbers, presents, or display of any kind, Geary was
pushing his way into the heart of a hostile wilderness, under the shadow of the
military wing which, so far from being extended for his protection, completely
ignored his presence.13
During
Geary’s stay at Steen’s camp, on the 15th of July two refugees from a party of
prospectors which had been attacked by the Indians came in and reported the
wounding of one man, the loss of seventy horses, and the scattering of their
company,
12 Rept of Captain Smith, in XT. S. Sen.
Doc., i. 119, 3Gth cong. 2d sess.; Sac. Union, July 20, 18G0; S. F Alta, July
13, 1860.
13 In tho reports (if military and Indian
departments there is found a mutual concealment of facts, no mention being made
by Steen of the presence of the head of tho Indian department of Oregon and
Washington at his camp, in his communication to his superiors; nor did Geary in
his report confess that he had been disdainfully treated by the few savages to
whom he had an opportunity of offering the friendship of the United States
government, as well as by the army. To his interpreter thej replied that pow
der and ball were the only gifts that they desired or would accept from white
men. [n£. Aff. Rept, 18G0, 174-5; Dalles Mountaineer, in Or. Statesman, July
10, I860; Oljmpia Pioneer and Democrat, July 20, 18ti&
which had
fled into Harney Lake Valley after being attacked a second time. This incident,
with the general hopelessness of his errand, caused Geary to return to The
Dalles, while an express was sent forward to warn Smith, then two days on his
march toward the City of Rocks. Steen also moved his camp to Harney Lake to be
-within communicating distance in case Smith should be attacked, and he spent
two days looking for Indians without rinding any. A few days later Smith was
attacked, as above related.
In the
mean time Harney had been summoned to Wasliington city on business reputed to
be connected with the war debt of Oregon and Washington territories, and
Colonel Wright was placed in command of the department of Oregon. On hearing of
the interruption of the explorations, Wright at once ordered three companies
of artillery under Major George P. Andrews to march to the assistance of the
explorers, while a squadron of dragoons under Major Grier was directed to move
along the road toward Fort Boise to guard the immigrant road, and be within commanding
distance of Steen, who it was supposed would also be upon the road in a few
weeks.
When Steen
had been reenforced by the artillery companies, he marched on the 4tli of
August toward a range of snow mountains east of Harney Lake, extending for
some distance southward, near which he believed the Indians would be found,
taking with him a hundred dragoons and sixty-five artillerymen. The remainder
of the command under Major Andrews moved eastward to a camp near the Owyhee to
await orders. Major Grier being 011 the road to Boise with his dragoons,
looking out for the immigration, Steen lioped to catch the Indians and drive
them upon one or the other of these divisions. Attached to Steen’s division was
a small company of scouts from the Vv arm Spring reservation, who on the fourth
day
discovered
signs of the enemy on the north slope of a lii<jfli butte, which now bears
the name of Steen Mountain, and on the morning of the 8th a small party of
Indians was surprised and fled to the very top of this butte to the region of
perpetual snow, hotly pursued by the troops. Arrived at the summit, the
descent on the south side down which the Indians plunged, looked impassable;
but, with more zeal than caution, Steen pursued, taking his whole command,
dragoons and artillerv, down a descent of
' O o
7
six
thousand feet, through a narrow and dangerous canon, with the loss of but one
mule. The country about the mountain was then thoroughly reconnoitred for
three days, during which the scouts brought in three Indian men and a few women
and children as prisoners.
On the
10th the command returned to camp, after which Smith made a forced march of a
hundred miles on a supposed trail without coming upon the enemy. Steen then
determined to abandou the road survey and return to The Dalles. Dividing the
troops into three columns twenty miles apart, they were marched to the Columbia
Iliver without encountering any Indians on either route. Early in September the
companies were distributed to their several posts.14 Yet the troops
were not more than well settled in garrisons before the Snakes made a descent
on the Warm Spring reservation, and drove off all the stock they had not before
secured. When there was nothing left to steal, twenty dragoons under Lieutenant
Gregg were quartered at the reservation to be ready to repel any further
attacks.15
Colonel
Wright reported to headquarters, September 20th, that the “routes of
immigration were rendered perfectly safe ” by the operations of troops during
UU. S. Sen.
Doc, 1, vol. ii. 131, 3Gth cong. 2d sess.; Olympia Pioneer and Democrat, Sept.
14, 1860.
is I-ud. A J'. Piept,
lStiO, 176; 1861, 156; Puget Sound Herald, Oct. 26, I860.
the
summer; that nothing more needed to be done or could b<5 done, with regard
to the Shoshones, before spring, when the superintendent would essay a treaty
at Salmon River, which would serve every purpose;18 but urged the
construction of a fort at Bois£, which had already been directed by the
secretary of war, delayed, however, for reasons connected with the threatening
aspect of affairs in the southern states. Major Grier’s command, which had
taken the road to Bois<5 to look after the immigration, returned to Walla
Walla in September.
The troops
were no sooner comfortably garrisoned than the local Indian agent at the
Umatilla, Byron N. Davis, notified the commander at Fort Walla Walla that a
massacre had taken place three weeks previous on Snake River, between Salmon
Falls and Fort Boise, wherein about fifty persons had been killed, or scattered
over the wilderness to perish by starvation. Davis also reported that he had
immediately despatched two men with a horse-load of provisions to hasten
forward to meet any possible survivors; and at the same time a loaded wagon
drawn by oxen, this bein» the best, that he could do with the
3 O
means at
his command. As soon as the disaster became known to the military authorities,
Captam Dent with one hundred mounted men was ordered to proceed rapidly along
the road and afford such assistance as was required by the sufferers, and if
possible to punish the Indians. At the same time it was thought that the report
brought in by the three known survivors might be exaggerated.17
The story
of the ill-fated party is one of the most terrible of the many terrible
experiences of travellers across the Snake River plains. On the 13th of September,
between nine and ten o’clock in the morning, a train of eight wagons and
fifty-four persons was
16 U. S.
Sen. Doc. J, vol. ii. p. ISO, 1800-01, 3Gth cong. 2d sess.
11 Report of Colonel Wright, in U. S. Sen.
Doc. 1, vol. ii. p. 141, 1800-1,
36th cong.
2d sess.
attacked
by Indians about one liundred in number. An escort of twenty-two dragoons bad
travelled with this company six days west of Fort Hall, where Colonel Howe was
stationed with several companies of troops for the purpose of protecting the
immigration to California and Oregon. Thinking the California road more
dangerous, and awTare that there were or had been troops from the
Oregon department in the neighborhood of Boise, Colonel How e deemed further
escort unnecessary, and the train proceeded for two weeks before meeting w’ith
any hostile Indians.
On the
morning named they appeared in force, surrounding the train, yelling like
demons, as the emigrants thought with the design of stampeding their cattle,
which they accordingly quickly corralled, at the same time preparing to defend
themselves. Seeing this, the savages made signs of friendship, and of being
hungry, by which means they obtained leave to approach near enough to receive
presents of food. They then allowed the emigrants to pass on, but when the
wagons had gained a high point which exposed them to attack, a lire w'as
opened 011 the train with rifles and arrows from the cover of the artemisia.
Again the company halted and secured their cattle. But before this was
accomplished three men were shot down. A battle now took place, which lasted
the remainder of the day, and in wdnch several Indians were seen to fall. The
firing of the savages was badly directed, and did little harm except to annoy
the horses and cattle, already irritable for want of food and water. All night
the Indians fired random shots, and 011 the morning of the second day recommenced
the battle, which continued until the second night, another man being killed.
Toward sunset the company agreed upon leaving four of their wagons for booty to
the Indians, hoping in this way to divert their attention long enough to escape
with the other four. They accordingly started 011 with half the train, leaving
half behind. But the savages paid no
heed to
the abandoned property, following and attacking the emigrants with fresh
activity. The men labored to hasten their cattle, but in spite of all their
efforts the hungry creatures would stop to snatch a mouthful of food. With the
company were four 3'oung men, discharged soldiers from Fort Hall, well armed
with riiles and revolvers belonging to the company, and mounted on good
horses, who were to ride in advance to keep the way open. Instead of doing
their duty, they fled with the horses and arms.18 Two other men,
brothers named lleitli, succeeded in reaching Umatilla the 2d of October, by
whose report, as well as the story of the other surviving fugitives, the
massacre became known.
Finding it
impossible to drive the famished cattle, and seeing that in a short time they
must fall victims to the savages, the ill-fated emigrants determined to abandon
the remainder of the loaded wagons and the cattle, and if possible save their
lives. The moment, however, that they were away from the protection of the
wagons, two persons, John Myers and Susan Utter, were shot dead. Mr l tter,
father of the young woman, then made signs of peace, but was shot while
proposing a treaty. Mrs Utter refused to quit her dead husband, and with three
of her children, a boy and two girls, was soon despatched by the savages.
Eleven
persons had now been killed, six others had left the train, and there remained
thirty-seven men, women, and children. They were too bard pressed to secure
even a little food, and with one loaf of bread hfekiily snatched by Mrs Chase,
fled, under cover of the darkness, out into the wilderness to go—they knew not
whither. By walking all night and hiding under the bank of the liver during the
day thej eluded the Indians. The men had some fish-hooks,
18These men
were named Snyder, Murdoch, Chambourg, and Chaffey, Snyder and Chalfey escaped
and reported tbe other two as k'lled. Account of Joaepli Myers, in Olympia
Standard, Nov. 30, 1800; see also Sac. Union, Oct. 10, 18G0.
the women
some thread, which furnished lines for fishing, by which means they kept from
starving. As the bowlings of the Indians could still be heard, no travel was
attempted except at night. After going about seventy miles, the men became too
weak from famine to carry the young children. Still they had not been entirely
without food, since two dogs that had followed them had been killed and eaten.
After
crossing Snake Biver near Fort Boise they lost the road, and being unable to
travel, encamped 011 the Owyhee Biver. Just before reaching this their final
camp, a poor cow was discovered, which the earlier emigration had abandoned,
whose flesh mixed with the berries of the wild rose furnished scanty
subsistence, eked out by a few salmon purchased of some Indians encamped on
the Snake Biver in exchange for articles of clothing and ammunition. The
members of the party now awaiting their doom, in the shelter of the wigwams on
the banks of the Owyhee, were Alexis Vanormau, Mrs "V anorman, Mark
Yanorman, Mr and Mrs Chase, Daniel and Albert Chase, Elizabeth and Susan
Trimble, Samuel Gleason, Charles and Henry Utter, an infant child of the
murdered Mrs Utter, Joseph Myers, Mrs Myers, and five young children,
Christopher Trimble, several children of Mr Chase,19 and several of
Mr Vanorman’s.
Before
encamping it had been determined to send an express to the settlements. An old
man named Munson, and a boy of eleven, Christopher Trimble, were selected to
go. On reaching Burnt Biver they found the Reith brothers and Chaffey, one of
the deserting soldiers. They had mistaken their way and wandered
19 These arc all the named mentioned by
Myers in his account of the sojourn on the Owyhee; but there are other names
given by the Reith brothers who first arrived at Umatilla. These were William
Anttly, a soldier fiom Fort Hall; A. Markerman, wife and five children; an old
man named Civilian G. Munson; and Charles kesner, a soldier from Fort Hall. U.
Sett. Doc.
1, vol. ii. 143, 1800-01, 30th cong. 2d sess. Munson was among the rescued; all
the others must have been killed in flight. Myers of course could not see all
that was transpiring in the moment ol greatest emergency.
ill the
wilderness, having just returned to the road. Munson went on with these four
men, two of whom succumbed before reaching any settlement, and young Trimble
returned to the Owyhee to encourage the others in the hope that help might
come. They therefore made what effort they could to keep themselves alive with
frogs caught along the river.
During the
first fortnight the Indians made several visits to the camp of the emigrants,
and carried away their guns. A considerable quantity of clothing had been
disposed of for food, and as there wras nothing to replace it,- and
the nights were cold, there was an increase of suffering from that cause. The
Indians took away also by force the blankets which the fleeing men and women
had seized. Alarmed lest another day they might strip him of all his clothing,
and end by killing him, Vanorman set out with his wife and children, five in
number, Samuel Gleason, and Charles and Henry Utter, to go forward on the road,
hoping the sooner to meet a relief party. As it afterward appeared, they
reached Burnt River, where all their bodies were subsequently discovered,
except those of the four younger children, who, it was thought, were taken into
captivity.20 They had been murdered by the savages, and Mrs Vanorman
scalped.
Not long
after the departure from camp of this unfortunate party, Mr Chase died from
eating salmon, which he was too weak to digest. A few days later, Elizabeth
Trimble died of starvation, followed shortly by her sister Susan. Then died
Daniel and Albert Chase, also of famine. For about two weeks previous, the
Indians had ceased to bring in food, or,
20 ‘Eagle-from-the-Light, a Xez Perc6, had
just returned from the Snake country, and there came with him four Snake
Indians, who informed Agent Cain that they knew of four children, members of
that unfortunate party, that wTere yet alive. Arrangements were made
with them by which they agree to bring them in, and accordingly have left their
squaws, and returned to their country for that purpose.’ Letter from Walla
Walla, in Or. Argus, Dee. 22, 1860. The Indians who went after the children,
one of whom was a girl of thirteen, returned on account of snow in the
mountains. They wero heard of within 150 miles of the Flathead agency, and were
sent for by Mr Owen, agent at that place, but were never found.
indeed, to
show themselves, and thus helped on the catastrophe, the indirect cause of
which was their dread of soldiers. Young Trimble had been in the habit of visiting
the Indian camp before mentioned, and one day on returning to the immigrant
camp brought with him some Indians having salmon to sell As Trimble was about
to accompany them back to their village, he was asked by Myers to describe the
trail, “for,” said he, “if the soldiers come to our relief we shall want to
send for you.” It was an unfortunate utterance. At the word ‘soldiers’ the
Indians betrayed curiosity and fear. They never returned to the white camp; but
when sought they had fled, leaving the body of the boy, whom they murdered, to
the wolves.
At length,
in their awful extremity, the living were compelled to eat the bodies of the
dead. This determination, says Myers, Was unanimous, and was arrived at after
consultation and prayer. The bodies of four children were first consumed, and
eaten of sparingly, to make the hated food last as long as it might. But the
time came when the body of Mr Chase was exhumed and prepared for eating.
Before it had been tasted, succor arrived, the relief parties of the Indian
agency ami Captain Dent reaching the Owyhee, forty- five days after tlie attack
on Snake River When the troops came into this camp of misery, they threw
themselves down on their faces and wept, and thought it a cruelty that Captain
Dent would not permit them to scatter food without stint among the half-naked
living skeletons stretched upon the ground, or that he should resist the cries
of the wailing and emaciated children.
The family
of Myers, Mrs Chase and one child, and Miss Trimble were all left alive at the
camp 011 the Owyhee. Munson and Chaffey were also rescued, making twelve
brought in by the troops. These with the three men who first reached the
Columbia lliver were all that survived of a company of fifty-four per
sons.
Thirty-nine lives had been lost,a large amount of property wasted, and
indescribable suffering endured for six weeks. When Captain Dent arrived with
the rescued survivors at the Blue Mountains, they were already covered with
snow, which a little later would have prevented his return.21
The Oregon
legislature being in session when news of the Snake Paver massacre reached the
Willamette Valley, Governor Whiteaker, iu a special message, suggested that
they memorialize the president, the secretary of war, and the commander of the
department of Oregon, 011 the necessity for greater security of the
immigration between forts Hall and Walla Walla. He reminded them that they had
just passed through an Indian war from which the country was greatly depressed,
and left it with the legislature to determine whether the state should
undertake to chastise the Indians, or whether that duty should be left to the
army.44 Acting upon the governor’s suggestion, a memorial was
addressed to congress, asking for a temporary post at the Grand Rond, with a
command of twenty-five men; another with a like command on Burnt River; and a
permanent post at Boise of not less than one company. These posts could be
supplied from Walla Walla, which, since the opening of the country to
settlement, had become a flourishing centre of business.23 The
troops at th* two temporary posts of Grande Ronde and Burnt River could
21 Washington Standard, Nov. 30, 1860; Or.
Statesman, Nov. 26, 1860; Portland Adoertiser, Nov. 7, 1800: Hay's Scraps, v.
101; Or. Argns, Nov. 21, 1800; Olympia Pioneer and Democrat, Oat. 19, 1800;
Ind. Aff. Kept, 1801, 155; U. S. II. Ex:. Doc. 43, vol. viii., 30th cong. 2d
sess.; Cong. Globe, 1800-01^, part ii. p 1324—5; Or. Jour. Senate, 1800, 63;
Special Message of G v. Whiteaker, in Or. Statesman, Oct. 15, I860; S. P.
bulletin, Nov. 14 and 23, I860.
22 Or. Statesman, Oct. 15, ISOO.
2J Tlie
beneficial results of the military post at Walla Walla, erected by order of
Genera] Vt ool iu 1S57, had been great. ‘ Where but recently the bones of our countrymen
were bleaching on the ground, now all is quiet and our citizens are living in
peace, cultivating the soil, and this year have harvested thousands of bushels
of grain, vegetables are produced in abundance, mills have been erected, a
village has sprung up, shops and stores have been opened, and civilization has
accomplished wonderful results by the wise policy of the government.’ Memorial
to Cong., Or. Laws, i860, ap. 2.
return to
Fort Walla Walla to winter, and remain in garrison from November till May.
Another permanent post at or near the Great Falls of Snake River, garrisoned
by at least one full company, was asked for, where also an Indian agent should
be4stationed. This post it was believed would hold in check not only
the Indians, but lawless white men, fugitives from justice, who consorted with
them, and could be supplied from Fort Hall.
The same
memorial urged that treaties should be made with all the Indians of Oregon,
removing them to reservations; and asked for military posts at Warm Springs and
Klamath Lake. In connection with these military establishments, the legislature
recommended the construction of a military road from the foot of the Cascades
of the Columbia to Fort Walla Walla, which should be passable when the Columbia
was obstructed by ice. In a briefer memorial the secretary of war was informed
of the want of military protection on the routes of immigration, and asked to
establish three posts within the eastern borders of Oregon; namely, a
four-company post at Fort Boise; a two-company post on the Malheur Iliver, for
the pur* pose of protecting the new immigrant trail from Boise to Eugene City;
and a one-company post somewhere on Snake liiver between forts Boise and Walla
Walla. This memorial also asked that a military road be constructed on the
trail leading from Eugene City to Boise.'24
The Umpqua
district being attached to the department of California, it devolved on
General Clarke in command to look after the southern route to Oregon. This he
did by ordering Lieutenant A. Piper of the 3d artillery, stationed at Fort
Umpqua, to take the
24 The committee that prepared this memorial
evidently was under the impression that Steen had completed a reconnoissance of
the middle route, which was not the ease, his time being chiefly spent, as
Wright expressed it, in ‘pursuing an invisible foe.’ Steen’s report was
published by congress. See Cony. Globe, lijOO-l, part ii., 1 1.j7.
field in
southern Oregon with one company June 27th, and proceed to the Klamath Lake
country to quiet disturbances there, occasioned by the generally hostile
attitude of the Indians of northern California, Nevada, and southern Oregon at
this time. Piper encamped at a point seventy-five miles west of Jacksonville,
which he called Camp Day. In September a train of thirty-two wagons arrived
there, which had escaped with no further molestation than the loss of some
stock. Another train being behind, and it becoming known that a hundred Snake
Indians were in the vicinity of Klamath Lake, under a chief named Ilowlack,
sixty-five men were sent forward to their protection. They thus escaped evils
intended for them, but which fell on others.
Successes
such as had attended the hostile movements of the Snake Indians during the
years of 1859-60 were likely to transform them from a cowardly and thieving
into a warlike and murderous foe. The property obtained bv them in that time
amounted to many thousands of dollars, and being in arms, ammunition, horses,
and cattle, placed them upon a war footing, which with their nomadic habits and
knowledge of the country rendered them no despicable foe, as the officers and
troops of the United States were yet to be compelled to acknowledge.25
“In tlie summer of
1858 G. H, Abbott, Indian agent, went into the Indian country, afterward known
to military men as the JjJte District, with a view to make treaties with the
Snakes, Bannocks, Klamaths, and llodoes, the only tribes capable of making war,
who had neither been conquered nor treated with, sod selected a place for an
agency north of the Klamath Lakes, and about 7 j miles from Jacksonville in a
north-easterly direction. On his return his party discovered the remains of
five men, prospectors, who had been murdered, as it was believed, by Klamaths,
on the head waters of Butte creek, the middle fork of Ilo 'ue Jtiver. They were
Eli Tedford, whose body was burned, Robert Probst, James Crow, S. F. Conger,
and James Brown. Ind. Aff. Hept, 18u9, 391-2. A company of volunteers at once
went iu search of the murderers, three of whom, chieflj by the assistance of
the agent, were apprehended, and whom the Klamaths voluntarilj killed to prevent
trouble; that tribe being now desirous of standing well with the U. S.
fovernment. Five
other renegades from tlie. conquered tribes of the Ilogue liver mountains were
not captured. In June 18,39 a prospecting party from Lane county was attacked
on the head waters of the Malheur ltiver, and two of the men wounded. They
escaped with a loss of §7,1)00 or $S,0O0 worth of property. Sac. Union, July
7,18G0. Of the emigrants of 1S09 who
The
continual search for gold which had been going on in the Oregon territory both
before and after its division26 was being actively prosecuted at
this time. An acquaintance with the precious metal in its native state having
been acquired by the Oregon miners in California in 1818—9, reminded some of
them that persons who had taken the Meek cut-off in 1845, while passing through
the Malheur country had picked up an unfamiliar metal, which they had hammered
out on a wagon- tire, and tossed into a tool-chest, but which was afterward
lost. That metal they were now confident was gold,and men racked their brains
to remember the identical spot where it was found; even going on an expedition
to the Malheur in 1849 to look for it, but without success.
Partial
discoveries in many parts of the country
took the southern
route into the Klamath Lake valley, one small train was so completely cut off
that their fate might never have been discovered but for the information
furniohed by a Klamath Indian, who related the affair to Abbott. The men and
women were all killed at the moment of attack, and the children, reserved for
slavery, were removed with their plunder to the island in Tule Lake, long
famous as the refuge of the murderous Modocs. A few days later, seeing other
emigrant trains passing, the Indians became apprehensive and killed their
captives. Abbott made every effort to learn something more definite, but
without success. By some of the Modocs it was denied; by others the crime was charged
upon the Pit River Indians, and the actual criminals were never brought to
light. In the summer of 1858, also, thatworthy Oregon pioneer, Felix Scott, and
seven others had been cut off by the Modocs, and a la-ge amount of property
captured or destroyed Drew made a report on the Modocs, in Ind. Aff. Ilept,
1863, 59, where he enumerates 112 victims of their hostility since 1852, and
estimates tho amount of property taken at not less than $301),000.
20 As early
as .Tuly 1850 two expeditions set out to explore for gold on the Spokane and
Yakima rivers, S. F. Pac. 1Yen's, July 24 and Oct. 10, 1850; but it was not
found in quantities sufficient to cause any excitement. M. De Samt-Amaut, an
envoy of the French government, travelling in Oregon in 1851, remarked, page
365 of his book, that without doubt gold existed in the Yakima country, and
added that the Indians daily found nuggets of the precious metal. He gave the
same account of the Spokane country, but I doubt if his knowledge was gained
from any more reliable source than rumor. There were similar reports of the
Pend d’Oreille country in 1852. Zdbrixkie’s Land Law, 823. In 1853 Captain
George 13. McClellan, then connected with the Pacific railroad survey, found
traces of gold at tlio head-waters of the Yak ima River. S/evens' Jfam, in Pac.
P. R. Rept,xii. 140. In 1854 some mining was done on that river and also on the
Wenatchie. Or. Statesman, June 20, 1854; S. F. Alta, Juue 13, 1854; and
prospecting was begun on Burnt River in the autumn of the same year. Ebey's
Journal, MS., ii 39, 50, and also iu the vicinity of The Dalles. 8. F. Alta,
Sept. 30, 1854. In 1855 there were discoveries near Colville, the rush to which
place was interrupted by tho Indian war. In 1857-8 followed the discoveries in
British Columbia, and the Frazer River excitement.
north of
the Columbia again in 1854 induced a fresh search for the ‘lost diggings,’as
the forgotten locality of the gold find in 1845 was called, which was as unsuccessful
as the previous one. Such was the faith, however, of those who had handled the
stray nugget, that parties resumed the search for the lost diggings, while yet
the Indians in all the eastern territory were hostile, and mining was forbidden
by the military authorities.27 The search was stimulated by Wallen’s
report of his road expedition down the Malheur in 1859, gold being found on
that stream; and in 1860 there was formed in Lane county the company before
mentioned, which was attacked by the Snakes,23 and robbed of several
thousand dollars’ worth of horses and supplies. In August 18G1 still another
company was organized to prosecute the search, but failed like the others; and
breaking up, scattered in various parts of the country, a small number
remaining to prospect on the John Lay and Powder rivers, where sometime in
the autumn good diggings were discovered.2J
27 In August 1857 James McBride, George L.
Woods, Perry McCullock, Henry Moore, and three others, Or. Argus, Aug. 8, 1857,
left The Dalles, intending to go to the Malheur, but were driven back by the
Snake Indians, and fleeing westward, crossed the Cascade Mountains near the
triple peaks of the Three Sisters, emerging into the Willamette Valley in a
famishing condition. Victor's Trail-making in Oregon, in Overland Monthly. In
August 1858 McBride organized a sccond expedition, consisting of 26 men, who
after a month's search returned disappointed. Or. Argus, Sept. 18, 1858. Other
attempts followed, blit the exact locality of the lost diggings was never
iixed.
28 This party was led by Henry Martin, who
organized another company the following year.
29 There were three companies exploring in
eastern Oregon in 1861; the one from Marion county is the one above referred
to, seven men remaining after the departure of the principal part of the
expedition. It appears that J. L. Adams was the actual discoverer of the John
Day diggings, and one Marshall of the Powder River mines. The other companies
were from Clackamas and Lane, and each embraced about 60 men. The Lane company
prospected the Malheur unsuccessfully. In Owen's Directory the discovery of
the John Day mines is incorrectly attributed to Californians. Portland Advertiser,
in Olympia Herald, Nov. 7, 1861; Portland Oregonian, Nov. 7, 1 SCI; Sac. Union,
Nov. 16, 1861; N. Y. Engineering and Mining Journal, in Portland D. Herald,
March 22, 1871; Cal. Farmer, Feb, 27, 1863. Previous to the announcement of the
discoveries by the Oregon prospectors, E. D. Pierce returned to Walla Walla
from an expedition of eight weeks in extent, performed with a party of 20
through the country on the west side of Snake River, taking in the Malheur,
Burnt, Powder, and Grande Rondo rivers, .lie reported finding an extensive
gold-field on these streams, with room for thousands of miners, who could make
from three to fifteen dollars a day each.
Two men
working half a day on Powder River cleaned up two and a half pounds of
gold-dust. One claim yielded $6,000 in four days; and one pan of earth contained
0150. These stories created the liveliest interest in every part of Oregon,
and led to an immediate rush to the new gold-fields, though it was already
November when the discovery was made known.
Taken in
connection with the discoveries in the Nez Perce country, which preceded them
by about a year and a half, these events proved that gold-fields extended from
the southern boundary of ()regon to the British possessions. Already the
migration to the N-ez Perce, Oro Pino, and Salmon River mines had caused a
great improvement in the country. It had excited a rapid growth in Portland and
The Dalles,133 and caused the
organization of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company,31 which in 1861
had steamboats carrying freight three times a week to
Pierce brought
specimens of silver-bearing rooks to be assayed. About forty persons in Oct.
had taken claims in the Grande Ronde Valley, prepared to ■winter
there. Portland Oregonian, Aug. 27, 1861; Or. Statesman, Out. 21, 1801; S. P.
Bulletin, Oct. 24, 1801; Sac. Union, Nov. 4 and lli, 1801.
S'1 Wasco
county was assessed in 1803 $1,500,000, a gain of half a million since 1802,
notwithstanding heavy losses by ilood and snow. Or. Argus, Sept. 28, 1863.
31 The James
P. Flint a small non propeller, built in the east, was the tirst steamboat on
the Columbia above the Cascades. She was hauled up over the rapids in 1832 to
run to The Dalles, for the Bradford brothers, Daniel and Putnam., The Yakima
war of 1855-0 gave the first real impulse to steam’ooating on the Columbia
above- the Willamette. • The first steamer built to run to the Cascades was the
Belle, owned by J. C. Ainsworth & Co., the next the Fashion, owned by J. O.
Van Bergen. J, S. Ruckle soon »fter built the Mountain Buck Others rapidly
followed. In 1850 between the Cascades and The Dalles there were the Mary and
the IVasco, built by the Bradfords. In 1857 there was no steamboat above Tho
Dalles, and Captain Cram of the army confidently declared there never could
be. I. J. Stever^ contradicted this view, anil a correspondence ensued. Olympia
Herald, Dec. 24, 1858. In 1858 R. R. Thompson built a steamboat above the
Cascades, called The Venture, which getdng into the current was carried over
t’je falls. She was repaired, named the Umatilla, and taken to Fraser Riv«r. In
the autumn and winter of 1858-0, II. It. Thompson and Lawrence \Y. Coe built the
Colonel Wright above The D .lies, which iu spite of Cram’s prognostics ran to
Fort Walia Walla, to priest’s Rapids, anil up Snake River.
V he lhissatoe was
also put on the river between the Cascades and The Dalles in 1858, and below
the Cascades the Carrie. A. Ladd. There was at this time a liorse-rai’.road at
the portage on the north side of tho Cascades, owned by Bradford & Co.,
built in 1853. In 18»>8 J. O. Van Bergen purchased the right of way on the
south side of the Cascades, and began a tramway, like that on tho norih side,
but used iu connection with his steamers. Subse-
quently J. S. Ruckle
and Henry Olmstead purchased it to complete their lino to The Dalles. At this
stage of progress a company was formed by Ainsworth, Ruckle, and Bradford &
Co., their common property being the Carrie A. Ladd, Senorita, Belle, Mountain
Buck, another small steamer run ning to The Dalles, and five miles of
horse-railroad on the i.orth side of the river. The company styled itself the
Union Transportation Company, and soon purchased the Independence and Wasco,
owned by Alexander Ankeny, and the James P. Flint and Fashion, owned by J. O.
Van Bergen.
As there was no law
in Oregon at this time under which corporations could be established, the
above-named company obtained from the. legislature of Washington an act
incorporating it under tiie name of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company When
the Oregon legislature passed a general incorporation act granting the same
privileges enjoyed under the Washington law, the company was incorporated under
it, and paid taxes in Oregon. In 1861 the railroad portage on the south side of
the Cascades was completed, and the following year the 0. S. N. Co. purchased
it, laying down iron rails and putting on a locomotive built at the Vulcan
foundery of S. P. The first train run over the road was on April 20, 1863, and
the same day the railroad portage from The Dalles to Celilo was opened.
Meantime the O. S. X. Co. had consolidated with Thompson and Coe above The
Dalles in 1861, and now became a powerful monopoly, controlling the navigation
of the Columbia above the Willamette. Their charges for passage and freight
were always as high as they would stand, this being the principle on which
charges were regulated, rather than the cost of transportation.
Iu 1863 the People’s
Transportation Company built the E. I). Baker to run to the Cascades; another,
the Iris, between the Cascades and The Dalles; and a third, the Cayuse, above
The Dalles. They lost the contract for carrying the government freight, and
the 0. S. N. Co. so reduced their rates as to leave the opposition small
profits in competition. A compromise was effected by purchasing the property of
the people’s line above tlio Cascades, paying for the Cayuse and Iris in three
boats running between Portland and Oregon City, and $10,000; the O. S. X. Co.
to have the exclusive navigation of the Columbia and the people’s 1
ine to coniine their business to the Willamette, above Portland. In 1S6j all
the boats on the lower Columbia were purchased. In 1879 the 0. S. N. Co. sold
its interests, which had greatly multiplied and increased, to the Oregon
Railway and Navigation Company, a corporation which included river, ocean, and
railroad transportation, and wnich represented many millions of capital.
Ainsworth formerly commanded a Mississippi River steamboat. Ruckle came to
Oregon in 1855, and became captain of Van Bergen’s boat, the Fashion. Then he
built a boat for himself, the Mountain Buck, and then the railroad portage. He
was a successful projector, and made money in various ways. In 1864-3 he
assisted George Thomas and others to construct a. stage road over the Blue Mountains;
and also engaged iu quartz mining, developing the famous Rockfellow lode
between Powder and Bu .'nt rivers, which was later the Virtue mine. S. G. Reed
came from Massachusetts to Oregon about 1851. lie was keeping a small store at
Rai ni»r in 1853, but soon removed to Portland, where ho became a member of the
O. S. N. Co. in a few years. He has given much attention to the rais, ing of
fine-blooded stock on his farm in fashington county. Parker’s Puget Sound, MS.,
1; Dalles Inland Empire, Dec. 'IS, 1878. John H. Wolf com tnanded The Cascades;
John Babbage the Julia and the Emma Hayward; J. McNulty the Hassaloe and
Mountain Queen. Thomas J. Stump could run The Dalles and the Cascades at a
certain stage of water with a steamboat. Other steamlxiat m;n were Samuel D.
Holmes, Sebastian Miller. Leonard Hisj.. Ob., Vol. II. 31
ness,
clothing, and provisions were required in large quantities and sold at high
prices. Lewiston had also sprung up at the junction of the Clearwater and Snake
rivers, besides several mining towns in the gold- fields to the east. Nor were
mining and cattle-raising the only industries to which eastern Oregon and
Washington proved to be adapted. Contrary to the generally received notion of
the nature of the soil of these grassy plains, the ground, wherever it was
cultivated, raised abundant crops, and agriculture became at once a prominent
and remunerative occupation of the settlers, who found in the mines a ready
market. But down to the close of 1861, when the John Day and Powder River mines
were discovered, the benefits of the great improvements which I have mentioned
had accrued chiefly to Washington, although founded with the money of
Oregonians, a state of things which did not fail to call forth invidious comment
by the press of Oregon. But now it was anticipated that the state was to reap
a golden harvest from her own soil, and preparations were made in every part of
the Pacific coast for a grand movement in the spring toward the new land of
promise.
Before the
vivid anticipations of the gold-huntcrs could be realized a new form of
calamity had come.
White, W. P. Grey,
Ephraim Baughman of the E. I) Baker ana later of the 0. S. N. Co.’s boats above
The Dalles; Josiah Myrick of the Wilson Ji. Hunt and other boats; James -Strang
of the Rescue and Wenat; Joseph Kellogg of the Rescue and the Kellogg; William
Smith of the Wenat; William Turnbull of the Fannie Trovp; Richard Hobson of
the/o,vie McNear; James M. Gilman and Sherwood of tue Annie Stewart; Gray,
Felton, and Holman, whose names are associated with the ante-railroad days of
transportation in Oregon. See McCracken’s Early Steamboating, MS.; Deady’s
Hist. Or., MS.; Deady’s Scrap-bouk; Or. Argun, Feb. 22, 1862; Portland
Oregonian, Dec. 2G, 1864, and July 31, 1805; Or. Statesman, April 7, 18G2;
Olympia Pioneer and Democrat, Sept. 10, 1858; Olympia Herald, Sept. 10, 1858;
Land Off. Rept, 18G7, 69; U. S. Sec. War Rept, ii. 509-11, 40th oong. 2d sess.;
Cong. Globe, 1805-6, pt v. ap. 317, 39th cong. 1st sess.; Or. City Enterprise,
Dec 29, 18GG; Dalles Mountaineer, Jan. 19, 1866; Rusling’s Across America, 231,
250; S. F. Bulletin, July 20, 1858; S. F. Alta, March 4, 1862; Or. Laws, 1860,
ap. 2; Census, 8th, 331; lord’s Roa/l-makers, MS., 31; Or. Reports, iii.
169—70; McCormick's Portland Directory, 1872, 30-1; Or. Deutsch Ztitung, June
21, 1879; Portland Standard, July 4, 1879; Astoriah, July II. 1879; Portland Oregonian, April 20 and June
15, 1878; Richardson's Mississ., 401; Owen’s Directory, 1865, 141; Bowles’
Northwest, 482-3.
Toward the
last of November a deluge of rain began, which, being protracted for several
days, inundated all the valleys west of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade ranges,
from southern California to northern Washington, destroying the accumulations
of years of industry. No flood approaching it in volume had been witnessed
since the winter of 1844. All over the Willamette the country was covered with
the wreckage of houses, barns, bridges, and fencing; while cattle, small
stock, storehouses of grain, mills, and other property were, washed away. A
number of lives were lost, and many imperilled. In the streets of Salem the
river ran in a current four feet deep for a quarter of a mile in breadth. At
Oregon City all the mills, the breakwater, and hoisting works of the Milling
and Transportation Company, the foundery, the Oregon Hotel, and many more
structures were destroyed and carried away. Linn City was swept clean of
buildings, and Canemah laid waste. Cham- poeg had no houses left; and so on up
the river, every where.82 The Umpqua River rose until it carried
away the whole of lower Scottsburg, with all the mills and improvements on the
main river, and the rains destroyed the military road on wThieh had
been expended fifty thousand dollars.33 The weather continued stormy,
and toward christmas the rain turned to snowT, the cold being
unusual. On the 13th of January there had been no overland mail from California
for more than six weeks, the Columbia was blocked with ice, which came down
from its upper branches, and no steamers could reach Portland from the ocean,
while there wras no communication by land or water with eastern
Oregon and Washington; whieli state of things lasted until the 20th, when the
ice in the Willamette and elsewhere began breaking up, and the cold relaxed.
** In the following
summer '•he first raw mil' was erected at Gardiner.
83 Or.
Statesman, Dec. 9 ami 16, 18GJ The rain-fall from October to March was 71.60
inches. Id., May 19, 1862.
Such a
season as this coming upon minors and travellers in the sparsely settled upper
country was sure to occasion disaster. It strewed the plains with dead men,
whose remains were washed down by the next summer’s Hood, and destroyed as many
as twenty- five thousand cattle. A herder on the Tucaunon froze to death with all
tho animals in his charge.
o
Travellers
lay down by the wayside and slept the sleep that is dreamless. A sad tale is
told of the pioneers of the John Day mines, who were wintering at the base of
the Blue mountains to be ready for the opening of spring, many of whom were
murdered and their bodies eaten by the Snakes.31
The flood
and cold of winter were followed in May by another flood, caused by the rapid
meltiiig of the large body of snow in the upper country. The water rose at The
Dalles several feet over the principal streets, and the back-water from the
Columbia overflowed the lower portion of Portland. On the 14th of June the
river was twenty-eight feet above low- water mark. The damages sustained along
the Columbia were estimated at more than a hundred thousand dollars, although
the Columbia Valley wTas almost in its wild state. Added to the
losses of the winter, the whole country had sustained great injury. On the
other hand, there wTas a prospect of rapidly recovering from the
natural depression. The John Day mines were said by old California miners to be
the richest yet discovered. This does not seem to have proved true as compared
with Salmon Itiver; but they were undoubtedly rich. By the 1st of July there
were nearly a thousand persons mining and trading on the head waters of this
river. New discoveries were made on Granite Creek, the north branch of the
North Pork of John Day, later in the season,
54 Of the
perilou? and fatal adventures of a pi.rty of express messengers and travellers
in this region, John D. James, J. E. Jagger, Moody, Gay, Niles, Jeffries,
Wilson, Bolton, and others, also of a party bound fur the John Day River mines,
full details are giv en in Caltfunki Inter Pocula, this series.
which
yielded from twenty to fifty dollars a day. Xor were the mines the sole
attraction of this region: the country itself was eagerly seized upon; almost
every qnarter-section of land along the streams was claimed and had a cabin
erected upon it,35 with every preparation for a permanent residence.
About a
dozen men wintered in the Powder River Valley, not suffering cold or annoyed by
Indians. This valley was found to contain a large amount of fertile land
capable of sustaining a large population. It was bounded by a high range of
granite mountains, rising precipitously from the western edge of the basin,
while on the north and south it was shut in by high rolling hills covered with
nutritious grass. To the east rose a lower range of the same rolling hills,
beyond which towered another granite ridge similar to that 011 the west. The
river received its numerous tributaries, rising in the south and west, and
united them in one on the north-east side of the valley, thus furnishing an
abundance of watercourses throughout.
In this
charming locality, where a little handful of miners hibernated for several
months, cut off from all the world, in less than four months after the snow
blockade was raised a thriving town had sprung up and a new county was
organized, a hundred votes being cast at the June election, and the returns
being made to the secretary of state as “the vote of Baker county.”33
The (Jrand Rond Valley had always been the admiration of travellers. A por
25 Ebey's Journaly MS.,
viii. 237-8.
36 ‘They
assumed to organize,’ said the Statesman of June 23, 18C2, ‘and
named the precincts
Union and Auburn, and elected officers. One precinct
made returns properly
from Wasco county. ’ The legislative assembly in tlie
following September
organized the county of Baker legally by act. Sydney
Abell was the first
justice of the peace. He died in May 1803, being over
50 years of age. He
was formerly from Springfield, III., but more recently from Marysville, Cal.
Portland Oregonian, May 28, 18G3. At the first municipal election of Auburn
Jacob Norcross was elected mayor; O. M. Eowe recorder; J. J. Dooley treasurer;
A. C. Lo wring, D. A. Johnson, J. Lovell,
I). M. Belknap, J. R.
Totman, aldermen. Or, Statesman, Nov. 17, 1862.
Umatilla county was
also established in 1862.
tion of
the immigration of 1843 liad desired to settle here, but- was prevented by its
distance from a base of supplies. Every subsequent immigration had looked upon
it with envying eyes, but had been deterred by various circumstances from settling
in it. It was the discovery of gold, after all, which made it practicable to
inhabit it. In the winter of 1861-2 a mill ^ite had been selected, and there
were live log houses erected all at one point for greater security from the
incursions of the Snake Indians, and the embryo city was called La Grande. It
bad at this date twenty inhabitants, ten of whom were men. It grew rapidly for
three or four years, being incorported in 1864,37 and after the
first flush of the mining fever, settled down to steady it’ slow advancement.
The
pioneers of Grand Rond sutfered none of those hardships from severe weather
experienced in the John Day region or at Walla Walla. Only eighteen inches of
snow fell in January, which disappeared in a few days, leaving the meadows
green for their cattle to graze on. La Grande had another advantage: ic was on the immigrant road, which crave it communication
with the Columbia. Another road was being opened eastward fifty miles to the
Snake River, on a direct f’uurse to the Salmon River mines; and a road was also
opened in the previous Xovember from the western foot of the Blue Mountains to
the Grande Ronde Talley, which was to be extended to the Powder Iliver Valley.93
81 Owen/s’
Directory, 1865, 140; Or. Jo'<r. Honse, 1S64, 83. The Ereoc h voya^eura
sometimes called the Grand Rond, La Grande Vallee, aud the American settlers
subsequently adopte 1 the adjective as a name tor thtir town, instead of the
Unger phrase Ville dt I% Grandt Vallee, which was meant.
’’The last road rr..
ntioned was one stipulated for in the treaty of ISoo with the Cayuse and
Umatilla Indians, which should be ‘locatedand cpened from Powder River or 11
rand Rond to the western base of the Blue Mountains, south of the southern
limits of the reservations.’ The explorations were made under the direction of
H. G. Thornton, by order of Wia H. Rector. The distance by this road from the
base to the summit ix sixteen wilesy from the summit to Grand Rond River,
eighteen lailes; and down the rivei to the old emigiant road, twelve miles. It
first touched the Grand Rond
Such was
the magical growth of a country four hundred miles from the seaboard, and but
recently opened to settlement. In twenty years it had become a rich and
populous agricultural region, holding its mining resources as secondary to the
cultivation of the soil.
River about midway
between Grand Rond and Powder River valley, and turned south to the latter from
this point. Ind. Ajf. Rept, 1861, 154; Port- luud Oregonian. Feb. 6, 18(i2.
1861-1805.
Appropriation
Askld
foe—General Wright—Sis Companies
Raised— Attitude toward Secessionists—First Oregon Cavalry—Expeditions of
Maury, Drake, and Curry—Fort Boise Established— Reconnoissance of Drew—Treaty with the Klamaths and Mo- doos—Action oi the Lemslatike—First Infaxtry
Oregon Voi,- tNIEERS.
Sometime
during
the autumn or ■winter of 1860 the
military department of Oregon was merged in that of the Pacific,
Brigadier-general E. V. Sumner commanding; Colonel Wright retaining his position
of commander of the district of Oregon and Washington. The regular force in the
country being much reduced by the drafts made upon it to increase the army in
the east,1 Wright apologized for the abandoment of the country by
troops at a time when Indian wars and disunion intrigue made them seem
indispensable, but declared that every minor consideration must give way to the
preservation of the union.2
Fearing
lest the emigrant route might be left unprotected, a call was made by the
people of Walla
1 There were only about 700 men ami 19
commissioned officers left in the ■whole of Oregon and
Washington iu 1S61. The garrisons left were ] 11 men under Captain EL M. Black
at Vancouver; 116 men under Maj. Lugeubeelat Colville; 127 men under Maj. Steen
at Walla Walla; 41 men under Capt. Van Voast at Cascades; 43 men under Capt, F.
T. Dent at Hoskins; 110 men at the two posts of Steilacoom and Camp Picket; and
54 men under Lieut- colonel Buchanan at The Dalles. U. S. S*n. Doc., 1, vol.
ii. 32, 37th cong. 2d sess. Even the revenue cutter Jo Lane belonging to
Astoria was ordered to New York. Or. Argus, June 29, 1801.
2 See letter in Or. Statesman, July 1,
1801.
Walla
Valley to form a company to guard tlie immigration, a plan which was abandoned
on learning that congress had made an appropriation asked for by the
legislature of $50,000 for the purpose of furnishing an escort.3
Although
no violent outbreaks occurred in 18G1, both the people and the military
authorities were apprehensive that the Indians, learning that civil war
existed, and seeing that the soldiery were withdrawn, might return to
hostilities, the opportunities offered by the numerous small parties of miners
travelling to and fro heightening the temptation and the danger.4
Some color was given to these fears by the conduct of the Indians on the coast
reservation, who, finding Fort Umpqua abandoned, raised an insurrection, took
possession of the storehouse at the agency, and attempted to return to their
former country. They were however prevented carrying out their scheme, only the
leaders escaping, and the guard at Fort Hoskins was strengthened by a small
detachment from Fort Yamhill. Several murders having been committed in the
Modoc, Pit lliver, and Pah Ute country, a company of forty men under Lindsey
Applegate, who had been appointed special Indian agent, went to the protection
of travellers through that region, and none too soon to prevent the destruction
of a train of immigrants at Bloody Point, where they were found surrounded.5
On the appearance of Applegate’s coin-
8 Or. Argus, June 15, 1801; Cong. Globe,
lbGO-1, pt ii. 1213, 3Gth cong. 2d sess.; Id., 1324-5; Id., app. 302.
! On the
Barlow route to The Dalles the Tyghe Indians from the Warm Sp 'ins reservation
murdered several travellers in the month of July. Among the killed were Jarvis
Briggs, and his son aged 28 years, residents of Linn eounty, and pioneers of
Oregon, from Terre Haute, Indiana. Or. Statesman, Aug. 20, 18GI The murderers
of these two were apprehended and hanged. The Pit River Indians and llodoes
killed Joseph Bailey, member elect to the Oregon legislature, in August, while
driving a herd of 800 cattle to the Nevada mines. Bailey was a large and
athletic man, and fought desperately for his life, killing several Indians after
he was wounded. Samuel Evans and John Sims were also killed, the remainder of
the party escaping. Or. Statesman, Aug. 19, 1801.
6 Ind. Aff. Rept, 1803, 59; Portland
Oregonian, Aug. 27, 1SG1; 0. C. Applegate’s Modoc Hist., MS., 17. Present at
this ambush were some of the Modocs celebrated afterward in the war of 1872-3;
namely, Sconeliin, Scar- face, Black Jim, and others.
pany the
Modocs retreated, and no further violence occurred during the season. In
anticipation of similar occurrences, Colonel Wright in June 1861 made a
requisition upon Governor Whiteaker for a cavalry company. It was proposed that
the company be enlisted for three years, unless sooner discharged, and
mustered into the service of the United States, with the pay and according to
the rules and regulations of the regular army, with the exception that the company
should furnish its own horses, for which they would receive compensation for
use or loss in service. A. P. Dennison, former Indian agent at The Dalles, was
appointed enrolling officer; but the suspicion which attached to him, as well
as to the governor, of sympathy with the rebellion, hindered the success of the
undertaking, which finally was ordered discontinued,6 and the
enlisted men were disbanded.
In the
mean time Wright was transferred to California to take the command of troops
in the southern part of that state, for the suppression of rebellion, while
Lieutenant-colonel Albemarle Cady, of the 7th infantry, was assigned to the
command of the district of Oregon. Soon after, Wright was made brigadier-
general, and placed in command of the department of the Pacific.7 As
troops were withdrawn from the
6 Or. Statesman,
June 17 anti Oct. 21, 1861; Or. Joar. House, 1862, app. 22-4. ‘
7 He was a native of Vt, graduated from
West Point in 1822, and was promoted to the rank of 2d lieut in the 3d inf. iu
July, and to the iimk of 1st lieut in Sept. of the same year. He served in the
west, principally at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and in Indian campaigns on the
frontier,until 1831, when he was transferred to La, with the 3d inf., occupying
the position of adj. to that reg. until 1836, when he was promoted to a
captaincy in the 8th inf. He serv ed through the Florida war, and under the
command of <5en. Taylor, fought at Pmlo Alto and Ilesaca de la Palma in
Mexico, after which lie was transferred to Scott’s command. He received three
brevets ft ir gallant services before being promoted to the rank of maj., one
in the Florida war, one after the. battles of Contreras and Churubusco, Mexico,
and the lust, that of col, after the battle of Molino del Iley. Wright camo to
the Pacific coast with the 5th inf. in 1852, holding the rank of maj., and was
promoted to a colonelcy Feb. 3, 1855, and the following month was appointed to
command the reg. of 9th inf., for which provision had just been made by
congress. He went east, raised his regiment, ami returned in Jan. 1856, when he
was ordered to Or. and Wash. He remained in that military district, as we have
seen, until the summer of 1861. In Sept, he was ordered to S. P., and soon
after relieved Gen. Sumner in the command of the department of the Pacific,
several
posts in Oregon and Washington he replaced them with volunteer companies from
California. On the 28th of October 350 volunteer troops arrived at Vancouver
and were sent to garrison forts Yamhill aud Steilacoom. On the 20th of November
five companies arrived under the command of Major Curtis, two of which were
despatched to Fort Colville, aud two to Fort Walla Walla, one remaining at The
Dalles.8 _
The
attempt to enlist men through the state authorities having failed, the war
department in November made Thomas R. Cornelius colonel, and directed him to
raise ten companies of cavalry for the service of the United States for three
years; this regiment being, as it was supposed, a portion of the 500,000 whose
enlistment was authorized by the last congress. R. F. Maury was commissioned
lieutenant-colonel, Benjamin F. Harding quartermaster, C. S. Drew major, and J.
S. Rinearson junior major. Volunteers for themselves and horses were to
receive thirty- one dollars a month, $100 bounty at the expiration of service,
and a land warrant of 160 acres. Notwithstanding wages on farms and in the
mines were high, men enlisted in the hope of going east to fight.5
Six
being appointed
brig.-gen. on the 28th Sept. He remained in command till 1805, when, lieing
transferred to tlio reestablished Oregon department, he toot passage on the
ill-fated Brother Jonathan, which foundered ntar Cresctnt City July 9, 1865,
when Wright, his -«ifc, the captain of the ship, De Wolf, anil 300 passengers
were drowned. North Pacific Review, i. 216-17.
6S. P.
Alta, Nov. 3 and 14, lfi61; Sac. Union, Nov. 16 and 25, 1861. The officers at
Walla Walla were Capt. W. T. McGmder, 1st dragoons, lieuta Reno and Wheeler,
and surgeon Thomas A. McParlin. Capts A. Rowell and West, of the 4th Cal. reg.,
were stationed at The Dalles. Or. Statesman, Aug. 11 anil Dec. 2, 1801.
"Says J. A.
Waymire: ‘It was thought as soon as we should become disciplined, if the war
should continue, wr would be taken east, should there be no war on this coast.
For my own pirt, I should have gone to tho army of tho Missouri but for this
understanding. ’ Historical Correspondence, MS. Camps were established in
Jackson, Marion, and Clackamas counties. The first company, A, was raised in
Jackson county, Capt. T. S. Harris. Thti second, 15, in Marion, Capt. E. J.
Harding. Company C was raised at Vancouver by Capt. William Kelly. D company
was raised in Jackson county by Capt. S. Trua.:; company K by Capt. George B.
Currj, in Wasco county; and company F, of the southern battalion, by Capt.
William J. Matthews, principally in Josephine county. Captains D. P. Thompson,
of Oregon City, and Remick Cowles, of Umpqua county, also raised companies,
companies
being fully organized, tlie regiment was ordered to Vancouver about the last of
May 1862, where it was clothed with United States uniforms, and armed with
old-fashioned muzzle-loading rifles, pistols, and sabres; after which it
proceeded to The Dalles.
On the 3d
of June, Colonel Cornelius arrived at Fort Walla Walla with companies Ii and E,
and took command of that post. About two weeks later the three southern
companies followed, making a force of 600. The necessity for some military force
at home was not altogether unfelt. The early reverses of the federal army gave
encouragement to secession on the Pacific coast. General Wright, on the 30th of
April, 1862, issued an order confiscating the property of rebels within the
limits of his department, and making sales or transfers of land by such
persons illegal.10 Government officers refused to purchase forage or
provisions from disloyal firms; and disloyal newspapers were excluded from the
mails.11
or parts of
companies. Brown’& Autobiography, MS., 47; Letter of Lieut Way- mire, in
Historical Correspondence, MS.; Rhinehart's Oregon Cavalry, MS., 1-2. '
10 A circular was issued from t-ie land
office at Washington confining grants of land to poisons ‘loyal to the United
States, and to such only;’ and requiring all surveyors and preemptora to take
the oath of allegiance. Or. Argus, March 8, 1S62; Or. Statesman, March 3, 1862.
The Albany Democrat
was excluded from the mails; also the Southern Oregon Gazette, the Eugene.
Democratic Register, and next the Albany Inquirer, followed by the Portland
Advertiser, published by S. J. McCormick, and the Corvallis Union, conducted by
Patrick J. Malone. W G. T’Vault started a secession journal at Jacksonville in
November 1862, called the Oregon Intelligencer. The Albany Democrat resumed
publication by permission, under the charge of James O’Meara in the early part
of February 1863. In May O’Meara revived the Eugene. Register, under the name
of Democratic Review. The Democratic State Journal at The Dalles was sold in
1803 to W. W. Bancroft, and changed to a union paper, in Idaho. Union journals
were started about this time; among them The State Republican, at Eugene City,
was first published by Shaw t Davis on the materials of the People's Press, in
January 1862, edited by J. M. Gale, and the Union Crusadtr at the same place,
by A. C. Edmonds, in October, changed in a month to The Herald of Re* form.
"The first daily published in Oregon was the Portland News, April 18,
1859; S. A. English & Co. The Portland Daily Times was first issued Dec.
19, 1860, and the Portland Daily Oregonian, Feb. 4, 186J. The first newspaper
east ot The Dallas was the Mountain Sentinel, a weekly journal started fit La
Grande in October 1864, by E. S. McComas. In the spring of 1865 the Tri-Weekly
Advertiser was started at Umatilla on the materials of the Port'and Times, and
the following year a democratic journal, the Columbia
The 1st
Oregon cavalry remained at Walla Walla with little or nothing to do until the
28th of July. In the mean time. Cornelius resigned, and Colonel Steinberger of
the Washington regiment took command.12 It had been designed that a
portion of the Oregon regiment should make an expedition to meet and escort the
immigration, and if possible to arrest and punish the murderers of the
immigrants in the autumn of 1860. General Alvord ordered Lieuten- ant-colonel
Maury, with the companies of Harris, Harding, and Truax, to proceed upon the
errand.13
The
history of the 1st Oregon cavalry from 1862 to 1865 is the history of Indian
raids upon the mining and new farming settlements, and of scouting and
fighting by the several companies. Like the volunteers of southern Oregon,
they were called upon to guard roads, escort trains, pursue robber bands to
their strongholds, avenge murders,14 and to make explorations of
the country, much of which was still unknown.
In January
1863 a call was made for six companies of volunteers to till up the 1st
regiment of Oregon cavalry, notwithstanding a very thorough militia organization
had been effected under the militia law of 1862, which gave the governor great
discretionary power and placed several regiments at his disposal. The work of
recruiting progressed slowly, the dis-
Press, by
J. C Dow and T. W. Avery. Neither continued long. Other ephemera) publications
appeared at Salem, Portland, and elsewhere. In 1865 Oregon had well established
9 weekly and 3 daily journals.
12 Colon el Justin Steinberger was of Pierce
county, Washington Territory. He raised 4 companies of liis regiment in
California, and arrived with them at Vancouver on the 4th of May, relieving
Colonel Cady of the command of the district. Iu July Brigadier-general Alvord
arrived at Vancouver to take command of the district of Oregon, and Steinberger
repaired to Walla Walla. Olympia lUrald, Jan. 28, March '20, Apiil 17, 1862;
Olympia Standard, Aug. 9, 1862; (Jr. Statesman, June 30, 186‘2.
The immigration of
1862 lias been placed by some writers as high as 30,000, and probably reached
20,000. Of these 10,000 went to Oregon, S^O to Utah, 8,000 to California.
Olympia. Standard, Oct. 11 and 25, 1862. The greater portion of the so-called
Oregon immigration settled in the mining region east of the Snake River and in
the valleys of Grande Ronde, Powder River, John Day, aud Walla Walla.
MThe fate
of many small parties must forever remain unknown.
engaged
men of the state who had not enlisted being absent in the mines. One company
only was raised during the summer, and it began to be feared that a draft would
be resorted to, Provost Marshal J. M. Keeler having been sent to Oregon to make
an enrolment.
The
situation of Oregon at this time was peculiar, and not without danger. The
sympathy of England and Prance with the cause of the states in rebellion, the
unsettled question of the north-western portion of the United States boundary,
known as the San Juan question, the action of the French government in setting
up an empire in Mexico, taken together with the fact that no forts or defences
existed on the coast of Oregon and Washington, that there was a constantly
increasing element of disloyalty upon the eastern and southern borders, as well
as in its midst, which might at any time combine with a foreign power or with
the Indians—all contributed to a feeling of uneasiness.
Oregon had
not raised her share of troops for the service of the United States, and had
but seven companies in the field, while California had nearly nine regiments.
California had volunteers in every part of the Pacific States, even 'n the
Willamette Valley. Troops were needed to serve on Oregon soil, and to protect
the Oregon frontier. A post was needed at Boise to protect the immigration, and
an expedition against the Snakes wTas required. Everything was done
to stimulate a military spirit. By the militia law, the governor,
adjutant-general, and secretary of state constituted a board of military auditors
to audit all reasonable expenses incurred by volunteer companies in the
service of the state. This board publicly offered premiums for perfection in
drill, the test to be made at the time of holding the state fair at Salem.
The war
department had at length consented to allow posts to 1«e established at Boisd,
and at some
point
between the Klamath and Goose Lakes, near the southern immigrant road; and in
the spring of 1863 Major Drew, who in May was promoted to the rank of
lieutenant-colonel of the 1st Oregon cavalry, sent Captain Kelly with company 0
to construct and garrison Fort Klamath. The remainder of the regiment wras
employed in the Walla Walla and Nez Percd country in keeping peace between the
white people and Indians, and in pursuing and arresting highwaymen,
whiskey-sellers, and horse-thieves, with which the whole upper country was
infested at this period of its history, and who could seldom be arrested without
the assistance of the cavalry, whose horses they kept worn down by long marches
to recover both private and government property.
On the
13th of June an expedition set out, whose object was to find and punish the
Snakes, consisting of companies A, D, and E, with a train of 150 pack- mules
under Colonel Maury from the Lapwai agency. Following the trail to the Salmon
River mines, they passed over a rugged country to Little Salmon River, and
thence over a timbered mountain ridge to the head waters of the Payette.15
The command then proceeded by easy marches to Boise River to meet Major
Lugenbeel, who had left Walla Walla June 10th by the immigrant road to
establish a government post on that river near the line of travel. On July
1st, the day before Maury’s arrival, the site of the fort was selected about
forty miles above the old Hudson’s Bay Company’s fort, and near the site of the
present Boise City.18 While at the encampment
15 Or.
Argus, July 27, 1363, contain:! a good description of this country, by J. T.
Apperson, lieutenant.
1B The
immigration of 1863 was escorted, as that of the previous year had been, by a
volunteer company under Captain Medorum Crawford, who went
east to organize it,
congress having appropriated $30,000 to meet the expense; ?10,000 of which was
for the protection ot emigrants by the Fort Benton and
Mullai wagon-road
route. See Cong. Globe, 1HG2-3, part ii. >ipp 182, 37th cong. 3d sess.;
letter of J. R. McBride, in Or. Argus, May 16, 1863. The immigration was much
less than in the previous year, only about 400 wagons. Among them was a large
train bound for the town of Aurora, founded by
on Salmon
Falls Creek, Curry with twenty men made an expedition across the barren region
between Snake River and the Goose Creek Mountaius,17 toward the
Owyhee, through a country never before explored. At the same time the main
command proceeded along to Bruneau River, on which stream, after a sep~ aration
of eleven days, it was rejoined by Curry, who had travelled four hundred miles
over a rough volcanic region.18 After an expedition by Lieutenant
Waymire19 up Bruneau River, the troops returned to Fort Walla Walla,
where they arrived on the 26th of October.
In March
Maury was promoted to the colonelcy of the regiment, C. S. Drew' to be
lieutenant-colo- nel, and S. Truax to be major. Rliinehart was made regimental
adjutant, with the rank of captain, and took command of company A, Harris
having resigned at the close of the Snake River expedition. Rinearson was
stationed at Fort Bois£ to complete its construction. Lieutenants Caldwell,
Drake, and Small were promoted to the rank of captain; second lieutenants
Hopkins, Hobart, McCall, Steele, Hand, and Underwood to the rank of first
lieutenants. Those who had been promoted from the ranks were Waymire, Pepoon,
Bowen, and James L. Curry.
The first
expedition in the field in 1864 was one under Lieutenant Waymire consisting of
twenty-six men, which left The Dalles on the 1st of March, en-
Dr Keil m Marion
county several years before, upon the community system. Deady's Hist. Or., MS.,
78.
L; The
reports of the expedition and the published maps do not agree. The latter place
the Goose Creek Mountains to the south-east. Captain Curry, however, travelled
south-west toward a. chain of mountains nearly parallel with the range
mentioned, wnich on the map is not distinguished by a name, in which the
Bruneau and Owyhee rivers take their rise,
ls Curry
says: ‘With the exception of two camps made near the summit of Goose Creek
Mountains, the remainder were made in fissures in the earth so deep that
neither the pole star nor the 7-pointers could be seen.’ The whole of Curry’s
report of this expedition is interesting and well written. See Rept of Adjutant
Gen. of Or., i860, 28.
"Waymire, in
Historical Correspondence, MS.; S. F. Evening Post, Oct. 28, 1882.'
camping on
the 17th on the south fork of John Day River, thirty-three miles from Canon
City. This temporary station was called Camp Lincoln. From this point he
pursued a band of Indian horse-thieves to Harney Lake Valley, where he found
before him in the field a party of miners under C. H. Miller.^ The united force
continued the search, and in three days came upon two hundred Indians, whom
they fought, killing some, but achieving no signal success. Early in .Tune,
General Alvord made a requisition upon Governor Gibbs fora company of forty
mounted men, to be upon the same footing and to act as a detachment of the 1st
Oregon cavalry, for the purpose of guarding the Canon City road. The proclamation
was made, and Nathan Olney of The Dalles appointed recruiting officer, with
the rank of 2d lieutenant. The term of service required was onl}T
four months, or until the cavalry which was in the field should have returned
to the forts in the neighborhood of the settlements anil mines. The people of
The Dalles, whose interests suffered by the frequent raids of the Indians,
offered to make up a bounty in addition to the pay of the government. The
company was raised, and left The Dalles July 19th, to patrol the road between
The Dalles and the company of Captain Caldwell, which performed this duty on
the south fork of John Day River.
In the
summer of 1864 every man of the Oregon cavalr\ was in the field. Immediately
after Lieutenant Way mire’s expedition a larger one, consisting of companies
D, G, and part of B, was ordered to Crooked River, there to establish
headquarters. With them went twenty-five scouts from the Warm Spring
reservation, under Donald McKay, halfbrother of W. C. McKay. This force left
The Dalles April 20th, under the command of Captain Drake,
20 Joaquin Miller, author subsequently of
several poetical works, stories, and plays. He had but lately been editor of
the Democratic Register of Eugene City, which was suppressed by order of CoL
Wright for promulgating disloyal sentiments.
Hi»t. Uk. Vol. II. 33
being
reenforced at Warm Spring1 by Small’s company from Vancouver, and
arriving at Steen’s old camp May 17th, where a depot was made, and the place
called Camp Maury. It was situated three miles from Crooked Iliver, near its
juncture with Des Chutes, in a small canon heavily timbered with pine, and abundantly
watered by cold mountain springs. The scouts soon discovered a camp of the
enemy about fourteen miles to the east, who had with them a large number of
horses. Lieutenants McCall and Watson, with thirty-five men and some of the
Indian scouts, set out at ten o’clock at night to surround and surprise the
savages, but when day dawned it was discovered that they were strongly
intrenched behind the rocks. McCall directed Watson to advance on the front
with his men, while he and McKay attacked on both flanks. Watson executed his
duty promptly, but McCall, being detained by the capture of a herd of horses,
was diverted from the main attack. On hearing Watson’s fire he hastened on, but
finding himself in the range of the guns had to make a detour, which lengthened
the delay. In the mean time the Indians concentrated their fire on those who
first attacked, and Watson was shot through the heart while cheering on his
men, two of whom were killed beside him, and five others wounded. The Indians
made their escape. On the 20th of May Waymire, who had relieved Watson at Warm
Spring, was ordered to join Drake’s command, and on the 7th of June all the
companies concentrating at Camp Maury proceeded to Harney Valley, where it was
intended to establish a depot, but finding the water in the lake brackish and
the grass poor, the plan was abandoned. Somewhere in this region Drake expected
to meet Curry, who with A and E companies, tun Cayuse scouts under Umhowlitz,
and Colonel Maury had left Walla Walla on the 28th of April, by way of the
immigrant road for Fort Boise and the Owyhee, but two weeks elapsed before a
junction was made.
Curry’s
expedition on reaching old Fort Boisd was reenforced by Captain Barry of the
1st Washington infantry, with twenty-five men. A temporary depot was
established eight miles up the Owyhee River and placed in chargc of Barry, The
cavalry marched up the west bank of the river to the mouth of a tributary
called Martin Creek, formed by the union of Jordan and Sucker creeks, near
which was the crossing of the road from California to the Owyhee mines,
beginning to be much travelled.21
On the
25th of May, Curry moved west from the ferry eight miles, and established a
camp on a small stream falling into the Owyhee, which he called Gibbs Creek, in
honor of Governor Gibbs. Here he began building a stone bridge and
fortifications, which he named Camp Henderson, after the Oregon congressman;
and Rhinehart was ordered to bring up the supplies left with Barry, the
distance being about one hundred miles between the points. When Rhinehart came
up with the supply train he found Curry absent on an exploring expedition.
Being satisfied from all he could learn that he was not yet in the heart of the
country most frequented by the predatory Indians, where he desired to fix his
encampment, Curry made an exploration of a very difficult country to the
south-west.22
On this
expedition, Alvord Valley, at the eastern base of Steen Mountain, was
discovered;23 and being satisfied that hereabout would be found the
head
21 This road was froth La^en Meadows on the HumboMt,
via Starr City, an l Queen River. It was 180 miles from the Meadows to this
ferry, and 65 thence to Boonville in Idaho. Portland. Oregonian, June 25, 1864.
* The report of this exploration is
interesting. A peculiar feature of the Bctnery wus the frequent mirage over
dried-ap lakes. * While on this smooth B’.vrface, ’ he says, speaking of one on
the oast of Steen Mountain, ■ th( mirage made our
little party plaj an amusing pantomime. Some appeared to be high in tin air,
others sliding to the right and left like wea-vers’ shuttles. Some of them
appeared npun out to an enormous length, and the next group spindled up: thus a
changeable, movable tableau was produced, representing everything contortions
and capricious reflections could do.’ Rep>rt of Captain (terry, m liept Adjt
Gen. Or., 1866, 37-8.
1 This statemem should be qualified,
Waymire discovered the valley, aud Curry explored it.
quarters
of a considerable portion of the hostile Indians, Curry determined to move the
main command to this point, and to this end returned toward camp Henderson by
another route, hardly less wearisome and destitute of water than the former
one. The place selected for a permanent camp was between some rifle-pits dug in
the spring by Waymire’s command and the place where he fought the Indians, on
a. small creek coming down from the hills, which sank about three miles from
the base of the mountains. Earthworks were thrown up in the form of a star, to
constitute a fort easily defended. Through this enclosure ran a stream of pure
water, and there was room for the stores and the garrison, the little post
being called Camp Alvord. Here were left Barry's infantry and the disabled
cavalry horses and their riders; and on the 22d of June Curry set out with the
main cavalry to form a junction with Drake, somewhere in the vicinity of Harney
Lake, which junction was effected on the 1st of July at Drake’s camp on
llattle- snake Creek, Harney Valley,
For a
period of thirty days captains Drake and Curry acted in conjunction, scouting
the country in every direction where there seemed any prospect of finding
Indians, and had meantime been reenforced by Lieutenant Noble with forty Warm
Spring Indians, wThich brought the force in the field up to about
four hundred. Small parties were kept continually moving over the country,
along the base of the Blue Mountains, on the head waters of the John Day, and
over toward Crooked Kiver, as well as southward toward the southern immigrant
trail, which was more especially under the protection of Colonel Drew. Mining
and immigrant parties from California were frequently fallen in with, nearly
every one of which had suffered loss of life or property, or both, and wherever
it was possible the troops pursued the Indians with about the same success
that the house-dog pursues the limber and burrowing fox. Few skir
mishes
were had, and not a dozen Indians killed from April to August. - In the mean
time all the stock was driven off from Antelope Valley, a settled region
sixty-five miles east of The Dalles, and about the same distance west of the
crossing of the south fork of the John Day; and nothing but a continuous wall
of troops could prevent these incursions.
About the
1st of August Curry, who with Drake had been scouting in the Malheur mountains,
separated from the latter and returned toward Camp Alvord. Before he reached
that post he was met by an express from Fort Boise, with the information that a
stock farmer on Jordan Creek, a branch of the Owyhee, had been murdered, and
his horses and cattle driven off. Twenty-one miners of the Owyhee district had
organized and pursued the Indians eighty miles in a south-west direction,
finding them encamped in a deep canon, where they were attacked. The Indians,
being in great numbers, repulsed the miners with the loss of one killed24
and two wounded. A second company was being organized, 160 strong, and Colonel
Maury had taken the field with twenty-five men from Fort Boise. Curry pushed on
to Camp Alvord, a distance of 3.i0 miles, though his command had not rested
since the 22d of June, arriving on the 12th with his horses worn out, and 106
men out of 1J34 sick with dysentery.28 The Warm Spring Indians, who
were constantly moving about over the country, brought intelligence which
satisfied Curry that the marauding bands had gone south into Nevada. Consequently
on the 2d of September, the sick having partially recovered, the main command
was put-in motion to follow their trail. Passing south, through the then new
and famous mining district of Puebla Valley, where some prospectors were at
work with a small quartz-mill, using sage-brush for fuel, a party
M. M. Jordan, the
discoverer of Jordan Creek mines, was killed.
20 In the absence of medicines, Surgeon
Cochrane’s supply being exhausted, and himself one of the sufferers, an
infusion uf the root uf the wild geranium, found in that country, proved
effective.
of five
Indiana was captured forty miles beyond. Surmising tliat they belonged to the
band which attacked the rancho on Jordan Creek, they would have been hanged but
for the interference of the miners of Puelua, who thought they should be more
safe if mercy were shown. Yielding to their wishes, the Indians, who asserted
that they were Pah Utes, were released. But the mercy shown then was atrociously
rewarded, for they afterward returned and murdered these same miners.28
The heat ami dust of the alkali plains of Nevada retarding the convalescence
of the troops, Curry proceeded no farther than Mud Lake, returning by easy
marches 011 the west side of Steen Mountain to ("amp Alvord September
16th, breaking camp on the 26th and marching to Port Walla Walla, the infantry
and baggage-wagons being sent to Fort Boise. Curry took the route down the
Malheur to the immigrant road, where he was met October 14th by an express from
district headquarters directing him if possible to be at The Dalles before the
presidential election in November, fears being entertained that disloyal voters
would make that the occasion of an outbreak. If anything could infuse new
energy into the Oregon cavalry, it was a prospect of having to put down
rebellion, and Curry was at Walla Walla twelve days afterward, where the command
was formally dissolved, company A going into garrison there, the detachment of
F to Lapwai, and company E to The Dalles, where the election proceeded quietly
in consequence. Drake’s command remained in the field untd late in autumn,
making his headquarters at Camp Dahlgren, on the head waters of Crooked River,
and keeping lieutenants Waymire, Noble, and others scouring the country between
the Cascade and Blue mountains.
While
these operations were going on in eastern Oregon, that strip of southern
country lying along
26 Report of
Captain Curry, in Rept Adjt Gen. Or., 1^60, 46.
the
California line between tlie Klamath Lakes and Steen Mountain was being scoured
as a separate district—being in fact a part of the district of California.
Toward the last of March, Colonel Drew, at Camp Baker in Jackson county,
received orders from the department of the Pacific to repair to Fort Klamath,
as soon as the road over Cascades could be travelled, and leaving there men
enough to guard the government property, to make a reconnoissance to the Owyhee
country, and return to Klamath post.
The snow
being still deep on the summit, of the mountains, in May a road was opened
through it for several miles, and on the 26th the command left Camp Baker,
arriving at Fort Klamath on the 28th. The Indians being turbulent in the
vicinity of the fort, it became necessary to remain at that post until the 28th
of June, when the expedition, consisting of thirty- nine enlisted men,
proceeded to Williamson River, and thence to the Sprague River Valley, over a
succession of low hills, covered for the most part with an open forest of
pines.27 He had proceeded no farther than Sprague River when his
march was interrupted by news of an attack on a train from Shasta Valley
proceeding bv the way of Klamath Lake, Sprague River, and Silver Lake to the
John Day Mines.28 Fortunately Lieutenant Davis from Fort Crook, California,
with ten men came up with the train iu time to render assistance and prevent a
massacre. The
27 Drew’s
report was published in 1865, in the Jacksonville Sentinel, from January 28 to
March 11, 1805, and also in a pamphlet of 32 pages, printed at Jacksonville. It
is chiefly a topographical reconnoissance, and as such is instructive and
interesting, but contains few incidents of a military character iu relation to
the Indians; in fact, these appear to have been purposely left out. But taking
the explorations of Drew, which were made at some distance north of the
southern immigrant road, in connection with those of Drake and Curry, it will
be seen that a great amount of valuable work of a character usually performed
by expensive government exploring expeditions was performed by the 1st Oregon
cavalry in this and the following year. See Drew's Owyhee Reconnoissance, 1-32.
2*This
occurred June 23d near Silver Lake, 85 miles north of Fort Klamath. The train
consisted.of 7 wagons and 15 men, several of whotn were accompanied by their
families. The Indians took 7 of their oxen and 3,500 pounds of flour. John
Richardson was leader of the company. Three men were wounded.
company
fell back forty miles to a company in the rear, and sent word to Fort Klamath,
after which they retreated to Sprague River, and an ambulance having been sent
to take the wounded to the fort, the immigrants all determined to travel under
Drew’s protection to the Owyhee, aud thence to the John Day.
Their
course was up Sprague River to its head waters, across the Goose Lake Mountains
into Drew Valley, thence into Goose Lake Valley, around the head of the lake to
a point twenty-one miles down its east side to an intersection with the
immigrant road from the States near Lassen Pass, where a number of trains
joined the expedition. Passing eastward from this point, Drew’s route led into
Fandango Valley,23 a glade a mile and a half west from the summit
of the old immigrant pass, and thence over the summit of Warner Range into
Surprise Valley,*0 passing across it and around the north end of
Cowhead Lake, eastward over successive ranges of rocky ridges down a canon into
Warner Valley, and around the south side of Warner Mountain,31 where
lie narrowly escaped attack by the redoubtable chief Panina, who was deterred
only by seeing the howitzer in the train.32 Proceeding south-east
over a
29 So named from a dance being held there to
celebrate the meeting of friends from California and the States. In the midst
of tlxeir merriment they were attacked, and war’s alarms quickly interrupted
their festivities. Drew’s Hecoimoismnce, 9.
30 Drew says this and not the valley beyond
it should have been called Warner Valley, the party under Capt. Lyons, which
searched for Warner’s remains, finding Lis bones in Surprise Valley, a few
miles south of the immigrant road. /</., 10
31 Drew made a reconnoissance of this butte,
'which he. declared for military purposes to be unequalled, and as such it was
held by the 8nake Indians. A summit on a general level, with an area of more
than 100 square miles, diversified with miniature mountains, grassy valleys,
lakes and streams of pure water, groves of aspen, willow, an-1
mountain mahogany, and gardens of service-berries, made it a complete haven of
refuge, where its possessors could repel any foe. The approach from the valley
was exceedingly abrupt, being in many places a. solid wall. On its north side
it rose directly from the waters of W arner Lake, which rendered it
unassailable from that direction. Its easiest approach was from the south, by a
series of benches; but an examination of the country at its base discovered the
fact that the approach used by the Indians was on the north.
S2l’anina
afterward accurately described the order of march, and the order
sterile
country to Puebla Valley, the expedition turned northward to Camp Alvord,
having lost so much time in escort duty that the original design of exploring
about the head waters of the Owyhee could not be carried out. The last wagons
reached Drew’s camp, two miles east of Alvord, on the 31st of August, and from
this point, with a detachment of nineteen men, Drew proceeded to Jordan Creek
Valley and Fort Boisd, escorting the immigration to these points, and returning
to camp September 22d, where lie found an order requiring his immediate return
to Fort Klamath, to be present with his command at a council to be held the
following month with the Klamaths, Modocs, and Panina’s band of Snake Indians.
On his return march Drew avoided going around the south-eastern point of the
Warner Mountains, finding a pass through them which shortened his route nearly
seventy miles, the road being nearly straight between Steen and Warner
Mountains, and thence westward across the ridge into Goose Lake Valley, with a
saving in distance of another forty miles. On rejoining his former trail he
found it travelled by the immigration to Rogue River Valley, which passed down
Sprague River and by the Fort Klamath road to Jacksonville. A line of communication
was opened from that place to Owyhee and Boisd, which was deemed well worth the
labor and cost of the expedition, the old immigrant route being shortened
between two and three hundred miles. The military gain was the discovery of the
haunt of Panina and his band at Warner Mountain, and the discovery of the
necessity for a post in Goose Lake Valley.33
Congress
having at length made an appropriation of $20,000 for the purpose of making a
treaty with
of encamping,
picketing, and guarding, witli all the details uf an advance through an enemy’s
country, showing that nothing escaped his observation, and that what was worth
copying he could easily learn.
33 Hay’s
Scraps, iii. 121-2.
the Indian
tribes in this part of Oregon, Superintendent Huntington, after a preliminary
conference in August, appointed a general council for the 9th of October. The
council caine off and lasted until the 15th, on which day Drew reached the
council ground at the ford of Sprague Iliver, glad to find his services had not
been required, and not sorry to have had nothing to do with the treaty there
made: not because the treaty was not a good and just (me, but from a fear that
the government would fail to keep it.34
,4 The
treaty was made between Huntington of Oregon, A. E. Wiley, sup. of Cal by hi*
deputy, agent Logan of Warm Spring reservation, and the Klamaths, Modoc*, and
Yahooskin band of Snakes. The military present were a detachment x Washington
infantry under Lieut. Halloran, W. 0. McKay with 5 Indian scouts, Captain Kelly
and Lieutenant Underwood with a detachment of company 0 The Indiana on the
ground numbered 1070, of whom 700 were Klamaths, over 300 Modocs, and 20
Snakes, but more than 1,500 were represented. Huntington estimated that there
were not mure than 2,000 Indians in the country treated for, though Drew and E.
Steole of California, made a much higher estimate. Ind. Ajf. llept, 1865, 102.
Special Agent Lindsey Applegate and McKay acted as counsellors and interpreters
for the Indians. There was no difficulty in making a treaty with the Klamaths.
Tho Modocs and Snakes were more reluctant, but signed the treaty, v. hie h they
perfectly understood. It ceded all right to a tract of country extending from
the 44th parallel on the north to the ridge which divides the Pit and McLeod
rivers on the south, and from the Cascade Mountains on the west to the Goose
Lake Mount ains on the east. There was reserved a tract beginning on the
easteri- shore of Upper Klamath Lake at Point of Rocks, twelv e miles below
Williamson River, thence following up the eastern shore to the mouth of Wood
River to a point one mils north'of the bridge at Fort Klamath; thence due east
to the ridge which divides Klamath marsh from Upper Klamath Lake; thence along
said ridge to a point due east of the north end of Klamath marsh; thence due
east, passing the north end of Klamath marsh to the summit of the mountain,
the extremity of which forms the Point of Rocks, and along said ridge to tho
place of beginning. This tract contained, besides much country that was
considered untit for settlement, the Klamath marsh, which afforded a great food
supply in roots and seeds, a largo extent of fine grazing land, with enough
arable land to makes farms for all the Indians, and access to tin fishery on
Williamson River and the great or Upper Klamath Luke. The Klamath reservation,
as did every Indian reservation, if that on the Oregon coast was excepted,
contained some of the choicest country and most agreeable scenery in the state.
White persons, except government officers and employes, were by the terms of the
treaty forbidden to reside upon the reservation, while the Indians were
equally bound to live upon it; the right of way for public roads only being
pledged. The U. S. agreed to pay $8,000 per annum for five years, beginning
when the treaty should be ratified; §5,000 tor the next fi\e years, and $3,000
for the following five years; these sums to be expended, under the direction of
the presideut, for the benefit of the Indians,. The U. S. furt her agreed to
pay $35,000 for such articles as should be furnished to the Indians at the time
of signing the treaty, and for their subsistence, clothing, and teams to begin
farm.ng for the first year. As soon as practicable afte ■ the
ratification of the treaty, mill*, shops, and. a school-house were to be built.
For fifteen years a superintendent of farming, a farmer, blacksmith,
wagon-maker, sawyer, and
Overtures
had b'een made to Panina, but unsuccessfully. He had been invited to the
council, but preferred enjoying his freedom. But an unexpected reverse was
awaiting the chief. After Superintendent Huntington had distributed the
presents provided fur the occasion of the treaty, and deposited at the fort
16,000 pounds of tlnur to be issued to such of the Indians as chose to remain
there during the winter, he set out on his return to The Dalles, as he had
come, by the route along the eastern base of the Cascade Mountains. Quite
unexpectedly, when in the neighborhood of the head waters of Dos Chutes, he
came upon two Snakes, who endeavored to escape, but being intercepted, were
found to belong to Panina’s band. The escort immediately encamped and sent out
scouts in search of the camp of the chief, which was found after several hours,
on one of the tributaries of the river, containing, however, only three men,
three women, and two children, who were captured and brought to camp, one of
the women being Panina’s wife. Before the superintendent could turn to
advantage this fortunate capture, which he hoped might bring him into direct
communication with Panina, the Indians made a simultaneous attempt to seize the
guns of their captors, when they were fired upon, and three killed, two
escaping though wounded. One of these died a few hours afterward, but one
reached Panina’s camp, and recovered. By this means the chief learned of the
loss of four of his warriors and the captivity of liis wife, who was taken with
the other women and children to Vancouver to be held as hostages.
carpenter were to be
furnished, and two teachers for twenty-two years. The U. S. might cause the
land to bo surveyed in allotments, which might be secured to the families of
the holders. The annuities of the tribe could not be taken for the debts of
individuals. The U. S. might at any future time locate other Indians on the
reservation, tiie parties to the treaty to lose no rights thereby. On the part
of the Indians, they pledged themselves not to drink intoxicating liquors on
pain of forfeiting their annuities; and to obey the laws of the U. S.; the
treaty to be binding when ratified.
> The first
settler 111 the Klamath country was George Nourse, who took up in August 1863
the land where Linkville stands. He was notary public and registrar of the
Linkton land district. Jacksonville Sentinel, March 8, 1873.
Not long
after this event Panina presented himself at Fort Klamath, having received a
message sent hit* from the council ground, that he would be permitted to come
and go unharmed, and wished Captain Kelly of Fort Klamath to assure the
superintendent that he was tired of war, and would willingly make peace could
he be protected.35 To this offer of submission, answer was returned
that the superintendent would visit him the following summer with a view to making
a treaty. This closed operations against the Indians of southern Oregon for the
year, and afforded a prospect of permanent peace, so far as the country
adjacent to the Rogue Iliver Valley was concerned, a portion of which had been
subject to invasions from the Klamath country. Even the Umpqua Valley had not
been quite free from occasional mysterious visitations, from which henceforward
it was to be delivered.
With the
close of the campaigns of the First Oregon Cavalry for 1864, the term of
actual service of the original six companies expired. They had performed hard
service, though not of the kind they would have chosen. Small was the pay, and
trilling the reward of glory. It was known as the ‘puritan regiment,’ from
habits of temperance and morality, and was largely composed of the sons of
well-to-do farmers. Out of tifty-one desertions occurring in three years, but
three were from this class, the rest being recruits from the floating
population of the country. No regiment in the regular army had stood the same
tests so heroically.
When the
legislature met in 1804 a bounty act was passed to encourage future, not to
reward past, volunteering. It gave to every soldier who should enlist fur
three years or during the war, as part of the state’s
33 A treaty
wai made with Patina m the fcflowing year, but bailly observed by him. as the
history of tho Snake wars will show.
quota
under the laws of congress, $150 in addition to other bounties and pay already
provided for, to be paid in three instalments, at the beginning and end of the
tirst year, and at the end of the term of service either to him, or in case of
his demise, to his heirs. For the purpose of raising a fund for this use, a tax
was levied of one mill on the dollar upon all the taxable property of the
state.33 At the same time, however, an act was passed appropriating
$100,000 as a fund out of which to pay live dollars a month additional
compensation to the volunteers already in the service.37
On the day
the first bill was signed Governor Gibbs issued a proclamation that a
requisition had been made by the department commander for a regiment of infantry
in addition to the volunteers then in the service of the United States, who
were “to aid in the enforcement of the laws, suppress insurrection and invasion,
and to chastise hostile Indians ” in the military district of Oregon. Ten
companies were called for, to be known as the 1st Infantry Oregon Volunteers,
each company to consist of eighty-two privates maximum or sixty-four minimum,
besides a full corps of regimental and staff officers. The governor in his
proclamation made an earnest appeal to county officers to avoid a draft by
vigorously prosecuting the business of procuring volunteers, lieutenants’commissions
were immediately issued to men in the several counties as recruiting officers,83
conditional upon their raising their companies within a prescribed time, when
they would be promoted to the rank of captain.39
88 Or. Laws,
1H66, 98-110.
57Id,,
104-8; tlhinehart's Oregon Cavalry, MS., 15.
58 A. J.
Borland, Grant county; E. Palmer, Yamhill,* Charles Lafollet, Polk; J. M. Gale,
Clatsop; W. J. Shipley, Benton; W. S. Powell, Multnomah; G. P. Crandall,
Marion; F. O. McCown, Clackamas; T. Humphreys, Jackson, were commissioned 2d
lieutenants*
39 Polk
county raised $1,200 extra bounty rather than fail, and completed her
enlistment, first of all. Josephine county raised $2,500, and Clackamas offered
similar inducements. Portland Oregonian, Nov. 30, 1864, Feb. 14, 18Go.
Six
companies were formed within the limit, and two more before the first of April
1865.4U
Early in
January 1865 General McDowell made a requisition for a second regiment of
cavalry, the existing organization to be kept up and to retain its name of 1st
Oregon cavalry, but to be filled up to twelve companies. In making his
proclamation Governor Gibbs reminded those liable to perform military duty of
the bounties provided by the state and the general government which would
furnish horses to the new regiment. But the response was not enthusiastic.
About this time the district was extended to include the southern and
south-eastern portions of the state, heretofore attached to California, while
the Boise and Owyhee region was made a subdistrict of Oregon, commanded by
Lieutenant Colonel Drake. These arrangements left the military affairs of
Oregon entirely in the hands of her own citizens, under the general command of
General McDowell, and thus they remained through the summer. On the 14th of
July Colonel Maury retired, and Colonel B. Curry took the command of the
district.
In the
summer of 1864 General Wright, though retaining command of the district of
California, was relieved of the command of the department of the Pacific by
General McDowell, who in the month of August paid a visit of inspection to the
district of Oregon, going first to Puget Sound, where fortifications were
being erected at the entrance to Admiralty Inlet, and thence to Vancouver on
the revenue cutter Shubrick, Captain Scammon. On the 13th of September he
inspected the defensive works under construction at the mouth of the Columbia,
,0The
following „ei\ the lieutenants in thi regiment: William J. Shipley, Cyrus H.
Walker, Thoma« H, Reynolds, Samuel F Kerns, John B. Dimick, Darina 15. Randall,
William M. lland, William Grant, Harrison B. Oattnan, Byron Barlow, William R.
Dunliar, John W. Cullen, Chailes B. Roland Charles II. Hill, Joseph M. Gale,
Janies A. Bali h. Peter J’. Oates, I)ani( 1 W, Applegate, Charles N. Chapman.
Albert Applegate, Richard l’’ox (vice Balch). figmrt Adjt Gen. Or., 1S66, pp.
217-221
•which
were begun the previous year. For thi& purpose congress had in 1861-2
appropriated $100,000 to be expended at the mouth of the Columbia, and with
such rapidity had tho work been pushed forward that the fortifications on Point
Adams, on the southern side of the entrance to the river, were about completed
at the time of McDowell’s visit. With the approval of the war department,
Captaiu George Elliot of the engineering corps named this fort in honor of
General I. J. Stevens, who fell at the battle of Chantilly, September I, 18G2.41
Immediately
on the completion of this fort corresponding earthworks were erected on the
north side of the entrance to the river on the high point known as Cape
Disappointment, but recognized by the department as Cape Hancock. Both of
these fortifications were completed before the conclusion of the civil war,
which hastened their construction, and were garri ■ soned in
the autumn of 1865.42 In 1874, by order of the war department and at
the suggestion of Assistant adjutant-general H. Clay Wood, the military post
at Cape Hancock was named Fort Canby, in honor of Major-general Edward Ii. S.
Canby, who perished by assassination during the Modoc war of 1872-3, and the
official name of the cape was ordered to be used by the army.
11 Fort Stevens wa» constructed of solid
earthwork'!, just infide the entrance, and was mado one of tho strongest anil
best armed foi titications on the Pacific coast. It was a nonagon in shape, and
surrounded by a ditch thirty feet in width, which v-as again surrounded by
earthworks, protecting the walls of the fort o.nd the earthworks supporting the
ordnance. Or. Argus, June 5 and 29, 1863; Ibid., Aug. 18, 1863; Victor's Or.,
40-1; Surgeon Gen. Circ., 8, 4S4-7.
42 On Capt
Ijisappointment nas a light house of the first class, rising fri .m the highest
point. Extending alr>ng the crest of the cape on the river side were three
powerful batteries mounted on solid walls of earth. Under the shelter of the
cape, around the shore of Baker Bay, were the garrison buildings and officers’
quarters. It was and is at present one of the prettiest places on the Columbia,
though rather inaccessible in stormy weather, Surgeon Gen. Circular, 8, 461:
Victor's Or., 36-8; Overland, Monthly, viii. 73 1; Steel’s Rijh> Regt, MS.,
5; Portland Oregonian, April 4. 1864, Oct. 19, 1865; S. F. Bulletin, Nov. 25,
1864; Ur. Pioneer Hist. Soc., 7-8.
THE SHOSHONE WAR.
1866-1868.
Companies
and Camps—Steele’s Measures- Haxleck Headstrong— Battle of the Owyhee—Indian
Raids—Sufferings of the Settlers AND TRANSPORTATION Men— MOVEMENTS
OF TROOPS— AnTTtDE OF GOVERNOR Woods—Free
Fighting—Enlistment of Indians to Fight Indians—Military Reorganization—Among
the Lava-beds—Crook in Command—Extermination or Confinement and Death in Reservations.
In the spring of 1865 the troops were early
called upon to take the field in Oregon and Idaho, the roads between The Dalles
and Boise, between Boise and Salt Lake, between Owyhee and Chico, and Owyhee
and Humboldt in California, being unsafe by reason of Indian raids. A hundred
men were sent in April to guard The Dalles and Boise road, which, owing to its
length, 450 miles, they could not do. In May, company B, Oregon volunteers,
Captain Palmer, moved from The Dalles to escort a supply-train to Boise. Soon
after arriving, Lieutenant J. W. Cullen was dircted to take twenty men aud
proceed 150 miles farther to Camp Roed, on the Salmon Falls Creek, where he
was to remain and guard the stage and immigrant road. Captain Palmer was
ordered to establish a summer camp on Big Camas prairie, which he called Camp
Wallace. From this point Lieutenant C. H. Walker was sent with twenty-two
enlisted men to the Three Buttes, 110 miles east of Camp Wallace, to look out
for the immigration. Leaving most of his command at Three Buttes, Walker
proceeded to Gibson’s ferry,
ISU)
above Fort
Hall, where he found a great number of wagons crossing, and no unfriendly
Indians. On receiving orders, however, he removed his company to the ferry,
where he remained until September 19th, after which he proceeded to Fort Hall
to prepare winter
Western
Oregon.
quarters,
Palmer’s company being ordered to occupy that post. The old fort was found a
heap of ruins; but out of the adobes and some abandoned buildings of the
overland stage company, a shelter was erected at the junction of the Salt Lake,
Virginia City, and Boisd roads, which station was named Camp Lander. This
Hibt.
Ob., Vox.. II.
33
mcocl
Rainlef
Colum'bla CStyJ
COLUMBIA^ 8T\1HELENS;
fillan-ooki
Head
CASCADES
>VANCOUVER
Brook
'’tr Vrl J
Sn'tf ept- n dmcePl
«lor»mouihcf
J ucAyU
.Foulweather
Albany;
ky|^ORVALLl3«
M a f$i$p£a
nW.aterlop)
{rowiiBville
Spring field
EUGENE CITY
post and
Camp Reed were maintained during the winter by the Oregon infantry, the latter
having only tents for shelter, aixI being exposed to severe hardships.1
In May detachments of Oregon cavalry were ordered from The Dalles, under
lieutenants Charles Hobart and Janies L. Curry, to clear the road to Canon
City, and thence to Boise, from which post Major Drake ordered Curry to proceed
to Rock Creek, on Snake River, to escort the mails, the Indians having driven
off all the stock of the overland stage company from several of the stations.
lieutenant,
Hobart proceeded to Jordan Creek, where he established a post called Camp Lyon,
after General Lyon, who fell during the war of the rebellion, at Willow Creek
in Missouri. Soon after, being in pursuit of some Indians who had again driven
off stock on Reynolds Creek, he was himself attacked while in camp on the
Malheur, having the horses of his command stampeded; but in a fight of four
hours, during which he had two men wounded, he recovered his own, took a part
of the enemy’s horses, and killed and wounded several Indians.2
Captain L L. Williams, of company H, Oregon infantry, who was employed guarding
the Cafion City road, was ordered from camp Watson in September, to proceed on
an expedition to Selvie River, Lieutenant Low en of the cavalry being sent to
join him with twenty-five soldiers, Before Bowen’s arrival, Williams’ company
performed some of the best fighting of the season under the greatest
difficulties; being on foot, and compelled to march a long distance surrounded
by Indians mounted and afoot, but of whom they killed fifteen, with a loss of
one man killed and two wounded.® Williams remained in the Harney Yalley
through the winter, establishing Camp Wright.
1 Lieut
Walker here referred to is a «on of Rev. Elkanah Walker, a missionary of 1335.
! Boisi
City Statesman, Jhjly 13 und 18, 1865 Hobart w*-,aftt-twsi lacap- tain i a the
regular army. A lbany States Rights-Democrat, Jn\y'2, 1875. _
“Report, of Lt
Wi'liams in llept Adjt Gen. Or. 1866, 82-98. L. 1 William? was one of the Port
Orford part} which suffered bo severely
iu 1851.
In
addition to tho Oregon troops, Captain L. S. Scott, of the 4th California
volunteer infantry, was employed guarding the road to Chico, being stationed in
Paradise Valley through the summer, but ordered to Silver Creek in September,
where he established Camp Curry.
Colonel
Curry had succeeded to the command of the district of the Columbia on the death
of General Wright, while en route to Vancouver to assume the command, by the
foundering of the steamship Brother Jonathan. In order to obviate the
inconvenience of long and unwieldly transportation trains, and in order also to
carry on a winter campaign, which he believed would be most effectual, as the
Indians would then be found in the valleys, Curry distributed the troops in the
following camps: Camp Polk on the Dos Chutes Iliver, Camp Curry on Silver
Creek, Camp Wright on Selvie River, camps Logan and Colfax on the Canon City
and Boisd road, Camp Alvord in Alvord Valley, Camp Lyon on Jordan Creek, Idaho,
Camp Reed near Salmon Falls, and Camp Lander at old Fort Ilall, Idaho. But with
all these posts the country continued to suffer with little abatement the
scourge of frequent Indian raids.
Early in
October Captain F. B. Sprague, of the 1st Oregon infantry, was ordered to
examine the route between (/amp Alvord and Fort Klamath, with a view to opening
communication with the latter. Escorted by eleven cavalrymen, Sprague set out
on the 10th, taking tho route by Warner Lake over which Drew had made a
reconnoissance in 1865, arriving at Fort Klamath on the 17th without having
seen any Indians. But having come from Fort Klamath a month previous, and seen
a large trail crossing bis route, going south, and not finding that any fresh
trail indicated the return of the Indians, he came to the conclusion that they
were still south of the Drew road, between it and Surprise Valley, where (Damp
Bidwell was located.
On making
this report to Major Rheinliart, in com
mand at
Klamath, he was ordered to return to Camp Alvord by the way of Surprise Valley
and arrange cooperative measures with the commander of the post there. But
when he arrived at Camp Bidwell on the 28th, Captain Starr, of the second
California volunteer cavalry, in command, was already under orders to repair
with his company, except twenty- tive men, to Fort
Eastern
Oregon, Camps and Ports.
Crook,
before the mountains became impassable with snow. He decided, however, to send
ten men, under Lieutenant Backus, with Sprague’s escort, to prove the supposed
location of the main body of the Indians. On the third day, going north, having
arrived at Warner’s Creek, which enters the east side of the lake seven miles
south of the crossing of the Drew road,
without
falling in with any Indians, Backus turned back to Camp Bidwell, and Sprague
proceeded.
No sooner
had this occurred than signs of the enemy began to appear, who were
encountered, 125 strong, about two miles south from the road. While the troops
were passing an open space between the lake aud the steep side of a mountain
they were attacked by the savages hidden in trenches made by land-slides, and
behind rocks. Sprague, being surprised, and unable either to climb the
mountain or swim the lake, halted to take in the situation. The attacking
parties were in the front and rear, but he observed that those in the rear were
armed with bows aud arrows, while those in front had among them about
twenty-five rifles. The former were leaving their hiding-places to drive him
upon the latter. Observing this, he made a sudden charge to the rear, escaping
unharmed and returning to Camp Bid- well.
Captain
Starr then determined to hold his company at that post, and cooperate with Camp
Alvord against those Indians. But when Sprague arrived there by another route
he found the cavalry half dismounted by a recent raid of these ubiquitous
thieves, and the other half absent in pursuit,4 thus a good
opportunity of beginning a winter campaign was lost. But an important
discovery had been made of the principal rendezvous of the Oregon Snake
Indians—a knowledge which the regular army turned to account when they
succeeded the volunteer service.
In
October, before Curry had thoroughly tested his plan of a winter campaign,
orders were received to muster out the volunteers, and with them he retired
from the service. He was succeeded in the command of the department by I
lieutenant-colonel Brake, who in turn was mustered out in December. Little by 1
ttle the whole volunteer force was disbanded, until in June 1866 there remained
in the service only com-
# * James Alderson of Jacksonville, a good
man, who was on guard, was killed in this raid. Portland Oregonian, Dec. 4,
1805.
pany B,
1st Oregon cavalry, and company 1,1st Oregon infantry. All the various camps in
Oregon were abandoned except Camp Watson, against the removal of which the
merchants of The Dalles protested,6 and Camp Alvord, which was
removed to a little different location and called Camp C. F Smith. Camp Lyon
and Fort Boise were allowed to remain, but forts Lapwai and Walla Walla were
abandoned. These changes were made preparatory to the arrival of several
companies of regular troops, and the opening of a new campaign under a new
department commauder.
The first
arrival in the Indian country of troops from the east was about the last of
October 1BG5, when two companies of the 14th infantry were stationed at Fort
Boise, with Captain Walker in command, when the volunteers at that post
proceeded to Vancouver to be mustered out. No other changes occurred in this
part of the field until spring, the United States and (>regon troops being
fully employed in pursuing the omnipresent Snakes.6 Toward the
middle of February 1866, a large amount of property having been stolen, Captain
Walker made an expedition with, thirty-nine men to the mouth of the Owyhee, and
into Oregon, between the Owyhee and Malheur rivers, coming upon a party of
twenty-one Indians in a canon, and opening fire. A vigorous resistance wTas
made before the savages would relinquish their booty, which they did only when
they were all dead but three, who escaped in the darkness of coming night.
Walker lost one man killed and one wounded.
On the
24th of February Major-general F. Steele
5 Dalles Mountaineer,
April 20, 1866. ^
6 A man named Clark was shot, near the
mouth of the Owyhee, while encamped with other wagoners, in Nov.; 34 horses
were Btolen from near Bois6 ferry on Snake River in Dec.; and the pack-mules at
Camp Alvord were stolen. Captain Sprague recovered these latter. Feb. 13th the
rancho of Andrew Hall, 15 miles from Ruby City, was attacked, Hall killed, 50
head of horses driven off, and the premises set on fire. BoisS Statesman, Feb.
17, 1866; Id., March 4, 1866. Ada County raised a company a? volunteers to
pursue these Indians, but they were not overtaken. Ind. Ajf. Uept, 1866, 187-8;
Austin Reese River Reveille, March 13, 1866.
took
command of the department of the Columbia. There were iu the department at that
time, besides the volunteer force which amounted numerically to 553 infantry
and 319 cavalry, one battalion of the 14th United States infantry, numbering
793 men, and three companies of artillery, occupying fortified works at the
mouth of the Columbia and on San Juan Island. These troops, exclusive of the
artillery, were scattered in small detachments over a large extent of country,
as we already know.
On the 2d
of March the post of Fort Boise, with its dependencies, camps Lyon, Alvord,
Reed, and Lander, was erected into a full military district, under the command
of Major L. H. Marshall, who arrived at district headquarters about the 20tli,
and immediately made a requisition upon Steele for three more companies. In
April Colonel J B. Sinclair of the 14th infantry took the command at Camp
Curry, which he abandoned and proceeded to Bois£. Fort Boise received about
this time a company of the same regiment, under Captain Hinton, withdrawn from
Cape Hancock, at the mouth of the Columbia, and another, under
Lieutenaut-colonel J. J. Coppmger, withdrawn from The Dalles.
Camp
Watson received two companies of cavalry, under the command of Colonel E. M.
Baker. Camp C. F. Smith received a cavalry company under Captain David Perry,
who marched into Oregon from the south by the Chico route; and Camp Lyon
received another under Captain James C. Hunt, who entered Oregon by the
Humboldt route. At Camp Lyon also was a compauy of the 14th infantry under
Captain P. Collins, and one of the 1st Oregon infantry under Captain Sprague.
From this it will be seen that most of the troops were massed in the Boise
military district, only Baker’s twTo companies being stationed
where they could guard the road between The Dalles and Boise, which was so
infested that the express company refused to carry treasure over it, half a
dozen
successful
raids having been made on the line of the road before the first of May.
Although
Steele’s first action was to cause the abandonment of most of the camps already
established, as I have noticed, as early as March 20th, he wrote to General
Halleck, commanding the division of the Pacific, that the Indians had commenced
depredations, with such signs of continued hostilities in the southern portions
of Oregon and Idaho that he should recommend the establishment of two posts
duiing the summer, from which to operate against them the following winter,
one at or near Camp Wright, and another in Goose Lake Valley, from which
several roads diverged leading to other valleys frequented by hostile Snakes,
Utes, Pit Rivers, Modocs, and Klamaths.
On the
28th of March Major Marshall led an expedition to the Bruneau River, 110
miles, finding only the unarmed young and old of the Snake tribe, to the number
of 150. On returning about the middle of April he ordered Captain Collins, with
a detachment of Company B and ten men from the 14th infantry, to proceed to
Squaw Creek, a small stream entering Snake River a few miles below the mouth of
Reynolds Creek, and search the canon thoroughly, not only for Indian foes, but
for white men who were said to be in league with them, and who, if found, were
to be hanged without further ceremony. Being unsuccessful, Collins was sent to
scout on Burnt River and Clark Creek.
On the
11th of May Marshall again left the fort with Colonel Coppinger and eighty-four
men, to scout on the liead-waters of the Owyhee. lie found a large force of
Indians at the Three Forks of the Owyhee, strongly posted between the South and
Middle forks. The river being impassable at this place, lie moved down eight
miles, where he crossed his men by means of a raft. As they were about to
advance up the bluff, they were fired on by Indians concealed behind rocks. A
battle now occurred which
lasted
four hours, in Which seven of the savages were killed and a greater number
wounded; but the Indians being in secure possession of the rocks could not be
dislodged, and Marshall was forced to retreat across the river, losing his
raft, a howitzer, some provisions, and some ammunition which was thrown in the
river. His loss in killed was one non-commissioned officer.7 His
rout, notwithstanding, was complete, aud to account for the defeat he reported
the number of Indians engaged at 500, an extraordinary force to be in anyone
camp.
And thus
the war went on, from bad to worse.8 On the 19th of May a large company
of Chinamen, to whom the Idaho mines had recently been opened, were attacked at
Battle Creek, where Jordan and others were killed, aud fifty or sixty
slaughtered, the frightened and helpless celestials offering no resistance, but
trying to make the savages understand that they were non-combatants and begging
for mercy.9 Pepoon hastened to the spot, but found only dead bodies
strewn
1 A detachment of tlie Oregon cavalry
accompanied Marshall on this expedition, and blamed him severely for
inhumanity. A man named Phillips, an Oregonian, was lassoed and drawn up the
cliif in which the Indians were lodged, to be tortured and mutilated. Lieut
Silas Pepoon of the Oregon cavalry wished to go to his rescue, but was
forbidden. He also left 4 men on the opposite bank of the river, who were cut
off by the swamping of the raft. The volunteer commanders would never have,
abandoned their men without an effort for their rescue. See U. 8. Mess. and
Docs, 1866-7, 501, 39tii cong. 2d sess.
“During the night of
the 4th of May sixty animals -were stolen from pack-rs on Reynolds Creek, eight
miles from Ruby City. None of the train*
were recovered. The
loss and damage wax estimated at S10,o0(). Dalles Mountaineer, May 18, 1866.
About the 25th of May, Beard and Miller, teamsters from Chico, on their way to
the Idaho mines, lost 421 cattle out of a herd of 460, driven off by the
Indians. About the 20th of June, tw enty horses were
stolen from War Eagle
Mountain, above Ruby City. On the 12th of June, C.
C. Gassett was
murdered on his farm near Ruby City, and 100 head of stocK
driven off. Early in
July, James Perry, of Michigan, was murdered by the
Indians, his arms and
legs chopped off, and his body pinned to the ground,
along with a man
named Green, treated in the same manner.
9 Travellers over the road reported over
100 unburied bodies of Chinamen. The number killed has been variously reported
at from 50 to 150. One boy escaped of the whole train. Tie represented his
countrymen as protesting, ‘ Me bellee good Chinaman! Me no fightee.! ’ But the
scalps of the Chinamen seemed specially inviting to the savages. Butler’s Life
and Times, MS., 1112. Their remains were afterward gathered and buried in one
grave. Starr’s Idaho, MS., 2; U. S. Sec, Int. Sept, 1S67-8, 97, 40th cong. 2d
sesa.; Owyhee Index, May 26, 1866; Owyhee News, June 1806.
along the
road for six miles. This slaughter was followed by a raid on the horses and
cattle near Boon- ville, in which the Indians secured over sixty head. As they
used both horses and horned stock for food, the conclusion was that they wTere
a numerous people or valiant eaters.
Repeated
raids in the region of the Owyhee, with which the military force seemed unable
to cope, led to the organization, about the last of June, of a volunteer
company of between thirty and forty men, under Captain I. Jennings, an officer
wrho had served in the civil war. On the 2d of July they came upon
the Indians on Boulder Creek, and engaged them, but soon found themselves
surrounded, the savages being in superior force. Upon discovering their
situation, the volunteers intrenched themselves, and sent a messenger to Camp
Lyon; but the Indians wTere gone before help came. The loss of the
volunteers was one man killed and two wounded.lu The Indian loss was
reported to be thirty-five.
The
commander of the district of Boisd did not escape criticism, having established
a camp on the Bruneau River where there were no hostile Indians, and, it wTas
said, shirked fighting wdiere they wTere.n But during the
month of August he scouted through the Goose Creek Mountains, killing thirty
Indians, after which he marched iu the direction of the forks of the Owyhee,
wdiere he had a successful battle, and retrieved the losses and failure of the
spring campaign by hanging thirty-five captured savages to the Hmbs of trees.12
He proceeded from there to Steen Moun-
ln Thomas B.
Cason, killed; Aaron Winters and Charles Webster wounded. Cason had built up
around him a stone fortification, from which he shot in the
2 days 15 Indians, and was shot at last in
his little fortress. Sec. Int. Rept, 1867-8, iii., 40th cong. 2d sess., pt 2,
97; Boitf Statesman, July 7 and 10, 1866; Sac. Union, July 28, 1868.
11 Boise StitteimcuL, July 20, 1866.
Marshall designed erecting a permanent post on the Bruneau, and had expended
several thousand dollars, when orders came from headquarters to suspend
operations. A one-company camp Was pirmitted to reinuin during the year.
Yreka
Union, Oct. 20, 1866; IIayes’ Scrapn, v., Indians, 228.
tain,
Carnp Warner, Warner Lake, where he arrived on the 1st-of October.
In the
mean time the stage dines and transportation companies, as well as the
stock-raisers, on the route between The Dalles and Canon City, and between
Canon City and Boise, were scarcely less annoyed and injured than those in the
more southern districts.13 Colonel Baker employed his troops iu
scouring the country, and following marauding bands when their depredations
were known to him, which could not often be the case, owing to the extent of
country over which the depredations extended. On the 4th of July Lieutenant R.
F. Bernard, with thirty-four cavalrymen, left Camp Watson in pursuit of
Indians who
13 In May the Indians drove off a herd of
horses from the Warm Spring reservation, and murdered a settler on John Day
Kiver named John Witner. In June they attacked a settler on Snake River, near
the Weiser, and on the main travelled road, driving off the pack-animals of a
train encamped there. In August they robbed a farm on Burnt River of $300 worth
of property, while the men were mowing grass a mile away; stole 54 mules and 18
beef- cattle from Gamp Watson; and attacked the house of N. J. Clark, on the
road, which they burned, with his stables, 50 tons of hay, and 1,000 bushels of
grain, and stole all his farm stock, the family barely escaping with their
lives. Eight miles from Clark’s they took a team belonging to Frank Thompson.
About the same time they murdered Samuel Leonard, a miner at Mormon Basin. A
little later they surprised a mining camp near Canon City, killing Matthew
Wilson, and severely wounding David Graham. No aid could be obtained from Camp
Watson, the troops being absent in pursuit of the government property taken
from that post. In Sept. they took horses from a place on Clark Creek, from
Burnt River, and the ferry at the mouth of Powder River. They pursued and fired
on the expressman from Mormon Basin; and attacked the stage between The Dalles
and Canon City, when there were but two persons on board, Wheeler, one of the
proprietors, and H. C. Paige, express agent. Wheeler was shot in the face, but
showed great nerve, mounting one of the horses with the assistance of Paige,
who cut them loose and mounted one himself. The men defended themselves and
escaped, leaving the mail and express matter in the hands of the Indians, who
poured the gold*dust out on the ground, most of it being afterward recovered.
The money, horses, and other property were carried off. In October eleven
horses were stolen from a party of prospectors on Rock Creek, Snake River. In Nov.
the Indians again visited Field’s farm, and stole three beef-cattle. They were
pursued by the troops, who surprised and killed several of them, destroying
their camp, and capturing a few horses. On the 20th a party of hunters,
encamped on Canon Creek, a few miles from Canon City, were attacked, and J.
Kester killed. The Indians came within one mile of Canon City, and prepared to
attack a house, but being discovered, fled. Early in December they stole a
pack-train from near the Canon City road. They were pursued by a detachment of
twenty men from Baker’s command, under Sergeant Conner, and the train
recovered, with a loss to the Indians of fourteen men killed and five women
captured. Sec. Int, Ueptt 1867-8, pt 2, 95-100; Dalles
Mountaineer, Dec. 14, 1866.
had been
committing depredations on the Canon City road, and inarched south to the
head-waters of Crooked River, thence to Selvie River and Harney Lake, passing
around it to the west and south, and continuing south to Steen Mountain; thence
north-east around Malheur Lake, and on to the head-waters of Malheur River,
where, on the middle branch, for the first time in this long inarch, si^ns of
Indians were discovered.
Encamping
in a secure situation, scouts were sent out, who captured two. Lieutenant
Bernard himself, with fifteen men, searched for a day in the vicinity without
finding any of the savages. On the 17th he detached a party of nineteen men,
under Sergeant Conner, to look for them, who 011 the 18th, about eight o’clock
in the morning, on Rattlesnake Creek, discovered a large camp, which he at once
attacked, killing thirteen and wounding many more. The Indians fled, leaving a
few horses and mules, but taking most of their property. The loss 011 the side
of the troops was Corporal William B. Lord. The detachment returned to camp on
the evening of the 18th, where they found a company of forty-seven citizens
from Auburn in Powder River Talley in search of the same band.
With this
addition to his force, Bernard, on the 19th, renewed the pursuit, and found the
Indians encamped in a deep canon with perpendicular walls of rock, about a mile
beyond their former camp, which place they had further fortified, but which on
discovering that they were pursued they abandoned, leaving all their
provisions and camp equipage behind, aud escaping with only their horses and
arms. Leaving the citizens to guard the pack-train, Bernard, with thirty men,
followed the flying enemy for sixty miles over a broken and timbered country,
passing the footmen, who scattered and hid in the rocks, and encamping on
Selvie River. During the night the footmen came together, and passing near
camp, turned off into some low hills covered with broken rocks and juniper
trees.
Upon being
pursued, they again scattered like quail, and only two women and children were
captured. The following day the train was sent for, and the citizens notified
that they could accomplish nothing by coming farther. Bernard continued to
follow the trail of the mounted Indians for another day, when he returned to Camp
Watson, having travelled G30 miles in twenty-six days. He spoke of a report
often before circulated that there were white men among the Malheur band of
Shoshones, the troops having heard the English language distinctly spoken
during the battle of the 18th. He estimated the number of Indians, men, women,
and children, at 300, and the fighting men at eighty. The loss of all their provisions
and other property, it, was thought, would disable them.14
In August
Lieutenant-colonel R. F. Beirne, of the 14th infantry, from Camp Watson,
marched from The Dalles along the Canon City road to Boise, scouting the
country along his route. On arriving at Fort Boise, he was ordered to scout the
Burnt River region, where the Indians were more troublesome, if that were
possible, than ever before. The same was true of the Powder River district and
Canon City; and the inhabitants complained that the troops drove the Indians
upon the settlements. To this charge Steele replied that this could not always
be avoided. But the people of the north-eastern part of Oregon asserted,
whether justly or not, that Halleck favored California, by using the main
strength of the troops in his division to protect the route from Chico to the
Idaho mines, so that the California merchants should be able to monopolize the
trade of the mines, while the Oregon merchants were left to suffer on the road
from the Columbia River to the mines of Idaho, or to protect themselves as they
best could. The stage company suffered equally with packers and merchants.
Finally
Halleck visited south-eastern Oregon; and
11 4 it a
California, Aug. 22, 1SG8; Mens, and Dues, Abridg. l»G6-7, 501.
going to
Fort Boise by the well-protected Chico route, and thence to the Columbia River,
travelling with an escort, and at a time when the Indians were most quiet,
being engaged in gathering seeds and roots for food, he saw nothing to excite
apprehension.
The
legislature, which met in September, and the new governor, George L. Woods,
were urged to take some action, which was done.15 After some
discussion, a joint resolution was passed, October 7th, that if the general
government did nut within thirty days from that date send troops to the
protection of eastern Oregon the governor was requested to call out a sufficient
number of volunteers to afford the necessary aid to citizens of that part of
the state.
General
Steelo had been quite active since taking the command in Oregon. During the
summer he had made four tours of inspection: one to and around Puget Sound,
travelling between 600 and 700 miles, a part of the time on horseback. The
second tour was performed altogether on horseback, a distance of over 1,200
miles. Leaving The Dalles with an escort of ten men and bis aide-de-camp, he
proceeded to Camp Watson, where he took one of the cavalry companies sent to
that post in April, commanded by Major E. Myers, and continued his journey to
Camp Curry and Malheur Lake. While encamped on the east side of the lake, the
Indians drove off fifty-two pack- mules belonging to the escort. They were
pursued, and the animals recovered, except three which had been killed and
eaten. From Lake Malheur Steele pi’oceeded without further interruption to Camp
Lyon, and thence to Fort Boise, where he found General Ilal- leck and staff,
returning to The Dalles by the usually travelled road—leaving, it would seem by
the complaints of the citizens of Eastern Oregon, Myers’ company iu the Boise
country. With Fialleck, he
15See Weodi’
Her.., MS.; also U S. Mett. and Dorn, 186ft 7, 503 4, 39th cong. 2d sess; Or.
Jour. Senate, 1866, 51-5; Portland Oregonian, July 14, 1866.
next
inspected the forts at the mouth of the Columbia; and on the 13th of August
returned to Boise, crossing Snake River at the mouth of the Bruit eau,
examining the country in that vicinity with a view to establish'ng a post. From
Bruneau Steele went to tho Owyhee mines, and thence to the forks of the Owyhee,
where troop? were encamped watching the movements of the Indians. Taking an
escort of twenty men, under Captain David Perry, he next proceeded to Alvord
Valley, arriving at Camp Smith on the 6th of September. Thence he returned to
Fort Boise, and to Vancouver about the time the legislature was considering the
subject of raising volunteers.
Soon after
the return of Steele aud his interview with Woods, recruiting for the 8th
regiment United States cavalry was begun in the Willamette Valley, but
progressed slowly, the recruiting service having been injured by the action of
the legislature, which held out the prospect of a volunteer organization, in
which those who would enlist preferred to serve. The movement to recruit,
however, by promising to put an additional force in the field, arrested the
volunteer movement, and matters were left to proceed as formerly.16
16 In Sept. the Owyhee stage was attacked
and two men shot. In Nor. the luuians fired on loaded teams entering Owyhee
mines from Snake River by the main road, and killed a man named McCoy, besides
wounding one Adams. They fired on the Owyhee ferry, and on a detachment of
ravalry, botii attacks being made in the night, and neither resulting m
anything more jerious than killing a horse, and driving off fourteen head of
cattle. During the autumn a par? v of 68 Idaho miner* wen- prospecting on tht
upper waters of Snake Rivt r. A detachment of eleven uen were absent from the
main party looking for gold, when one of the eleven separated himself from
them, to look for the trail of others. Ou returning, he saw that the detachment
had been attacked, and hastened to report to th main company, w ho, oh reaching
thi place, found aU ten men murdered. Their names, so far us known, were Bruce
Smith Edward Riley, David Conklin, William Strong, and George Ackleson. This
partj were afterward attacked ia Montana by the Sioux, when Col Rice and
William Smith were killed, and several wounded. See account in Portland
Oregonian, Nov. 28, lb66. On the 8th of Nov. the Owyhee stage w as attacked
within four miles of Snake River crossing, a passenger named Wilcox killed,
another, nanie.i idarrmgton, wounded in the hip, and the driver, Waltermire,
wounded in the side. The driver ran his team two miles, pursued by the Indians,
who kept tiring on the stage, answered by passengers who had arms. The w
heel-hor';es bt'ing at last shot, the pariy were forced to run for their liv
es, and escaped. On returning with assistance,
But it
cannot be said that Steele did not keep his troops in motion. He decided also
to try the effect of a winter campaign, and reestablished several camps,
besides establishing Camp Warner, on the west side of Warner Lake, and Camp
Three Forks of Owyhee on the head of the north branch of that river, on the
border of the Flint district, and throwing a garrison into each of the two
abandoned forts of Lapwai and WTalla Walla. Two or three more
cavalry companies arrived before December, there being then seven in Oregon and
Idaho, besides five companies of the 14th infantry, one of the 1st Oregon
infantry, and five of artillery in the department.
A number
of scouting parties were out during the autumn, scouring the south-eastern part
of Oregon, skirmishing here and there, seldom inflicting or sustaining much
loss. On the 2Gth of September fifty cavalrymen under Lieutenant Small attacked
the enemy at Lake Abert, in the vicinity of Camp Warner, and after a fight of
three hours routed them, killing fourteen and taking seven prisoners. Their
horses, rifles, and winter stores fell nto the hands of the troops.
On the
morning of the 15th- of October Lieutenant Oat man, 1st Oregon infantry, from
Fort Klamath, with twenty-two men and five Klamaths as scouts, set out for Fort
Bidwell to receive reenforcements and provisions for an extended scouting
expedition. He was joined by lieutenant Small with twenty-seven cavalrymen. The
command marched to the WTarner
Wilcox was found
scalped and mutilated. The mail-bags'were Mitopena.nl contents scattered. In
Dec. twenty savages attacked the Cow Creek farm in Jordan Valley, and taking
possession of the stable, riddled the house with bullets and arrows. Having
frightened away the inmates, they drove off all the cattle on the place. They
were pursued, and the cattle recovered. U. 8. See. Int. Kept, 99-HK), vol.
iii., 4th cong. 2d sess. Dalle> Mountaineer, Dec. 7, 1866; Owyhee Avalanche,
Nov. 17, 1866; Idaho World, Nov. 24, 1866. On the 30th of Oct. the Indians
raided Surprise Camp, a military station, t arrying off grain, tents, tools,
etc. Major Walker, promoted from uaptain, pursued them, when they divided
their force, sending off thou plunder itl some, while a dozen of them charged
the soldiers. Four Indiana were killed and the rest escaped. Boiti Statesman,
Nov. 8, 1866.
Lake
basin, seeking the rendezvous of the enemy. Two-days were spent in vain search,
when the command undertook to cross the mountains to Lake Abert, at their
western base, being guided by Blow, a Klamath chief. After proceeding six miles
in a direct course, a deep canon was encountered running directly across the
intended route, which was followed for ten miles before any crossing offered
which would permit the troops to pass on to the west. Such a crossing was at
last found, the mountains being passed on the 26th, and at eleven o’clock of
the day the command entered the beautiful valley of the Chewaucan by a route
never before travelled by white men
About two
and a half miles from the point where they entered the valley, Indians were
discovered running toward the mountains. Being pursued by the troops, they
took up their position in a rocky canon. Leaving the horses with a guard, the
main part of the command advanced, and dividing, passed up the ridges on both
sides of the ravine, while a guard remained at its mouth. At twelve o’clock the
firing began, and was continued for three hours. Fourteen Indians were killed,
and twice as many wounded. The Indians then fled into tho mountains, and the
troops returned to their respective posts.17
Early in
Xovember the Shoshones under Panina threatened an attack on the Klamath
reservation, in revenge for the part taken against them by tho Klam- aths in
acting as scouts. With a promptness unusual with congress, the treaty made with
Panina in September 1865 had been ratified,18 and this chief was
under treaty obligations. But true to his threat, he invaded the Sprague River
Valley, where the chief of the Modocs had his home, stealing some of Sconchin’s
horses. In return, Sconcliin pursued, capturing two Snake women. He reported to
the agent on the
11
Jacksonville Reporter, Nov. 3, 1»66; Dalle's Mountaineer, Dec. 7, 1866- Cong,
Globe, 1865-6, pt v. ap, 402.
Hist.
Ob., Vol. II 31
reservation
that he had conversed with some of Panina’s head men, at a distance, in the
manner of Indians, and learned from them that the Snakes were concentrating
their forces near Goose Lake, preparatory to invading the reservation, and
capturing the fort. Applegate, the agent, notified Sprague, who reported to his
superiors, saying that he had not men enough to defend the reservation aud
search for the enemy. The Shoshones did in fact come within a few miles of the
post, where they were met and fought by the troops and reservation Indians,
losing thirteen killed and others wounded. Meanwhile the troops were gradually
aud almost unconsciously surrounding the secret haunts of the hostile Shoshones
in Oregon, their successes being in proportion to their nearness of approach,
the attacking party on either side being usually victorious.19
About this
time the controversy between the civil and military authorities took a peculiar
turn. The army bill of 1866 provided for attaching Indian scouts to the regular
forces engaged in fighting hostile bands; and certain numbers were apportioned
among the states and territories where Indian hostilities existed, the
complement of Oregon being one hundred. Governor Woods made application to
General Steele to have these hundred Indians organized into two companies of
fifty each, under commanders to be selected by himself, and sent into the field
independently of the regular troops, but to act in conjunction with them. This
proposition Steele declined, on the ground that the army bill contemplated the
employment of Indians as scouts only, in numbers of ten or fifteen to a command.
* In (Jet. Lieut Patton, of f&pt Hunt's
company w ith 10' men, had a skirmish on Dun dor anti Blitzen Creek, V. hich
runs into Malheur Lake from t'na .south, killing 6 out of 75 Indians, with t
loss of I man, and 4 horses wounded. BoU(Statesman, Oct, £7,1866. Capt. O’Bmme
ako had a fight on the Owyhee 'in Nov., in which h« killed 14 and captured 10,
losing one man wounded aud a citizen, S. C. Thompson, killed. Id. Nov. 17,
1906; Owyhee Avalanche, Nov.
10 1SGG. Baker’s command, in Nov. anu Dec.,
killed about GO Indians. Dalit 1 Mountaineer, Dec. 14, 1866; Sec. War Kept, i.
481-2, 40th cong. 2d sess.
Being
refused by Steele, Woods appealed to Hal- leck as division commander, who also
refused, using little courtesy in declining. The quarrel now became one in
which the victory would be with the stronger. Woods telegraphed to the
secretary of war a statement of the case, and asked for authority to carry out
his plan of fighting Indians with Indians. Secretary Stanton immediately
ordered Halleck to conform his orders to the w ishes of the governor of Oregon
in this respect; and thus constrained, authority was given by Halleck to Woods
to organize two companies of fifty Indians each, and appoint their officers.
Accordingly, W. C. McKay and John Parragh, both familiar with the Indian
language and customs, were appointed lieutenants, to raise and command the
Indian companies, which were sent into the field, with the humane orders to
kill and destroy without regard to age, sex, or condition.20
About tho
time that the Warm Spring Indians took the field, George Crook,
lieutenant-colonel 23d infantry, a noted Indian-fighter in California, was
ordered to relieve Marshall in the command of the district of Boise/1
as the Idaho newspapers said, “to
20 Lieuts McKay and Darragh, in giving a
personal account of their < xpedi tion, relate that their command killed
fourteen women and children, which was done in accordancc v, ith written and
verbal instructions from headquarters of the military district, and much
against the wishes of thp Indian scouts, who remonstrated against it, on the
ground that the Snakes, in their next inroad, would murder their wives and
children. U. S. Sec. Int. Kept, 1867-8, vol. iii., pt ii., 101, 40th cong. 2d
sess. Woods’ apology was that the women of the Snake tribe were the most brutal
of murderers, and had assisted in the fiendish tortures of Mrs and Miss Ward,
and other immigrant women, for which they deserved to sjtfer equally with the
men.
21 See RecolUotiom of G. L. Woods, a
manuscript dicta tion containing many terse and vivid pictures of the. modem
actors in our history; also Overland Monthly, vol. ii., p. 162, 1869.
The follow ing is a
complete roster of the officers in th< department of the Columbia in the
autumn of I860 Department staff: Frederick Steele, major- geu. commanding
department. Ueorge Macomber, 2d lieut 14th inf., V. A. insp.-gen. Henry C.
Hodges, capt., A, Q M., bvt lieut -col U. S. A., hief Q. M. Sam. A. Foster,
capt., 0. S., bvt major U. S. A., C. C. S,, Act. 4. A. Ci. P. 6. S. Ten Brunk
‘surgeon D. S. A . Dvt lieut-col medical director. Geoige Williams, brevet
capt. U. S, A., aide-de-camp. Richard P. Strong, 1st lieut 7th int.,
aide-de-camp. Stations and commands: Fort Colville, Capt. John S. Wharton, co.
U, I4i,h inf, Fort Lapwai, Lt J. H. Gallagher, lith
the
satisfaction of everybody/' General Crook was a man of quiet determination, and
the people of Oregon and Idaho expected great things of him. Nor were they
disappointed, for to him is due the credit of subduing the hostile tribes on
the Oregon and California frontier, aud in Idaho. When the war began, eastern
Oregon was for the most part a terra incognita, and the Oregon cavalry had
spent four years in exploring it and tracking the Indians to their hitherto
unknown haunts. Aud now the most efficient officers decided that the Indians
must be fought in the winter, and Steele, after brief observation, adopted the
theory. Then Governor Woods had throwu into the field the best possible aids to
the troops in his two companies of Indian allies.
When Crook
assumed command in the Boise district the Indians were already hemmed in by a
cordon of camps and posts, with detachments continually in the field harassing
and reducing them. About the middle of December Crook took the field with forty
soldiers and a dozen Warm Spring allies. On the Owyhee he found a body of about
eighty warriors prepared for battle. Leaving ten men to guard camp, lie
attacked with the remainder, fighting for several hours, when the savages fled,
leaving some women and children and thirty horses in his hands. Twenty-
inf., co. E, 8th cav
Tort W’alla Waila tit Oscar I. Converse, co. I), 8tli cat* Fort Stevens. Capt.
Leroy L. James, co C, 2d art. (.'ape Hancock, Capt. John
I. Rogers, co. L, 2d. art Fort Steilacoom,
Capt. Chas II. Feirce, co. E, ‘2d art. San Juan Inland, Capt. Thomas Greys co.
1, 2d art. Fort Vancouver, Col 6. A. H. Blake. IstU. S. cav,. field, staif, and
hand; Bvt lieut-col Albert 0. Vincent, co. F, 2d art.; Capt. William Kelly, co.
C, 8th cavalry. Vancouver Arsenal, P>vt capt L. S. Babbitt, det.
ordnance corps. Camp Watson, Bvt. lieut-cul Eugene M. Baker, co. I Irt
cav ; Lieut Auiandus C. Rustler, co. F, 14th inf. Camp Logan, Lieut Charles B.
Western, 11th inf., co. F, 8th cav. Fort Klarasth, Capt. F. B. Sprague, co. I,
1st Or. inf. volunteers. Boise District: Fort Boisi5. Bv t
limj.-gen. Ueor^e, Crook, 23d inf.; Bvt col James B. Sinclair, co. H, 14th
ini' Camp Three oik'-, I T.. Bvt lieut-col John J. C»p- pinger, cos A and F,
14th int. (lamp 0, F. Smith, Capt. J. H Walker, co. C, lith inf. Camp Warner,
Capt. P. Collins, cos B and D, 14th inf.; Brt major Edward Myers, co. H, 1st
cavalry Camp Lyon, I. T., Capt. James 0. Hunt, co. M, 1st cav. Off. Arm.
Itegis., I860, 07; Portland Oregonian, Dec. 22, 1866. Capt. David Perry
superseded Marshall at Fort Boisd in the interim before Crook’s arrival; and
Major Rheinhart, 1st Or. int., was in command at Fort Klamath uuriug the summer
of 1806.
five or
thirty Indians were killed. Crook lost but one man, Sergeant O’Toole, who hud
fought in twenty- eijsrlit battles of the rebellion.
In January
1867 Crook’s men again met the enemy about fifteen miles from the Owyhee ferry,
on the road to California. His Indian scouts discovered the Snake camp, which
was surprised and attacked at daylight. In this affair sixty Indians were
killed and thirty prisoners taken, with, a large number of horses.' A man named
Hanson, a civilian, was killed in the charge, and three of Crook’s men wounded.
Soon after a smaller camp was discovered; live of the savages were killed, and
the remainder captured. An Indian was recognized among the prisoners who had
before been captured and released on his promise to refrain from warlike
practices iu the future, and was shot for violating his parole.22
From the Owyhee Crook proceeded toward Malheur lake and river, in the vicinity
of which the Warm Spring Indian companies had been operating. On the 6th of
January McKay attacked a camp, killing three, taking a few horses and some
ammunition. He discovered the headquarter* of Panina, who had fortified himself
on a mountain two thousand feet in height, and climbing the rocks with his men,
fought the chief a whole day without gaining much advantage, killing three Shoshones,
and having one man and several horses wounded. The same night, however, he
discovered another hostile camp, attacking which he killed twelve, and took
some prisoners. The snow being fourteen to eighteen inches deep in
north-eastern Oregon at this time, the impossibility of keeping up the strength
of their horses compelled the scouts to suspend operations.
Meanwhile,
notwithstanding the exertions of the troops, it was impossible to check the
inroads of the Indians. Only a few years previous to the breaking
22 U. S. Int. Rept, 1S67-8, vol. iii. 188,
40th cong. 2d sess; Owyhee Avalanche, Jan. 5, ZSG7.
out of the
Shoshone war this tribe was treated with contempt, as incapable of hostilities,
other than petty thefts and occasional murders for gain. When they first began
their hostile visits to the Warm Spring reservation Robert Newell, one well
acquainted with the character of the different tribes, laughed at the terror
they inspired, and declared that three or four men ought to defend the agency
against a hundred of them. But a change had eume over these savages with the
introduction of fire-arms and cattle. From cowardly, skulking creatures, whose
eyes were ever fastened on the ground in search of some small living thing to
eat, the Shoshones had come to be as much feared as any savages in Oregon.5*
As early
as the middle of March detachments of troops were moving on the Canon City
road, and following the trails of the marauders. They travelled many hundred
miles, killing with the aid of the allies twenty-four Indians, taking a few’
prisoners, and destroying some property of the enemy. On the 27tli of July
Crook, while scouting between Camp C. F. Smith and Camp Harney with detachments
from three companies of cavalry, travelling at niglit and
23 For example, it takes a brave and
somewhat chivalrous savage to rob a stage. On March 25th, as the Boisf and
Owyhee stage was coming down the ravine tow ard Snake River from Reynolds
(Ireek, it was attacked by eight umbi'shed Indians*. The driver, William
Younger, was mortally wounded. James I'IJman, a California pioneer, a Boise
pioneer, a merchant of Idaho, in attempting to escape, was overtaken and
killed. The mail and contents of the coach were destroyed or taken. The same
band killed Bouehet, a citizen of Owyhee. A few days previously they bad raided
a larm, and driven off 23 cattle from Reynolds Creek. On the 23th of April, 8
Shoshones raided the farm of Clano and Cosper, on the Canon City road, and
secured 25 cattle and 2 horses. They were pursued by J. X. ('lark, whose house
and barn they had destroyed in Sept., who, with Howard Maupin and William
Ragan, attacked them as they were feasting on m ox, killing 4 and recovering
the stock. One of the Indians killed by Clark was the chief Panina. In the same
month Fraser and Stack were killed near their homes on Jordan Creek. la May
they attacked C. Shea, a herder on Sinker Creek, and were repelled and pursued
by 8 white men, w ho, however, barely escaped with their lives. Two me n,
McKnight and Polk, being in pursuit of Shoshones, were wounded, McKnight
mortally. The savages burned a house and barn near Inskip’s farm, Owyhee, and
drove olf the stock, which the troops finally recovered. They killed three men
in Mormon Basin. On every road, m any direction, they made their raids, firing
on citizens and stealing stock. U. 8, Sec. Int. Sept, 1SG7-8, iii. 101-3, 40th
cong. 2d sess.
lying
concealed by day, came upon a large body of the enemy in a canon in the Puebia
Mountains. He had with him the two companies of allies, composed of Warm
Spring, Columbia River, and Boise Shoshones, the first eager for an
opportunity of avenging themselves on an hereditary foe. They were allowed to
make the attack, leaving the troops in reserve. The Shoshones were completely
surrounded, and the allies soon had thirty scalps dangling at their belts. It
was rare sport for civilization, this making the savages tight the savages for
its benefit.24 Proceeding toward and when within eight miles of the
post, another Indian camp was discovered and surrounded as before, the allies
being permitted to perform the work of extermination.
From
observing that the Indians were constantly well supplied with ammunition, and
that although so many and severe losses were sustained the enemy were not
disheartened nor their number lessened,. General Crook came to the conclusion
that it was not the Oregon tribes alone he was fighting. From along experience
in Indian diplomacy, he had discovered that reservations were a help rather
than a hinderance to Indian warfare, premising that the reservation Indians
were not really friendly in their dispositions. It was impossible always to
know whether all the Indians belonging to a reservation were upon it or not, or
what was their errand when away from it. An Indian thought nothing of
travelling two or three hundred miles to steal a horse—in fact, the farther his
thefts, from the reservation the better, for obvious reasons.. He was less
liable to detection; and then he could say he had been on a hunting expedition,
or to gather the' seeds and berries which were only to be found in mountains
and marshes, where the eye of the agent was not likely to follow him. Meantime
he, with
s*Ree
Omjh^e Avalanche, in Oregonian, Aug. 24,1867. ‘The troops did not fire a shot.'
Boise titate-iman, in Shamtu Courier, Aug. 31, 18G7r
others
like-minded, could make a rapid journey into Oregon, leaving his confederates
on the reservation, who would help him to sell the stolen horses on his return
for arms and ammunition, and who in their turn would carry these things to the
Oregon Indians to exchange for other stolen horses. There were always enough
low and vicious white men in the neighborhood of reservations to purchase the property
thus obtained by the Indians and furnish them with the means of carrying on
their nefarious practices. By this means a never-failing supply of men, arms,
and ammunition was pouring into Oregon, furnished by the reservation Indians
of California. Such, at all events, was the conviction of Crook, and he
determined to act upon it by organizing a sufficient force of cavalry in liis
district to check the illicit trade being carried on over the border,
It was the
intention of Crook to have his troops ready for prosecuting the plan of
'ntercepting these incursions from California by the 1st of July; but owing to
delay in mounting his infantry, and getting supplies to subsist the troops in
the field, the proposed campaign was retarded for nearly two months. The
rendezvous for the expedition was Camp Smith, on the march from which point to
Camp Warner, in July, his command intercepted two camps of the migratory
warriors, and killed or captured both. Crook left Camp Warner on the 29th of
July with forty troops under Captain Harris, preceded by Darragh with his
company of scouts, with a view of selecting a site for a new winter camp, the
climate of Warner being too severe.25 Passing southerly around the
base of Warner buttes, and north again to the Drew crossing of the shallow
strait between Warner lakes,
25 The
winter of 1866-7 was very severe in the Warner Lake region, which has an
altitude of nearly 5,000 feet. One soldier, a sergeant, got lost, and perished
in the snow. The entire company at Camp Warner were compelled to walk around a
small circle in the snow for several nights, not daring to lie down or sleep
les£ they should freeze to death. Owyhee Avalanche, April 6, 1867; Portland
Oregonian, Aug. 24, 1867.
he
encamped on Honey Creek, fifteen miles north-west of Warner, where he found
Darragh, whom he followed the next day up the creek ten miles, finding that it
headed in a range of finely timbered mountains trending north and south, with
patches of snow on their summits. On the 31st the new camp was located in an
open-timbered country, on the eastern boundary of California, and received the
name of New Warner. It was 500 feet lower thau the former camp. On the 1st of
August the command returned, having discovered some fresh trails leading
toward California, and confirming the theory of the source of Indian supplies.
At Camp Warner were found Captain Perry and McKay, who had returned from a
scout to the south-east without finding an Indian; while Archie McIntosh, a
half-breed Boise scout, had brought in eleven prisoners, making forty- six
killed and captured by the al.ies within two weeks.
On the 3d
of August Crook set out on a recon- noissance to Selvie River and Harney A
"alley, with the object of locating another winter post, escorted by
Lieutenant Stanton, with a detachment of Captain Perry’s company, and Archie
McIntosh with fifteen scouts. The point selected was at the south end of the
Blue Mountains, on the west side, and the camp was named Harney.28
On the
lGtli of August, by a general order issued from headquarters military division
of the Pacific, the district of Boise was restricted to Fort Boise. Camp Lyon,
Camp Three Porks of the Owyhee, and Camp C. F. Smith were made to constitute
the dig trict of Owyhee,* and placed under the command of General Elliott, 1st
cavalry. Fort Klamath and camps Watson, Warner, Logan, and Harney were
designated as constituting the district of the lakes, and assigned to the
command of Crook, who also had
™Ge?i.
Orders Dept Columbia, Nov. 26, 1867.
** A few
months later Bois£ was incorporated in the district of Owyhee,
command of
the troops at Camp Bidwell, should he require their services.
Having at
last obtained a partial mount for his infantry, Crook set out about September
1st for that part of the country from which he believed the reenforcements of
the Indians to come, with three companies of cavalry, one of mounted nfantry,
and all the Indian allies. It was hoped by marching at night and lying
concealed by day to surprise some considerable number of the enemy. But it was
not until the 9th that Darragh reported finding Indians in the tules about Lake
Abort. On proceeding from camp on the east side of Goose Lake two days in a
north course, the trail of a party of Indians was discovered, but Crook
believed them to be going south, and dividing his force, sent captains Perry
and Harris and the Warm Spring allies north to scout the country between
Sprague and Des Chutes rivers, taking iu Crooked River and terminating their
campaign at Camp Harney in Harney Valley.
At the
same time he took a course south-east to Surprise Valley, with the mounted
infantry under Madigan, one cavalry company under Parnell, and the Boise scouts
under McIntosh Having found that there were Indians in the mountains east of
Goose Lake, but having proof that they had also discovered him, instead of
moving at night, as heretofore, he made no attempt to conceal himself, but
marched along the road as if going to Fort Crook, and actually did march to
within twTenty miles of it; but when he came to a place where he was
concealed by the mountains along the river on the south side, he crossed over
and encamped in a timbered canon.
On the
25th the command was marched in a course south-east, along the base of a spur
of the mountains covered with timber. While passing through a ravine a small
camp of Indians was discovered, who fied, and were not pursued. Coming soon
after to a plain trail leading toward the south fork of Pit Iliver,
it was
followed fifteen miles, and the camp for the night made in a canon timbered
with pine, with good grass and water. Signs of Indians were plenty, but the
commander was not hopeful. The horses were beginning to fail with travelling
over lava-beds, and at night; the Indians were evidently numerous and watchful;
and there was no method of determining at what point they might be expected to
appear. Forewarned in a country like that on the Pit Kiver, the advantages
were all on the side of the Indians.
The march
on the 26th led the troops over high table-]and, eastward along a much used
trail, where tracks of horses and Indians were frequent, leading finally to the
lava-bluffs overlooking the south branch of Pit River, and through two miles of
canon down into the valley. Here the troops turned to the north along the foot
of the bluffs, and when near the bend of the river the scouts announced the
discovery of Indians in the rocks near by. Crook prepared for battle by
ordering Parnell to dismount half his men and form a line to the south of the
occupied rocks, while Madigan formed a similar line on the north side, the two
uniting on the east in front of the Indian position. McIntosh with liis scouts
was ordered back to the bluff overlooking the valley, the troops getting into
position about one o’clock, and the Indians waiting to be attacked in the
rocks.
The
stronghold was a perpendicular lava-wall, three hundred feet high, and a third
of a mile long on the west side of the valley. At the north end was a ridge of
bowlders, and at the south end a canon. In front was a low sharp ridge of
lava-blocks, from which there was a gradual slope into the valley. These several
features of the place formed a natural fortification of great strength. But
there were yet other features rendering it even more formidable. Running into
its south-eastern boundary were two promontories, a hundred and fifty feet in
length, thirty in height, with perpendicular walls parallel to each other and
about
thirty
feet apart, making a scarped moat which could not be passed. At the north end
of the eastern promontory the Indians had erected a fort of stone, twenty feet
in diameter, breast-high, pierced v\ ith loop-holes; and on the western
promontory two larger forts of similar construction. Between this fortress and
the bluff where the scouts were stationed were huge masses of rocks of every
size and contour. Tbe only approach appearing practicable was from the eastern
slope, near which was the first fort.
At the
word of command Parnell approached the canon on the south. A volley was tired
from the fort, and the Indians fell back under cover, when the assailants by a
quick movement gained the shelter of the rocky rim of the ravine; but iu
reconnoitring immediately afterward they exposed themselves to another volley
from the fort, which killed and wounded four men. It was only by siege that the
foe could be dislodged. Accordingly Eskridge, who had charge of the horses,
herders, and supplies, was ordered to go into camp, and preparations were made
for taking care of the wounded, present and prospective.
The battle
now opened in earnest, and the afternoon was spent in volleys from both sides,
accompanied by the usual sounds of Indian warfare, in which yells the troops
indulged as freely as the Indians. A squad of Parnell's men were ordered to
the bluff to join the scouts, and help them to pour bullets down into the round
forts. The Indians were entirely surrounded, yet such was the nature of the
ground that they could not be approached by men in line, and the firing was
chiefly confined to sharp-shooting. The range from the bluffs above the fort
was about four hundred yards, at an angle of forty-five degrees; and hundreds
of shots were sent during the afternoon down among them. Prom the east fort
shots could reach the bluff from long-range guns, and it was necessary to keep
under cover. All the Indians who could
be seen
were clad only mi a short skirt,
with feathers in their hair. One of them, notwithstanding the cordon of
soldiers, escaped out of the fortress over the rocky ridge and bluff, giving a
triumphant whoop as he gained the level ground, and distancing his pursuers.
It was conjectured that he must have gone either for supplies or
reenforcements.
Thus wore
away the afternoon. As night approached Crook, who by this time had
reconnoitred the position from every side, directed rations to be issued to the
pickets stationed around the stronghold to prevent escapes. When darkness fell
the scouts left the bluff and crept down among the rocks of the ridge
intervening between the bluff and the fortress, getting within a hundred feet
of the east fort. The troops also now carefuUy worked themselves into the
shelter of the rocks nearer to the Indians, who evidently anticipated their
movements and kept their arrows flying in every direction, together with
stones, which they threw at random. In the cross-fire kept up in the dark one
of Madigan’s men was killed by Parnell’s company. All night inside the forts
there was a sound of rolling about and piling up stones, as if additional
breastworks were being constructed. Whenever a volley was tired by the troops
in the direction of these noises, a sound of voices was heard reverberating as
if in a cavern. During the early part of the flight there were frequent flashes
of lightning and heavy peals of thunder. In the mean time 110 change was
apparent in the position of affairs.
At
daybreak Parnell and Madigan were directed to bring in their pickets and form
under the crest of the ridge facing the east fort, while the scouts were
ordered to take position on the opposite side of the ridge, and having first
crawled up the slope among the rooks as far as could be done without
discovering themselves, at the word of command to storm the fort.23
At sunrise the command Forward! was given.
88 ‘The
general talked to the men like a father; told them at the word
The men,
about forty in number, sprang to their feet and rushed toward the fort. They
had not gone twenty paces when a volley from the Indians struck down Lieutenant
Madigan, three non-commissioned officers, three privates, and one citizen—eight
in all. The remainder of the storming party kept on, crossing a natural moat
and gaining the wall, which seemed to present but two accessible points. Up one
of these Sergeant Russler, of Company I), 23d infantry, led the way; and up the
other, Sergeant Meara and Private Sawyer, of Company H, 1st cavalry, led at
different points. Meara was the first to reach a natural parapet surrounding
the east fort on two sides, dashing across which he was crying to his men to
come on, when a shot struck him and he fell dead. At the same moment Russler
came up, and putting his gun through a loop-hole fired, others following his
example. He was also struck by a shot,
It was
expected that the Indians, being forced to abandon the enclosure which wTas
now but a pen in which all might be slaughtered, would be easily shot as they
came out, and some of the men disposed themselves so as to interrupt their
anticipated ilight; but what was the surprise of all to see that as fast as
they left the fort they disappeared among the rocks as if tliey had been
'izards. In a short time the soldiers had possession of the east fort, but a
moment afterward a volley coming across from the two forts on the west, and
scattering shots which appeared to come from the rocks beneath, changed the
position of the besiegers into that of the besieged. Several men more were
wounded, one more killed, and the situation became critical in the extruine.
But notw
ithstanding the Indians still had so greatly the advantage, they seemed to have
been shaken in their courage by the boldness of the troops in storm-
Forward! they should
rise up quick, go with a yell, aud keep yelling, and never think of stopping
until they had crossed the ditch, sealed the wall, md bioktn through the
breastworks, and thu faster the better.' J. Wassen, in, Oregonian, Nov. 12,
lt>67.
ing the
east fort, or perhaps they were preparing a surprise. A continuous lull
followed the volley from the west forts, which lasted, w ith scattering shots,
until noon, though the men exposed themselves to draw the fire of the enemy and
uncover his position One shot entered a loop-hole and killed the soldier
stationed there. Shots from the Indians became fewer during the afternoon,
while the troops continued to hold the east fort, and pickets were stationed
who kept up a fire wherever any sign of life appeared in the Indian quarter The
west forts, being inaccessible, could not be stormed. There was nothing to do
but to watch for the next movement of the I ndians, who so far as known were
stilf concealed in their fortifications, where the crying of children and other
signs of life could be heard through the day and night of the 27th.
On the
morning of the 28th, the suspense having become unbearable, Crook permitted an
Indian woman to pass the lines, from whom he received an explanation of the
mysterious silence of the Indian guns. Not a warrior was left in the forts. By
a series of subterranean passages leading to the canon on the south-west, they
had all escaped, and been gone for many hours. An examination of the ground
revealed the fact that by the means of fissures and caverns in the sundered
beds of lava, communication could be kept up with the country outside, and that
finding themselves so strongly besieged they had with Indian mutability of purpose
given up its defence, and left behind their women and children to deceive the
troops until they were safely away out of danger. To attempt the examination of
these caves would be foolhardy. A soldier, iu descending into one, was shot
through the heart, probably by some wounded Indian left in hiding there. The
extent and depth of the caverns and fissures would render futile any attempt to
drive out. the savages by fire or powder. Nothing remained but to return to
Camp Warner, which movement was begun on the 30th, and ended on the
4th of
October at the new post in the basin east of Lake Abert.
The result
of this long-projected campaign could not be said to be a victory. According to
Wasson, it was not claimed by the troops that more than fifteen Indians were
killed at the Pit River fortress, while the loss sustained by the command in
the two days’ siege was eight killed and twelve wounded.29 That
General Crook sacrificed his men in the affair of Pit River in his endeavor to
achieve what the public expected of him is evident, notwithstanding the laudatory
and apologetic accounts of the correspondents of the expedition. Had he let his
Indian scouts do the fighting in Indian fashion, while he held his troops ready
to succor them if overpowered, the result might have been different. One thing,
'ndeed, he was able to prove, that the foe was well supplied with ammunition,
which must have been obtained by the sale of property stolen in marauding
expeditions to the north. Stored among the rocks was a plentiful supply of
powder and caps, iu sacks, tin cans, and boxes, all quite new, showing recent
purchases. The guns found were of the American half-stocked pattern, indicating
whence they had been obtained, and 110 breech loading guns were found, though
some had been previously captured by these Indians.
The
expedition under Perry, which proceeded north,
a There is
a discrepancy between the military report, which makes the number of killed
five, and Wassen’s, which make* it eight; but I have followed the latter, because
his account gives tun circumstances and names. The list is as follows: Killed:
Lieut John Madigan, born in Jersey City, X. J.; sergeants Charles Barchet, bom
in Germany, formerly of 7th Vt volunteers, Michael Meara, bom in Galway,
Ireland. Is years in U. S. A., and Sergeant Russler; privates Janies Lyons,
born in Peace Dale, R. I ; Willoughby Sawyer, born in Canada West; Carl Bross,
born in Germany, lived in Newark. N. J.; James Carey, from New Orleans.
Wounded: corporal-; MaOann, Fogarty, Firman; privates Clancy, Fisher,
Kingston, McGuire, Embler, Barbes, Shea, Enser; and I^awrence Traynor,
civilian. The remains of Lieut Madigan were taken one day’s march from the
battle-field, and buried on the north bank of Pit River, about twenty miles
below the junction of the so'irh branch. The privates were buried in the valley
of the south branch, half a mile north of the forts. The wounded wore conveyed
on mule litters to New (imp Warner, Corr. S. 1'. Bulletin, iu Portland Herald,
Dec. 10, 1867; J Wa*sen, in Oregonian, Nov. 12, 1867; I J ayes’ Indian Scraps,
v. 141; General. Order Dept Columbia, no. 3'2, 1S67.
failed to
find any enemy. Lieutenant Small, how-, ever, with fifty-one men from Fort
Klamath and ten Klamath scouts, was more successful, killing twenty-three and
capturing fourteen in the vicinity of Silver and Abert lakes, between the 2d
and 22d of September. Among the killed were two chiefs who had signed the
treaty of 18G4, and an influential ined- icine-man. Panina having also been
killed by citizens while on a foray on the Canon City and Boise road in April,
as will be remembered, there remained but few of the chiefs of renown alive.30
For about
two months of the summer of 1867, while Captain Wildy of the 6th cavalry was
stationed on Willow Creek in Mormon Basin, to intercept the passage north of
raiding parties, the people along the road between John Day and Snake rivers
enjoyed an unaccustomed immunity from depredations. But early in September
Wildy was ordered to Fort Crook, in California, and other troops withdrawn from
the north to strengthen the district of the lakes. Knowing what would be the
effect of this change, the inhabitants of Baker county petitioned Governor
Woods for a permanent military post in their midst, but petitioned in vain,
because the governor was not able to persuade the general government to listen
favorably, nor to dictate to the commander of the department of the Columbia
what disposition to make of his forces. Wildy’s company had hardly time to
reach Fort Crook when the dreaded visitations began.31 About the
last
30 Oregoman, Nov. i and 12, 1867;
Jarlnonville Sentinel, Sept. 28, 1867; Y.rthi Union, Oct. 5, 1867; S. F Alta,
Sept. 28, J861.
31 The first attack was maJe Sept. 28th upon
J. B. Scott, w ho with his wift and children was driving along the road between
Rye Valley and their hnmt on Burnt lliver. Scott was killed almost instantly,
receiving two latal wounds at once. The wite, though severely wounded, seized
the reins as they fell from the hands oi her dead husband, and urging the
horses to a run escaped with her children, but died the following day This
attack -vas followed by others in quick succession. Oregonian, Oct. 4, 7, 9,
1867; Umatilla Columbia Press, Oct. 5, 1867. On the morning of the 3d of
October a smaJI band of Indians plundered tho house of a Mr Howe, a few miles
east of Camp Logan, and detachment of seven men of company F, 8th cavalry was
sent under Lieut Pike to pursue them Pike may have been a valuable officer,
Hiai Oa„ Vol. II. 35
of October
General Steele ordered a cavalry company to guard the roads and do picket duty
in the Burnt River district.
But
depredations were not confined to the Oregon side of Snake River. They were
quite as frequent in Boise and Owyhee districts, where there was no lack of
military camps. So frequent were the raids upon the stock-ranges32
that the farmers declared they must give up their improvements and quit the
country unless they were stopped. At length they organized a force in the lower
Boise Valley. Armed with guns furnished by Fort Boisd, and aided by a squad of
soldiers from that post, they scouted the surrounding country thoroughly,
retaking some stock and killing two Indians.33 But while they
recovered some of their property, the stage station at the mouth of the Payette
River was robbed of all its horses.34 And this wTas the
oft-repeated experience of civil and military parties. Blood as well as spoils
marked the course of the invaders.35 Stages, and even the Snake
River
but he vas not
experienced in Inrtian-fighting. He was eagerly pushing forward after the
guides, who had discovered the camp of the thieves, 'when he imprudently gave a
shout, which sent the savages flying, leaving a rifle, which m their haste was
forgotten, l'ike very foolishly seized it by the muzzle and struck it on a rock
to destroy it, when it exploded, wounding him fatally, which accident arrested
the expedition; and a second, under Lieut Kauffman, failed to overtake the
marauders. Oregonian, Nov, 4, 1807; Gen. Order Headquarters Dept Columbia, no.
32.
32 On the night of Oct. 3d, within half a
mile of Owyhee City, Joseph X1. Colwell, a highly respected citizen,
was killed, scalped, and burned. On the following night a raid was made on the
cattle in Jordan Valley, within 3 miles of Silver City. Four separate
incursions were made into Boist5 Valley during the autumi Owyhee Avalanche,
Oct. 5, 1867; Boiu4 Statesman, Oct. 22, Dec. 17, 1867; Boisi Democrat, Dec. 21,
1876.
** A farmer who
belonged to the volunteer company of Bois6 Valley stated that one of the
Indians killed was branded with a circle and the figures 1S45, showing that 22
years before he had been thus punished for offences ot a similar kind.
31J here was
a <-hipf known to his own people as Oulux, and to the settlers as Bigfoot,
who led many of these raids. He was nearly 7 feet in height, and powerfully
built, with a foot 14| inches in length. The track of this Indian could not be
mistaken He was in Crook’s first battle in the spring, on the Owyhee, with
another chief known as Littlefoot. Yreka Union, Feb. 9, and Nov. 11, 1867.
Bigfoot was killed by an assassin, who lay in wait for him, and his murderer
promised him to guard from the public the secret of his death, of which he was
ashamed.
Sj On the
21st of October, in the morning, occurred one of the most painful of tho many
harrowing incidents of the Shoshone wai. Two seigeante, named
steamer
Shoshone, were attacked. Letters and newspapers were found in Indian camps
clotted with human gore. The people, sick of such horrors, cried loudly for
relief. 1 Jut at this juncture, when thuir services were most needed, the
Indian allies were mustered out, although General Steele, in making his report,
fully acknowledged their value to the service, saying they had done most of the
righting in the late expeditions, and proved efficient guides and spies.34
On the 23d
of November Steele relinquished the command of the department of the Columbia,37
which
Nichols and Denoille,
left Camp Lyon in a four-horse ambulance to go to Fort Bois6, Denoille having
with him his wife, who was in delicate health. Nine miles from camp, whilo
passing through a rocky canon, they were attacked by Indians iu ambush, and
Denoille, who was driving, was killed at the first fire. N ichols, not knowing
that his comrade was hit, was giving his attention to the Indians, when
Denoille fell out of the wagon dead, and the horses becoming frightened ran
half a mile at the top of their speed, until ono fell and arrested the flight
of the others. Nichols now sprang out, followed by Mrs Denoille, whom he urged
to conceal herself before the Indians came up; but being bereft of her reason
by the shook of the tragedy, she insisted on returning to find her husband;
anil Nichols, hiding among the rocks, escaped to Carson ’- farm that evening.
When a rescuing party went out from Silver City after Denoille’s body, which
was stripped and mutilated, nothing could be learned of tho fate
oi his Wife. A scouting party was immediately
organized at Camp Lyon. At the Owyhee River the troops came upon a camp, from
which the inmates fled, leaving only two Indian women. These women declared
that Mrs Denoille had not been harmed, but was held for ransom. One of them
being sent to impure what ransom would be required, failed to return, when the
troops retreated to eamp to refit for u, longer expedition. Col Coppinger and
Capt. Hunt immediately resumed the pursuit, but the Indians had escaped. About
the middle of Dec. a scouting party attacked a camp of twenty savages, kill-
i’.g five aud capturing six. Some of Mrs Denoille’s clothing was found on one
of the captured women, who said that the white captive was taken south to
Winnemucca to be held for a high ransom. It was not until iu the slimmer of
1868 that the truth was ascertained, when to a scout named Hicks was pointed
out the place of the woman’s death, and her bleaching bones. She had been taken
half a mile fiom the road where the attack was made, dragged by the neck to a
convenient block of stone, her head laid upon it, and crushed with another
stone. The Indian who described the scene, and his part in it, was riddled by
the bullets of the company. Boise Statesman, Oct, ‘24, 26, and Dec. 17, 1867;
Owyhee Avalanche, June 13, 1868.
36 Bept Sec. War, 1867-8, i 7U; Oregonian,
Dec. 23, 1S67.
31 Steele
was born in Delhi, N. Y., graduated at West Point in 1843, and received a
commission as 2d lieut in the 2d reg. U. S. inf He served under Scott in
Mexico, and was brevetted 1st lieut, then captain, for gallant conduct at the
battles of Contreras and Chapultepec; and was present at the taking of the city
of Mexico. After the Mexican war he was stationed in Cal., on duty as adj. to
Gen. Riley. At the outbreak of the rebellion he was ordered to Missouri, where
he was soon promoted to the rank of major in the 11th LI. S. inf For gallant
services at Wilson’s Creek, he was made a brig. gen. of volunteers; and for
subsequent services brevetted maj. gen. On leaving Oregon he was granted an
extended leave of absence, from which he anticipated lwich pleasure, but died
suddenly of apoplexy, in S. F,
was
assumed by General L. IT. Rosseau, wbo, however, made no essential changes in
the department. Arrangements were continued in each district for a winter
campaign of great activity.38 The military journals contain frequent
entries of skirmishes, with a few Indians killed, and more taken prisoners;
with acknowledgments of some losses to the army in each. Crook, whose district
was in the most elevated portion of the country traversed, kept some portion
of the troops continually in the field, marching from ten to twenty miles a day
over unbroken fields of snow from one to two feet in depth. In February he was
on Dunder and Blitzen ( ’reek,39 south of Malheur Lake, where he
fought the Indians, killing and capturing fourteen. While returning to Warner,
a few nights later, the savages crept up to his camp, and killed twenty-three
horses and mules by shooting arrows into them and cutting their throats. Crook
proceeded toward camp Warner, but sent back a detachment to discover whether
any had returned to feast on the horse flesh. Only two were found so engaged,
who were killed. Another battle was fought with the Indians, in the
neighborhood of Steen Mountain, on the 14th of April, when several were
killed.
The troops
at Camp Harney made a reconnoissance of the Malheur country in May, which
resulted in surprising ten lodges on the north fork of that river near Castle
Rock, or as it was sometimes called, Malheur Castle, and capturing a number of
the enemy, among whom was a notorious subchief known as E. E. Gantt, who
professed a great desire to live thereafter in peace, and offered to send
couriers to bring in his warriors and the head chief, Wewawewa, who, he
declared, was as weary of conflict as himself.40 On
’“See general order
No. 5 district of Owyhee, in Oregovi'in, Nov. lfif>7
39So i.amed
by Curry s troops, who crossed it in a thunder-storm in 1864. Re pi Adjt-Orn,
Or., 1.866, 4i.
0 Gantt had reasons for his humility. He
nad been engaged ir. several -aids daring tins spring, driving off th( stock
from Mormon basin between Burnt and Malheur rivers, and capturing two trains of
wagons At length the farmers organized a company, and in concert with the noops
from Camp
this
promise he was released, his family, and in all about sixty prisoners, with
their property, and the stock plundered from the settlers remaining in the
hands of the troops. A messenger was sent to intercept General Crook, who,
having been temporarily assigned to the command of the department of the
Columbia, was on his way to the north.
The
Indians had sustained some reverses in Idaho, among which was the killing of
thirty-four who had attacked the Boise stage in May, killing the driver and
wounding several other persons. Many prisoners had also been taken during the
winter, and some had voluntarily surrendered. Kosseau had issued an order in
February that all the Indians taken in the district of Owyhee should be sent
under guard to Vancouver, and those taken in the district of the lakes should
be sent to Eugene City, via Fort Klamath, to be delivered to the
superintendent of Indian affairs. Those at ’Boise took advantage of a severe
storm, when the guards were less vigilant than usual, to recover their freedom;
but as they only escaped to find themselves given up by their chiefs, it was a
matter of less consequence.
According
to an order of Ilalleck’s, no treaty could be made with the Indians by the
officers in his division without consulting him, and it became necessary for Crook
to wait for instructions from San Francisco. He repaired in the mean time to
Camp Harney, where
Colfax, inflicted
severe chastisement on a portion of this band. Bigfoot, also, on the east side
of Snake River, was captured by the farmers’ company of the Payette and the
troops from Bois<§ fort, who happened to come upon his camp at the same
time, surrounding it, when the Indians surrendered. Ore/jonian, June 24, 1868.
Meanwhile, in the Owyhee district the usual murderous attacks had been going
on. In May the Indians again shot and killed the driver of the stage, Robert
Dixon, between Bois<§ City and Silver City; and shot and wounded the
passengers in another wagon. In March they had murdered a farmer named Jarvis,
near Carson’s farm. Owyhee Avalanche, March 21, 1808. In June they stole stock
and killed a young man named Jonas Belknap, in Mor mon basin, who went to
recover the horses, cutting his body to pieces, and sticking it full of pointed
rods with slices of fat bacon on the ends. Bois6 Statesman, June 13, 1868. The
party which went to find these Indians was attacked in a canon, and Alex.
Sullivan was killed.
the
principal chiefs of the hostile bands were assembled, and where a council was
held on the 30th of June.
“Do you
see any fewer soldiers than two years ago?” asked he. “No; more.” “Have you as
many warriors?” “No; not half as many.” “Very well; that is as I mean to have
it until you are all gone.”41 The chiefs knew this was no empty
threat, and were terrified. They sued earnestly for peace, and Crook made his
own terms. He did not offer to place them on a reservation, where they would be
fed while they idled and plotted mischief. He simply told them he would
acknowledge Wewawewa as their chief, who should be responsible for their good
conduct. They might return free into their own country, and establish their
headquarters near Castle Rock on the Malheur, and so long as they behaved
themselves honestly and properly they would not be molested. These terms were
eagerly accepted, and the property of their victims still in their possession
was delivered up.42
Crook had
no faith in reservations, yet he felt that to leave the Indians at liberty was
courting a danger from the enmity of white men who had personal wrongs to
avenge which might provoke a renewal of hostilities. To guard against this, he
caused the terms of the treaty to be extensively published, and appealed to the
reason and good judgment of the people, reminding them what it had cost to
conquer the peace which he hoped they might now enjoy.43 With regard
to the loss of life by fighting Indians in Oregon and Idaho up to this time, it
is a matter of surprise that it was so small. The losses by murderous attacks
out of battle were far greater. From the first settlement of Oregon to June 1868,
the whole number of persons
41 See
letter to Gov. Ballard of Idaho, in Oreqonian, July 29, 1868; Overland
Monthly, 1869, 162.
2 Among the relics returned were articles
belonging to three deserting soldiers, who^e fate was thus ascertained.
>3
Mesx. and Docs, 1S6S-9, 380-6; Hayes' Indian Scraps, v. 142; Omjoman, July 13,
1S68.
known to
be killed and wounded by Indians was 1,394. Of these onlyabout 90 were killed
or wounded in battle. The proportion of killed to wounded was 1,130 to 264,
showing how certain was the savage aim. A mighty incubus seemed lifted off the
state when peace was declared. General Crook, now in command of the department,
was invited to Salem at the sitting of the legislative assembly to-receive the
thanks of that- body.41
The treaty
which had been made was with the Malheur and Warner Lake Shoshones only. There
were still some straggling bauds of Idaho Shoshones who were not brought in
until August; and the troops still scouting on tlie southern border of Oregon
continued for some time to find camps of Pah Utes, and also of the Pit River
Indians, with whom a council was subsequently held in Round Valley, California.
Early in July between seventy and eighty of Winneinucca’s people with three
subchiefs were captured, and surrendered at Camp C. F. Smith, “where,” said
Crook in one of his reports, “there seems to be a disposition to feed them,
contrary to instructions from these headquarters.”
The
Indians had submitted to force, but it was a tedious task, subjecting them to
the Indian department, which had to be. done. Crook had said to them, “You are
free as air so long as you keep the peace;” but the Indian superintendent said,
“You signed a treaty in 1865 which congress has since, ratified, and you must
go where you then agreed to go, or forfeit the benefits of the treaty; and we
have, besides, the power to use the military against you if you do not.” This
argument was the last resorted to. The tone of the Indian department was
conciliatory; sometimes too much so for the comprehension of savages. They
never conceded anything unless forced to do so, and how should they know that
the white race practised
11 See Senate Jomt Resolution, no. 0, in
Or. House .Tour., 1868, 85-6; Or, Laws, 186S, U9-100, 102-3; Or. Legh. Doc*,
1SG8; Governor's Message., 4-0.
such
magnanimity? Crook cautioned his subordinates on this point, telling them to
disabuse the minds of the Indians of the. notion that the government was
favored by their abstinence from war.
Superintendent
Huntington, who had talked with Wewawewa about the settlement of his people,
was told that the Malheur Indians would consent to go upon the Siletz
reservation in wrestern Oregon, but that those about Camp Warner
would not, and nothing was done toward removing them in 18G8. Meantime Huntington
died, and A. 13. Meacham was appointed in his place. A small part of the
Wolpape and Warner Lake Shoshones consented to go upon the east side of Klamath
reservation; but in 1869 most of these Indians were at large, and sufficiently
unfriendly to alarm the white inhabitants of that part of the state.
And now
the bad effects of the late policy began to appear. When the Shoshones were
first conquered they would have gone wherever Crook said they must go. But
being so long free, they refused to be placed on any reservation, ()ther
tribe*, imitating their example, were restless and dissatisfied, even
threatening, aim affairs assumed so serious an aspect that Crook requested the
commander of the division to withdraw no more troops from Oregon, as he felt
assured any attempt to forcibly remove the Indians—a measure daily becoming
more necessary to the securitjr of the settlements—would precipitate
another Indian war, and that the presence of the military was at that time
necessary to restrain many roving bands from committing depredations.45
About the
20tli of October Superintendent Meacham, assisted by the commanding officer at
Camp Harney, held a council with the Indians under We-
<5The facta
here stated are taken from the military correspondence in the dept of the
Columbia, copied by permission of General .1 elf C. 1 )avis, to whose courtesy
1 have been much indebted. For convenience, I shall hereafter refer to these
letters as Military Corratpondence, with appropriate date. The above expression
of opinion was dated May 8, 1SG9.
wawewa,
which ended by their declining to go upon the Klamath reservation as requested,
because Crook, who could have persuaded them to it, declined to do so,4*
for the reason that he believed that Meacham had promised more than he would be
able to perform.
Early in
November Meacham held a council with the Indians assembled at Camp Warner uuder
Otsehoe, a chief who controlled several of the lately hostile bands, and
persuaded this chief to go with his followers upon the Klamath reserve. But
the war department gave neither encouragement nor material assistance, although
Otsehoe and other Indians about Warner Lake were known to Crook to be amongst
the worst of their race, and dangerous to leave at large.47
True to
his restless nature, Otsehoe left the reservation in the spring of 1870, where
his people had been fed through the winter. They deserted in detachments,
Otsehoe remaining to the last; and when the commissary required the chief to
bring them back, he replied that Major Otis desired them to remain at Camp
Warner, a statement which was true, at least in part, as Otis himself admitted.4!s
Otsehoe,
however, finally consented to make his home at Camp Yainax, so far as to stay
oil the reser
46 * I did not order them to go with Mr
Meacham, for the reason that I have their confidence that I will do or order
only what is best and right, both for themselves and the government.’ Military
Correspondence, Dec. 7, 1869.
47 ‘Among these bands,’ says Gen. Crook,
‘and those near Harney, are some as crafty and bad as any I hare ever seen, and
if they are retained in the vicinity of their old haunts, and the Indian
department manages them as they have other tribes in most cases, they will have
trouble with them.5 Military Correspondence, March 4, 1869.
4S ‘ I do
not remember giving any Indians permission to stay here, but I have said that
if they came I would not send them back, because they said they could live
better here. I shall, however, advise the Indians to go over and see Mr
Meacham, in the hope that he will rectify any neglect or wrong that may have
been done them.’ Otis to Ivan D. Applegate, in Military Correspondence, July
18, 1870. Applegate, in reply, says that the Indians were well fed and well
treated during the winter, but that crickets had destroyed their growing grain,
and Meaeham’s arrival had been delayed, owing to the tardiness of the Indian
department in the east, besides which reasons, sufficient to discourage the
unstable Indian mind, Archie McIntosh, one of the Boise Indian scouts, had been
making mischief on the reservation, by representing that Otsehoe was wanted
with his people at Camp Warner.
vation
during the winter season, but roving abroad iu the summer through the region
about Warner and Goose lakes. In March 1871, by executive order, a reservation
containing 2,275 square miles was set apart, on the north fork of the Malheur
River, for the use of the Shoshones. In the autumn of 1873 a portion of them
were induced to go upon it, most of whom absented themselves on the return of
summer. Gradually, however, and with many drawbacks, the Indiau department
obtained control of these nomadic peoples, who were brought under those
restraints which are the first step toward civilization.49
With the
settlement of the Shoshones upon a reservation, the title of the Indians of
Oregon to lands within the boundaries of the state was extinguished. The Grand
Rond reservation in the Willamette Valley was afterward purchased of the
Indians and thrown open to settlement. The Malheur reservation was abandoned,
the Indians being removed to Washington.50 Propositions have been
made to the tribes on the Umatilla reservation to sell their lands, some of the
best in the state, but so far with no success, these Indians being strongly
opposed to removal. Ten years after the close of the Shoshone war, claim was
laid by a chief of the Nez Perces to a valley in north-eastern Oregon, the
narrative of which I shall embody in the history of Idaho. Thus swiftly and
mercilessly European civilization clears the forests of America of their lords
aboriginal, of the people placed there by the almighty for some purpose of his
own, swiftly and mercilessly clearing them, whether done by catholic,
protestant, or infidel, by Spaniard, Englishman, or Russian, or whether done
ia the name of Christ, Joe Smith, or the devil.
49Ind. Aff.
Reply 1873, 320-4; H. Ex, Doc., 99, 43d cong. 2d seas.; Owyhee Avalanche, Oct.
11, 1873.
50 Winnemucoa’s people refused to remain at
the Yakima agency, and made their exodus a few years ago to Nevada, whence they
came.
THE MODOC WAR.
1864 1873.
Land
of the Modocs—Keintpoos, or Captain Jack—Agents, SUPERINTENDENTS, AND
TREATIES—KeINTPOOS DECLINES TO Go ON A RESEP.VA-
tion—Raids—Troops
in Pursuit—Jack Takes to the Lava-beds— Appointment op a Peace
Commissioner—Assassination of Candy, Thomas, and Sherwood—Jack Invested in his
Stronghold—He Escapes—Crushing Defeat of Troops under Thomas—Captain Jack
Pursued, Caught, and Executed.
The Modoc war, fought
almost equally in California and Oregou, is presented in this volume because
that tribe belonged to the Oregon superintendency, and for other reasons which
will appear as I proceed. From the time that certain of Fremont’s men were
killed on the shore of Klamath Lake down to 1864, when superintendent
Huntington of Oregon entered into a treaty with them and the Klamaths, the
Modocs1 had been the implacable enemies of the white race, and
were not on much more friendly terms w ith other tribes of their own race,
sustaining a warlike character everywhere. They lived on the border-land between
California and Oregon, but chiefly in the latter, the old head chief, Sconchin,
having his home on Sprague River, which flows into the upper Klamath Lake, and
the subchiefs in different localities.
lveintpoos,
a young subchief, had his headquarters
1 ilodoc,
according to E. Steele of Yreka, is a Shasta word signifying ‘stranger/ or
‘hostile stranger,’ and came into use as a name by white miners, through
hearing the Shastas use it. Ind. Aff. jRept,
1864, 121. Linsey Applegate, who is familiar with their history, has a list of
persons killed by them, to the number of 95. Historical Correspondence, MS.
anywhere
about Tule Lake, ranging the country from Link River, between the two Klamath
lakes, to Yreka, in California. He was called Captain Jack by the white
settlers, on account of some military ornaments which lie had added to his
ordinary shirt, trousers, and cap; was not an unadulterated savage, having
lived long enough about mining camps to acquire some of the vices of
civi'ization, and making money by the prostitution of the women of his band
more than by honest labor. Some of the boys of this band of Modocs were
employed as liouse-servants in Yreka, by which means they acquired a good
understanding of the English language, and at the same time failed not to
learn whatever of evil practices they observed among their superiors of the
white race. During the civil war they heard much about the propriety of
killing off the white people of the north, and other matters in harmony with
their savage instincts; and being unable to comprehend the numerical strength
of the American people, conceived the notion that this was a favorable time to
make war upon them, while their soldiers were fighting a long way off.
E. Steele,
Indian superintendent of California, when he entered upon the duties of his
office in 1863, found the Klamaths and Modocs, under their chiefs Lalake and
Sconchiti, preparing to make war upon southern Oregon and northern (California,
having already begun to perpetrate those thefts and murders which are a sure
prelude to a general outbreak. The operations of the 1st Oregon cavalry and the
establishment of Port. Klamath to prevent these outrages are known to the
reader. In February 1864 the Modocs on the border of Oregon and California,
w’ho spent much of their time in Yreka, being alarmed lest punishment should
overtake them for conscious crimes, sought the advice of Steele, who, ignoring
the fact that they had been allotted to the Oregon superin tendency, took the
responsibility of making with them a treaty of friendship and peace. This
agreement was between Steele
individually
and Keintpoos’ band of Modocs, and required nothing of them but to refrain
from quarrels amongst themselves, and from theft, murder, child- selling,
drunkenness, and prostitution in the white settlements. The penalty for
breaking their agreement was, to be given up to the soldiers. The treaty
permitted them to follow any legitimate calling, to charge a fair price far
ferrying travellers across streams, and to act as guides, if desired to do so.
On the. part of the white people, Steele promised protection when they came to
the settlements, but advised their obtaining passes from the officers at Fort
Klamath, to which they were informed that they would be required to report
themselves for inspection.
This
action of Steele’s, although prompted by a desire to j 'revent an outbreak, was
severely criticised later. He was aware that congress had granted an
appropriation for the purpose of making an official treaty between the
superintendent of Oregon, the Modocs, and the Klamaths, and that the latter had
been fed during the winter previous at the fort, in anticipation of this
treaty. For him to come in with an individual engagement was to lay the
foundation for trouble with the Modocs, who were entirely satisfied with a
treaty, which left them free to visit the mining camps, and to perpetrate any
peccadilloes which they were cunning enough to conceal, while a government
treaty which would restrain them from such privileges was not likely to be so
well received or kept. Keintpoos did, however, agree to the treaty of October
1864, at the council-grounds on Sprague River, whereby the Klamaths and Modocs
relinquished to the United States all the territory ranged by them, a certain
large tract lying north of Lost River
chin, the
head chief of all the Modocs, was now an old man. Iu his fighting days he had
given immigrants and volunteer companies plenty to do to avoid his arrows. It
was through his warlike activities
except
Valley.
Scon
that the
rocky pass round the head of Tule Lake came to be called Bloody Point. Yet he
had observed the conditions of the treaty faithfully, living with his hand at
his old home on Sprague River, within the limits of the reservation, and
keeping his people quiet. But Keintpoos, or Captain Jack, as I shall henceforth
call him, still continued to occupy Lost River Meadows, a favorite
grazing-ground, where his band usually wintered their ponies, and to live as
before a life combining the pleasures of savagery and civilization, keeping
his agreement neither with Steele nor the United States, two of his followers
being arrested in 1867 for distributing ammunition to the hostile Snakes.
This
practice, with other infringements of treaty obligations, led the agent in
charge of the Klamath reservation 111 1808 to solicit military aid from the
fort to compel them to go upon the reserve,2 which was not at that
time granted.
In 1869
the settlers of Siskiyou county, California, petitioned General Crook, iu
command of the Oregon department, to remove the Modocs to their reservation,
saying that their presence in their midst was detrimental to the interests of
the people. Crook replied that he would have done so before but for a report
emanating from Port Klamath that the Indian agent did not feed them.8
After some weeks, however, he, 011 the demand of Superintendent A. B. Meacham,
ordered Lieutenant Goodale, commanding at Port Klamath, to put Jack and his
band upon the reserve if in his belief the Indian department was prepared to
care for them properly. Accordingly, in December, Meacham obtained a detachment
of troops and repaired to the ford on Lost River, where he had an interview
with Jack, informing him of the purpose of the government to exact the
observance of the
s Yreka
Journal, Nov. 15, 18G7; Woodbridge Messenger, Nov. 23, 1So7; Ind. A£. Rept,
1808, 124.
1 Military
Correspondence, Oct. 14 and Dec. 7, 1869; Ind.Aff. Rept, 1HG9, 105; Poitland
Oregonian, Aug. 4, 1868.
treaty.
Jack hesitated and prevaricated, and during the night fled with a part of his
followers to the lava- beds south of Tule Lake, leaving the camp in charge of
two subchiefs, George and Riddle. But Meacham remained upon the ground, and
after two or three days’ correspondence with Jack by means of messengers,
obtained his consent to come upon the reservation with his people, Jack at the
same time confiding his resolve to George not to remain longer than he found it
agreeable.4 Meacham established Jack comfortably at Modoc Point, on
Klamath Lake, by his own desire, where also Sconchin was temporarily located
while improvements were being made upon the lands intended for cultivation
As I have
intimated, the military department threw doubts upon the maimer in which the
Indian department provided for the wants of the Indians; and to prevent any
occasion being given to Jack to violate treaty obligations, Captain (J. C.
Knapp was commissioned agent,5 who was profuse in his allowances to
the Modocs in order to cultivate their regard. But all in vain. Early in the
spring Jack, pretending to be starved, but in reality longing for the
dissipations of Yreka, and designing, by drawing away as many as possible of
Sconchin’s men, to become a full chief, left the reservation with his band, and
returned to Lost River Valley, which was now being settled up by white
cattle-raisers. This movement of Jack’s caused Meacham to accuse Knapp of
permitting the Klamaths to annoy and insult the Modocs, thus provoking them to flight.
Meacham was a man with a hobby. He believed that he knew all about the savage
race, and how to control it. Like Steele, when he accepted the chieftainship of
Jack’s band in 18G4, he was flat-
*0. C. Applegate's
Modoc History, MS., 2. This is a full and competent account of Modoc affairs
from 1864 to 1873. No one has a more thorough and intelligent knowledge of the
customs, manners, ideas, and history of this tribe than Mr Applegate.
5 Military officers were, in the autumn of
1869, substituted for other agents at each of the reservations in eastern
Oregon, and at several in California. Ind. Aff. Bepty 1870, 51.
tered by
the distinction of being the friend of these wild people, and his theory was
that he could govern them through his hold on their esteem. Knapp was accused
by Jack of causing his people to labor at making rails for fencing, with
providing insufficient food, and with moving them from place to place, although
he had only proposed to remove them to land more suitable for opening farms,
and furnished with wood and grass,6 and this, jVIeacham said, was
reason enough
Thf
Modoc Country.
for their
leaving the reservation. He now called upon the commandant of the fort to take
measures to return Jack and his band to the reserve, and also insisted upon the
relative positions of the civil superintendent and military agent being made clear
by the department at Washington. Having a military agent did not seem to work
well, since Captain Knapp, through his knowledge of affairs at the fort, and
the inefficiency of Goodale’s command, refrained from making a requi-
6 Military Correspondence, MS., March 18,
1873.
sitiou
upon faim, when in bis character of agent it was his duty to have done so. This
neglect caused Goodale to be censured, who promptly placed the blame upon
Knapp, while admitting the soundness of his judgment.7 Owing to the
'nferiority of the force at Klamath, no steps were taken for a year and a half
to bring back the Modocs under Jack to the reservation, during which time they
roamed at will from one resort to another, making free use of the beef of the
settlers on Lost Iliver, and by their insolence each summer frightening the
women into flight.8
In August
1870 General Crook was relieved from the command of the Department of the
Columbia by General E. 11. S. Canbv, and sent to fight the Indians of Arizona,
for which purpose all the military stations in Oregon were depleted.8
At Fort Klamath there was one company, K, of the 23d infantry under Lieutenant
Goodale, and no cavalry, while at Camp Warner, over a hundred miles to the
east, there were two companies, one being cavalry, neither post being strong
enough to assist the other, and both having to keep in check a large number of
Indians subdued by Crook, but not yet trusted to remain quiescent.
There were
certain other elements to be taken into account in considering the causes which
led to the Modoc war. The Klamaths used formerly to be allies of the Modocs,
although they seem never to have been so fierce in disposition; but after being
settled on the reserve and instructed, and especially after Lalake, their old
chief, was deposed, being supplanted by a remarkable young Klamath, named by
’Letter of Goodale,
in Military Correspondence.», MS., May 16, 1870.
8 Jack’s
band used to range up and down among the raneheros, visiting houses in the
absence of the men, ordering the women to cook their dinners, lounging on beds
while the frightened women complied, and committing various similar outrages
for two summers before the war began, causing the settlers to send their
families to Rogue River Valley for safety. Applegate’s Modoc History* MS.
9Rept of
Maj.-gen. George H. Thomas, in H, Ex, Doc., i. pt ii., 114, 41st cong. 2d sess.
Hist. Ob., Vol. II, 33
the agent
Allen David, their ambition was not to fight, but to learn the arts of peace.
Their advancement in civilization and conformity to treaty regulations was a
source of pride with them, and of annoyance to Captain Jack, the more so that
the Klamaths had assisted in arresting the Modocs guilty of aiding the hostile
Shoshones with ammunition. I3ut Jack was even more annoyed with Sconchin, whom
he taunted with remaining on the reservation more for convenience than care for
his people,10 whom Jack was constantly endeavoring to entice away.
In 1870,
having been left so long to follow his own devices, Jack made a formal claim to
a tract of land, •already settled upon, six miles square, and lying on both
sides of the Oregon and California line, near the head of Tule Lake.
Superintendent Meacham, not knowing bow to compel Jack to bring his people upon
tbe reserve, reported to the secretary of the interior, recommending that this
tract as described should be allowed them as a reserve. A more unwise
proposition could not have been made; for aside from the precedent established,
there was the conllict with the settlers already in possession within these
limits, the opposition of the neighboring fanners to having this degraded band
in their vicinity, and the encouragement given to Jack, who was informed of the
superintendent’s action, bearing upon the future aspect of the case.
Previous
to this Knapp went to Yreka to have an interview with Jack, whose importance
increased with finding himself the object of so much solicitude, and who flatly
refused to go with him to Camp Yainax, Sconchiu’s home, to meet the
superintendent. During the summer of 1871 he frequently visited the
reservation, defying the military authorities, and boasting that in Yreka he
had friends who gave him
10 W. V. Rhinehart, in Historical
Correspondence, MS., agrees with Jack about this. But Sconchin was never
detected in illicit intercourse with the
enemy.
and his
people passes to go where they pleased, which boast he was able to confirm.11
At length Jack precipitated the necessity of arresting him by going npon the
reservation and killing a ‘doctor,’ who, having failed to save the lives of two
persons in his family, was, according to savage reasoning, guilty of their
deaths. It is doubtful if an Indian who had lived so much among white people
believed in the doctor’s guilt; but whether he really meant to avenge the death
of his relatives or to express his defiance of United States authority, the
effect was the same. By the terms of the treaty the government was bound to
defend the reservation Indians against their enemies. Ivan I). Applegate,
commissary at Camp Yainax, made a requisition upon tho commander at Fort
Klamath to arrest Jack for murder, the effort to do so being rendered
ineffectual by the interference of Jack’s white friends in Yreka.12
Lieutenant
Goodale was relieved at Fort Klamath in 1870, by Captain James Jackson, 1st
United States cavalry, with his company, B. Knapp had also been relieved of the
agency on the reservation by John Meacharn, brother of the superintendent, who
on being informed of the murder on the reserve instructed the agent to make no
arrests until a conference should have been had with Jack and his lieutenants,
at the same time naming John Meacharn and Ivan I). Applegate as his
representatives to confer with them.13
Jl Says
Jackson: ' He carries around with him letters from prominent citizens of
Yreka, testifying to his good conduct and good faith with the whites. Many of
the settlers in the district where he roams are opposed to having him
molested.’ Military Correspondence, MS., Aug. 29, 1871. This was tiue of some
of the settlers on the six-mile tract, who feared to be massacred should his
arrest be attempted. How well they understood the danger was soon proved.
12 The following is a eopy of a paper
tarried around by Jack: ‘Yreka, June 26, 1871. Captain Jack has been to Yreka
to know what the whites are going to do with him for killing the doctor. The
white people should not m<*ldle with them in their laws among themselves,
further than to persuade, them out of their foolish notions. White people are
not mad at them for executing their own laws, and should not be anywhere. Let
them settle all these matters among themselves, and then our people will be in
no danger from them. E. Steele.’ Applegate's Modoc Hist., MS.
15 Lieut R.
H. Anderson, in Military Correspondence, MS., Aug. i, 1871; II. Com. Rept, 88,
2.37-t)7, 42d cong. 3d seas.
This
desire having been communicated to Canby, he directed Jackson to suspend any
measures looking to the arrest of Jack until the superintendent’s order for a
conference had been carried out, but to hold his command in readiness to act
promptly for the protection of the settlers in the vicinity should the conduct
of the Indians make it necessary. At the same time a confidential order was
issued to the commanding officer at Vancouver to place in effective condition
for field service two companies of infantry at that post.14
In
compliance with the temporizing policy of the superintendent, John Meacham
despatched Sconchin with a letter to John Fairchild, living on the road from
Tule Lake to Yreka, a frontiersman well known to and respected by the Indians,
and who accompanied Sconchin, and with him found Jack, who refused to hold a
conference with the agent and commissary, as desired.
Among the
settlers in the country desired by Jack was Oregon’s venerable pioneer, Jesse
Applegate, re-jj siding as agent upon a tract claimed by Jesse I). Carr of
California, and lying partly in that state and partly in Oregon. Of Applegate,
Jack demanded pay for occupation. On being refused, one of Jack’s personal
guard, known as Black Jim, set out on a raid among the settlers, at the head of
fifteen or twenty warriors, alarming the whole community, and causing them to
give notice at the a^encv. These things led to a fur-
O o «/ O
ther
attempt to gain a conference with J ack, he being given to understand that if
he would consent he would be safe from arrest, and allowed to remain for the
present in the Lost Iliver country.
At length
Jack signified his willingness to see the commissioners, provided they would
come to him at Clear Lake, Applegate’s residence, attended by no more than four
men, he promising to bring with him the same number. Word was at once sent by
Applegate to Klamath, sixty miles, and the commissioners
14 Military
Correxpondenr?, MS., Aug. 6, 1871.
wore
informed. On arriving at the rendezvous, they found, instead of four or tive
Modoc,s, twenty-nine, in war-paint and feathers.
The
conference was an awkward one, Black Jim doing most of the talking for the
Modocs. Jack was sullen, but liually gave as a reason for not returning to the
reservation that he was afraid of the Klamath ‘medicine.’15 He also
complained that the Klam- aths exasperated him by assuming the ownership of
everything on the reserve, drew an effective picture of the miseries of such a
state of dependence, and denied that his people had ever done anything to
disturb the settlers.16 When reminded that he had driven away
several families, and that those who remained were assessed, he demanded to
know A\ho had informed against him, but was not told.17 All through
the interview Jack had the advantage. There were thirty armed Modocs against
half a dozen white men, who, warned by Jack’s sullen demeanor, dared not utter
a word that might be as tire to powder. He so far unbent during the
conversation as to promise not to annoy the settlers, and not to resist the
military, and was given permission to remain where he was until the
superintendent could come to see them; and upon this understanding John Meacham
wrote to that functionary that no danger was to be apprehended from Jack’s
band. Yet the commissioners had hardly set out on their return to Yainax when
it was warmly debated in the Modoc camp whether or not to commence hostilities
at once by murdering Jesse Applegate and the other settlers about Clear and Tule
lakes.18
151 am at a
loss for a word to give as a synonym for ‘medicine’ as here used. It might be
the ‘evil-eye’ of the ancients.
* H. F. Miller was at that time paying them
an assessment. This man said to a neighbor: ‘I favor the Modocs because lam obliged
to do it. If they go to war they will not kill me, because I use them so well.’
Applegate's Modoc Hist., MS. Mark the sequel.
17 John Meacham, in Historical
Correspondence, MS., Aug. 21, 1871.
18This w as
afterward confessed by the Modocs to their captors. Applegate’s Modoc Hist.,
MS.
Agent
Meacham’s report of security for the present was communicated by the
superintendent to Canby, who in turn reported it to the division commander at
San Francisco, and the matter rested. Major Ludiu-j;- toii, military inspector,
who made a tour of the stations on the border of California and Oregon,
passing through camps Bid well, Warner, and Harney, also reported the people on
the whole route free from any fear of Indians, and that the rumors of alarm
arose solely from petty annoyances to individuals from Indians visiting the
settlements.19 Fort Klamath was not visited by the inspector, and
the report of the Indian agent misled the military department.
But the
settlers in the Tule and Clear Lake district did not feel the same security. On
the contrary, in November 1871 they petitioned the superintendent and Canby to
remove the Modocs to their reservation, saying that their conduct was such
that they dared not allow their families to remain in the country.29
Their petition remained in the superintendent’s hands for two months before it
was submitted to Canby, with the request that Jack’s band be removed to Camp
Yainax, and suggesting that not less than fifty troops be sent to perform this
duty, and that Commissary Applegate accompany the expedition, if not objected
to by Captain Jackson.
Canby
replied that he had considered the Modoc question temporarily settled by the
permission given them by the commissioners to remain where they were until they
had been notified of the determination of the government in regard to the six
miles square recommended by him to be given them for a separate reserve, and
that it would be impolitic to send a military force against them before that
decision, or before
19 Military
Correspondence, Sept. 2, 1871. Capt. Jackson also wrote, ‘I have no doubt that
they are insolent beggars, but no far as I can ascertain no one has been
robbed, or seriously threatened.’ II. Ex. Doc., i. pt ii., 115, 41st cong. 2d
sess.
2uSee letter
of Jesse Applegate to Supt Meacham, Feb. 1, 1872, in II Ex. Doc., 122, 13, 43d
cong. 1st sess.; Military Correspondence, MS., Jan. 29.1S72; Jacksonville
Democrat, March 1, 1873.
they had
been notified of the point to which they were to be removed; but that in the
mean time Jackson would be directed to take measures to protect the settlers,
or to aid in the removal of the Modocs should force be required.21
Alarmed by
the delay in arresting Jack, a petition was forwarded to Governor Grover,
requesting him to urge the superintendent to remove the Modocs, or authorize
the organization of a company of mounted militia to be raised iu the
settlements for three months’ service, unless sooner discharged by the
govei’nor. In this petition they reiterated their former complaint, that they
had been harassed for four years by about 250 of these Indians, 80 of whom were
fighting men. These latter were insolent and menacing, insulting their
families, drawing arms upon citizens, and in one case firing at a house. They
complained that the superintendent had turned a deaf ear, and unless the
governor could help them there was no further authority to which they could
appeal. Being scattered over a large area, it was to be feared that in case of
an outbreak the loss of life would be heavy.22 Grover succeeded in
procuring an order that Major Otis, with a detachment of 50 cavalry and their
officers, should establish a temporary camp in Lost River district; but Canby
refused to take any more active measures before the answer to the recommendation
of the superintendent, with regard to a reservation in that country, should
arrive from Washington.
Early in
April Meacham was relieved of the superintendency, and T. B. Odencal appointed
in his place. One of liis first acts was to take council of Otis in regard to
the propriety of permitting Jack and his followers to remain any longer where
they were,
21 See
correspondence in T. B. Od^neaVs Modoc War; Statement of its Origin and
(-ciuses, etc.; Portland, 1873. This pamphlet was prepared by request of
II. W. Scott, C. P. Crandall, B. Goldsmith, and
Alex. P. Ankeney, of Portland, to correct erroneous impressions occasioned by
irresponsible statements, and is made up chiefly of official documents.
22Military
Correspondence, MS., Jan. 29 aud Feb. 19, 1872.
when Otis
made a formal recommendation in writing that the permission given by Meacham
should be withdrawn, and they directed to go upon the reservation, the order
not to be given before September; that m case of their refusal the military
could put them upon it in winter, which was the most favorable season for the
undertaking. Otis further recommended placing Jack and .Ulack Jim on the
Siletz reservation, or any other place of banishment from their people, giving
it as his opinion that there would be no peace while they were at liberty to
roam, without a considerable military force to compel his good behavior. Iu
order to make room for the Modocs, and leave them no cause of complaint, he
proposed the removal of Otsehoe’s baud of Shoshones, together w ith Wewawewa’s
and some others, to a reservation in the Malheur country.23 The same
recommendation was made to Can by on the 15 th of April.
While
these matters were under discussion, the long-delayed order arrived from the
commissioner of Indian affairs at Washington to remove the Modocs, if
practicable, to the reservation already set apart fcr them by the treaty of
18G4, aud to see that they were protected from the aggressions of the
Klainaths. Could this not be done, or if the superintendent should be unable to
keep them on the reserve, he was to report his views of locating them at some
other point which he should select.
Odeneal
wrote to the newT agent at Klamath, L. S. Dyar,24 and to
Commissary Applegate to seek an
B'I make
the above recommendations,’ he said, ‘after commanding the military districts
of Nevada, Owyhee, and the districts of the lakes,’ succes- bively since
December 1867. Odeneal’s Modoc War, 22.
24 Dyar was the fourth agent hi three years.
Lindsey Applegate was incumbent from 1864 to 1869, when Knapp was substituteil
to secure tbe fair treatment of the Indians, which it was then supposed only
military officers could give. But Captain Knapp was more complained of than
Applegate, because he endeavored to get some service out of the Modocs in their
own behalf. John Meacham was then placed in office for one year, when J. II.
High, former agent at Fort Hall, supplanted him. Klamath agency being under
assignment to the methodist church for religious teaching, L. S. Dyar was
appointed through this inliuence. All of these men treated the Indians well.
interview
with Jack, and endeavor to persuade him to go to live on the reservation. Major
Otis had previously made an attempt, through his Indian scouts, to have a
conference, but had been repulsed in a haughty manner. However, after much
negotiation it had been agreed that a meeting should take place at Lost Iliver
gap between Otis, Agent High, Ivan and Oliver Applegate, with three or four
citizens as witnesses, and three or four Klamath scouts on one side, and Jack
with half a dozen of his own men on the other. But according to his former
tactics, Jack presented himself with thirty-nine fighting men, aud had Otis at
his mercy.
The
council at Lost Iliver gap was productive of no good results, Jack denying any
complaints made by the settlers, and one of the witnesses, Miller, testifying
that his conduct was peaceable, under the selfish and mistaken belief that he
was insuring his own immunity from harm.25 When Odeneal’s order
arrived for a council with Jack, that he might be informed of the decision of
the commissioner of Indian affairs, Scon- chin was employed to act as messenger
to arrange for a meeting at Linkville; but Jack returned fur answer that any
one desiring to see him would find him in his own country. After considerable
effort, a meeting was arranged to take place at the military encampment at
Juniper Springs, on Lost Iliver. Agents Dyar and Applegate, attended by some of
Sconchin’s head men, met Jack and his warriors on the 14tli of May, when every
argument and persuasion was used to influence him to conform to the treaty, but
without success. His unalterable reply was that he should stay where he was,
and would not molest settlers if they did not locate on the west side of Lost
Iliver, near the mouth, where he had his winter camp. The settlers, he said,
were always lying about him and
25 It is said tliat Miller went to
Fairchilds and complained bitterly of the position in which Otis’ questions
before the Indians had placed him. He admitted that he had not told the truth,
but declared that he dared not say otherwise. Siskiyou County Affairst
MS., 53.
making
trouble, but bis people were good people, and would not frighten anybody. He
desired only peace, and was governed by the advice of the people of Yreka, who
knew and understood him.*6 The old chief Sconcliin then made a
strong appeal to Jack to accept the benefits of the treaty, and pointed out the
danger of resistance, but in vain.
The
commissioners reported accordingly, and also that in casting about for some
locality where Jack’s band might be placed, apart from the Klamaths, no land
had been found unoccupied so good for the purpose as that upon the reservation.
Camp Yainax wTas, in fact, nearly as far from the Klamath agency as
the Lost River country. Nothing now remained but to prepare to bring the Modocs
on to the reservation. Odeneal gave it as his opinion that the leading men
among them should be arrested and banished to some distant place until they
should agree to abide by the laws, while the remainder should be removed to
Yainax, suggesting the last of September as a proper time for carrying out this
purpose; and the commissioner issued the order to remove them, “peaceably if
you can, forcibly if you must.”
In May,
the Modocs having broken camp and begun their summer roaming, Otis reported his
station on Lost River unnecessary, and the troops were withdrawn about the 1st
of June. No sooner, however, were the troops back at Fort Klamath than Jack appeared
at the camp of Sconchin’s people, away from Yainax on their summer furlough,
with forty armed
,6 Who
besides E. Steele .Tack referred to is not known, Steele admits giving advice
to Jack and Ins followers. ‘My advice to them was, and always has been, to
return to the reservation, and further, that the officers wo'-»d compel them to
go. They replied that they would not go, and asked why the treaty that I had
made with them when I was superintendent of northern California—they supposing
that our state line included their village at the fishery—was not good . .1
told them they had made a new treaty with the Oregon agency since mine, and
sold their lands, ami that had done away with the first one. Jack said he did
not agree to it.. .1 have written several letters for him to the settlers, in
which 1 stated his words to them,’ etc. These extracts are from a manuscript
defence of his actions, written by Steele to his brother at Olympia, in my
possession, entitled Steele’s Modoc Question, MS.
warriors,
conducting himself in such a manner as to frighten them back to the agency. The
citizens were hardly less alarmed, and talked once more of organizing a
*»ilitia company. The usual correspondence followed between the Indian and
military departments, and the settlers were once more assured that their safety
would be looked after.27
While the
Modoc question was in this critical stage, influences unknown to the department
were at work confirming Jack in his defiant course, arising from nothing less
than a scheme, proposed by Steele of Yreka, to secure from the government a
grant of the land desired by him, on condition that he and his people should
abandon their tribal relation, pay taxes, and improve the land, which they
promised to do.'28 But 110 one knew better than Steele that to leave
the Modocs in the midst of the white settlements would be injurious to both
races, and most of all to the Indians themselves, who instead of acquiring the
better part of civilization were sure to take to themselves only the worse; and
that the better class of white people must object to the contiguity of a small
special reserve in their midst. Not so did the Modocs themselves reason about
the matter. Steele, because they could approach him with their troubles, and
because he simply told them to go and behave themselves, without seeing that
they did so, was the white chief after their own mind, and his word was law,
even against the power with which they had made a treaty. They were proud of
his friendship, which gave them importance in their own eyes, aud which
blinded them to their inevitable doom. So said the settlers, with whom I cannot
always fully agree.
21 Military Correspondence, MS., June 10,
15, and 20, 1872; OdeneaVs Modoc War, 31-2,
28 Steele
was threatened with prosecution by Odeneal, and in the defence before referred
to, after explaining his acts, says: ‘At this last interview with Capt. Jack I
again tried to persuade him to go upon the reservation, but I must confess that
it was as much to avoid the trouble and expense that would fall upon me in
getting the land grant through for them as from any other motive.’ Modoc
Question, MS., 25.
It now
being definitely settled that Jack’s band must go upon the reservation to
reside before winter, Odeneal repaired to the Klamath agency November 25th,
sending a special messenger, James Brown of Salem, and Ivan Applegate to Lost
River to invite them to meet him at Linkville, and to promise them the kindest
treatment if they would consent to ,go to Yainax, where ample provision had
been made for their support. If they would not consent, he required them to
meet him at Linkville on the 27th for a final understanding.
To the
military authorities a communication was addressed requiring them to assist in
carrying out the instructions of the commissioner of Indian affairs by
compelling, if necessary, the obedience of the Modocs to recognized authority,
and they had signified their readiness to perform this duty.29 On
the 27th Odeneal and Dyar repaired to Linkville to meet the Modocs, according
to appointment, but found there only the messengers, by whom they were apprised
of Jack’s refusal either to go upon the reservation or to meet the
superintendent at that place. “ Say to the superintendent,” returned Jack,
“that we do not wish to see him or talk with him. We do not want any white man
to tell us what to do. Our friends and counsellors are men in Yreka,
California. They tell us to staj7' where we are, and we intend to do
it, and will not go upon the reservation. I am tired of being talked to, and am
done talking.” One of Jack’s lieutenants, commonly known as Scarface Charley,
from a disfigurement, would have taken the lives of the messengers upon the
spot, but was restrained by Jack, who preferred waiting until the
superintendent was in his power.30
28 Odeaeal’i
Modoc JFar, 33 Capt. Jackson had been superseded in the
rMmmaud at Fort
Klamath by Maj. G. G. Hunt, who in turn was relieved July 17th by Maj. John
Green. Major Otis had also been relieved of the Command of the district of the
lakes by Colonel Frank Wheaton, 21st inf.
*# This
was revealed by friendly Indians present at the conference. It is found in
Dyar’s statement.
Being now
assured that nothing short of an armed force could bring the Modocs to
submission, Odeneal sent word to Colonel Green, in command at Fort Ivlamath,
that military aid would be required in arresting Captain Jack, Black Jim, and
Scarface, who should be held subject to his orders.
It had
never been contemplated by the superintendent or by Canby that any number of
troops under fifty should attempt to take Jack and his warriors. In view of
this necessity, Canby had issued a special order early in September giving
Wheaton control of the troops at Klamath, that in an emergency of this kind he
might have a sufficient force to make the movement successful, and Wheaton had
directed Green to keep him fully advised by courier of the attitude of the
Modocs. But now occurred a fatal 'error. Ivan Applegate, who carried Odeneal’s
requisition to the fort, supposed that there was a sufficient force of cavalry
at the post to arrest half a dozen Indians,31 however brave or
desperate, and gave it as his opinion that no serious resistance would be made
to the troops. Odeneal, in his letter to Green, said: “I transfer the whole
matter to your department, without assuming to dictate the course you shall
pursue iu executing the order.” Green, who was of Applegate’s opinion that the
Modocs would yield at the appearance of his cavalry, and thinking it better to
take Jack and his confederates before they were reenforced, immediately sent
olF Captain Jackson with thirty-six. men to execute the order.32
The troops
left Fort Klamath at noon on the 28th,
31 The order to arrest did not include more.
Jack was believed to have about HO fighting men and that about half that number
were at his camp.
82 When the
mistake had been made, there was the usual quarrel between the military and
Indian departments as to which had been in the wrong. Gen. Canby exonerated
Odeneal by saying: ‘The time and manner of applying force iested in the
discretion of the military commander.’ It is easy to see that Green might have
been misled by Applegate’s report that -Jack had only about half his warriors
with him, but he must have known that he v, as not carrying out the intentions
of the commanding general of the department.
I myself think that hi wished to show how
easj a thing it was to dispose of the Modoc question when it tame into the
proper lianus.
officered
by Captain Jackson, Lieutenant Boutelle, and Dr McEldery. Odeneal had sent Brown,
his special messenger, to notify the settlers who were likely to be endangered
in case of an engagement with the Modocs. How imperfectly this was done the
sequel proved.33 The superintendent met Jackson on the road about
one o’clock on the morning of the 29th, directing him to say to Jack and his
followers that he had not come to fight, but to escort them to Yain**, and not
to fire a gun except in self-defence.
A heavy
rain was falling, through which the troops moved on, guided by Ivan Applegate,
until daybreak, when, arriving near Jack's camp, they formed in line, and
advancing rapidly, halted upon the outskirts/ calling to the Modocs to
surrender, Applegate acting as interpreter. The Indians wrere
evidently surprised and wavering, a part of them seeming w illing to oliey, but
Scarface and Black Jim, with some others, re-; tained their arms, making
hostile demonstrations during a parley lasting three quarters of an hour.
Seeing that the leaders grew more instead of less defiant, Jackson ordered
Lieutenant Boutelle to take some men from the line and arrest them. As they advanced,
Scarface fired at Boutelle,34 missing him. A volley from both sides
followed. Almost at the first fire one cavalryman wras killed and
seven wounded. The balls from the troops mowed down fifteen Indians^
Up to the
time that firing commenced, Jack had remained silent and sullen in his tent,
refusing to take any part in the proceedings, but on the opening of hostilities
he came forth and led the retreat of his people, now’ numbering twice as many
as on the visit of Brown and Applegate. In this retreat the women and children
were left behind. It was now’ that the rashness of Colonel Green became
apparent. Jackson’s force,
83Brown
afterward said he knew nothing of any settlers below Crawley’s farm, and that
the men he notified said nothing about any Odeneal’s Modoc War, 39. The truth
was that none comprehended the danger.
S1 Oregonian, Dec. 12, 1872; Yreka Journal,
Jan. 1, 1873; Red Bluff Sentinel, Dec. 7, 1872.
already
too light, was lessened by the loss of eight men, whom he dared not leave in
camp lest the Indian women should murder and mutilate them, and he was
therefore unable to pursue. Leaving a light skirmish line with Boutelle, he was
forced to employ the remainder of the troops in conveying the wounded and dead
to the east side of the river in canoes, and thence half a mile to the cabin of
Dennis Crawley, after which he returned and destroyed the Indian camp.
In the
mean time a citizens’ company, consisting of 0. C. Applegate, James Brown, J.
Burnett, D. Crawley, E. Monroe, Caldwell, and Thurber, who had gathered at
Crawley’s to aw’ait the result of the attempted arrest, attacked a smaller camp
on the east side, and lost one man, Thurber. They retired to the farm and kept
up filing at long range to prevent the Indians crossing the river and attacking
Jackson’s command on the flank and rear. While this was going on, two men fled
wounded to Crawley’s, one of whom, William Nus, soon died. At this intimation
that the settlers below were uninformed of their danger, Ivan Applegate,
Brown, Burnett, and other citizens went in various directions to warn them,
leaving but.a small force at Crawley’s to guard the wounded. During their
absence Jackson was called upon to protect this place from the hostilities of
Hooker Jim and Curly- headed Doctor, two of Jack’s head men not before
mentioned. As there was no ford nearer than eight- miles, the troops spent two
or three hours getting to Crawley’s, where they encamped, and beheld in the distance
the smoke of burning hay-ricks.33
On the
morning of the 30th, Captain Jackson having heard that a family named Boddy
resided three and a half miles below Crawley’s, who had not been warned,
despatched a detachment with a guide to ascertain their fate. Finding the
family absent, and the premises undisturbed, the troops returned with this
report, the guide Crawley coming to the conclu-
53S. F. Alta, Dec. 12, 1872; Oregon Herald, Dec. 14, 1872.
sion that
they had fled south, warning others on the way. But in this he was mistaken,
four out of a family of six at this place having been killed, and two having
escaped.'’8
It was
afterward ascertained that no more persons were killed on the. 29tli; but on
the following day a number of men about Tule Lake were slain, among them their
good friend Miller/*7 Living within sev- enty-tive yards of Miller’s
house was the Brotherton family, three men of which were killed. That the
remainder were saved, was due to the courage of Mrs Brotherton, who defended
her home for three days before relief arrived.33 The victims in this
collision
The men, W illiitn
Boddy, Nicholas Schira, ais son-in-law, and two stepsons, William and Itichard
Cravigan, were killed while about their larm work. Mrs Schira, seeing the
team-horses coming home without a driver, ran to them and found the lines
bloody. She put the horses, in the stable, and with t.er mother walked along
the road to find her husband. About half a mile from the house he was found
lying on the ground, shot through the head. Remembering her brothers, she left
her mother with the dead and ran on alone to find them. On the way .she passed
Hooker Jim, Curly-headed Doctor, Long Jim, One-eyed Mose, Ruck Dave, and Humpy
Jerry, all well known metnbers of J uok’s band, who did not offer to intercept
her. After finding the body of one brother, Mrs Schira returned to her mother,
aud together they fled over a timbered ridge toward Crawley’s, but while on the
crest, seeing a number of persons about the house, mistook them fur Indians, and
turned toward the highest hills in the direction of Linkville, which were then
covered M ith snow. After wandering until the middle of the 2d day without food
or fire, they were met and conducted to the bridge 011 Lost River, from which
place they were taken to Linkville. On the 2d of Dec. Mrs Schira returned with
a wagon t-> look for her dead, but found that Boutelle had gone ou the same
errand. The Boddy family were from Australia, and were industrious, worthy
people. Jacksonville Sentinel, Dec. 1872.
37 In the Yreha Journal of Dec. 4, 1872, is
the following: * In the massacre of settlers that follow ed the attack on the
Modocs, the Indians killed none but those who were foremost in trying to force
them on the reservation.’ On the contrary, it is remarkable that not one of
those killed were signers of the petitions for their removal, lists of which
have been published in documents here quoted. These persons were afraid to
petition for Jack's removal.
80 Seeing
some Indians approaching who had her husband’s horses, Mrs Brotherton took the
alarm. Three Indians surrounded the house of John Shroedei, a neighbor, and
shot him while he was trying to escape on horseback Joseph Brotherton, a boy
of 15 years, was in company with this man, but being on foot, the Indians gave
no attention to him w hile in pursuit of the mounted man. Mrs Brotherton,
seeing her son running toward the house, went out to meet him with a revolver.
Her juunger son called her back and ran after her, bnt she ordered him to
return to the house aud get a Henry ritle, telling him to elevate the sight for
800 yards and tire at the Indians. He obeyed, his still younger sister wiping
and handling the cartridges. Under cover of the rifle the mother and son
reached the house in safety, which was fastened, barricaded, and converted into
a fortress by making loop-holes. The Indians retired during the night, but
guard v, as maintained 0a» Indian was
between
Jack and tbe troops counted eighteen white men and about the same number of
Indians.35
War was
now fairly inaugurated. Jack had thrown down the gauntlet to the United States,
and Crawley’s cabin in the midst of the grassy meadows of Lost River had become
the headquarters of a so far defeated and humiliated military force. The
distance from Craw ■ ley’s to Fort Klamath was sixty miles, to the agency
fifty-five, to Camp Yainax about the same, to Link- ville twenty-three miles,
to Ashland, in the Rogue River Valley, eighty-eight miles, to Camp Warner about
the same distance, and to Yreka farther. There were no railroads or telegraph
lines in all the country, and a chain of mountains lay between the camp and the
post-road to army headquarters. That was the situation.
As soon as
news of the fight reached the agcucy, Dyar raised a company of thirty-six
Klamaths, whom he placed under D. J. Ferree, and sent to reenforce Jackson. 0.
C. Applegate hastened to Yainax to learn the temper of Sconchin’s baud of
Modocs, and finding them friendly, organized and armed a guard of fifteen to
prevent a raid on the camp, and taking with him nine others, part Modocs and
part Klamaths, crossed the Sprague River mountains Into Langell Valley, and
proceeded thence to Clear Lake, to ascertain the condition of his uncle, Jesse
Applegate. Arming December 2d, he found his brother Ivan had been there with a
party of six citizens and five cavalrymen. The troops being left to guard the
family at Clear Lake, the citizens set out upon a search for the bodies of the
killed, and 0. C. Applegate with his company of Indians, himself in disguise,
irame-
killed and one
wounded in the defence. On the third day Ivan Applegate came that way and took
the family to Crawley’s. Oregonian, Dec. 9, 1872. Besides those mentioned, the
persons killed were John Shroeder, Sover, a herdsman, Adam Shillingbow, Christopher
Erasmus, Collins, and two travellers, in all 15 men and boys, besides Nus,
Thurman, and the cavalryman.
F. Call,
Dec. 2, 6, 8, 1872; S. F. Bulletin, Dec. 2, 3, 12, 27, 1872: S. F. Post, Dec.
6, 1872; Sac. Union. Dec. 13, 19, 1872.
Hist.
Ob., Vol. II. 37
diately
joined in the search. While at Brotherton’s they had a skirmish with Scarface’s
party of Modocs. Fortifying themselves in a stable, one of the friendly Modocs
was sent to hold a parley with Scarface, and to spy upon him, which he did by
affecting to sympathize with his cause. He escaped back by pretending that he
went to bring in other sympathizers from the reservation, but instead revealed
the plan of the enemy, which was to finish the work of murder and pillage on
that day. Jack and eighteen warriors were to proceed down the west side of Lost
River to the Stone Ford, and join Scarface. When they had killed the men who
were searching for the dead, they would return and attack Jackson, but
Applegate’s [.arty prevented the junction. Ferrer’s company of Klamaths had
also been on a scout down the west side of the river, under Blow, one of the
head men on the reservation, which being observed by Jack, restrained his
operations on that side. They could not now attack without exposing themselves
to the fire of two camps a short distance apart, and retired to the lava-beds.
Entering
lower Klamath Lake from the south was a small stream forking toward the west,
the southern branch being known as Cottonwood Creek, and the western one as
Willow Creek. On the first was a farm belonging to Van Bremer, and on the other
the farm of John A. Fairchilds. On Hot Creek, a stream coming into tho lake on
the west side, lived P. A. Dorris. Between Dorris’ and Fairchild’s places was
an encampment of forty-five Indians called Hot Creeks, a branch of the Modocs,
a squalid company, but who if they joined Jack’s forces might become dangerous;
and these it. was determined to bring upon the reservation. Being a good deal
frightened by what they knew of tho late events, they yielded to argument, and
set out for their new home under the conduct of Fairchild, Dorris, and Samuel
Culver.
Dyar had
been notified to meet them at Linkvilte, where the Indians would be turned over
to him. But now happened one of those complications liable to arise under
circumstances of so much excitement, when every one desired to be of service to
the common cause without knowing in the least what to do. The same thought had
occurred to William J. Small, residing three miles below Whittle’s ferry on Klamath
River, who organized a party among his neighbors and set out for Hot Creek with
the purpose of removing these Indians to the reservation. Knowing that they
were liable to fall in with the hostile Modocs, they went well armed. At
Whittle’s the two parties met, and the conductors of the Indians, being
suspicious of the intentions of Small’s men, opposed their visiting tho Indian
encampment, on which Small and liis men returned home.
In the
interim four citizens of Linkville, all good men, hearing of Small’s
enterprise, and anxious for its success, started to reenforce him. On the way a
drunken German named Fritz attached himself to the party, and talked noisily of
avenging the death of his friend William Nus. From this man’s gabble the report
spread that the Linkville men contemplated the massacre of the Hot Creek
Indians. Alarmed by this rumor, Isaac Harris and Zenas Howard hastened by a
shorter route to the ferry to warn Fairchild, so that when the Linkville men
arrived they found themselves confronted by the escort of the Indians with
arms in their hands. An explanation ensued, when the Linkville party turned off
to Small's place. Fritz, however, remained at the ferry and contrived to alarm
the Indians by his drunken utterances.
When Dvar
reached Linkville he too heard the rumor afioat, and hastened on to the ferry,
although it was already night, intending to thwart any evil intent by moving
the Indians past Linkville before daylight. Fairchild agreed to the
proposition, and hastened to inform the Indians and explain the cause. An ar
rangement
had been entered into with Small’s party to escort them, and the Indians
readily consented, saddling their ponies, and the foremost accompanying Dyar to
the ferry. Here they waited for some time for the remainder to follow, when it
was discovered that they had tied back to their native rocks and sagebrush.
The few with Dyar soon followed, and thus ended a laudable attempt to lessen
the hostile force by placing this band peaceably on the reserve.
In a day
or two these Indians were employed making arrows and bullets, in the midst of
which a wagon arrived from the Klamath agency, and another attempt was made to
remove the Hot Creek Indians to the reservation, but they disappeared in a
night, taking with them not only their own horses and provisions, but those of
their friend Fairchild.
After the
failure of the attempt to remove the Hot Creek band, an effort was made by
Fairchild, Dorris, Beswick, and Ball, all personally well known to the Modocs,
to persuade Jack to surrender and prevent the impending war. They found him in
the juniper ridge between Lost River and the lava-beds south of Tule Lake; but
although he refrained from any act of hostility towards them, he rejected all
overtures with impatience, and declared his desire to fight. In this interview
Jack denied all responsibility of the affair of the 29th, saying that the
troops fired first; and further, placed all the guilt of the murders of
innocent settlers upon Long Jim, although Scarface, Black Jim, and himself had
been recognized among the murderers.49
The effect
of Fairchild’s visit was to give Jack an opportunity to gain over the Hot Creek
head men who
45 This
m< ral obliquity of Jack’s makes it impossible to heroize him, not
withstanding I
recognize something grand 111 his desperate obstinacy. On his
trial ht Hai-t.
referring to this occasion: ‘I did not think ot fighting John
Fairchild came to my
tent an-i asked me if X wanted to fight, I told him,
“No, I was done
fighting.”’ Scarface admitted at his trial that ne killed one of the settlers,
and Jaek was with him, But it is observable all through the history of the war
that Jack denied his crimes, and endeavored to fasten the ■responsibility
upon others, even upon his own friends. He was the prince of Jiart>.
'accompanied
liim. It also convinced the military that no terms would be accepted by the
Modocs except such as they were able to enforce. All the families in this
region were immediately sent to Yreka, and men in isolated places surrounded
themselves with stockades.
The
courier of Colunel Green found the commander of the district of the lakes
confined to his bed with quinsy. He trusted there would be no serious difficulty,
but advised Green to use all the force at his command, and sent him Captain
Perry’s troop F, of the 1st cavalry, and also a small detachment from Fort
Bidwell under Lieutenant J. G. Kyle, which he said would give him a force of
seventy-five cavalrymen in addition to Jackson’s company, or a hundred and
fifty completely equipped troops.41 Before Wheaton’s order reached
Fort Klamath the mischief had been consummated. On news of the disaster being
received at Camp Warner, Perry’s troops set out by way of Yainax, to join
Jackson, and Captain R. F. Bernard was ordered from Bidwell by the southern
immigrant road to the same destination. They were directed to make forced
marches, the supply-trains to follow. But the condition of the roads made
travelling slow, and a week had elapsed after Jackson’s fight before he was
reenforced.
In order
to protect the roads between the settlements, and to keep open the route to
Yreka, Bernard’s troops were stationed at Louis Land’s place on the east shore
of Tule Lake, on the borders of that volcanic region popularly known as the
lava-beds, in whose rocky caves and canons Jack had taken refuge with his
followers. From Bernard’s camp to Jack’s stronghold, as reported by the scouts,
was a distance of thirteen miles, or two miles from the western
41 IT. Ex.
Doc., 122, 40, 43d cong. 1st sess. This remark of Wheaton’s shows that he, as
well as Odeneal and Applegate, thought there must be st Klamath irom 00 to 75
cavalrymen—twice aa many were sent to arrest the Modocs.
border of
the lava-fields. The trail thence was over and among rocks of every conceivable
size, from a pebble to a cathedral. The opportunity afforded for concealment,
and the danger of intrusion, in such a region was obvious.
At Van
Bremer’s farm, distant twelve miles from the stronghold on the west, was
Perry’s command, while Jackson remained at Crawley’s, where Green had liis
headquarters. As fast as transportation could be procured, the material of war
was being concentrated at this point. General Canby, on receiving information
of the affair of the 29th, at once despatched General E. C. Mason with a
battalion of the 21st infantry, comprising parts of C and B companies, numbering
sixty-four men, to join Wheaton’s forces. A special train on the 3d of December
conveyed Mason, Captain George H. Burton, and lieutenants Y. M. C. Silva, W. II.
Boyle, and II. De W. Moore to Roseburg, then the terminus of the Oregon and
California railroad.42 The remainder of the march, to Jacksonville
and over the mountains through rain and snow, occupied two weeks, making it the
middle of December before the infantry reached Crawley’s. It was not until
about the same time that Wheaton reached Green’s headquarters, where he found
the ammunition nearly exhausted by distribution among the settlers,
necessitating the sending of Bernard to Camp Bidw'ell, ninety miles, with
wagons, for a supply.
The
governors of both California and Oregon had been called upon by the people of
their respective states to furnish aid. Governor Booth of California responded
by sending to the frontier arms out of date, and ammunition too large for the
guns;43 Governor Grover forwarded a better equipment. The Wash-
il BoyU’s Personal Observations on the.
Conduct of the it odor War. a manu script of 4(i pages, has been of great
service to me in enabling me to give a connected account ot that remarkable
campaign. Boyle was post quartermaster. He relates that the talk of the
officers at Vancouver was that ‘ when 0 reen goes after those Modocs he will
clean them out sooner than a man could say Jack Robinson,’ and that he thought
so himself.
43 Yrelca Uespatehtu, in Oregonian, Dec. 21, 1872; S. F.
Alta, Dec. 13,1872.
ington
Guards of Portland offered their services, which were declined only because the
militia general, John E. Ross of Jacksonville, and captain O. C. Applegate of
Klamath, had tendered and already had their companies accepted.44
Applegate’s company was made up of seventy men, nearly half of whom were picked
Klamaths, Modocs, Shoshones, and Pit River Indians from the reservation. In the
interval before the first pitched battle they were occupied scouting, not-
only to prevent fresh outrages, but to intercept any of Jack’s messengers to
Camp Yainax, and prevent their drawing off any of the Sconchin band, whom,
although they declared their loyalty to be unimpeachable, it was thought prudent
to watch. Another reason for surveillance was that Jack had threatened Camp
Yainax with destruction should these Modocs refuse to join in the insurrection,
and they were exceedingly nervous, being unarmed, except the guards. To protect
them was not only a duty, but sound policy.
In the
mean time neither the troops nor the Indians were idle. Perrx was still at Van
Bremer’s, with forty cavalrymen. Ross was near Whittle’s ferry, at Small’s
place. On the 16th of December detachments from both companies made a
reconnoissance of Jack’s position, approaching within half a mile of the stronghold,
and from their observations being led to believe that it was possible so to
surround Jack as to compel his surrender, although one of his warriors shouted
to them defiantly as they turned back, “ Come on ! Come on!” This exploration
revealed more perfectly the difficult nature of the ground, broken by fissures,
some a hundred feet in depth and as many in width; and it revealed also that in
certain places were level flats of a few acres covered with grasses, and
furnished with water iu abundance, where the Indian horses grazed in security.
Nothing could be better chosen than the Mudoc position; and should their
ammuni-
41
Oregonian, Dec. 3, 1872; App/egate's Modoc War, MS., 17.
tion
become exhaused, nothing was easier for them than to steal out unobserved
through the narrow chasms, while watch was kept upon one of the many lofty
pinnacles of rock about them. But they were not likely to be soon forced out by
want, since they had taken §700 in money at one place, and $3,000 worth of
stores at another, besides a large amount of ammunition and a few rifles, in
addition to their own stock oh hand. Everything indicated that hard fighting
would be required to dislodge the Modocs. Another delay now ensued, caused by
sending to Vancouver for two howitzers, to assist in driving them out of their
fastnesses.
Both the
regular troops and militia were restive under this detention. The '23d infantry
had just come from fighting Apaelies in Arizona, and were convinced that
subduing a band of sixty, or at the most eighty, Modocs would be a trifling
matter if once they could come at them; and the state troops, having only
enlisted for thirty days, saw the time slipping away in which they had meant to
distinguish themselves. The weather had become very cold, and the militia were
ill supplied with blankets and certain articles of commissariat. Another
difficulty now presented itself They had enlisted to fight in Oregon, whereas
the retreat chosen by the enemy lay just over the boundary in California; but
General Wheaton overcame this last, by ordering Boss to pursue and fight the
hostile Indians wherever they could be found.45
Actual
hostilities were inaugurated December 22d, by Captain Jack attacking Bernard’s
wagon-train as it was returning from Bid-well with a supply of ammunition,
guarded by a small detachment. The attack was made a mile from camp, on the
east side of the lake, by filing from an ambuscade, when one soldier and six
horses were killed at the first fire. Lieutenant Kyle, hearing the noise of
shooting, hastened to
iJ Boyle’s
Conduct of t]v> Modoc War, MS., 9.
the rescue
with nearly all the troops in reserve, hut ten having had time to mount, and in
this unprepared manner fought the Indians the remainder of the day. In this
skirmish the long range of the United States arms seemed to surprise the
Modocs, as it saved the train. The Indians failed to capture the ammunition,
but lost their own horses, and four warriors killed and wounded. A bugler whom
they pursued escaped to headquarters, when Jackson’s troops were sent to
reenforce Bernard; but before his arrival the Modocs had retreated.46
About, the same time they showed themselves on Lost River, opposite
headquarters, inviting the attack of the soldiery; and also near Van Bremer’s,
where Perry and Ross wTere encamped together.
On the
25th of December Wheaton ordered the volunteers to the front, and word was sent
to Langell Valley, where five families still remained, to fortify. Preferring
to go to Liukville, they set out in wagons, and were fired upon from an ambush
near the springs on Lost River, but were relieved and escorted to their
destination by a scouting party. A supply-train from Klamath was also attacked,
and a part of the escort wounded, being relieved in the same manner by the
volunteers.
Colonel
Green, who still retained the immediate command of the troops, was now ordered
to attack the Indians whenever in his judgment sufficient material of war was
on hand. “With the howitzers and one snow-storm I am ready to begin,” had been
his asseveration. On the 5th of January another recon- noissance wTas
made, by Captain Kelly of Ross’ battalion, with a detachment of twelve men,
with the object of finding a more practicable route than the one iu use from
Van Bremer’s, where Green had taken up his headquarters, to the Modoc
stronghold. On
^Reptof Gen. Wheaton,
in II. Ex. Dor., 122, 48-9, 43il cong. 1st sess.; Boylt'ii Conduct of the Modoc
War, MS., 7 -9; lied Bluff Sentinel, 1’eb. 1, 1&73.
the way
they had a skirmish with twenty of Jack’s people, who retreated toward camp,
bat being pursued, dismounted and fortified. The firing brought a reenforcement
from Jack’s camp, when the volunteers retreated to an open field, while the
Indians, not car ing to engage again, returned to the lava-beds. A scout by
Applegate with twenty men revealed the fact that the high ridge between Yan
Bremer’s and the lava-field, known as Van Bremer’s Hill, was used as an
observatory by the Modocs, who kept themselves informed of every movement of
the troops.
On the
12th of January an expedition consisting of a detachment of thirteen men under
Perry, a handful of scouts under Donald McKay, and thirty of Applegate’s mixed
company, the whole under Colonel Green, made a reconnoissance from headquarters
to ascertain whether wagons could be taken to a position in front of the Modoc
stronghold. Green was fired on from a rocky point of the high bluff on the
verge of and overlooking the lava-field. Perry returned the fire, driving in
the Modoc sentinels, and shooting one of the Hot Creek Indians through the
shoulder. Applegate came up in time to observe that the Modocs were dividing
into small parties to ascend the hill and get on the flank of the troops, when
he stretched a skirmish-line along the bluff for a considerable distance to
intercept them. Scar- face, who was stationed on a high point in the lava- bed,
cried out in stentorian tones to his warriors, “Keep back, keep back; I can see
them 111 the rocks!”47
The Modoc
guard then foil back half-way down the hill, where they made a stand and defied
the soldiers, but made strong appeals to the Indian allies to for-
41
Applegate’* Modoc Hist., MS. Another instance of the wonderful voice- power of
Scarface is mentioned by a writer in the Portland Herald, and in Early Affairs
in Siskiyou County, MS. ‘ We distinctly heard, incredible as it may seem, above
the distant jells and cries of the uamp below, three or four miles away a big
basso voice, that sounded like a trumpet, and that seemed to give command The
big voice, was understood and interpreted as saying: “ There are but few of
them, and thej are on toot. Get your horses! Get your horses 1 ” ’
sake the
white men and join their own race to fight. The leaders were very confident.
Hooker Jim said once he had been for peace, but now he w~as for war, and if the
soldiers wished to tight, they should have the opportunity, while Jack and
Black Jim challenged the troops to come down where they were.
A
medicine-wotnan also made an address to the Klamath and Modoc scouts, saying
that were all the Indians acting in concert they would be few enough, and
entreating them to join Jack’s force. Donald McKay answered in the Cayuse
tongue that their hands were reddened with the blood of innocent white people,
for which they should surely be punished, when Jack, losing patience, replied
that he did not want to fight Cayuses, but soldiers, and he invited them to
come and fight, and he would whip them alb The Klamaths asked permission to
reply, but Colonel Green, thinking the communication unprofitable, forbade it.48
It not
being Green’s intention to fight that day, a retreat was ordered. To this the
Klamaths were opposed, saying he had the advantage of position, and could
easily do some execution on the Modocs. As Green withdrew, the Modocs resumed
their position on the hill, and the Klamaths, being then on the crest of the
second hill, wished to open on them, but were restrained.
There was
much discussion about this time away from the seat of war concerning the causes
which led to it,49 and much dissatisfaction was felt that nothing
had been done to restrain Jack’s band, which still
4R It was
certainly unsaf* allowing the Indian allies to converse with the hostile
Modocs, who appealed to them so strongly for help Tlie regular offi cers
afterward entertained the belief that the Klamaths acted deceitfully, and
promised Jack help, in the Modoc tong je. But Applegate’s confidence was never
tihaken, and he trusted them in very great emergencies. Modoc Hist., MS.
9 It was
intimated in Cal. that speculation in Oregon had much to do with it, to which a
writer in the Oregonian, Jan. 18, 1873, retorted that he agreed with Gov. Booth
in that respect, for citizens of Cal. had for years encouraged the Modocs in
refusing to go upon the reservation, for no other reason than to secure their
trade, etc.; » hich the facts seem to show
made
predatory excursions away from their stronghold. It was now the middle of
January. The settlers in Klamath Valley remained under cover. The road from
Tule Lake southward was closed. Fairchild and Dorris had converted their homes
into fortified camps. There was much uneasiness in northern California, and
talk of forming companies of home-guards, Dorris being selected to visit Booth
to obtain aid. But Booth had other advisers, and instead of furnishing arms,
made a recommendation to the government to set apart five thousand acres of
land where Jack desired it, as a reservation for his band, all of which
’nterference only complicated affairs, as will be seen.
On the
lGtli of January, everything being in readiness, and the weather foggy, which
answered in place of a snow-storm to conceal the movements of the troops, the
army marched upon Jack’s stronghold.'’0 The regulars in the field
numbered 225, and the volunteers about 150. In addition to the companies
already mentioned was one of twenty-four sharpshooters under Fairchild. Miller
of the Oregon militia had been ordered to the front by Governor Grover, but
took no part in the action which followed.
At four
o’clock in the morning Colonel Green, with Perry’s troops, moved up to the
bluff 011 the southwest corner of Tule Lake to clear it of Modoc pickets, and
cover the movements of the main force to a camp on the bluff three miles wTest
of Jack’s stronghold, so located as to be out of sight of the enemy. By three
iu the afternoon the whole force was iu position, consisting of two comjjanies
of infantry under Captain Burton and Lieutenant Moore, a detachment of another
company under Sergeant John McNamara,
50 Wheaton
wrote to Canby on the 15th that all things were in excellent condition, the
most perfect understanding prevailed of what was expected of each division, and
the troops were in the most exuberant spirits. ‘ If the Modocs will only try to
make good their boast to whip 1,000 soldiers, all will be satisfied. Our scouts
and friendly Indians insist that the Modocs will fight us desperately, but I
don’t understand how they can think of attempting any serious resistance,
though of course we are prepared for their fight or flight.’ U. Ex. Doc.t
122, 49-50, 43d cong. 1st sess.
Ross’
volunteers under Hugh Kelly and 0. C. Applegate; the howitzer battery under
Lieutenant W H. Miller, and Fairchild’s sharp-shooters; all, but some of tbe
scouts, dismounted, furnished with a hundred rounds of ammunition, with fifty
in close reserve, and cooked rations for three days. A line of pickets was
thrown out along the edge of the bluff and another around the camp.
On the
east side of the lake were Bernard’s and Jackson’s companies, and twenty
regularly enlisted Klamath scouts under the chief David Hill, all commanded by
Bernard, who bad been directed to move up to a point two miles from the Modoc
position, to be in readiness to attack at sunrise; but proceeding in ignorance
of the ground, and contrary to the advice of his guide, he came so near to the
stronghold that he was attacked, and compelled to retreat with four men
wounded,“w hich unfort unate-error greatly embarrassed him next day.
As the
troops looked down, on the morning of the 17th, from the high bluff, the fog
which overhung the lava-bed resembled a quiet sea. Down into it they were to
plunge aud feel for the positions assigned them. Mason with the infantry had
his position at the extreme left of the line, resting on the lake, with
Fairchild’s sharp-shooters flanking him. On his right were the howitzers, in
the centre General Wheaton and staff, and generals Miller and Ross of the
militia; on the right of these Kelly aud Applegate wiuh their companies, and on
the extreme right Perry’s troop, dismounted.52
Descending
the bluff by a narrow trail, surprised at meeting no Modoc picket, the troops
gained their positions, in the order given, about seven in the morning. It was
the design to move the line out on the right until it met Bernard’s left in
front of the Modoc posi-
' Boyle's Conduct of
the Modoc War, MS., 11.
*2 Bovle
places Perry in the centre, hut he was not on the fioU, and Green *nd Applegate
were, ”'hose reports 1 follow.
tion,
where three shots were to be fired by the howitzers to announce a parley, and
give Jack an opportunity to surrender.
But the
accident of the previous afternoon having put the Modocs on their guard, hardly
had the line formed wh'm the Indians opened fire, and instead of surrounding
them and demanding their surrender, the troops found that they must fight for
every foot of ground between them and the fortress. The fog, too, now became an
obstacle instead of an aid to success. Unable to discern their course, the
troops were compelled to scramble over and amongst the rocks as best they
could, at the risk any moment of falling into ambush, making the movement on
the right painfully slow. Nevertheless it was steadily pushed forward, all
caution being used, the men often lying flat and craw ling over rocks within a
few yards of the Indians, who could be heard but not seen. The howitzers, w
hich had been relied upon to demoralize the Indians, proved useless so long as
the enemy’s position was concealed from view. The line, after advancing a mile
and a half, was halted and a few shells thrown, causing the Indians some alarm,
but through fear of hitting Bernard’s command the firing was soon suspended.
Again the line wTas pushed on another mile and a half by a series of
short charges, jumping chasms and sounding the war-whoop.
About one
o’clock the extreme right of the bne, w hich now enveloped the stronghold on
the wTest aud south, wTas brought to a halt bv a deep,
wide gorge in the lava, which could not be crossed wdthout sacrifice of life,53
as it was strongly guarded, and in close neighborhood to the mam citadel. On
consultation with Wheaton and other officers, Green determined to move the west
line by the left and connect with Bernard by the shore of the lake.
At this
point some confusion occurred in the line.
65 Thi reade. should not forget that Green
intended to oaptur# J ack without a serious fight, if possible.
In the
skirmishing and clambering among the rocks, and the bewilderment of the fog,
the volunteers had changed places with Perry’s troop, and were mow on the
extreme right. They had, in fact, charged down the ravine, and Applegate’s
company had gained a position on the sage plain beyond where they lay concealed.
Then came an order, “Look out for Bernard!” and a volley which mowed down the
sage over their heads, so near were they to a junction with him. While the
volunteers were preparing to charge on the stronghold the regular troops had
begun to withdraw, seeing which, they were for a time puzzled, until nearing
the Modoc position, it was discovered that most of the troops were passing to
the left under the bluffs on the west side of the lake; soon after which an order
reached the volunteers to report to headquarters, where they found a portion of
Perry’s troop and a reserve of infantry under Lieutenant Ross.
Meanwhile
Mason and Green were endeavoring to make the junction by the left, the troops
encountering a destructive fire as they plunged into a ravine on the shore of
the lake nearly as dangerous to cross as that on the route first pursued. By
pushing forward the sharp-shooters and a detachment of Burton’s company to
cover the troops as they passed, the crossing was effected. But as Wheaton
afterwards said, “There was nothing to fire at but a puff of smoke issuing from
cracks in the rock;” while the Modocs were stationed at the most favorable
points for picking off the men as they hurried past, crawling over the sharp
rocks on their hands and feet, suffering terribly.
After
Green had passed the first ravine, Bernard was heard to say that he was within
four or rive hundred yards of the stronghold, and Green resolved if possible
to join him, and make a charge before dark. But after sustaining a fire from
the Modocs stationed in the cliffs overhanging the lake shore until he had
almost made the junction, he found himself confronted by another deep canon, so
well defended that he was
unable to
effect a crossing, and was; besides, compelled to defend himself from a flank
movement by the Modocs on his left. While in this discouraging position the
fog lifted, and a signal was received from Wheaton to come into camp,
established in a small cove on the lake shore, if he thought best. I3ut fearing
to expose his men a second time to the peril of passing the Modoc position,
Green declined, and when night had fallen, commenced a march of fourteen miles,
over a trail fit only for a chamois to travel, passing the dreaded ravine,
carrying the wounded in blankets or on the backs of ponies captured during the
day. Their sufferings were severe. One man, belonging to Fairchild’s company,
rode the whole distance with his thigh-bone broken and his leg dangling.5*
When a halt was called, the men fell asleep standing or riding. Their clothing
was in shreds from crawling among the rocks; their shoes were worn off their
feet. A month in the field would not have brought them to such a state. It was
not until past noon of tho 18th that Green’s command reached Bernard’s camp on
the east side of the lake. After making arrangements for the removal of the
wounded to Fort Klamath, seventy miles away, over a rougn road, three miles of
which was over naked bowlders, Green and Mason, with an escort of ten Indian
scouts, returned to headquarters that same night by the wagon-road around the
north side of the lake.
When the
volunteer captains reported to Wheaton, they w’ere ordered to take their men to
the lake for water, and then to take up a position in the crags, and extend a
skirmish line to the left. While in this position, the Modocs not being far
off, Hooker Jim was heard to call the attention of the other leaders to the
separation of the volunteers from the regular troops, and that by moving around
to the right of the volunteers they could cut them off, and also cut off
r ■ Beyle's
f'cmduct of the Modoc War, MS., 18-19. Thia was Jerry Crook. He died iu
February.
communication
between Wheaton’* camp by the lake and his supplies on the hill, which were
left in charge of only ten men Signal-tires were already springing up in that
direction.
This
determined Wheaton to fall back to camp, and he again signalled to Green his
change of plan, authorizing him to withdraw to Bernard’s camp, as just related.
At dark the retreat to camp began, Applegate leading, the wounded in the centre,
and Kelly’s company, with the detachment under Ross, skirmishing in the rear.
As the evening advanced the Modocs withdrew, and the stumbling and exhausted
men reached camp a little before midnight.
The loss
sustained in the reconnoissance of the 17th— for it could hardly be called a
battle—was nine killed and thirty wounded.55 Among the latter were
Captain Perry and Lieutenant Kyle of the regular service, and Lieutenant
George Roberts of the sharpshooters. The dead were left upon the field, where if
life were not extinct the Modoc women soon despatched them. The high spirits of
the morning were sunken iu a lethargy of mingled sorrow and exhaustion at
night. Every officer who had taken part in the operations of the 17th was
surprised at the result of six. weeks’ preparation for this event, and it
became evident that a much larger force would be required to capture the
Modocs in their stronghold- the strongest natural position ever encountered by
the army, if not, indeed, the strongest possible to find on earth.56
The loss
of life on the side of the Modocs was not thought to be great. The arms and
ammunition captured on the persons of the fallen soldiers made good much of
their loss in material. They were, in fact, scouting within six miles of Lost River
on the 10th, Lieutenant Ream with twenty-five volunteers having
45 This is
the official count. Applegate says the loss was 11, of whom 1,1 were killed. He
may count some v. ho did not die on the field, hut lived a few days.
‘“Rept - if Gen.
Wheaton, in H. Ex Doc., 12*2, i3d cong. 1st Bess.
Hisi.
Ob., Vol. II M
encountered
some of them as he was on his way to Bernard’s with the horses of Fairchild’s
company, and Applegate was sent to guard the settlements.
The time
for which the Jacksonville volunteers enlisted having expired, they were now
anxious to return to their homes and business, which had been hastily left at
the call of their fellow-citizens. Applegate, too, fearing the effect of the
late defeat on the reservation Modocs, wished to return to camp Yainax. Tn consideration
of these circumstances, Wheaton sent a despatch to Portland, by way of Yreka,
asking Canby for three hundred foot-troops and four mortars, and suggesting
that the governor of California should be called upon to send militia to guard
that portion of his state open to incursions from the Modocs. Canby immediately
responded by ordering two companies of artillery and two of infantry to the
seat of war, and as the ii habitants of Surprise V alley apprehended an
uprising of the Shoshones 011 account of the Modoc excitement, a company of
cavalry was sent to their defence, making the number of troops in the Modoc
region six hundred, exclusive of the garrisons at the several posts in the
district of the lakes. But even with these, the country being in part
inadequately guarded, the general sent a recommendation to army headquarters at
Washington, that conditional authority should be given him to call upon the
governors of Oregon and I California for two companies of volunteers from each
state.
On the 23d
the encampment at Van Bremer’s was broken up, the troops and stores removed to
Lost Iliver ford, and a permanent camp established, where preparations were
carried on for attacking Jack in his stronghold, when two mortar-boats should
have been constructed, by which his position could be shelled from the lake
side—a plan which, if it had been put in execution, would have ended the war.
But now
again outside interference with the Modoc
question
was productive of the worst results.87 It happened that E. L.
Applegate, brother of O. C. and Ivan Applegate, commissaries on the
reservation, was in Washington as a commissioner of immigration; but the
legislature of Oregon having failed to furnish funds for his purposes, he was
in need of some other commission. Meacham, ex-superintendent of Indian affairs,
was also there, and these two men proposed to the perplexed secretary of the
interior a plan of settlement of the Modoc difficulty in harmony with his
prejudices.58 When the scheme was ripe, Attorney- general Williams
arranged an interview, and the thing was accomplished. Other politicians made
the appeal in favor of a peace commission, and closed their argument by
recommending Meacham as a commissioner, being a man “in whom they have great
confidence”— meaning the Modocs. All this seems very singular, when it is
remembered that Jack would have none of Meacham’s advice when he was
superintendent, It was not less singular that E. L. Applegate should have
consented to act directly in opposition to the opinions of his family, gained
by a harassing experience; but the fact remains that Meacham returned to
Oregon as chairman of a peace commission.®9
On the
30th of January the secretary of war directed General Sherman to notify Canbv
that offensive operations against the Modocs should cease, and the troops be
used only to repel attacks and protect the citizens. Wheaton was also relieved
of his command,60 which was assumed by Colonel Alvin C. Gillem
67 See
remarks of N. T, Tribune, in S. F. Bulletin, Jan. 2ii, 1873. anil Sac. Union,
Jaii. 31, 1873.
II. Ex.
Doc., 122, 239-40, 43d cong. 1st sesa.
"9
The Washington correspondent of the S. F. Bulletin names the Oregonian? in
Washington who were the authors of the peace commission. They were A. B.
Meacham, E. L. Applegate, S. A. Clarke, D. P. Thompson, M. P. Iierrj, U H
Kincaid, Daniel Chaplin, and a ‘few other Oregon gentlemen.’ Jacob Stitzel
should have been added. Meacham wa3 the elector chosen to carry the
vote of Oregon to Washington on Urant’s reelection, and was in a position to
have his requests granted.
f There was
a general protest against Wheaton’s removal, it being conceded, by those who
knew the difficulties to be encountered, that he had done ’veil as could be
done v ith his force.
of the 1st
cavalry. Canby also felt that the new order of the war department implied
censure of himself, and wrote to Sherman that hostilities could not have been
avoided, as the Modocs were determined to resist; that he had taken care that
they should not be coerced until their claims had been decided upon by the
proper authorities; and that there would be no peace on the frontier until they
were subdued and punished for their crimes. Sherman replied to Can- by’s
protest: “Let all defensive measures proceed, but order no attack on the
Indians until the former orders are modified or changed by the president, who
seems disposed to allow the peace men to try their hands on Captain Jack.”
The
commissioners first named to serve with Meacham were Superintendent Odeneal and
Parson Wilbur, agent at Simcoe reservation; but Meacham refusing to serve with
either, Jesse Applegate and Samuel Case were substituted. Canby was advised of
the appointments, and also that the commissioners were to meet and confer with
him at Linkville on the 15th of February; but the meeting did not take place
until the 18th, on account of Meacham’s failure to arrive.
In the
interim Jack kept up the excitement by attacks now and then on the troops, in
which cases they also fought vigorously. On the 25th of January an attack was
made on the rear-guard of the train of Bernard, who was moving camp from the
south-east corner of Tule Lake to Clear Lake. They had captured one wagon,
when Bernard returned and fought them, taking nearly all their horses, and depriving
them of the means of making forays through the surrounding country. In the
various encounters, eight Modocs had been kdled and as many wounded.
Being
shorn of a part of his strength, Jack resorted to savage wiles, anil allowed it
to go out that he was tired of war, keeping up a constant communication, which
the armistice permitted him to do, with liis
former
friends, and even with the camp of Gillem, through the visits to these places
of the Modoc women. They quickly came to understand that they were to be
visited by a peace commission; and not to be behind the United States in
humanity, they also pretended to a peace party among themselves, and even that
Jack had been wounded by his own men for not fighting on the 17th.
This
familiar phase of Indian diplomacy did not deceive any one. Fairchild
endeavored to gain an interview, but was refused. After a quiet interval of
nearly a fortnight, some of their scouts again ventured out as far as Crawley’s
house, which they burned.
When the
people whose relatives had been killed in the massacre of the 29th and 30th of
November heard of the peace commission, they took steps to have eight of Jack’s
band indicted before the grand jury of Jackson county, in order to forestall
the possible action of the commissioners, and secure the punishment of the
murderers.61 Governor Grover also filed a protest with the board
against any action of the commission which should purport to condone the crimes
of the Modocs, who, he claimed, should be given up and delivered over to the
civil authorities for trial and punishment, and insisting that they would have
no more authority to declare a reservation on the settled lands of Lost River
than on the other settled portions of the state.
To this
protest, which was forwarded to the secretary of the interior, Delano replied
that the commission should proceed without reference to it; that if the
authority of the United States were defied or resisted, the government would
not be responsible for the results; and that the state might be left to take
61 These 8
were Scarface Charley, Hooker Jim, Long Jim, One-eyed Mose, Old Doctor
Humphrey, Little Jim, Boston Charley, and Dave, Oregonian, Feb. 15, 1873; 11.
Ex. i)oc., 122, 263, 43d cong. 1st sess.
care of
the Indians without the assistance of the government; the United States in this
case being represented by a coterie of politicians who were simply
experimenting with a contumelious band of spoiled savages, without regard to
the rights of the white people of the state.62 To this haughty and
overbearing message the people could only reply by still protesting.
The
commissioners, after meeting at Linkville, repaired to Fairchild’s place on
Willow Creek, to be nearer all points of communication with the government,
the army, and the Modocs. The services were secured of Whittle aud his Indian
wife Matilda, who were to act as messengers and interpreters. The first work of
the board was to investigate the causes of the hostile attitude of the Modocs,
during which the facts already presented in this chapter were brought out;63
and while this was in progress Whittle made a visit to the Modocs to learn how
Jack would receive the peace commissioners.
On the
21st of February Meacham telegraphed to Washington that he had a message from
Jack, who declared himself tired of living in the rocks and desirous of peace;
that he was glad to hear from Washington, but did not wish to talk with any
one who had been engaged in the war; aud that he would meet Meacham and Case
outside the rocks without harming them.64
This was
not an honest report. What Jack did say to Whittle was that he would consent to
a conference with Steele, Roseborougli, and Fairchild, but declined to meet
the commissioners.65 The president had already, by the advice of
Canby, appointed lioseborough as one of the board, who in company
c2 Ilcd
Blvff Sentinel, Feb. 22, 1873; New York Herald, Feb 17 and Juno 2, 1S73.
*:i Jesse
Applegate resigned rather than • investigate ’ his brother and nephews.
84 See
ttlegram in //. Ex. Doc., 122, 255, 4Ril cong. 1st sesa.
6i yreba
despatches, in Oregonian, Feb. 26, 1S73.
with
Steele, who it was thought might be useful in communicating with Jack, was then
on his way to the front. Before his arrival, however, Whittle had a second
interview with Jack, whom he met a mile from the lava-beds with a company of
forty warriors heavily equipped with needle-guns aud small arms, but asserting
that he only wanted peace, to prove which he pointed to the fact that the
houses of Dorris, Fairchild, Van Bremer, and Small were still left standing,
and again consenting to talk with the men before named. Growing impatient, he
expressed a desire to have the meeting over, and Dave, one of his company,
returned to camp with Whittle, and carried back word that Fairchild would make
a preliminary visit on the 26th to arrange for the official council.66
Accordingly,
on that day Fairchild, accompanied, not by Whittle and Matilda, but by T. F.
Riddle and his Indian wife, Toby,67 as interpreters, repaired to the
rendezvous. He was charged to say that the commissioners would come in good
faith to make peace, and that he was delegated to fix upon a place aud time for
the council. But the only place where Jack would consent to meet them was in
the lava-beds; and as Fairchild would not agree that the commissioners should
go unarmed into the stronghold, ha returned to camp without making any
appointment. With him were allowed to come several well-known murderers, Hooker
Jim, Curly-headed Doctor, and the chief of the Hot Creeks, Shacknasty Jim. They
came to make terms with Lalake, a chief of the
66 One of the surgeons in camp stated,
concerning the second interview with Jack, that 10 of his followers were for
peace and 10 against it, while the others were indifferent. Yreka despatches,
in Oregonian, Feb. 25, 1873.
67 Whittle and Kiddle belonged to that class
of white men known on the frontier as ‘squaw men/ They were not necessarily bad
or vicious, but in all disturbances of the kind in which the people were then
plunged were an element of mischief to both sides. Having Indian wives, they
were forced to keep on terms of friendship with the Indians whatever their
character; and owing allegiance to the laws of the state and their own race,
they had at least to pretend to be obedient to them. It is easy to see that
their encouragement of the Modocs, direct or indirect, had a great deal to do
with bringing on and lengthening the war.
Klamaths,
for the return of sixty horses captured during the war, with which transaction
there was no interference by the military.68
On the
arrival of Steele, the board of commissioners held a meeting, and decided to
offer the Modocs a general amnesty on condition of a complete surrender, and
consent to remove to a distant reservation within the limits of Oregon or
California, Canby to conclude the final terms. Against this protocol Meacham
voted, being still inclined to give Jack a reservation of his choice. On the 5
th of March Steele proceeded, in company with Fairchild, Riddle, and Toby, and
a newspaper reporter, R. H. Atwell, to visit the Modoc stronghold, and make
known to Jack the terms offered. A singular misunderstanding resulted. Steele,
who was but little acquainted with the language of the Modocs, reported that
Jack had accepted the offer of the commissioners, and Fairchild that he had
not. Riddle and Toby were the best of interpreters; Scar- face spoke English
very well, and Jack but little if' at all. Steele and Fairchild were equally
well acquainted with Indian manners, making their difference of opinion the
more unaccountable.
When
Steele handed in his report there was a feeling of relief experienced in camp,
and the commissioners set about preparing despatches, only to be thrown into
confusion by the contradictory statement of Fairchild. So confident was Steele,
that he decided upon returning for verification of his belief; but Fairchild
declined to expose himself to the rage of the Modocs when they should find they
had been misinterpreted. In view of these conflicting opinions, Meacham
cautiously reported that he had reason to believe that an honorable and
permanent peace would be concluded within a few days.69
On
returning that evening to the Modoc stronghold, Steele found the Indians in
much excitement.
6f Yreka
despatches, in Orrgonian, March 1873; Ind. Aff. Itepl, 1873,
75.
m H. Ex Doc., 122, 200, 43d cong. lut bubs.
They had
been reenforced by twenty warriors. Sconchin70 was openly hostile,
Jack still professing to desire peace. The evidences of blood-thirstiness were
so plain, however, that Steele’s confidence was much shaken, and he slept that
night guarded by Scarface. In the morning Jack wore, instead of his own, a woman’s
hat—supposed to indicate his peace principles; and Sconchin made a violent war
speech. When he.had finished, Jack threw off his womau’s hat and hypocrisy
together, declaring that he would never go upon a reservation to be starved.
When told by Steele of the futility of resistance, and the power of the
American people, he listened with composure, replying: “Kill with bullets
don’t hurt much; starve to death hurt a heap.”71 No full report of
this interview was made public. It was understood that a complete amnesty had
been offered, provided the Modocs would surrender, and go to Angel Island in
the bay of San Francisco, until a reservation could be found for them in a warm
climate. They were to be comfortably fed and clothed where they were until removed
to Angel Island, and Jack was offered permission to visit the city of
Washington in company with a few of his head men. Jack made a counter-proposi-
tiou, to be forgiven and left in the lava-beds. He desired Meacham and
Applegate, with six men unarmed, to come on the following day aud shake hands
with him as a token of peace.
On
returning from the conference, Steele advised the commissioners to cease
negotiations until the Indians should themselves make overtures, saying that
the Modocs thought the soldiers afraid of them, and carried on negotiations
solely iu the hope of getting Canby, GiUem, Meacham, and Applegate into their
70 Sconchin
of Jack’s band was a brother of the chief Sconchin at Yainax, and an
intelligent though unruly Indian.
11 Steele’8 Modoc Question, MS., 25. It is
noticeable that in all Steele’s interviews with Jack he never made any attempt
to impress upon his mind the benevolent intentions of the government, but only
its coercive power, which he knew Jack defied.
power to
kill them. As for himself, he would take no more risks among them.
Meacham
then telegraphed the secretary of the interior that the Modocs rejected peace,
and meant treachery in proposing to shake hands with the commissioners
unarmed; but Delano, with the theoretical wisdom of the average politician,
replied that he did not so believe, and that negotiations were to be continued.
Canby telegraphed Shermau, March 5th, that the reports from the Modocs
indicated treachery and a renewal of hostilities, to which Sherman replied that
the authorities at Washington confided in him, and placed the matter in his
hands.72
It was not
until this intimation of a change in the board was made that the commissioners,
having completed their examination of the causes which led to hostilities,
presented their report. The conclusions arrived at were that in any settlement
of the existing hostilities it would be inadmissible to return the Modocs to
the Klamath reservation, the Klamaths having taken part iu the war against
them; or to set apart a reservation on Lost Liver, the scene of their
atrocities. They also objected to a general amnesty, which would bring the
federal government in conflict with the state governments, and furnish a
precedent calculated to cause misconduct oft the reservations, besides greatly
offending the friends of the murdered citizens. It was their opinion that the
eight Indians indicted should be surrendered to the state authorities to be
tried. Should the Modocs accept an amnesty, they should, with the exception of
the eight indicted, be removed at once to some fort, other than Fort
72 The despatch read: ‘All parties here have
absolute faith in you, but mistrust the commissioners. If that Modoc atffjr
can be terminated peacefully by you it will be accepted by the secretary of the
interior as well as the president. Answer immediately, and advise the names of
one or two good men ■with whom you ran act, and they will
receive the necessary authority; or, if you can effect the surrender to you of
the hostile Modocs, do it, and remove them under guard to some safe place,
assured that the government will deal by them liberally and tairly.’
Klamath,
until their final destination was decided upon.73
To this
report General Canby gave his approval, except that he held the opinion that
the Indians, by surrendering as prisoners of war, would be exempt from process
of trial by the state authorities of Oregon or California. From this opinion
Iloseborough dissented, but thought neither state would interfere if satisfied
that the murderers would be removed to some distant country beyond the
possibility of return.
Applegate
and Case having resigned, the former with a characteristic special report to
the acting commissioner of Indian affairs, H. II. Clum, in which he alluded to
the peace commission as an “expensive blunder,” and rejected his pay of ten
dollars a day, it might be said that after the 6th of March no board really
existed, and everything was in the hands of Canby. Jack, who kept himself
informed of all that was transpiring, and fearful lest the commissioners should
yet slip through his fingers, sent his sister Mary, 011 the day followiug
Steele’s final departure, to Canby, to say that he accepted the terms offered
on the 3d, of present support and protection, with removal to a distant
country; asking that a delegation of his people might be permitted to accompany
the government officers in search of a new home, while the remainder waited,
under the protection of the military, and proposed that the surrender should be
made 011 the 10th.
To this
proposition Canby assented, and word was sent to Jack that he and as many of
his people as were able to come, should come into camp that evening, or next
morning, and that wagons would be sent to the edge of the lake to fetch the
others on Monday. But Jack did not come as expected, and the messengers sent
to him returned with the information that they could not yet leave the
lava-beds, as they were
73 Portland Bulletin, March 13, 1873;
Jacksonville Sentinel, March 8, 15, 1873; Gold Hill News, March 15, 1873; 8. F.
Call, March 5, 6, 7, 12, 13,1873.
interring
their dead, but would soon keep their promise. Canby then sent warning that
unless they surrendered at once the troops would be sent against them, and
Mary was sent once more to convey messages from Sconchin and Jack. The former
affected surprise that the white officers should so soon be offended with them,
and wished to know the names of those who sent the warning message; and Jack declared
ho desired peace or war at once, but preferred peace. There was little in his
message, however, to indicate any degree of humility. On the contrary, he
dictated the terms, which would leave him master of the situation, his people
fed and clothed, and allowed to remain on Lost River, whilo he went forth free.
Kiddle and Toby, who interpreted the messages from the Modocs, saw in them a
sinister meaning, and cautioned Canby.
The
general, finding himself forced into a position where he must vindicate the
power and righteousness of the government, and obey orders from the departments,
had little choice. Either he must make war on the Modocs, which he was
forbidden to do, or he must make peace with them, which was still doubtful. He
chose to accept as valid the excuses for their want of faith, and went on
making preparations for their reception at his camp on the 10th. Tents were put
up to shelter them, hay provided for beds, aud new blankets, with food and
fire-wood furnished, besides many actual luxuries for the head men. On the day
appointed, four wagons were sent, under the charge of Steele and David Horn, a
teamster, to Point of Rocks on Klamath Lake, the rendezvous agreed upon; but no
Indians appearing, after four hours of waiting the expedition returned and
reported. Notwithstanding this, Canby telegraphed that he did not regard the
last action of the Modocs as final, and wTould spare fio pains to
bring about the result desired; but might be compelled to make some movement of
troops to keep them under observation. This was satisfac
tory to the
secretary of the interior, but not quite so to General Sherman, who had
somewhat different views of the Modoc question. *
On the
lltli a reconnoissance of the lava-beds, by a cavalry company under Colonel
Biddle, was ordered, but he saw nothing of the Modocs. According to a
previously expressed desire of Jack’s, a messenger had been sent to Yainax to
invite old Sconchin and a sub-chief, Riddle, to visit him, a proposition
favored by the general, who hoped the friendly chiefs might influence him to
make peace. Sconchin came reluctantly, and after the interview assured the
general that all future negotiations would be unavailing.
On the
13th Biddle, while reconnoitring the vicinity of the lava-beds, captured
thirty-four horses belonging to the Modocs—a measure thought necessary to
lessen their means of escape. Two days afterward headquarters were moved to Van
Bremer’s, aud the troops drawn closer about Jack’s position. On the 19th
Meacham wrote that he had not entirely abandoned hope of success; but the Modocs
were deterred by a fear that the Oregon authorities would demand the eight
indicted men to be tried. In this letter he advocated a meeting on Jack’s own
terms, and said if left to his own judgment he should have visited the
stronghold; even that he was ready to do so now, but was restrained by Canby;
though it did not appear that anything had transpired to change his mind since
he had written that the Modocs meant treachery. Canby himself could not make
his reports agree, for on one day he thought the Modocs would consent to go to
Yainax, and on the next that they were not favorable to any arrangement. On
the 22d, while Canby
14 Sherman s telegram, after counselling
patience, closed Y.itu thia paragraph: • But bhould these peaceful measures
fail, and should the Modocs presume too tar on the forbearance of the
government, and again resort tc deceit and treachery, I trust you will make
such uf>e of the military force that no other Indian tribe will imitate
their example, and tnat, no reservation for them will be- necessary except
graves among their chosen lava-beds.’
and Gillem
were making a reconnoissance with a cavalry company, an accidental meeting
took place with Jack and a party of his warriors, at which a conference was
agreed upon between Jack, Sconchin, and the two generals; but when the meeting
took place it was Scarface, the acknowledged war-chief, instead of Sconchin,
who accompanied Jack. These provocations caused Canby to tighten more and more
the cordon of soldiery, and to remove headquarters to the foot of the high
bluff skirting the lake, within three miles of the Modoc position.
The peace
commission, which had been reorganized by the appointment of E. Thomas, a
methodist preacher of Petaluma, California, and L. S. Dyar of the Klamath agency,
in place of Applegate and Case, resigned, arrived at headquarters on the 24tli
of March, and also Captain Applegate with five reservation Modocs sent for by
Canby to assist in the peace negotiations. On the 2Gth Thomas and Gillem had
an interview with Bogus Charley, another of the Modoc warriors, who passed
freely between the stronghold and the military camp, carrying news of all he
saw to his leader. In this interview it was once more agreed upon that on the
following day Jack and his head men should meet these two in conference; but
instead, a message “of a private nature” was sent by a delegation consisting of
Bogus Charley, Boston Charley, Mary, and Ellen, another Modoc woman.
In this
way the time passed until the last of March was reached, and fear was
entertained that with the return of warm weather the Modocs would escape to the
Shoshones, and that together they would join in a war on the outlying
settlements. Hooker Jim had indeed already made a successful raid into Langell
Valley, driving off a herd of horses; and on more than one occasion Jack’s
lieutenants had ventured as far as Yaiuax, laboring to induce Sconchin’s band
to join in a confederacy of five tribes, which he said were ready
to take
the war-path as soon as he should quit the lava-beds; and these occurrences,
becoming known, caused much alarm.
On the
31st a movement by the troops in force was made, three hundred marching to the
upper end of Klamath Lake, and thence on the 1st of April to Tule Lake and the
lava-beds, Mason’s position being two miles from the stronghold, on the east
side. On the 2d the Modocs signified their willingness to meet the peace
commissioners at a point halt-way between headquarters and the stronghold; but
Jack only reiterated his terms, which were a general amnesty, Lost River, and
to have the troops taken away. The only concession made was his consent to
having a council-tent erected at a place on the lava-field a mile and a quarter
from the camp of the commissioners.
Again on
the 4th a request was made by Jack for an interview with Meacham, Roseborough,
and Fairchild at the council-tent. They went, accompanied by Riddle and Toby,
and found Jack, with six warriors and the women of his family. Again Jack and
Scon- chin demanded the Lost River country and their freedom. He was assured
that it was useless talking about Lost River, which they had sold, and which
could not be taken back. When reminded of the killing of the settlers, Jack
declared that if the citizens had taken no part iu the fight of the 29 th the
murders would not have taken j 'ace; and finally said that he would say no
more about Lost River if he could have a reservation in California, including
Willow, Cottonwood, and Hot creeks, with the lava-beds; but this also was
pronounced impracticable. The council, which lasted five hours, was terminated
bj the Indians suddenly retiring, saying if their minds were changed on the
morrow they would report.
On the
following morning Boston Charley brought a message from Jack to Roseborough,
asking for another interview, to which consent was refused until Jack should
have made up his mind; when Boston
cunningly
remarked that the Modocs might surrender that day. Roseborougli beiu^ deceived
iuto thinking that they so intended, Toby i 'iddle was immediately sent to Jack
with a message encouraging him in this purpose. The proposition was not only
declined, but in such a manner that on her return Toby assured the
commissioners and General Canby that it would not be safe for them to meet the
Modocs in council. This information was lightly treated by Canby and Thomas,
but was regarded as of more consequence by Meacham and Dyar. Jack had succeeded
in allaying the apprehensions of treachery ouce entertained by Canby, by his
apparently weak and vacillating course, which appeared more like the obstinacy
of a spoiled child than the resolution of a desperate man. The military, too,
were disposed to regard Jack’s attachment to the region about Tide Lake as
highly patriotic, and to see in it something romantic and touching. These
influences were at that critical juncture of affairs undermining the better
judgment of the army.75
On the
morning of the 8th of April Jack sent a messenger to the commissioner to
request a meeting at the council-tent, the former to be accompanied by six
unarmed Modocs. But the signal- officer at the station overlooking the
lava-beds reporting six Indians at the council tent, and twenty more armed in
the rocks behind them, the invitation was declined. Jack understood from this
rejection of his overtures that he was suspected, and that whatever he did must
be done quickly. If the truth must be told, in point of natural sagacity,
diplomatic ability, genius, this savage was more than a match for them all. His
plans so
15 In Mfacham’aspecial report be points out
that Thomas was indiscreet in his intercourse with the Modocs. He questioned
one of them as to the truih of Tobyreport that it would not lie safe for the
cummiss'oners to meet Jack, which was denied; ami on being asked iu turn who told
him, he said Toby Riddle- a dangerous breach of trust, exposing Tobj to the
wrath of the Modocs. Giller.i also informed this same Indian - that unless
peace was made, very soon he would move up near the Modoc stronghold, and that
one hundred Warm Spring Indians would be added to the army within a few days.’
hul. Ajf. Rept, 1873, 77.
far had
been well devised. His batflmg course had secured him the delay until spring
should open suffi eiently to allow him to fly to the Shoshones, when, by
throwing the army into confusion, the opportunity should be afforded of escape
from the lava-beds with all his followers.
On the
morning of the 10th Boston Charley, Hooker Jim, Dave, and Whim visited
headquarters, bringing a proposition from Jack that Canby, Gillern, and the
peace commissioners should meet the Modocs ui council. He was answered by a
proposition in writing, which Riddle read to them, containing the former terms
of a general amnesty and a reservation in a warmer climate. Jack’s conduct was
not encouraging. He threw the paper upon the ground, saying he had no use for
it; he was not a white man, and could not read. Light remarks were uttered
concerning the commissioners. Beef was being dried, and breastworks thrown up,
strengthening certain points, all of which indicated preparations for war
rather than peace. Jack, however, agreed to meeting the commissioners if they
would come a mile beyond the council-tent.
Notwithstanding
all these ominous signs, and the advice of Riddle to the contrary, it was
finally settled at a meeting of the peace commissioners, Thomas in the chair,
that a conference should take place between them and Can by on one side and
Jack and five Modocs on the other, both jtarties to go w ithout arms. The 11th
was the day set for the council, and the place indicated by Jack accepted.
After this decision was arrived at, Riddle stdl advised Canby to send
twenty-five or thirty men to secrete themselves iu the rocks near the
council-ground, as a guard against any treacherous movement on the part of the
Indians. But to this proposal Canby replied that it would be an insult to
Captain Jack to which ho could not consent; and that besides, the probable
discovery of such a movement would lead to hostilities. In this he was
Hist. Ob.#
Yol. II. 39
not mistaken,
for Bogus Charley and Boston Charley spent the night in Gillem’s camp,
remaining until after the commissioners had gone to the rendezvous.16
The place
chosen by Jack was a depression among the rocks favorable to an ambuscade, and
Meacham, who had not been present when the meeting was determined upon,
strenuously objected to placing the commission in so evident a trap, but
yielded, as did Dyar, to the wishes of Canby and Thomas, one of whom trusted in
the army and the other in God to see them safely through with the conference.77
So earnest was Riddle not to be blamed for anything which might happen, that he
requested all the commissioners and Canby to accompany him to Gillem’s tent,
that officer being ill, where he might make a formal protest; and where he
plainly admitted that he consented to make one of the party rather than be
called a coward, and advised that concealed weapons should be carried. To this
proposition Canby and Thomas punctiliously objected, but Meacham and Dyar concealed
each a small pistol to be used in case of an attack.
At the
time appointed, the peace commissioners repaired to the rendezvous, Meacham,
Dyar, and Toby riding, and the others walking, followed by Bogus and Boston
from the military camp, which gave Jack just double the number of the
commissioners, of whom Canby w7as to be considered as one. All sat
down in a semicircular group about a camp-fire. Canby offered the Modocs
cigars, which were accepted, and all smoked for a little while. The general
then opened the council, speaking in a fatherly way: say; “ ft. Ex.
Doc., 122, 139, l.'M cong. 1st sess.
77 Canby said that the Modocs date not
attack with Mason’s force where it could be thrown into the stronghold before
the Modocs could return to it. Thomas said that God almighty would not let any
such body of men 1/e hurt that was on as good a mission as that. ‘I told
him,’says Riddle, ‘that he might trust in God, but that I didn’t trust any of
them Indians.’ Meacham, in his Wigwam and Warpath, published two or three years
after the war, says that the Modocs, perceiving the doctor’s religious bent,
pretended to have their hearts softened and to desire peace from good motives,
which hypocrisy deceived hit*. I do not iind anything anywhere else to sustain
thia assertion.
ing he had
for many years been acquainted with Indians; that he came to the council to
have a kindly talk with them and conclude a peace, and that whatever he
promised them they could rely upon. Meacham and Thomas followed, encouraging
them to look forward to a happier home, where the bloody scenes of Lost Iliver
could he forgotten.
In reply,
Jack said he had given up Lost Iliver, but he knew nothing of other countries,
and he required Cottonwood aud Willow creeks in place of it and the lava-beds.
While the conference had been going on, several significant incidents had
occurred. Seeing another white man approaching along the trail from camp, and
that the Indians appeared uneasy, Dvar mounted and rode out to meet the
intruder and turn him back. When he returned he did not rejoin the circle, but
remained a little way behind, reclining upon the ground, holding his horse.
While Meacham was talking and Sconchin making some disrespectful comments in
his own tongue, Hooker Jim arose, and going to Meacham’s horse, took his
overcoat from the horn of the saddle, putting it on, and making some mocking
gestures, after which he asked in English if he did not resemble “old man
Meacham.”
The
affront and all that it signified was understood by every man there; but not
wishing to show any alarm, and anxious to catch the eye of. Canby, Meacham
looked toward the general, and inquired if he had anything more to say. Calmly
that officer arose, and related in a pleasant voice how one tribe of Indians
had elected him chief, and given him a name signifying “Indian’s friend;” and
how another had made him a chief, and given him the name of “The tall man;” and
that the president of the United States had ordered him to this duty he was
upon, and he had no power to remove the troops without authority from the
president.
Sconchin
replied by reiterating the demand for Willow and Cottonwood creeks, and for the
removal
of the
troops. While Sconchin’s remarks were being interpreted, Jack arose and walked
behind Dyar’s horse, returning to his place opposite Canby a moment later. As
he took his position, two Indians suddenly appeared, as if rising out of the
ground, carrying each a number of guns. Every man sprang to his feet as Jack
gave the word, “all ready,” in his own tongue, and draw ing a revolver from his
breast iired at the general. Simultaneously Sconchin fired on Meacham, and
Boston Charley on Thomas. At tho tirst motion of Jack to lire, Dyar, who was a
very tall man and had the advantage of a few' feet in distance, started to run,
pursued by Hooker Jim. When he had gone a hundred and fifty rods, finding
himself hard pressed, he turned and fired his pistol, which checked the advance
of the enemy. By repeating this manoeuvre several times, he escaped to the
picket-line. Riddle also escaped by running, and Toby, after being given one
blow, was permitted to follow her husband. General Canby was shot through the
head. Thomas was also shot dead; and both were instantly stripped naked.
Meacham had five bullet-wounds, and a knife- cut on the head. He was stripped
and left for dead, but revived on the arrival of the troops.
While the
commissioners were smoking and conversing with the Modocs, a preliminary part
of the tragedy was being enacted on another part of the field. An Indian was
discovered by the picket about Mason’s camp carrying a white flag, a sign of a
desire to see some of the officers, and Lieutenant W. L. Sherwood, officer of
the day, was sent by the colonel to meet the bearer and learn his errand.
Sherwood soon returned with the report that some Modocs desired an interview
with the commander of the post; when Mason sent them word to come within the
lines if they wished to see him. Lieutenant Boyle, who happened to be present,
asked permission to accompany Sherwood, when the two officers walked out to
meet the flag-bearer, half a mile outside the pickets.
On the way
they encountered tliree Indians, who inquired if Boyle was the commanding
officer, and who invited them to go on to where the ilag-bearer awaited them.
Something in their manner convincing the officers of treachery, they declined,
saying that if the Indians desired to talk they must come within the lines, and
turned hack to camp. The Indians then commenced tiring, Sherwood and Boyle
running and dodging among the rocks, being without arms. Sherwood soon fell,
mortally wounded, but Boyle escaped, being covered by the guns of the pickets.
The
officer at the signal-station overlooking Mason’s camp immediately telegraphed
General Gillem what had occurred, and preparations were at once made to send T,
T. Cabaniss to warn General Canby, but before the message was ready the
signal-officer reported firing on the council-ground.
At this
word the troops turned out, Sergeant Wooton of company K, 1st cavalry, leading
a detachment without orders. The wildest confusion prevailed, yet in the sole
intent, if possible, to save the life of the general whom they all loved and
venerated, there was unity of purpose. Before the troops reached the
council-ground they were met by Dyar, with the story of the fatal catastrophe,
and on arriving at the spot, Meacham was discovered to be alive. Jack had
retreated to his stronghold, the troops following for half a mile, but finally
retreating to camp for the night.73
As might
have been expected, a profound excitement followed upon the news of the
disastrous wind ing-up of the peace commission. At Yreka Delano was hanged in
effigy. At Portland the funeral honors
78 Cabaniss, who was personally strongly
attached to Canby, wrote an interesting and highly colored account of the
incidents just prior to and succeeding the massacre, for the Eureka, Cal,,
West Coast Signal, April 1$, 1873, Various accounts appeared in the newspapers
of that date, and in Fitzgerald'* Cal. Sketches, 140; Simpson's Meeting the
Sun, 356-83; and Meacham's Wigwam and Warpath, written to justify his own want
of judgment and conceal his want of honesty.
paid to
Canby were almost equal to those paid to Lincoln.79
One
general expression of rage and desire for revenge was uttered over the whole
country, east as well as west; aud very few shrank from demanding extermination
for the murderers of a major-general of the United States army and a methodist
preacher, though little enough had been the sympathy extended by the east to
the eighteen hard-working, undistinguished cit sens of the Oregon frontiers0
massacred by these same Modocs.
The
president authorized Sherman to order Schofield, commanding the division of
the Pacific, “to make the attack so strong and persistent that their fate may
be commensurate with their crime;” to which Sherman added, “You will be fully
justified in their utter extermination.” Many expedients were sug-
79 Edward R. S. Canby was burn in Kentucky
in 1817, and appointed to the military academy at West Point from Indiana. He
graduated in 1839, and was made 2d lieut. He served in the Florida war, and
removed the Indians to Arkansas in 1842. From 1846 to 1848 he served iu
Mexico, and was at the siege of Vera Cruz, the battles of Cerro Gordo,
Contreras, and Churubuseo, where he was brevetted major for gallant conduct;
was at the as sault and capture of the City of Mexico, where ko was brevetted
lieut-col; was commander of the division of the Pacific from 1849 to 1851,
after which he was four years in the adj.-gen. office at Washington. From 1855
to the breaking out of the rebellion he was on frontier duty He served through
the civil war as colonel of the 19th inf. in the dep. of New Mexico; was made
brig, gen. of U. S. volunteers in March 1862; was detached to take command of
the city and harbor of New York to suppress draft riots; was made maj.-gen. of
volunteers in 1864, in command of the military division of west Missis- sipjii;
was brevetted brig.-gen. of the U. S. army in 1865 for gallant conduct at the
battle of Valverde, New Mexico; and was brevetted maj.-gen. U. S. ar’i-v for
gallant and meritorious services at the capture of Fort Blakoly and Mobile. He
commanded the military district of North and South Carolina from September 1867
to September 1868, and was afterward placed in command of Texas, and then of
Va, where he remained until transferred to Or. in 1870. He was tall and
loldierly in appearance, with a benevolent countenance. He had very little
money saved at the time of his death, and a few citizens of Portland gave five
thousand dollars to his widow. It is stated that a brother was stricken with
sudden insanity on hearing of his fate. Santa Barbara Index, July 17, 1873.
Rev. E. Thomas was e minister in the methodist denomination. He was in charge of
a Niag- ara-street ehureh in Buffalo, New York, in 1853; came to Cal. in 18G5,
where ho was agem for the Methodist Book Concern; for several years was editor
of the Cal. ChrinUcm Advocate, and at the time of his death was presiding elder
of the Petaluma district of the Cal. M. E. Conference. He left a wife and three
children. Oregonian, Apnl 14, 1873.
““See Washington
despatches, in Portland Oregonian, April 15, 1873; Hu ¥. Herald, April 20,
1873; London Times, April i6, 1873.
gested in
the public prints to force the Modocs out of their caves in the lava-beds, such
as sharp-shooters to pick them off at long range; steel armor for the soldiers;
the employment of blood-hounds, and of sulphur smoke 81 But
fortunately for the reputation of the American people, none of these methods
were resorted to, the public being left to exhaust its hostility in harmless
suggestions.82 '
The troops
had at no time regarded the peace com mission with favor, any more than had the
people best acquainted with the character of the Modocs Those who fought on the
17th of January were displeased with the removal of Wheaton from the command,
and had seen nothing yet in Gillem to lessen their dissatisfaction. They were
now anxious to fight, and impatiently awaiting the command, which they with
other observers thought a long time coming.
On the day
after the massacre Mason moved to the south of the stronghold six miles. His
line was attacked by the Modocs, forcing the left picket to give way, which
position was, however, retaken by Lieutenant E. R. Thellar with a portion of
company I of the 21st infantry. Skirmishing was kept up all day and a part of
the 13th. At length, on the 14th, Gillem telegraphed to Mason, asking if he could
be ready to advance on the stronghold on the next morning; to which Mason
replied that he preferred to get into position that night. To this Gillem
consented, ordering him not to make any persistent attack, but to shelter his
men as well as possible. Donald McKay’s company of Warm Spring scouts, engaged
by Canby when it began to appear that hostilities would be resumed, had
arrived, and was posted on Mason’s left, with orders to work around toward
Green’s right.
The
movement began at midnight, and before day-
81 See
letter of A, Hamilton to the secretary of the interior, in II. Ex. Doc,, 122,
287, 43d cong, 1st sess.
Portland
Bulletin, March 8 and 15, and April 2, 4, 19, 28, 1873; Jackson- milt Sentinel,
May 3, 1873; Roseburg Plaindealert May 2 and June 27,
1873.
light the
troops were in position, about four hundred yards east of the stronghold, the
right of the infantry under Captain Burton resting on the lake, and Bernard’s
troop dismounted on the left, with a section of mountain howitzers, held subject
to order, under Lieutenant E. S. Chapin. Breastworks of stone were thrown up
to conceal the exact position of the troops. On the west side of the lake Perry
and Cresson moved at two o’clock in the morning to a point beyond the main
position of the Modocs on the south, where they concealed their troops and
waited to be joined at daylight by the infantry and artillery under Miller and
Throckmorton, with Colonel Green and staff. Miller had the extreme right, and
the cavalry the extreme left touching the lake, while Throckmorton's artillery
and two companies of infantry were in the centre.
'■ The day
was warm and still, aud the movement to close in began early. The first shots
were received a mile and a half from Jack’s stronghold on the west, while the troops were advancing
iu open skirmish order along the lake shore, sheltering themselves as best
they could under cover of the rocks in their path. On reaching the gorge under
the bluff a galling fire was poured upon them from the rocks above, where a
strong party of Modocs were stationed. Mason was doing all that he could to
divide the attention of the •Indians while the army passed this dangerous
point, and the reserves coming up, a charge was made which compelled the Modocs
to retire, and their position was taken.
• At two
o’clock the order was given to advance the mortars under Thomas and Cranston,
and Howe of the 4th artillery. By half past four they were in position, and the
left of the line on the west had reached a point opposite the stronghold. By five
o’clock the mortars began throwing shells into the stronghold, which checked
the Modoc firing. So far all went well. The bluff remained in the possession of
Miller’s men, between whom and the main plateau, or mesa, m
which, the
caves are situated, only two ledges of rock intervened. On Mason’s side, also,
the outer line of the Modoc defences was abandoned. A.t six o’clock the mortars
were again moved forward, and by nightfall the troops in front of the
stronghold were ready to scale the heights. At midnight Mason’s troops took up
the position abandoned by the Modocs, within one hundred yards of their
defences.
Their last
position was now nearly surrounded, but they fought the troops on every side,
indicating more strength than they were supposed to possess. The troops
remained upon the field, and mortar practice was kept up throughout the night
at intervals of ten minutes. In the morning, Mason’s force with the Warm Spring
scouts being found in possession of the mesa, the Modocs abandoned their
stronghold, passing out by unseen trails, and getting on Mason’s left,
prevented his joining with Green’s right. Subsequently, he was ordered to
advance liis right and join Green on the shore of the lake, which cut the
Indians off from water.
By ten
o’clock in the forenoon Green’s line had reached the top of the bluff nearest
the stronghold, meeting little opposition, but il was decided not to push the
troops at this point, as there might be heavy loss without any gain, and the
want of water must soon force the Modocs out of their caverns and defences,
while it was not probable they could tind a stronger position anywhere. The
day’s work consisted simply of skirmishings. No junction was effected between
Mason and Green on the west; the principal resistance offered being to this
movement.
In the
evening Thomas dropped two shells into the Modoc camp-fire, causing cries of
rage and pain. After this the Indians showed themselves, and challenged the
soldiers to do the same; but the latter were hidden behind stone breastworks,
five or six in a place, with orders not to allow themselves to be surprised in
these little forts, built at night; they also caught a little
sleep, two
at a time, while the others watched/3 The second day ended with some
further advances upon the stronghold, and with the batteries in better
position. The blaze of musketry along the lake shore at nine o’clock in the
evening, when the Modocs endeavored to break through the Imes to get to water,
was like the flash of flames when a prairie is on fire. The troops remained
again over niglit on the field, having only coffee served hot with their
rations.
On the
morning of the 17th Green’s and Mason’s lines met without impediment, and a
general movement was made to sweep the lava-beds, the Indians seeming to rally
about eleven o’clock, and to oppose the approach to their famous position. But
this was only a feint, and when the troops arrived at the caves the Modocs had
utterly vanished. Then it appeared why they had so hotly contested the ground
between Mason and Green. An examination showed a fissure in the pedregal
leading from the caverns to the distant hills, which pass had been so marked
that it could be followed m the darkness, and through it had been conveyed the
families and property of the Modocs to a place of safety.
The loss
of the army in the two days’ engagements was five killed and twelve wounded. On
the third day a citizen of Yreka, a teamster, was killed, and his team
captured. Seventeen Iudians were believed to be killed
The
consternation which prevailed when it became known that Jack had escaped with
his band was equal to that after the massacre of the peace commissioners; but
the worst was yet to come. From the smoke of large fires observed in the
south-east,it was conjectured that the Indians were burning their dead, and
fleeing in that direction, and the cavalry was ordered to pursue, Perry setting
out the 18th to make a circuit of the lava-beds, a march of eighty miles. The
Warm
83 Boyle's
Conduct tf the Modoc War, MS., 28.
Spring
scouts also were scouring the country toward the east. In the mean time Mason
was ordered to hold the Modoc fortress, while his camp at Hospital Rock was
removed to the camp at Scorpion Point, on the east side of the lake. This left
the trail along the south side exposed to attack from the enemy’s scouts. On
the afternoon of the 18th they appeared on a ridge two miles off, and also at
nearer points during the day, firing occasional shots. On the morning of the
ll)th they attacked a mule pack-train on its way from Scorpion Point to supply
Mason at the stronghold, escorted by Lieutenant Howre with twenty
men, and were repulsed. Lieutenant P. Leary, in coming to meet the train with
an escort, had one man killed and one wounded; and Howe, on entering the
lava-beds, both coming and returning, was fired on. A shell dropped among them
dispersed them for that day; but on the 20th they again showed themselves,
going to the lake for water, and fired on the Warm Spring scouts, who were
burying one of their company killed on the 17tli. They even bathed themselves
in the lake, in plain view of the astonished soldiery in camp. After two days,
Perry’s and McKay’s commands came in without having seen a Modoc.
Meanwhile
Gillem was waiting for two companies of the 4th artillery, en route from San
Francisco, under captain® John Mendenhall and H. C. Hasbrouck, to make another
attempt to surround the Modocs in their new position, which he reported as
being about four miles south of their former one. In their impatience, the
troops went so far as to say that it was concern for his personal safety which
deterred Gillem, who had not stirred from camp during the three days’ fight,
but had all the troops that could be spared posted at his camp.
From the
20th to the 25th nothing was done except to keep the scouts moving. On the
night of the 22d McKay discovered a camp of forty Modocs in a ridge at the
southern end of the lava-beds, known as the
Black
Ledge. Its distance from headquarters was about four miles, with a trail
leading to it from the lake, which was practicable for light artillery. For two
days after its discovery no Indians were seen coming to the lake for water, and
the opinion prevailed that they had left the lava-beds, in which case they were
certain either to escape altogether or to attack the settlements.
In order
to settle the question of their whereabouts, a reconnoissance w7as
planned to take place on the 26th, to extend to the Black Ledge. In arranging
this scout Gillem consulted with Green. It was decided to send on this service
Thomas, with Howe, Cranston, and Harris of the artillery, and Wright of the
infantry, with a force of about seventy men, aud a part of Donald McKay’s
scouts, making about eighty- five hi all.
Some
anxiety was felt as the expedition set out at eight o’clock in the morning, aud
a watch wTas kept upon their movements as they clambered among the
rocks, until they passed from view behind a large sand-butte, a mile and a half
away. Before passing out of sight, they signalled that no Indians had been
found. As no official account of what transpired thereafter could ever be
given, the facts, as gathered from the soldiers, appear to have been as
follows:
Thomas
advanced without meeting any opposition or seeing any Indians until he reached
the point designated in his orders, keeping out skirmishers on the march, with
the Warm Spring scouts on his extreme left, that being the direction from which
it was thought the Indians might attack if at all But none being discovered,
and the field appearing to be clear, a halt was called about noon, when men and
officers threw themselves carelessly upon the ground to rest and take their
luncheon.
While in
this attitude, and unsuspicious of danger, a volley of riflo-balls was poured
in among them. It would be impossible to describe the scene which fol
lowed.
When the troops were attacked the}” were iu open ground, from which they ran to
take shelter in the nearest defensible positions. Many of them never stopped at
all, or heeded the word of command of their officers, but kept straight on to
camp. “Men, we are surrounded; we must fight and die like soldiers,” cried
Thomas; but he was heeded by few, fully two thirds of the men being
panic-stricken, and nearly one half running away.
The only
shelter that presented itself from the bullets of the concealed Modocs was one
large and several smaller basins in the rocks. In these the remainder of the
command stationed themselves, but this defence was soon converted into a trap
in which the victims were the more easily slaughtered. The Indians, who from
the first aimed at the officers, were now able to finish their bloody work. In
what order they were killed no one could afterward tell, but from the fact that
only Thomas and Wright were remembered to have said anything, it is probable the
others fell at the first fire, and that it was their fall which demoralized the
men so completely. Thomas received several wounds. Wright was wounded in the
hip, in the groin, m the right wrist, and through the body. He was in a hole
with four of his men, when a sergeant attempted to bring him some water, and
was also shot and Wounded in the thigh. Soon after Wright died, and the
remaining three, all of whom were wounded, were left to defend themselves and
protect the body of their dead commander. About three o’clock an Indian crept
up to the edge of the basin, calling out in English to the soldiers if they
were not wounded to leave for camp, as he did not wish to kill all of them, at
the same time throwing stones into the pit to cause some movement if any there
were really alive. Hearing no sound, he crept closer and peered over, with two
or three others, when the soldiers sprang up and fired. The ludians then left
them, whether wounded or not the soldiers could
not tell.
Similar scenes were being enacted in other parts of the field. As soon as it
was dusk those of the wounded who could move began crawling over the rocks
toward camp.
Out of
sixty-five enlisted men, twenty-two were killed and sixteen wounded, a loss of
over three fifths of the force; of the five commissioned officers, not one
escaped, though Harris lived a few days after being mortally wounded; Surgeon
Semig recovered with the loss of a leg; making the total loss of twenty-seven
killed and seventeen wounded, besides a citizen shot while fl'ointr to the
relief of the wounded.
O O <
“Where
were the Warm Spring scouts?” asked the horrified critics of this day’s work.
They were in the rear and to the left of Thomas, and after the attack, could
not get nearer because the soldiers w ould mistake them for the Modocs, not
being in uniform.84
According
to some witnesses, help was very tardily rendered after the attack on Thomas’
command became known/5 which it soon was. Although the stragglers
began to come in about half-past one o’clock, it was not until night that a
rescuing force wTas ready t’j go to Thomas’ relief. When they did
move, there were three detachments of cavalry under captains Trimble and
Cresson, and two others under Jackson and Bernard, with two companies of
artillery under Throckmorton and Miller. In two lines they moved out over the
lava-beds, soon lost to sight in the gloom of night and tempest, a severe storm
having come 011 at the close of a tine day. A large fire was built on a high
point, which gave but little guidance on account
8i Boyle’*
Conduct nf the Modoc. War, MS., 41 -2; Corr. S. F. Chronicle, in Portland
Oreqowian, May 6, 1873: S. F. Call, April 30, 1873; ,S. F. AIM, April 30, 1873;
Sac. Record-Union, April 30, 1873; S. F. Post, April 29, 1873;
S. F. Bulletin, April 29, 1873: Annual Report
of Maj.-Gen. Jejf. C. Davi*, 1873, p. 5- 6; Or. Deutsch Zeitnmg, May 3, 1873;
S. F Elevator, May 3, 1873.
fi Boyle
says that the firing, which began about noon, could lie distinctly heard a ti
camp. Oabamss testified the name. The correspondent of the S. K Chroni ie said
that no firing was heard, but that he could see through his glass, from the
signal station, the soldiers running wildly about and crawling over the rocks,
ev idently p inic stricken. Col (ireen, he says, went immediately to their
assistance; but this wan ialse.
of the
weather. When found, the whole extent of ground covered by the dead and wounded
was comprised within a few hundred feet, showing how little time they had in
which to move.
Finding it
impossible to bring in all the dead, the bodies of the soldiers were piled
together and covered with sage-brush, which the Indians subsequently fired. The
wounded, and the dead officers, were carried on stretchers, lashed upon the
backs of mules, and the ghastly procession returned through the storm to camp,
where it arrived at half-past eight on the morning of the 27th.
The loss
of so many officers and men deeply affected the whole army. Soldiers who had
been in the service all their ’ives wept like children.86 The discontent
which had prevailed since the command devolved upon Gillem became intensified,
and officers and men did not hesitate to say that had an experienced Indian
fighter, instead of young officers just from the east, been sent upon this
reconnoissance, or had these young officers received the proper orders, the
disaster need not have occurred. The effect on the public mind was similar,
which was at first incredulous, then stunned. “Whipped again 1 whipped again!”
was the universal lament.8
"6
‘Especially was this the cast' as regards Lieut Harris tif the 4th art, whose
battery, K, perfectly idolized him.’ S. F. Call, April 30, 1873. ‘ That night’s
march made many a young man old.’ Bot/le’x Conduct of the Mod on War, MS., 4.
t7Evan
Thomas was i sun of Lorenzo Thomas, formerly adj.-gen. oi the army. He was
appointed 2d lieut of the 4tl art. April 9. 18G1, from the district of
Columbia; was promoted to a first lieutenancy on the 14th of May 1861 and made
capt. Aug. 31, 1804, though brevetted capt. in Dei. 1862, and brevetted mai in
July 1803, honors won on the field of buttle. He left a widow ind two children
at San Francisco. After receiving his death wound Thomas buried his gold watch
and chain, in the hope it, might escape discovery by the Modocs, and be recovered
by his friends. But the watchful foe did not permit this souvenir to reach
them.
Thomas F. Wright was
a son of (Jen. George Wright, formerly in command of the department of the
Columbia. He wasappointed to the West Point military academy in 1858, and
served subsequently as 1st lieut in the 2d Cal. ca\alry, but resigned in 1863.
and was reappointed with the rank ot maj. in 6th Cal. inf. He was transferred
to the 2d Cal. inf. with the rank of col until he was mustered out at the close
of the war of the rebellion with the iu::k of brevet brig, -gen. He was
appointed 1st lieut of the 32d inf. in July 1806. In Jan 1870 he was assigned
to the 12th inf. at (.'amp Gaston, Cal.,
On the 2d
of May Colonel Jefferson C. Davis, who had succeeded Canby in the command of
the department of the Columbia, arrived at headquarters, where the army had
lain inactive and much dispirited since the 2Gth. Davis sent for Wheaton, to
whom he soon restored the command of the troops in the field, and Mendenhall’s
command having arrived, the army was to some extent reorganized, I )avia taking
a few days to acquaint himself with the country.
During
this interval the Modocs were not idle. Their fires could be seen nightly in
the lava-beds, and on the 7th they captured a train of wagons between Bernard’s
old camp and Scorpion Point, wounding two soldiers. Two Indian women, sent on
the same day to reconnoitre the last position of the Modocs, reported none in
the lava-beds, a statement verified by McKay. Hasbrouck’s light battery, serving
as cavalry, and Jackson’s cavalry were immediately ordered to prepare for an
extended reconnoissance on the 9th to make sure that no Indians were secreted
in any part of the lava-field. On the night of the 9th Has- brouck encamped at
Sorass Lake, south-east of the pedregal on the road to Pit River, but the water
being unfit for use, a detachment was sent back seventeen miles to procure
some. While the detachment, which was escorted by the Warm Spring scouts, was
absent, a company of thirty-three Modocs, headed by Jack, in the uniform of
General Canby, attacked the
whence after the
battle of the l'tli of Jan. he was ordered to the Modoc country. Albian Howe
was appointed 2d lieut in 1866, having served asmaj. of volunteers during the
war. He was promoted to a 1st lieut in X')' 18li9, uml brevetted capt in March
1867. He was the son of Col H. S. Howe, formerly ot the U. S. army, but on the
retired list, He had but a short time before his death married a daughter of W.
F. Barry, colonel • f the 1st artillery, and commander of the attillery school
at Fortress Monroe. Arthur Cranston was a native of Mass., 30 years of age. He
graduate! from West I’oint in 1867, and was appointed 2il lieut ir the 4th art
He had served in the 7tli reg. Ohio vol. before entering the militarj academy,
and was promoted to a lieutenancy in the 55th Ohio reg. which served in
western V. He left a widow and one child in Wanhingtoi George M. Harris was u
native of Pa, 27 years of age, and a graduate of West Point of the class of
1868. He was appointed 2d lieut of tin: luth infantry in 1868, and assigned to
the 4th artillery in 1869. S. F. Call, April 30, 1873.
camp,
stampeding their horses and leaving the command on foot.
Whi e the
troops were getting under arms, the Modocs continued to charge and fire,
killing four soldiers and one scout, and wounding seven other men, two
mortally. Hasbrouck rallied his command and charged the Indians at the very
moment the detachment returned, which joining in the light, the Modocs were
pursued three miles and driven into the woods, with a loss of twenty-four
pack-animals, their ammunition, one warrior killed, and several disabled, who
were carried off on horses toward the mountains on Pit River, McKay’s scouts
following.
This was
the first important advantage gained since the beginning of the war. The amount
of ammunition captured led to the conviction that Jack was receiving aid from
some unknown source, a suspicion which he afterward attempted to fix upon the
Klam- atbs, against whom no evidence was ever shown, all the proofs going to
show that the assistance came from Yreka.83
On news of
the attack on Hasbrouck reaching headquarters, Mason was sent to reenforce him
with a hundred and seventy men, and take the command of an expedition whose purpose
was to capture Jack. On arriving at Sorass Lake, Mason received information
from McKay that Jack was occupying a fortified position twenty miles south of
the original stronghold. He proceeded with three hundred men to invest this
position, and keep a watch upon the Modocs until the batteries should come up
to shell them out of it. Rut when the attack was made on the 13th Jack had
again eluded his pursuers. Hasbrouck's command, which had been again mounted,
wTas ordered to give chase toward the south, while Mason remained in
camp, and Perry’s troop made a
“Boyle was of opinion
that in the fight of the 17th the Klamath scouts gave their ammunition to the
Modocs, but Applegate, who was in command, strongly repelled the suspicion,
anti there was< evidence enough of illicit commerce with persona in or
about Yreka.
Husr. Ob,, Vol. II. 4u
dash along
the southern border of the lava-beds to beat up Indians in ambush. A thorough
scouting of the whole region residted in surprising a party of the Cottonwood
Creek band, killing one warrior and two armed women, who were mistaken for
warriors. All the rest of tho inen escaped, leaving five women and as many
children, who were taken prisoners.
From these
women intelligence was gained that after the defeat at Sorass Lake two thirds
of Jack’s following had deserted him, declaring a longer contest useless, and
that he had now no ability to fight except in «ielf-defence. At the last stormy
conference Jack had reluctantly consented to a cessation of hostilities, and
the advocates of peace had retired to their beds among the rocks satisfied; but
when morning came they found their captain gone, with his adherents and all the
best horses and arms, as they believed, towTard Pit River Mountains.
The intelligence that the Modocs were roaming at will over the country caused
the adjutant-general of the militia of California to order to be raised a
company of fifty sharp-shooters, under the captaincy of J. C. Burgess of
Siskiyou county, which was directed to report to Davis.
On the '20th
of May, Hasbrouek brought his prisoners in to headquarters, at Fairchild’s
farm, delivering them to the general, who immediately despatched two Indian
women, Artena and Dixie, formerly employed as messengers by the peace
commissioners, to find the remainder of the Cottonwood band and invite them to
come in and surrender without conditions. Artena had no confidence that the
Modocs would surrender, because of their fear that the soldiers would fall upon
them and slaughter them 1 ti revenge for their atrocities. But Davis
succeeded in convincing her that he could control his men, and she in turn,
after several visits, convinced the hesitating Indians so far that they
consented, especially as Davis had at last sent them word that if they again
refused they
would be
shot down wherever found with a gun in their hands.
About
sunset on the 22d the cry was heard in camp, “Here they cornel Here they are!”
Every man started to his feet, and every camp sound was hushed. In front of the
procession rode Blair, the superintendent of Fairchild’s farm, who sharply eyed
the strolling soldiers. Fifty yards behind him rode Fairchild; behind him the
Modoc warriors, followed by the women and children, all mounted, or rather
piled, upon a few gaunt ponies, who fairly staggered under them. All the men
wore portions oi the United States uniform, and all the women a motley
assortment of garments gathered up about the settlements, or plundered from
the houses pillaged in the beginning of the war. Both men and women had their
faces daubed with pitch, in sign of mourning, giving them a hideous appearance.
Among them were the lame, halt, and blind, the scum of the tribe. Slowly and
silently they filed into camp, not a word being uttered by any one. Davis went
forward a little wTay to meet them, when twelve warriors laid down
their Springfield rifles at his feet, these being but about a third of the
fighting strength of this band. Among them, however, were Bogus Charley, Curly-
headed Doctor, Steamboat Frank, and Shacknasty Jim, four notorious \ illains.
When asked where were Boston Charley and Hooker Jim, Bogus answered that Boston
was dead, and Hooker Jim was searching for his body, neither of which stories
was true. Conscious of his deserts, Hooker was skulking outside the guard, afraid
to come iu, but perceiving that the others were unharmed, he finally presented
himself at camp by running at the top of his speed past the soldiers and
throwing himself 011 the floor of Davis’s tent. The sui'rendered band numbered
sixty-five in all.
The
captive Modocs now endeavored by their humility and obedience to deserve the
confidence of the commander, and if possible to secure immunity from
punishment
for themselves, and Davis thought best to make use of this truckling spirit in
putting an end to the war. From the information imparted by them in several
interviews, it wras believed that Jack was on the head-waters of Pit
River with twenty-five warriors and plenty of horses and arms, and it was
determined that a scouting expedition should take the field in that direction.
On the 23d of May, Jackson left Fairchild’s with his cavalry, marching by the
Lost River ford to Scorpion Point, where the artillery companies were
encamped. On the 25th Hasbrouck marched to the same rendezvous, Perry following
on the 28th, and with him went the expedition and district headquarters. >
Three days
previous to the removal of headquarters, the commander, with five soldiers, twTo
citizens, and four armed Modocs, made a reconnoissance of the lava-beds, the
Modocs behaving with the most perfect fidelity, and convincing Davis that they
could be trusted to be sent on a scout. Accordingly, on the 27th, they were
furnished with rations for four days, and sent upon their errand. Soon they
returned, having found Jack east of Clear Lake, on the old immigrant road to
Goose Lake, preparing to raid Applegate’s farm on the night of the 28th.
Jackson’s
and Hasbrouck’s squadrons, and the Warm Springs scouts were at once ordered to
Applegate’s and to take the trail of the Modocs toward Willow Creek canon, a
despatch being sent to notify the troops en route from Fairchild’s under
Wheaton to hasten and join headquarters at Clear Lake. Elaborate preparations
were made for the capture, skirmish lines being formed on each side of Willow
Creek, and all the prominent points in the vicinity held by detachments.
When all
these preparations had been completed for investing the Modoc camp, a number of
the Indians appeared, calling out to the officers that they did not want to
fight, and would surrender, when orders were
given not
to fire. Boston Charley then came forward and gave up his aims, stating that
the band Were hidden among the rocks and trees, but would surrender if he were
allowed to bring them in. At this moment the accidental discharge of a carbine
in the hands of one of the scouts caused the Indians on the noi’th side of the
creek to disappear; but Boston offered to undertake gathering them in, if
permitted to do so, which permission was given by Green. It happened, however, that
after crossing to the other side of the canon for that purpose, Boston was
captured by Has- brouck’s troops coming up that side, and sent to the rear
under guard, and that Green did not become aware of this fact for two hours,
during which he waited for Bostons return, and the Modoc warriors escapcd,
though some women and children were captured. It being too late to follow the
trail of the fugitives, the troops bivouacked for the night.
On the
morning of the 30th Hasbrouck’s scouts discovered the trail on the north side
of Willow Creek, leading toward Langel] Valley. Owing to the broken surface of
the country, it was not until late in the day that the foremost of the troops
under Jackson, who had crossed the creek and joined in the pursuit, reached the
crest of the rocky bluff bounding Langell Valley on the east, and where the
Modocs were discovered to be. When the skirmishers had advanced to within
gun-shot, Scarface Charley came forward with several others, offering to
surrender, and was permitted to return to the band whom he promised to bring
in. Jack’s sister Mary, being with the troops, went with Scarface, as did also
Cabauiss,89 to both of whom Jack promised surrender in the morning.
But. when morning came, true to his false nature, he had again disappeared with
a few of his followers.
The news
of Jack’s escape being sent to headquarters, Perry was ordered, on the morning
of the
Eureka
West Coast Signal, March 1, 1876; Corr. Oregonian, June 3r 1873.
31st, to
take guides and join in the pursuit,.80 About half-past one o’clock
on the morning of June 1st Perry struck Jack’s trail five miles east of Applegate’s,
and at half-past ten he was surrounded. He came cautiously out of his
hiding-place, glanced uneasily about him for a moment, then assuming a confident
air, went forward to meet Perry and the officers present with him, Trimble,
Miller, and De Witt, with whom he shook hands. He apologized for being captured
by saying “ his legs had given OUt.”®1 The troops were all called
in, and the world was allowed to know and rejoice over the surrender of this
redoubtable chieftain to a military force of 985 regulars and 71 Indian allies.
The number
of Jack’s warriors at the outset was estimated to be sixty. By the addition of
the Hot Creek band he acquired about twenty more. When the Modocs surrendered
there were fifty fighting men and boys, over fifty women, and more than sixty
children. The loss on the side of the army was one hundred in killed and
wounded; forty-one being killed, of whom seven were commissioned officers.
Adding the number of citizens killed, and the peace commissioners, the list of
killed reached sixty-tliree, besides two Indian allies, making sixty-five
killed, and sixty- three wounded, of whom some died. Thus the actual loss of
the army was at least equal to the loss of the Modocs, leaving out the wounded;
and the number of white persons killed more than double.92
Now that
Captain Jack was no more to be feared, a feeling of professional pride caused
the army to make much of the man who with one small compauy armed with rifles
had baffled and defeated a whole regiment of trained soldiers with all the
appliances of modern warfare. But there was nothing in the ap*
"“Henry
Applegate, son, and Charles Putnam, grandson, of .1 esse Apple- giiti, were the
guides who led Perry to Jack's last retreat.
91 i nnual
liepl of Jeff. G. Davis, 1S73.
**The Yreka Union of
May 17, 1S73, makes the number of killed 71- and wounded 07.
pearanee
of Jack to indicate tlie military genius that was there. He was rather small,
weighing about 1-45 pounds, with small hands and feet, and thin arms. 11 ;S
face was round, and his forehead low and square. His expression was serious,
almost morose, his eyes black, sharp, and watchful, indicating cunning,
caution, and a determined will. His age was thirty-six, and he looked even
younger. Clad in soiled cavalry pantaloons and dark calico shirt, his bushy,
unkempt hair cut square across his forehead, reclining negligently on his elbow
on the ground, with a pipe between his teeth, from which smoke was seldom seen
to issue, his face motionless but for the darting of his watchful eyes, he
looked almost like any other savage.93
As to the
manner in which the war was protracted, the cause is apparent. Had Wheaton been
permitted to build his mortar-boats, he would have shelled the Modocs out of
their caves as easily as did GiUem, and it being winter, they would have had to
surrender. The peace commission intervened, the Modocs were permitted to go
where they would, and to carry all the plans of the campaign to the stronghold
to study how to defeat them. The cutting-off of Thomas’ command could only
have happened through a knowledge of the intended reconnoissance. Davis’ plan
was to occupy the lava-beds as the Modocs had, which was a wise one, for. as
soon as they were prevented from returning, it was only a matter of a few days’
scouting to run them down.
There
remains little to be told of the Modoc story. The remainder of the band was
soon captured. Owing to the alarm felt after the massacre of the peace
83 Many
laudatory descriptions of Jack appeared in print. See S. F. Call, June 7, 1873;
Portland Oregonian, June 3, 1873; Red Bluff Sentinel, July 5, 1873. Sconchin
was even more striking in appearance, with a higher frontal brain, and a sensitive
face, showing in its changing expression that he noted and felt all that was
passing about him. Had be not been deeply wrinkled, though not over 45 years
old, his countenance would have been rather pleasing. Scarface, Jack’s high
counsellor, was an ill-looking savage; and as for the others who were tried for
murder, they were simply expressionless and absolutely indifferent.
commissioners
and subsequent escape of the Indians from the lava-beds, a battalion of three
companies of volunteers was organized by authority of Governor Grover to keep
open the road from Jacksonville to Linkville, and to carry to the settlers in
tho Klamath basin some arms and ammunition issued a month previous, in
anticipation of the failure of the peace commission, and which were stored at
Jenny Creek, on the road to Linkville; and Ross had his headquarters in
Lanffell Valley.
Owing to
the alarm of the settlers in Chewaucan, Silver Lake, and Goose Lake valleys,
Hizer’s company had marched out on the Goose Lake road, where they were met by
a company of fifty men from that region under Mulholland, coming in for arms
and ammunition. These, after being supplied, turned back, and Hizer’s company,
reentering Langell Valley just as Green’s squadrons were scouting for Jack,
joined in the chase, and after Green had returned to camp 011 the night of June
3d, captured twelve Modocs, among whom were two of the most noted braves of the
band. Ross sent a telegram to Grover, who ordered him to deliver them to the
sheriff of Jackson county, and to turn over the others to General Wheaton. .
But news
of the capture being conveyed to headquarters at Clear Lake, an escort was
sent to overtake the prisoners at Linkville and bring them back, Lindsay of
the volunteers surrendering them to the United States officer under protest,
upon being assured that Davis intended hanging those convicted of murder.
Such, indeed, was his design, having sent to Linkville for witnesses, among
whom were the women of the Boddy family.8* Before the time ar
94 Hooker .Tim and Steamboat Frank admitted
being of the party who killed and robbod this family, relating some of the
incidents, on hearing whi<'h the two women lost all control of themselves,
and with a passionate ‘lurst of tears and rage commingled, dashed at Hooker and
Steamboat, one with a pistol and the other with a knife. Davis interposed and
secured the weapons, receiving a slight cut on one of his hands. During this
exciting passage both the Indians stood like statues, without uttering a word.
ti. F. (Jail, June. 9, 1873.
rived
'which had been set for the execution, Davis received such instructions from
Washington as arrested the consummation of the design.
This
interference of the government, or, as it was understood, of the secretary of
the interior, so exasperated certain persons whose identity was never discovered,35
that when seventeen Modoc prisoners were en route to Boyle’s camp at Lost River
ford, in charge of Fairchild, they were attacked and four of them killed. The
despatch which arrested the preparations of Davis proposed to submit the fate
of the Modocs to the decision of the war office, Sherman giving it as his
opinion that some of them should be tried by court-martial and shot, others
delivered over to the civil authorities, and the remainder dispersed among
other tribes. This was a sort of compromise with the peace - conym i ssion
advocates, who were still afraid the Modocs would be harmed by the settlers of
the Pa- cilic frontier. So strong was the spirit of accusation against the
people of the west, and their dealings with Indians, that it brought out a
letter from Sherman, in which he said: “These people are the same kind that
settled Ohio, Indiana, and Iowa; they are as good as we, and were we in their
stead we should act just as they do. I know it, because I have been one of
them,”
The whole
army in the held protested against delay and red tape,96 but the
Modoc apologists had their way.
95 Yreka reports charged this act upon the
Oregon volunteers, though they Weri not within 8 miles of the massacre. Two
ruen only were concerned. A.
B. Meacham offered his aid to the secret
service department to find the assassins. H. Ex. Doc., 122, 327, 43d cong. 1st
sess.
90 ‘ I have
no doubt of the propriety and the necessity of executing them on the spot, at
once. 1 had no doubt of my authority, as department commander in the field, to
thus execute a band of outlaws, robbers, and murderers like these, under the
circumstances. Your despatch indicates a long delay of the cases of these red
devils, which I regret. Delay will destroy the moral effect which their prompt
execution would have upon other tribes, as also the inspiring effect upon the
troops.’ Telegram, dated June 5th, in II. Ex. Doc., 122, p. 87, i3d cong. lot
sess. Davis referred here to the desire of the troops to avenge the slaughter
of Canby ami Thomas’ command—a desire which had animated them to endure the
three days’ fight in the lava-beda, and the eleven days' constant scouting.
Portland Oregonian, June 7, 1873.
After
wearisome argument and a decision by Attorney-general Williams,97 a
military commission was ordered for the trial of “Captain Jack and such other
Indian captives as may be properly brought before it.” Those who might be
properly tried were named by the war department as the assassins of Canby,
Thomas, and Sherwood, and “ no other cases whatever,” notwithstanding Grover
had telegraphed to the department to turn over to the state of Oregon the
slayers of her citizens, whom the government refused to try, or allow to be
tried, thus saying in effect that the victims had deserved their fate. At the
same time a petition was addressed to Secretary Delano, by E. Steele, William
H. Morgan, John A. Fairchild, and II. W. Atwell, asking that Scarface Charley,
Hooker Jim, Bogus Charley, Steamboat Frank, Shacknasty Jim, and Miller’s
Charley should be permitted to remain in Siskiyou county, where it was proposed
to employ them on a farm near Yreka. Delano was constantly in receipt of
letters in behalf of the Modocs.
On the
14th of June the Modocs, 150 in number, were removed to Fort Klamath, and
imprisoned in a stockade, after which a large force of cavalry, under Green,
and of infantry, under Mason, made a march of GOO miles through eastern Oregon
and Washington, to overawe those tribes rendered restless aud threatening by
the unparalleled successes of the Modocs. On the 30th of June, in obedience to
instructions from Washington, Davis06 appointed a military com-
97 //. Ex.
Doc122, 88-90, 43d cong, 1st sess.; 8. F. Call, June 9, 1873; N. Y. Tribune, in
Oregonian, June, 1873; N. Y. Herald, June 22, 1873.
98Davis died
Nov. 30, 1879. He was born in Ind., and appointed from that state to West
Point; commissioned 2d lieut 1st artillery June 17, 1848; 1st lieut Feb. 29,
1852; captain May 14, 1861; colonel 22d Ind. vols Aug. 15, 1861; brig.-gen.
vols Dec. 18, 1861; brevet niaj. March 9, 1862, for gallant and meritorious
services at the battle of Pea Ridge, Ark.; brevet lieut-col May 15, 1864, for
gallant and meritorious conduct in the battle of Resaca, Ga; brevet eol May 20,
1864, for gallant and meritorious services in the capture of Rome, Ga; brevet
maj.-gen. of vols Aug. 8, 1864; brevet brig.-gen. March 13, 1865, for gallant
and meritorious conduct in the battle of Kenesaw mountain, Ga; brevet maj.-gen.
for services in the battle of Jonesborough, Ga; and colonel of the 23d infantry
July 28,1866. He came to the Pacific coast as commander of the department of
Alaska, aud was afterwards assigned to the department of Oregon. Hamerdy'a
Army Reg. for One Hundred Years, 1779-1879.
mission,
consisting of Colonel Elliott, captains Mendenhall, Hasbrouck, and Pollock,
and Lieutenant Kingsbury. Major Curtis was appointed judge-ad- vocate. The
trial began on the 5th of July. The witnesses for the prosecution were Meacham,
Dyar, Eldery, Anderson, four of the Modocs who had turned state’s evidence, aud
the interpreters. Jack made use of his witnesses oidy to try to fix the blame
of collusion upon the Klamaths. Three of his witnesses alleged that the
Klamaths assisted them, and that Allen David had sent them messages advising
them to hostilities; but this, whether true or false, did not affect their
case. When he came to address the commission, he said that he had never done
anything wrong before killing General Canby. Nobody had ever said anything
against him except the Klamaths. He had always taken the advice of good men in
Yreka. He had never opposed the settlement of the country by white people; on
the contrary, he liked to have them there. Jackson, he said, came to Lost River
and began firing when he only expected a talk; and that even then he ran off
without fighting. He went to the lava-beds, not intending to fight, and did not
know that the settlers were killed until Hooker Jim told him. He denied that
Cauby’s murder was concerted in his tent, accusing those whom General Davis had
employed as scouts. If he could, he would have denied killing Canby, as in his
last speech he did, saying it was Shacknasty Jim who killed him.
Only six
of the Modocs were tried, and four were hanged, namely, Jack, Sconchin, Black
Jim, and Boston Charley. Jack asked for more time, and said that Scarface, who
was a relative, and a worse man than he, ought to die in his stead. Sconchin
made some requests concerning the care of his children, and said, although he
did not wish to die, he would suppose the judge had decided rightly. Black Jim
sarcastically remarked that he did not boast of his good heart, but of his
valor in war He did not try
to drag
others in, as Jack had done, he said, and spoke but little in his own dcfenee.
If it was decided that he was to die, he could die like a man. Boston Charley
was coolly indifferent, and affected to despise the others for showing any
feeling. “I am no half woman,” he proclaimed. “I killed General Canby, assisted
by Steamboat Frank and Bogus Charley.”
On the 3d
of October the tragedy culminated, and the four dusky souls were sent to their
happy hunting- ground, nevermore to be molested by white men." By an order
from the war department, the remainder of the baud were removed to Fort I). A.
Russell in Wyoming, and subsequently to Fort McPherson in Nebraska, and lastly
to the Quapaw agency in the Indian Territory; but the lava-beds, which can
never be removed or changed, will ever be inseparably connected in men’s minds
with Captain Jack and the Modocs in their brave aud stubborn fight for their
native land and liberty—a war in some respects the most remarkable that ever
occurred in the history of aboriginal extermination.
59 //. Ex.
Doc., 122, 290-328, 43d cong. 1st sess.; S. F. Ca’t, Oct. 4, 1873; Red Bluff
Sentinel, Oct. 11, 1873; S. F. JJuiletin, Oct. i, 13, 20, 1873.
POLITICAL.
INDUSTRIAL, AND INSTITUTIONAL.
1862-1887.
Refttbltcan
Loyalty -Legislatt-re of 1862—Legal-ten der and Specific Contract—Public
Buildings—Surveys and Boundaries—Military Boad—Swamp and Agricultural
Lands—Civil Code—The Negro Question—Later Legislation—Governors Gibbs, Woods,
Grover, Chadwick, Thayer, and Moody—Members of Congress.
On the 9th
of April, 1862, the republicans of Oregon met in convention, and adopting union
principles as the test of fitness for office, nominated John R. McBride for
representative to congress; Addison C. Gibbs for governor; Samuel E. May for
secretary of state; E. N. Cooke, treasurer; Harvey Gordon, state printer;1
E. D. Shattuck,2 S. C. judge from 4th judicial
1 Harvey Gordon was a native of Ohio, and
a surveyor. He first engaged in polities in 1800, when he associated himself
with the Statesman, to which he gave, though a democrat, a decidedly loyal
tone. He died of consumption, at Yoncalla, a few months after his election,
much regretted. Sac. Union, July 1863.
’■'Ihave
mentioned Shattuck in connection with the Pacific University. He was born in
Bakersiield, Pec. 31, 18*24, and received a classical education at Burlington.
After graduating in 1848, he taught in various seminaries until 1831, when he
began to read law, and was admitted to the bar in New York city in Nov. 1852.
Thence he proceeded to Oregon in Feb. 1853, teaching 2 years in the Pacific
University. In 185G he was elected probate judge in Washington co., in 1857 was
a member of the constitutional convention, and soon after formed a law
partnership with David Logan; was a member of the legislature in 1858, and held
numerous positions of honor and trust from time to time. He was elected judge
in 1802, and held the office five years; was a^ain elected judge in 1874, and
held until 1878. He received a flattering vote for supreme judge and U. S.
senator. In every position Shattuck has been a modest, earnest, and pure man.
His home wa^ in Portland. Representative Men, of Or., 158.
YV. Carey Johnson was
born in Ross co., Ohio, Oct. 27, 1833, and came to Oregon with his father,
Hezekiah, in 1845. After learning printing he studied law, and was admitted to
practice in 1855. He was elected prosecuting attor-
( 637 )
district;
W. Carey Johnson, prosecuting attorney of the same; Joseph G. Wilson,
prosecuting attorney for the 3d judicial district, Andrew J. Thayer for the 2d,
and J. F. Gazley for the 4th.
The
nominees of the anti-administration party were A. E. Wait, who resigned his
place upon the bench to run for congressman; John F. Miller for governor;
George T. Vining for secretary of state ; J. B. Greer, state treasurer; A.
Noltner, state printer; W. W. Page, judge from the 4th judicial district ;
prosecuting attorney of that district, W. L. McEwan.
The
majority for all the principal union candidates was over 3,000, with a
corresponding majority for the lesser ones.3 Gibbs was installed
September 10th at the methodist church in Salem, in the presence of the
legislative assembly.4 By act of June 2, 1859, the official term of
the governor began on the second Monday of September 1863, and every four years
thereafter. This, being the day fixed for the meeting of the legislature, did
not allow time for the graceful
ney of Oregon City in
1858, city recorder in 1858, and prosecuting attorney for the 4th district in
18G2. Iu 1805-0 he held the position of special attorney under Caleb Cushing to
investigate and settle the Hudson’s Bay Co.’s claims. Ill 1800 he was elected
state senator, and in 18S2 rau for U. S. senator. He resided in Oregon City,
where he practised law. His wife was Josephine, daughter of J. F. Devore.
a<Jibbs'
Aotes on Or. Hid., MS., 19; Tribune Almanac, 1863, 57; Or. Argil*, June 14,
1862; Or. Statesman, June 23, 1863.
‘House: Jackson,
Lindsey Applegate, S. D. Van Dyke; Josephine, J. D. Fay; Douglas, It. Mallory,
James Watson; Umpqua, W. H. Wilsou; Coos and Curry, Archibald Stevenson; Lane,
V. S. McClure, A. A. Hemenway, Jl. Wilkins; Benton, A. M. Witliani, C. P.
Blair; Linn, H. M. Brown, John Smith, Wm M. McCoy, A. A. McOally; Marion, I. R.
Moores, Joseph Engle,
C. A. Reed, John Minto; Polk, B. Simpson, G.
W. Richardson; Yamhill, Joel Palmer, John Cummins; Washington, Ralph Wilcox;
Washington and Columbia, E. W. Conyers; Clackamas, 1*'. A. ColLard, M. Ramsby,
T. Kearns; Multnomah, A. J. Duiur, P. Wasserman; Clatsop and Tillamook, P. W.
Gillette; Wasco, 0. Huinason; speaker, Joel Palmer; clerks, S. T. Church,
Hi.nry Cummins, Paul Craudell; sergeant-at-arms, H. B. Parker; door-keeper,
Joseph Myers.
Senate: Jackson, J.
Wagner; Josephine, I), S. Holton; Douglas, S. Fitz- hugh; Umpqua, Coos, and
Curry, J. W. Drew; Lane, James Munroe, C. E. Chrisman; lienton, A. G. Hovey;
Linn, li. Curl, D. W. Ballard; Marion, John W. Grim, William Greenwood; Polk,
William Taylor, Yamhill, John R. McBride; Clackamas and Wasco, J. K. Kelly;
Multnomah, J. H. Mitchell; Washington, Columbia, Clatsop, and Tillamook, W.
Bowlby; president, \ . Bowlby; clerks, S. A. Claike, W. B, Daniels, Wiley
Chapman; sergeant-at- arms, R. A. Barker; door-keeper, D, M. Fields.
retirement
of one executive before tlie other came into office. Whiteaker took notice of
this fault in legislation, by reminding the representatives, in his biennial
message, that should it ever happen that there should not be present a quorum,
or from any cause the organization of both branches of the legislature should
fail to be perfected on the day fixed by law, the legislature could not count
the vote for governor and declare the election, and that consequently the new
governor could not be inaugurated. This, he said, would open the question as to
whether the governor elect could qualify at some future day. This palpable
hint was disregarded. The second Monday in September fell on the 8th, the
organization was not completed until the 9th, and the inauguration followed on
the 10th, no one raising a doubt of the legalit3T of the
proceedings. On the 11th, nominations were made in joint convention to elect a
successor to Stark, whose senatorial term would soon expire, and Benjamin F.
Harding of Marion county was chosen.6
5 The nominations made were B. F, Harding,
George H. Williams, E. I. Applegate, O. Jacobs, Thos H. Pearne, E. F. Maury, J.
H. Wilbur, A. Holbrook, II. L. Preston, W. T. Mattock, II. W. Corbett, and
John Whiteaker. Says Lteady: ‘Benjamin F. Ilarding, or, as we commonly call
him, Ben. Haril- ing, is about 40 years of age, and a lawyer by profession. lie
was born iu eastern Pennsylvania, where he grew up to mail’s estate, when he
drifted out west, and after a brief sojourn in those parts, came to Oregon in.
the summer of 18o0, and settled near Salem, where he has ever since resided,
fie was secretary of the territory some years, and has been a member of both
state and territorial legislatures. He was in the assembly that elected Nesmith
ami Baker, and was principal operator in the manipulations that produced that
result. He is descended from good old federal ancestors, and of course is down
on this rebellion and the next one on general principles. Following the example
of his household, he grew up a whig, but entering the political field first in
Oregon, w hert at that time democracy was much in vogue, he took that side, and
stuck to it moderately until the general dissolution in 1800. He left the state
just before the presidential election, and did not vote. If he had, although
rated as a Douglas democrat, the probability is he would have voted for Lincoln
He is devoid of all ostentation or special accomplishment, but has a big head,
full of hard common sense, and much of the rare gift of keeping cool and
holding his tongue. He is of excellent habits, is thrifty, industrious, and
never forgets No. 1. Ii] allusion to his reputed power of underground scheming
and management among his cronies, he has long been known as “Subterranean Ben.”
’ Thomas H. Peame, one of the aspirants for the senatorial position, preacher,
and editor of the Pacific Christian Advocate, had, as eould be expected, a
large following of the methodist church, vhich was a power, and the friendship
of Governor Gibbs, who was himself a methodist. But he had no peculiar fitness
for the place, and received much ridicule from friends ot Harding.
Strong
union sentiments prevailing, disloyalty to the federal government in any form
was out of fashion. None but the loyal could draw money from the state
treasury. But the most stringent test was the passage of an act compelling the
acceptance of United States notes in payment of debts and taxes, as well as an
act providing for the payment of the direct tax levied by act of congress in
August 1861,® amounting to over 035,000, seven eighths of the annual revenue of
the state.7
The
legal-tender question was one that occasioned much discussion, some important
suits at law, and considerable disturbance of the business of the Pacific
coast. The first impulse of a loyal man was declare his willingness to take the
notes of the government at par, and in Oregon many so declared themselves. The
citizens of The Dalles held a meeting and pledged themselves to trade only with
persons “patriotic enough to take the faith of the government at par.” The
treasurer of Marion county refused to receive legal-tenders at all for taxes;
while Linn received them for county but rejected them for state tax; Clackamas
received them for both state and county tax; and Columbia at first received
and then rejected them.8 The state treasurer refused to receipt for
legal-tenders, which subjected the counties to a forfeiture of twenty per cent
if the coin was not paid within a certain time. In 1803, when greenbacks were
worth .forty cents on a dollar, Jackson, Josephine, Douglas, Lane, Benton,
6 The internal revenue law took effect in
August 1862. Lawrence W. Ooe of The Dalle* was appointed collector, and Thomas
Frazier assessor. W. S. Matlock was appointed U. S. depositary for Oregon to
procure U. S. revenue stamps. Or. Statesman, Aug. 11 find A’os 3, 1862.
7 According to the message of Gov.
Whiteaker, there were g40.311.66 in the treasury on the 7th of Sept., 1862. To
draw the entire amount due the U. S. on the levy would leave a sum insufficient
to curry on the state govt, therefore §10,000 was ordered to bn paid at any time
■when
called for, and the remaining $2,),0<i0 t,ny time after the 1st of March,
1K63; and the treasurer should pay the whole amount appropriated in coin. Or.
Statesman, Oct. 27, 1862.
8S. F
Bulletin, Dec. 18, 1862; S. F. Aha, Nov. 18, 1862; Or. Argus, Dec,
6, 18G2; Or. Statesman, Dec. 22, 1862; Or.
Gen. Lav'H, 92,
and
Clatsop tendered theii’ state tax in this currency, which the state treasurer
refused to receive. These counties did not pay their taxes.
It was
contended by some that the constitution of Oregon prohibited the circulation of
paper money. It did, in fact, declare that the legislative assembly should not
have power to establish or incorporate any bank; and forbade any bank or
company to exist in the state with the privilege of making, issuing, or putting
into circulation any notes or papers to circulate as money. Such a conflict of
opinions could not but disturb business.9
In an
action between Lane county and the state of
’Place avarice and
patriotism in opposition among the masses, ami the latti is sure in time to
give way. Throughout all, California held steadily, and loyally withal, to a
metallic iurrency. Business v as done upon honor; but there were those both in
California and Oregon wlio, if patriotic on no other occasions, took advantage
of the law to pay debts contracted at gold prices with greenbacks purchased for
40 or 90 cents on a dollar ■with coin. After much
discussing and experimenting, Oregon finally followed the example of
California. In California and Oregon no public banks bad ever existed, a'l
being owned by private individuals, being simply banks of deposit, w here the
proprietors 1<>aned their on n capital, and, to a certain extent, that of
their depositors. They issued no bills, and banked alone upon gold or its equivalent
They therefore refused to receive greenbacks on general de posit; and tuese
notes were thrown upon the market to be bought aud sold at their value
estimated in gold, exactly reversing the money operations of the east. In New
York gold was purchased at a premium with greenbacks; in California and Oregon
greenbacks were purchased at a discount with gold; in New York paper money was
bankable, and gold was not offered, being withdrawn fro) circulation; in San
Francisco and Portland gold only was bankable, and paper money was offered in
trade at current rates, and not desired except by those who hau bills to pay
in New York. In .Tan 1SG3 the bankers a'id business men of Portland met and
agreed to receive legal-ten- ders at the rates current in San Francisco, as
published from time to time in the daily papers of Portland by Ladd ami Tilton,
bankers. The merchants of Salem soon followed; then those of The Dalles.
Finally the merchants published a black-list containing the names of those who
paid debts iu legal tenders, to be circulated among business men for their
information. Or. Statesman, Jan. 5, 13(33; Portland Oregonian, Aug. 30, 18G4;
and bills of goods w'ere headed ‘Payable in U. S. gold coin.’ These methods
protected merchants in general, but did not keep the subject out of the courts.
Able arguments were advanced by leading lawyers to prove that the treasury
notes were not money, as the constitution gave no authority for the issuance of
any but gold and silver coin. To these arguments were opposed others, equally
able, that the government had express power to coin money, and that money might
be of any material which might be deemed most lit, as the word ‘ money ’ did
not necessarily mean gold, silver, or any metal. James Lick vs William Fsuikner
and others, in Or. Statesman, Dec. 29, 1802. The supreme court of California
held that legal-tenders were lawful money, but that it did not follow that
everj kind of lawful money could be tendered in the payment of every
obligation. Portland Ongouian, Aug. 30, 1804.
Hl»r. Ob., Vol. U 4)
Oregon,
the court, Judge Boise presiding, held that the act of congress authorizing the
issue of treasury notes did not make them a legal tender for state taxes, and
did not affect the law of the state requiring state taxes to be paid in coin.
In another action between private parties, the question being on the power of
congress to make paper a legal tender, the court ruled in favor of congress. On
the other hand, it was decided by Judge Stratton that the law of congress of
February 25, 18G2, was unconstitutional. This law made treasury notes a legal
tender for all debts, dues, and demands, which included the salaries of judges,
which were paid from the state treasury. Hence, it was said, came the decision
of a supreme judge of Oregon against the power of congress.
Turn and
twist tlie subject as they would, the currency question never could be made to
adjust itself to the convenience and profit of all; because it was a war
measure, and to many meant present self-sacrifice and loss. For instance, when
greenbacks were worth no more than thirty or forty cents on the dollar in the
dark days of the spring of 1863, federal officers in California and Oregon were
compelled to accept them at par from the government, and to pay for everything bought
on the Pacific coast at gold pr'ces, greatly advanced by the eastern inflation.
The merchants, however, profited largely by the exchange and the advanced
prices; selling for gold and buying with greenbacks, having to some extent and
for a time the benefit of the difference between gold and legal tenders. To
prevent those who contended for the constitutionality of the act of congress
from contesting cases in court, California passed a specific contract law
providing for the payment of debts in the kind of money or property specified
in the contract, thus practically repudiating paper currency. But it quieted
the consciences of really loyal people, who were unwilling to seem to be
arrayed against the govern
ment, and
yet were opposed to the introduction of paper currency of a fluctuating value.10
The Oregon
legislature of 1864 followed the example of California, and passed a
specific-contract law. No money should be received in satisfaction of a
judgment other than the kind specified in such judgment; and gold and silver
coins of the United States, to the respective amounts for which they were legal
tenders, should be received at their nominal values in payment of every
judgment, decree, or execution. A law was enacted at a special session of the
legislature in 1865, called to consider the thirteenth amendment to the
constitution of the United States, making all state, county, school, and
military taxes payable in the current gold and silver coin of the government,
except where county orders were offered for county taxes. This law removed
every impediment to the exclusive use of coin which could be removed under the
laws of congress, and was in accordance with the popular will, which adhered to
a metallic currency.
By the
constitution of Oregon, requiring that at the first regular session of the
legislature after its adoption a law should be enacted submitting the question
of the location of the seat of government to the vote of the people, the
assembly of 1860 had passed an act calling for this vote at the election of
1862.11 The constitution declared that there must be a majority of
all the votes cast, and owing to the fact that almost every town in the state
received some votes, there was no majority at this election; but at the
election of 1864 Salem received seventy- nine over all the votes cast upon the
location of the capital, and was officially declared the seat of government.
As the constitution declared that no tax should be levied, or money of the
state expended, or
111 See opinion of the supreme court of Cal.
on the specific-contract act, in Portland Oregonian, Aug. 20and Sept. 2, 1804;
Or. Statesman, July 22, 1804; ■S'. P.
Alta, Jan 29, 1868.
11 Ur. Gen. Laws, 94;
Or. Laws, 1800, 68-9.
debt
contracted, for the erection of a state-house prior to the year 18G5, this
decision of the long-vexed question of the location of the capital was timely.
Ten entire sections of land had been granted to the state on its admission to
the union, the proceeds of which were to be devoted to the completion of the
public buildings, or the erection of others at the seat of government; said
lands to be selected by the governor, and the proceeds expended under the
direction of the legislature. Owing to the obstacles in the way of locating the
public lands, the public-buildings fund, intended to be derived therefrom, had
not yet begun to accumulate in 18G4, nor was it until 1872 that the legislature
appropriated the sum of $100,000 for the erection of a capitol. It will be
remembered that the penitentiary building at Portland had from the first been
unnecessarily expensive, and ill-adapted to its purpose, and that the state had
leased the institution for five years from the 4th of June, 1859, to Robert
Newell and L. N. English.12
Governor
Gibbs, in a special message to the legislature of 1862, proposed a radical
change iu the management of the penitentiary.13 He suggested that
1 Leven N.
English, born near Baltimore, in March 1792, removed when a child to Ky. lie
was a volunteer in the war of 1812, taking part in several batting. ()n the
restoration of peace he removed to 111., then a w ildtr- ness, where the Blat'k
Hawk war again called upon him to volunteer, this t’me as eapt. of n company.
In 1836 he went to Iowa, where he erected a fouling mill; and in 1840 he came
to Oregon, settling near Salem. English's Mills of that place were erected in
1846. On the breaking-out of the Cayuse war, English and two of his sons
volunteered He had 12 children by his first wife, who died in 1851. By a second
wife he had 7. He died March 3,
1875. San Joat Pioneer, Sept. 2, 1877; Tram. Or.
Pioneer Asso., 1875-6.
18 As it was the practice of the lessees of
the penitentiary to work the convicts outside of the enclosure, the most
desperate and deserving of punishment often found means of escape. Twenty-five
prisoners had escaped, twelve had been paidoned in the last two years of
Whiteaker’s administration, and fivr l ad finished the term* for which they
were sentenced, leaving twenty-five still in confinement. The crimes of which
men had been convictcd and incarcerated in the penitentiary since 1853 were,
arson 1. assault with intent to kill 15, assault with intent to commit rape 1,
rape 1, assisting prisoners to escape 3, burglary 8, foigery 3, larceny 58,
murder 1, murder in the second degree 12, manslaughter 6, perjury 1, receiving
stolen goods 1, riot 1, robbery 3, threat to extort money 1, not certified
7—123, making an average ol 13<J commitments annually during a period of 9
years For the period from Sept. 1862 to Sept. 1864 there was a marked increase
of crime, consequent upon the immigration from the southern -states of many of
the criminal classes, who thus avoided the
the
working of convicts away from the prison grounds should bo prohibited, and a
system of manufactures introduced, beginning with the making of brick for the
public buildings; and advised the selection of several acres of ground at the
capital, and the erection of temporary buildings for the accommodation of the
convicts. The legislature passed an act making the governor superintendent of
the penitentiary, with authority to manage the institution according to his
best judgment. Under the new system the expenses of the state prison for two
years, from November 1, 1862, to September 1, 1864, amounted to §25,000, about
$16,000 of which was earned by the convicts.14 As soon as the seat
of government was fixed, the legislature created a board of commissioners for
the location of lands for the penitentiary and insane asylum, of which board
the governor was chairman; and who proceeded to select 147 acres near the
eastern limits of the town, having a good water-power, and being in all respects
highly eligible.15 At this place were constructed temporary
buildings, as suggested by Gover nor Gibbs, and during his administration the
prisoners were removed from Portland to Salem. Under his successor still
further improvements were made in the condition and for the security of the
prisoners, but it was not until 1871 that the erection of the present fine
structure was begun. It was finished in 1872, at a cost of $160,000.16
draft. In
these 2 yearn 33 convicts were sent to the penitentiary, 12 fur larceny, 5
intent to kill, 4 burglary, 3 murder in the 1 st degree, 2 manslaughter,
1 rape, 1
seduction, 1 avion, 1 receiving stolen goods. The county of Wasco furr.ishe'd
just J of these criminals, showing the direction of the drift. Or. Journal
House, 1864, ap. 35-53.
uT‘ke
warden who, directed by the governor, produced these satisfactory results was
A. C. K. Shaw, who, by the consent of the legislature, was subsequently
appointed superintendent by the governor.
15 The land was purchased of Morgan L.
Savage, at $45 per acre, and the water-power of the Willamette WooMen
Manufacturing Company for §2,000. George H. Atkinson was employed to visit some
of the western states, and to visit the prisons for the purpose of observing
the best methods of building, and laying out the grounds, with the arrangement
of industries, and all matters pertaining to the most approved modern
penitentiaries. Or. Jour. Home, 1865, ap. 7-12.
isGibbs’
Noteson Or. Hist., MS., 20-22; Or. Code, 1862, ap. 71-3; Or. Lam, 1806, 95-8;
Or. Legis. Docs, 18G8, 7-10, 14; U. S. Educ. Rtyt, 54S-57, 41st cong. 3d sess.
See description in Murphy’s Oregon Directory, 1873, 197-8.
Previous
to 1862 no proper provision had been made for the care of the insane. The
legislature invested Governor Gibbs with authority to select land for the
erection of an asylum at Salem, and to contract for the safe-keeping and care
of the patients; but the state not yet being able to appropriate money for suitable
buildings, the contract was let to J. C. Hawthorne and A. M. Loryea, who
established a private asylum at East Portland, where, until a recent date, all
of these unfortunates were treated for their mental ailments.17 It
was not until about 1883 that the state asylum, a tine structure, was
completed.
The
legislature of 1862 passed an act for the location of the lands donated to the
state, amounting in all to nearly 700,000 acres, besides the swamp-lands
donated by congress March 12, 1860, and Governor Gibbs was appointed
commissioner for the state to locate all lands to which the state was
entitled, and to designate for what purposes they should be applied.18
A similar
act had been passed in I860, empowering Governor Whiteaker to select the lands
and salt springs granted by act of admission, by the donation act of 1850 for
university purposes, and by the act of March 12, 1860, donating swamp and
overflowed lands to the state, which the failure of the commissioner of the
general land-office to send instructions had rendered inoperative. The
legislature of 1860 had also provided for the possessory and preemptory rights
of the 500,000 acres donated to the state, by which any person,
17 In 1860 the
insane in Oregon were twenty-three in number, or a per cent of 0.438; in 1864
there were fifty-one patients in the asylum from a population of 80*000,
giving a per cent of 0.638. The percentage of cures was 32.50. Or. Jour. House,
186'2, ap. 19; Or. Jour. Home, 1864, ap. 7-8. In Sept. 1870 the asylum
contained 122 persons, 87 males ami 35 females. Of the whole number admitted in
1870-2, over 42 per cent recovered, and 7 per cent died. The building and
grounds there were not of a character or extent to meet the requirements of the
continually increasing number of patients. Governor’s message, in Portland
Oregonian, Sept. 13, 1866; Nash’s Or., 149; Or. Insane Asylum 1’ejit, 1872;
Portland Wfst Shore, March 1S80. The number of patients in 1878 was 233, of whom
166 were males. Rept of C. C. Strong, Visiting Physician, 1878, 0.
10 Or. Code,
1862, 105-7; Zabriskie s Land Law, 659 63.
being a
citizen, or having declared his intention of becoming such, might be entitled
to, with the right to preempt, any portion of this grant, in tracts nut less
than 40 nor more than 320 acres, by having it surveyed by a county surveyor;
the claimants to pay interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum upon the
purchase money, at the rate of $1.25 an acre, the fund accruing to be used for
school purposes. Whenever the government survey should be made, the claimant
might preempt at the general land-office, through the agency of a state
locating agent. I>y this act the state was relieved of all expense in selecting
these lands; but Governor Whiteaker gave it as his opinion that, the act was in
conflict with the laws of the United States, in so far as the state taxed the
public lauds, which opinion was sustained by the general land-office, as well
as that the state could have no control over the lands intended to be granted
until after their selection and approval at that office.19 The act
was accordingly repealed, after the selection of about 22,000 acres, and
another passed, as above stated.
Much
difficulty was experienced in finding enough good land subject to location to
make up the amount to which the state was entitled for the benefit, of common
schools and the endowment of an agricultural college,20 on account
uf the neglect of the government to have the lands surveyed, the surveys having
been,
19 Or. Jour.
House, 1862, ap 27; Or. Statesman, Sept. 15, 1862.
10 Or. Code, 1802, ap 109-10. The U. S. law
making grants to agricultural colleges apportioned the land in quantities
equal to 30,000 ac.’es for each senator and representative in congress to v
liich the states were respectively entitled by the apportionment of I860. By
this rule Oregon was granted 90,000 acres. Id., 60-4. The selections made
previous to Gibbs’ administra tion were taken in the Willamette and Umpqua valleys.
To secuio the full
a.nount of
desirable lands required much careful examination of the country. The
agricultural-Cullege grant was taken between 1862 and 1 SO I in the KU.m ath
Valley, and a considerable portion of the common-school lands also Eastern Oregon,
in the valley of the Columbia, w as also searched for good locations for the
state. D. P. Thompson and George H. Belden were the principal surveyors engaged
in making selections Belden made a complete map of Oregon from the best
authorities. Previous to this the maps wore verj imperfect, the best being one
made by Preston, and the e,arliust by J, W. L'rutch in 1855.
much
impeded by Indian hostilities, and the high prices of labor consequent on gold
discoveries. Upon the petition of the Oregon legislature, congress had extended
the surveying laws to the country east of the Cascades, and preparations were
making to extend the base line across the mountains east from the Willamette
meridian, with a view to operations ia the county of Wasco and the settlements
of Umatilla, Walla Walla, John Day, and Des Chutes valleys.21 But
congress failed to make an appropriation for the purpose, contracts already
taken were annulled, and little progress was made for two years, during which
the squatter kept in advance of the surveys upon the most valuable lauds.
During the year ending June 30, 1860, the service was prosecuted along the Columbia
River in the neighborhood of The Dalles, iu the Umatilla Valley, and also iu
the Klamath country, near the California boundary, which was not yet
established.
An act was
passed by congress June 25, ] 860, for the survey of the forty-sixth parallel
so far as it constituted a boundary between Oregon and Washington, which work
was not accomplished until 1864, although the length of the line was only about
100 miles, from the bend of the Columbia near Fort Walla Walla to Snake River
near the mouth of the Grand Rond River.2" There was much delay
in procuring the ser-
aLand Off.
Rept, 1858, 29 30.
22 While this matter was under consideration
in congress, it was proposed in the senate that a committee should inquire into
the expediency of reuniting Washington to Oregon. Sen. Misc. Doc., 11, 36th
cong. 2d sess., a proposition which, so far as the Walla Walla Valley was
concerned, would have been received with great favor by the state, the natural
boundary of which is indicated by the Columbia and Snake rivers. This was the
boundary fixed in the constitution of Oregon, from which congress had departed.
A motion was made in the legislature to annex at several different times. See
Or. Jour. House, 1865, 50-73j Memorial of Or. leg. in 1870, in U. S. II. Misc.
Doc., 23, i., 41st cong. 3d sess.; Or. Laws,1870, 212-13; Or. Jour. Sen., 1868;
U. S. Sen. Misc. Doc., 27,42d cong. 3d sess.; Salem Statesman, Feb. 14, 1871;
Salem Mercury, March 18, 1871. As late as 1873 Senator Kelly introduced (i bill
to annex Walla Walla county to Oregon, so as to conform the boundary to that
named in the constitutional convention. On the other hand, the people of Washington
would have been unwilling to resign this choice region. The matter was revived
in 1875-6, when a committee of the U» S. house rep.
vices of
an astronomer and surveyor who would undertake this survey for the small amount
appropriated, the country being exceedingly rough, and including the crossing
of the Blue Mountains.23 The contract was finally taken by Daniel G.
Major late in 18S4.2*
By the
time the northern boundary was completed, the mining settlements of eastern
Oregon demanded the survey of the eastern boundary from that point near the
mouth of the Owyhee where it leaves Snake Kiver and continues directly south.
The same necessity had long existed for the survey of the 4'2d parallel
between California and Oregon, which was not begun till 1867, when congress
made an appropriation for surveying the Oregon and Idaho boundaries as well,
Major again taking the contract.25 Owing to the continuous Indian
wars in eastern Oregon, as late as 1867 it was necessary to have a military
escort to protect the surveying parties and their supply trains; and it often
happened that the forces could not he spared from the scouting and fighting
which kept them actively employed. 1 !ut in spite of these obstacles, in 1869
there had been surveyed of the public lands in Oregon 8,368,564 out of the
60,975,360 acres which the state contained; the surveyed portions covering the
largest areas of good lauds in the most accessible portions of the state;
leaving at the same time many considerable bodies of equally
reported
favorably to the rectification of the Oregon boundary, but the change •was not
made. H. Misc. Doc., 23, 44th cong. 2d sess.; Gong. Globe, 1875
6, 300, 4710; H. Com. Reptt 764, 44th
cong. 1st sess.
23 The amount provided was $4,500. Sur.
-gen, Pengra recommended J. W. Perrit Huntington, a Connecticut man, an
immigrant of 1849. After a brief residence in Oregon City he settled in Polk
county, farming and teaching school, but removing to Yoncalla subsequently,
where he married Mary, a daughter of Charles Applegate, and where he followed
farming and surveying. He was a man of ability, with some eccentricities of
character. He was elected to the legislature in 18G0, and was one of the most
earnest of the republicans. In 1862 he was appointed superintendent of Indian
affairs, and again by Andrew Johnson in 1807- He died at his home in Salem
June 3, 18G9. Salem Unionist, in Roseburg Ensign, June 12, 1SG9; Deady's
Scrap'Book, 29.
24 Land Off. Rept, 1SI34, 9; Portland
Oregonian, Oct. 13, 1SG4.
25Or. Jour.
House, 1864, 42; Or. Argus, June 22, 18G3; Land Off. Reptj 18G7, 113-14.
good land,
-which would at a later period be required for settlement.28
The first
sale of public lands in Oregon by proclamation of the president took place in
1857. Only ten or eleven thousand acres were sold, netting the government
little more than the expenses of surveying its lands in Oregon.27
The homestead law of 18G2 conferred benefits on actual settlers nearly equal to
those of the donation law, though less in amount. The later arrivals in Oregon
had only begun to avail themselves of its privileges, when the president again
offered for sale, :n October 1862, 400,000 acres, by which act the
public lands were temporarily withdrawn from preemption and homestead
privileges, and preemptors were forced to establish their claims and pay the
price of their lands immediately in order to secure them against the danger of
being sold at auction by the government. This was felt to be a hardship by
many who had before the passage of the homestead law been glad to preempt., but
wTho now were desirous of recalling their preemption and claiming
under the homestead act; especially as the more honest and industrious had put
all their money into improvements, and could only meet the new demand by borrowing
money at a high rate of interest. But as only about 13,500 acres were sold when
offered,
'6
Land Off. Itept, 1869, 225. There were surveyed, up to June 1878, 21,127,802;
there remaining of unsurveyed public lauds and Indian reservations 39,849,49s
acres. In the remainder was included the state swamp-lands, of which onlj a
portion had been selected. U. S. //. Ex. Doc., ix. 18, 45th cong. 3d sess. Of
tho surveyed lands, 139,597 acres were either sold or taken under the homestead
or timber-culture acts from June 30, 1877, to July 1, 1878. Ibid., 146-100.
Dept Agric. liept, 1874-5, 67; see also Zahris- Icie’s Public Land Laws of the
United States, containing instructions for obtaining lauds, and laws and
decisions concerning lands, where are to be found many descriptions of the
country, with the resources of the Pacific states, collected from official
reports. San Francisco, 1870. Compare U. S. //. Ex. Doc., i. pt 4, vol. iv., pt
i., 32-6, 156-60, 290-319, 452-8, 504--8, 41st cong. 3d sess.; U. S. Sec. Int.
Rtpt, pt i., 41, 58, 268-76, 42d cong. 2d sess.; U. S. II. Ex. Doc., 170, x.,
42d cong. 2d sess.; U. S. Sec. Int. Rept, pt i. 11, 16 17, 226-37, 280-99,
313-14; Salem Willamette Farmer, Aug. 2, 1873; Salem Unionist, Dec. 17, 1866.
21 The
expenses of the year 1857. for surveying the public land?, were §11,746.66, and
the returns from their sale, $13,233.82. Land Off. Rept, 1858, 43 9.
few claims
could have lapsed to the government, even if their preemptions were not paid
up.
It is not
surprising that during the public survey* certain individuals should seize the
opportunity to secure to themselves large bodies of land by appearing to
assume necessary enterprises which shoul 1 only bo undertaken by the
government; and it might be questioned whether the legislature had a proper
regard to
the
interests of the state in encouraging such enter. O O
prises.
l>y an act of congress, approved July 2,1864, there were granted to the
state, to aid in the construction of a military wagon-road from Eugene City
across the Cascade Mountains by the way of the middle fork of the Willamette,
near Diamond peak, to the eastern boundary of the state, alternate sections of
the public lands designated by odd numbers, for three sections in width, on
each side of said road. When the legislature met, two months after the passage
of this act, it granted to what called itself the Oregon Central Military Road
Company all the lands and right of way already granted by congress, or that
might he granted for that purpose; with no other provision than that the lands
should be applied exclusively to the construction of the road, and that it
should be and remain free to the U. S. government as a military and post road.
It was, however, enacted that the land should be sold in quantities not exceeding
thirty sections at one time, on the completion of ten continuous miles of road,
the same to be accepted by the governor, the sales to be made from time to time
until the road should be completed, which must be within five years, or,
failing, the land unsold to revert to the United States.2*
What first
called up the idea was the report of Drew on his Owyhee reconnaissance in
18(34, showing that a road might be made from Fort Klamath to the
23 Or. Jour, Sen., 1864; Special Laivst 36-7;
Jacksonville Sentinel, May 3, 1S64; Zabriskie's Land Laws, 636-7.
Owyhee
mining country at no great expense, and passing through a region rich in
grass, timber, minerals, and agricultural lands. The grant amounted to 1,920
acres for each mile of road built, less the lands already settled on. The
distance was about 420 miles. Of this enormous grant, exceeding all granted to
the state on its admission to the union by 150,000 acres, excepting the
swamp-lands, whose extent was unknown, about one half, it was expected, would
be available. At the minimum price of $1.25 an acre, the one half would amount
to $1,008,000. Along the first twenty miles of the road, from Eugene Citjr
to the Cascade Mountains, the best lands were taken up; upon representing which
to congress, other lands were granted in lieu of those already claimed, to be
selected from the public lands. The law allowed a primary sale of thirty
sections, or 19,200 acres, with which to begin the survey, which land was
offered for sale in March 1865. With its own and the capital accruing from
sales of land and stock, the company—consisting at first of seventeen
incorporators29—pushed the road to the summit of the Cascade
Mountains in the autumn of 1867. This was the most difficult and expensive
portion of the work, and though by no means what a military road should be, was
accepted by the governor. It was never much used, and was almost entirely
superseded in 1868 by a wagon-road from Ashland to the Klamath Basin, by the
old Scott and Applegate pass of the Cascades, discovered in 184G.
A few
months after the act authorizing a road through their country, Huntington,
superintendent of Indian affairs, succeeded in treating with the Klamath and
Modoc tribes, and a portion of the Shoshones, by
; 9 W. H.
Ilanchett, Martin Blanding, A. W. Patterson, J G. Gray, E.
F. Skinner, Joel Ware, D. M. Risdon, S
Ellsworth, J. B. Underwood, A. S. Patterson, J'. Mulhollan, Harvey Small, A. S.
Powers, J. L. Bromley, J. H. McClung, Henry Parsons, and li. J. PeDgra. Their
capital stock was first $30,000, but subsequently raiwed to $100,000; share*
$250 each. For particulars, see Pengra’s liept Or. Cent. Military Hoad, a
pamphlet of (!3 pages, advertising the enterprise and giving a description of
the country. Evyerie City Juurual, July li, 21, 28, and Aug. 4, 11, 1S66; S. F
Bulletin, ijept. 20, 1805.
which a
reservation was set off, of a considerable extent of country between tlie
point where any road crossing the mountains near Diamond peak must strike the
plains at their eastern base and Warner’s Mountain. The right of the
government to lay out roads through the reservation was conceded by the
Indians, but it was not in contemplation that the government should have the
power to grant any of the reservation lands to any company constructing such a
road; the treaty having been made before the company was formed. Nevertheless,
as the survey of the reservation lands proceeded, which was urged forward to
enable the company to secure its lands, the odd sections along the line of the
military road where it crossed the reservation were approved to the state to
the extent of over 93,000 acres. The Indians, or their agents, held, very
properly, that their lands, secured to them by treaty previous to the survey of
the military road, were not public lands from which the state or the company
could select; and also that the state would have no right to violate the
conditions of the treaty by bringing settlers within the limits of the
reservation. By an act amendatory of the first act granting the lands to the
state, congress indemnified the state, and through the state the company, by
allowing the deficit to be made up from other odd sections not reserved or
appropriated within six miles on each side of the road.31' The
Oregon Central Military Road Company, after doing what was necessary to secure
their grant, and finding it inconvenient to be taxed as a private corporation
on so large an amount of property that had never been made greatly productive,
sold its lands to the Pacific Land Company of San Francisco, in 1873,
Ind. Aff.
Rept, 1874, 75; Cony. Globe, 1866-67, pt iii . app. 17'J, i!0th cong. 2d sess.
It would Heem from the fact that ia 1878-9 a bill was before congress asking
for a float on public lands in exchange for those embraced wiltim the
reservation and claimed by tho. 0. C. M. 11. Co., that the bill of 1866 was not
intended to indemnify for these lands, though the language is such as to lead
to that understanuing. The bill of 1S78-9 did not pass; and if the that is not
an indemnity bill, *hen the Indian land* are ii jeopardy. S.
1 . Chadwick, in Historical Comeptmdenee,
MS.; Ashland Tidings, Feb. 14, 187!); S. F. Bulletin, July 11, 1872.
and thus
this magnificent gift to the state passed with no adequate return into the
hands of a foreign private corporation.
In the
matter of the swamp-lands, nothing was done to secure them during a period of
ten years,31 it being held that the right to them had lapsed through
neglect, and Gibbs having had enough to do to secure the other state lands.
George L. Woods, who in 18GG succeeded Gibbs as governor, made some further selections
for school purposes. Not all of his selections had been approved when, in 1870,
L. F. Grover was elected governor. The agricultural-college lands which had
been selected in the Klamath Lake basin had been declared not subject to
private entry by the land- office at Iloseburg, within which district the lauds
lay, and that office had refused to approve the selection. The Oregon
delegation in congress procured the passage of an act confirming the
selections already made by the state where the lists had beeu filed in the
proper land-office, in all cases whore they did not conflict with existing
legal rights, and declaring that the remainder might be selected from any
lands in the state subject to preemption or entry under the laws of the United
States; with the qualification that where the lands were of a price fixed by
lawT at the double minimum of $2.50, such land should be counted as
double the quantity towards satisfying the grant. This was followed by the
establishment of another land-office, called the Linktor. district, iu the
Klamath country, and the approval of the agricultural-college selections.32
The internal improvement grant33 was also fully se-
51 Thfi
lejrislaturfi in 1870 memorialized congress for an extension of time for
locating the salt landa grant. Or. Juur. Sen., 1870, 211; I'. S. Mvk. Doc., 2;), i., 41st cong. 3il sess,. but it
wm permitted to lapse. Message of Gov. Thayer, 1882, 1!».
s’ Grover's
Message, 1872, p. 12-13; Cong. Globe, 1871-2, app. 702; Zahriskin'* Land Laws,
sup. 1877, 27, 73.
83 See A pptudix to Governor’s Message for
1879, which contains the official correspondence on the conlirmatiun of the
state lands, and is au interesting document; also Jachiiisville Sentinel from
Oct. 14 to Dec. 9, 1871.
cured to
the state during the administration of Governor Grover.
From the
time when the swamp-iand grant was supposed to have lapsed through neglect, as
decided by Whiteaker, and apparently coincided in by his successors, up to
x\.ugust 1871, no attention was given to the subject. Grover, however, gave the
matter close scrutiny, and discovered that the same act which required the
state to select the swarnpdands then surveyed within two years from the
adjournment of the legislature next following the date of the act, and
O O 5
which
requirement had been neglected, also declared that the land thereafter to be
surveyed should be chosen within two years from the adjournment of the
legislature next following a notice by the secretary of the interior to the
governor that the surveys had been completed and confirmed. No such notice
having been given, the title of the state to the swamp-lands was held to be
intact, and a complete grant and indefeasible title were vested in the state
by the previous acts of congress, which could not be defeated by any failure on
the part of the United States to perform an official duty. The small amount of
swamp-lands surveyed in 1860, and which were lost by neglect, could not much
affect the grant should it never be recovered.
In
pursuance of these views, the legislature of 1870 passed an act providing for
the selection and sale of the swamp and overflowed lands of the state.34
This act made it the duty of the land commissioner for Oregon, to wit, the
governor, to appoint persons to make the selections of swamp and overflowed
lands, and make returns to him, when they would be mapped,
84 The first clause of this sentence is a
quotation from a letter of Governor Grover to the secretary of the interior,
dated Nov. 9, 1871, a year after the passage of the act, but only three months
after ascertaining from W. H. Odell, then surveyor-general and successor to E.
L. Applegate, that no correspondence whatever was 011 file in the
surveyor-general’s office concerning the swamp-lands. Therefore the legislature
must have passed an act in pursuance of information received nine months after
its passage. See Or. Governor’s Messaget app.,
1872, 21-32; Or. Laws, 1870, 54-7.
described,
and offered for sale at not less than one dollar per acre; twenty per cent of
the purchase money to be paid within ninety days after the publication of a
notice of sale, and the remainder when the land had been reclaimed. Reclamation
was defined to consist in cultivating on the land in question for three
consecutive years either grass, cereals, or vegetables, on proof of which the
remainder of the purchase money could be paid, and a patent to the land obtained,
provided the reclamation should be made within ten years. No actual survey was
required, but only that the tract so purchased should be described by metes and
bounds; therefore, the twenty per cent which constituted the first payment was
a conjectural amount. The law had other defects, which operated against the
disposal of the lands to noil-speculative purchasers who desired to obtain
patents and have their titles settled at once. It was discovered, also, in the
course of a few years, that draining the land, which the law required,
destroyed its value. The law simply gave the opportunity to a certain class and
number of men to possess themselves of large cattle- ranges without anything
like adequate payment.
The
intention of the original swamp-land act of congress, passed September 28,
1850, was to enable a state subject to overflow from the Mississippi River to
construct levees and drain swamp-lands. The benefits of this grant were
afterwards extended to other states, including Oregon. Rut Oregon had no rivers
requiring levees, and, strictly speaking, no swamp-lands. It had, indeed, some
small tracts of beaver-dam land, and some more extensive tracts subject to
annual overflow, on which the best of wild grasses grew spontaneously. To
secure these overflowed lands, together with others that were not subject to
inundation, but could be embraced m metes and bounds, was the purpose of the
framers and friends of the swamp-land act of 1870 in the Oregon legisla
ture.35
It was a flagrant abuse of the trust of the people conferred upon the
legislative body, and of the powers conferred upon the officers of the state by
the constitution.36 It was a temptation to speculators, who rapidly
possessed themselves of extensive tracts, and. enriched themselves at the
expense of the state, besides retarding settlement.
One effect
of the swamp-land act was to bring in conflict with the speculators actual
settlers who had squatted upon some unsurveyed portions of these lands, and
cultivated them under the homestead law. If it could be proved that the land
settled on belonged to the state under the swamp-land act, the settler was
liable to eviction. Wherever such a conflict existed, appeal was had to the
general land-office, the case wTas decided upon the evidence, and
sometimes worked a hardship, which was contrary to the spirit and intention of
the government iu granting lands to the state.
The
legislature of 1872 urged the Oregon delegation to secure an early
confirmation of title, no patent, however, being required to give the state a
title to what it absolutely owned by law of congress. It also passed an act to
provide for the sale of another class
35 It was
said that some of the members who took an active part iu the passage of the
bill had prepared their notices and maps to seize the valuable portions of the
swamp-lands before voting on it. Two members made out their maps covering the
same ground, and it depended on precedence in filing notices who should secure
it. One of them called on the secretary after nightfall to file his notice and
maps, but was told that the governor had not yet signed the bill, on which he
retired, satisfied that on the morning he could repeat his application
successfully. The bill was signed by the governor that evening, and his rival,
who was more persistent, immediately presented his notice and maps, which being
filed at once, secured the coveted land to him. Jacksonville Sentinel, Dec. 16,
1871; Sacramento Union, Jan. 15, 1872. See remarks on swamp-lands, in Gov.
Chadwick's Message, 1878, 35-40.
3tJThe board
of swamp-land commissioners consisted of L. F. Grover, governor, S. F.
Chadwick, secretary, L. Fleischner, treasurer, and T. H, Cann, clerk of the
state land department. Section 6 of the swamp-land law declares that, ‘as the
state is likely to suffer loss by further delay in taking possession of the
swamp-lands within its limits, this act shall take effect and be in force from
and after its approval by the governor; provided, that in case the office of
commissioner of lands is not created by law, the provisions of this act shall
be executed by the board of commissioners for the sale of school and university
lands’—that is, the above-named officers of the state. Or, Laws, 1870, 56-7.
Hist. Ob., Vol. II.
42
of
overflowed lands on the sea-shore; and another act appropriating ten per cent
of all moneys received from the sale of swamp, overflowed, and tide lands to
the school fund.
The
swamp-lands which offered the greatest inducement to speculators were found in
the Klamath Lake basin, which was partially surveyed in 1858. A resurvey in
1872 gave a greatly increased amount of swamp-land, and changed the character
of the surveys materially.^ This was owing to a decision of the supreme court
of the United States, that the shores of navigable waters, and the soils under
them, were not granted by the constitution to the United States, but were
reserved to the states respectively.88 The amount selected and
surveyed as swamp -land in 1874 was nearly 107,000 acres. Tn 1876 it was over
300,000, with a large amount remaining unsurveyed. A considerable proportion
of these selections were made in the Linkton district, about Lower Klamath,
Tule Goose, and Clear lakes, and about the other numerous lakes in
south-eastern Oregon, and they led finally to the settling-up of that whole
region with stock-raisers, who, when they have exhausted the natural grasses,
will dispose of their immense possessions to small farmers who will cultivate
the soil after purchasing the lands at a considerable advance on the price paid
by the present owners.
As late as
1884, sw indling schemes on a vast scale were still being attempted.39
The history of the land grants shows that the intention of congress was to
benefit the state, and encourage immigration, but these benefits were all
diverted, bringing incalculable injury to the community. Seldom was a demand of
the legislature refused.40 Iu 18G4 congress passed an act
31 Or. Laws,
1872,129-33,2204U, 128-9; U.S. Sen. Misc. Doe.22,42d cong. 3d sess; Portland
Oregonian, Jan. 27,1873; Rept Sec. Int., 1873,223-35,2.>7-93.
38 See Or. Legist Docs, 1874, p. 17-18; S.
F. Examiner,Oct. 18,1874; Salem Mercury, Feb. 5, 1875; Albany State Rights
Democrat, Jan. 22, 1875.
39 See S. F. Chronicle, Feb. 29, 1884.
40 In 1864 the U. S. senate com. on land
grants refused a grant of land to construct a road from Portland to The Dalles.
Sen. Com. Reptt 34, 38th cong,
X&t sess.
amending
the act of September 27, 1850, commonly called the donation law, so as to
protect settlers who had failed to lile the required notice, and allowing them
to make up their deficiencies in former grants. A large amount of land was
taken up under this act.41 In the same manner the state was
indemnified for tho school lands settled upon previous to the passage of the
act donating the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections for the support of
schools. In 187G congress passed an act for the relief of those persons whose
donation claims had been taken without compensation for military reservations,
which reservations were afterward abandoned as useless. The settlers who had
continued to reside on such lands were granted patents the same as if no
interruption to their title had occurred.
According
to the act of admission, five per cent of the net proceeds of sales of all
public lands lying within the state which should be sold after the admission of
the state, after deducting the expenses incident to the sales, was granted to
the state for the construction of public roads and improvements. The first and
ouly public improvement made with this fund was the construction of a canal
and locks at the falls of the Willamette River opposite Oregon City, begun in
1870 and completed in 1872. After this use of a portion of the
public-improvement fund, the five-per-cent fund was diverted from the uses
indicated by law, aud by consent of congress converted to the common-school
fund, to prevent its being appropriated to local schemes of less importance to
the state.43
llZabriskie’$
Land Laws, 636-7; Portland Or. Htrald, Feb. 28, 1871; Sec. Int. Hept, 77-86,
44th cong. 1st sess.
nOr. Lows,
1870, 14; Governor's Message, app., 1872, 73 4, Drady’s Hist. Or., MS., 52;
Portland Standard, Jan. 7, 1881. The hrst embezzlement of public money in
Oregon -was frowi the tive-per-eent fund, amounting to $5,424.25. The drafts
were stolen by Sam. E. May, secretary of .state, anil applied to his own
nt<e. Or. Governor’s Message, app., 79-113; Woods’ Brcoi- leetions, MS., 7
S). It 'was this crime that brought ruin on Jose Applegate, one- of the
bondxmen, whose home was sold at forced sale in 1883, atter long litigation. S.
E. May was a young man of good talents and fine personal appearance, though with
a skin as dark as his charai'.ter, and which might easily have belonged to a
mulatto or mestizo.
The same
disposition was made of the fund arising from the sale of the 500,000 acres to
which the state was entitled on admission, by the act of September 4, 1841.
When the state was organized, the framers of the constitution offered to take
this grant in addition to the common-school lands, instead of for public improvements
; but on accepting the Oregon constitution, congress said nothing concerning
this method of appropriating the lands, from which it was doubtful whether the
law of congress or the law of the state should govern in this case. But as the
lands belonged absolutely to the state, it was finally decided to devote them
to school purposes.
By 1885
half of the 500,000-acre grant was sold, and the remainder, most of which was
in eastern Oregon, was, some time previous, offered at two dollars an acre.
From this, and the sale of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, the
five-per-cent fund, money accruing from escheats, forfeitures, and all other
sources provided by law, the school fund amounted in 1881 to about $600,000,
which was loaned on real estate security at ten per cent per annum. The number
of acres actually appropriated by congress for common schools amounted to
3,250,000, of which about 500,000 had been sold, the minimum price being $1.25
an acre.43
The
legislature of 1868 passed an act creating a board of commissioners for the
location of the 90,000 acres appropriated by congress for agricultural colleges,
and to establish such a college. By this act a school already existing at the
town of Corvallis was adopted as the Agricultural College, in wliigh students
sent under the provision of the act should receive a
;3 Portland
Standard, -Tail 7, 1881 The fund does not seem proportioned to the amount of
land. At the lowest price fixed by law, the lands sold must have aggregated
$025,000 up to the date just mentioned. Out of this, after taking the cost of
the canal mil looks at Oregon City, $200,000, there would be a considerable
amount to be accounted for more than should be credited to the account of
expenses. But the figures j,re drawn from the best authority obtainable,
collegiate
education in connection with an agricultural one. Each state senator w’as
authorized to select one student, not less than sixteen years of age, who
should be entitled to two years’ tuition in this college; and the president of
the college was permitted to draw upon the state treasurer for eleven dollars
aud twenty- five cents per quarter for each student so attending; the money to
be refunded out of the proceeds of the agricultural lands when selected.
This was
done because the act of congress making grants for the establishment of state
colleges of agriculture required these schools to be in operation in 1867. The
time was subsequently extended five years. Meanwhile the board of
commissioners, John F. Miller, I. H. Douthit, and J. C. Avery, proceeded H
to locate the agricultural-college lands, chiefly in Lake county. In 1881,
23,000 acres had been sold at $2.50 an acre, giving a fund of $60,000 for the
support of the agricultural department of this school.
Of the
state-university lands, about 16,000 acres remained unsold in 1885 of the
46.000 acres belonging to this institution This remainder, located in the
Willamette Valley, was held at two dollars an acre. An act locating the state
university at Eugene City was passed by the legislature of 1872. The people of
Lane county, in consideration of the location being made in their midst, made a
gift to the state of the grounds necessary, and the building erected upon it,
u No
building was erected, nor was the location of the college secured to Corvallis.
By simply adopting the Corvallis institution as it stood, a great difficulty
was removed, and expense saved, while the land grant wras secured.
Twenty-two students were entered in 1868. In 1871 the people of Benton co.
presented 35 acres of land to the college to make a farm, on which the agricultural
students labored a short time each day of the school-week, receiving compensation
therefor. Wheat and fruit were cultivated on the farm; fertilizers are tested,
and soils analyzed. Lectures are given on meteorology, botany, frnit-culture,
chemistry, and assaying. The building was enlarged, aud the apparatus increased
from time to time, with collections of minerals. The farm ■was valued
at $5,000, the buildings at $6,000. In 1876 about 100 students took the
agricultural course, all of whom were required to perform a small amount of
labor on the farm, and to practise a military drill. The state makes an annual
appropriation of $5,000 toward the current expenses of the college. Dept Agric.
Repts 1871-2, 325; 1875, 397, 492; Or.
Laics, 1868, 40-41; Or. Lcfjid. Docs, 1870, app. 12-16; Or. Laws, 1872, 133-5;
Governor’s Message, 1872, 12-13; Portland West Shore, Oct. 1SS0.
amounting
in value to $52,000. The university school was opened in 1876, when the fund
arising from the sale of its lands reached $75,000, nearly $10,000 of which sum
arose from sales of the Oregon City claim, previous to the legislative act
which restored that property to the heirs of John McLoughlin.45
The land
appropriated to the erection of public buildings having been all sold and the
funds applied to these purposes, there remained, in 1885, unsold of the state
lands of the above classes some three million acres, then held at from $1.25
to $2.50 an acre, besides such of the swamp-lands as might revert to the state,
the tide and overflowed lands of the sea-shore, and the salt-springs land.
Owing to the greater ease with which the level lands were cultivated, the
prairies were first selected, both by private claimants and government agents.46
The principal amount of the state lands still unsold iti 1885 were the brush
lands of the foot-hills and ridges of western Oregon, the timbered lands of the
mountains, and the high tablelands of eastern Oregon, which, compared with the
fertile and level valley lands of the state, were once esteemed comparatively
valueless. This, however, was a hasty conclusion. The brush lands, when
cleared, proved to be superior fruit lands; the high plateaus of eastern
Oregon, owing to a clayey soil not found in the valleys, produced excellent
wheat crops, and the timbered lands were prospective’!? valuable for lumber. In
fact, it became necessary for the government, in 1878, to impose a fine of
from $100 to $1,000 for trespassing on the forest lands, for their protection
from milling companies with no right to the timber. At the same time the
government of
45 Or. Laws,
1872, 47-53, 96-7; Nash’s Or., 162; Victor’s Or., 178. Much information may be
gleaned concerning the status of schools and the condition of the public funds
from Or. School Land Sales Rept, 1872; Or. Legist. Docs, 1868, doc. 4* 41-3.
461 find the
principal statements here set down collected by the clerk of the board of land
commissioners, M. E. P. McCormac, for the Portland Stan’ dard, Jan. 7, 1881;
Ashland Tidings, Jan. 29, 1877; Sac. Uaim, Jan. 15, 1872; S. F. Post, Sept. 9,
1873.
fered to
sell its timber, in tracts of 1G0 acres, at $2.50 an acre; and lands containing
stone quarries at the same price. The total number of acres of timber in the
state is estimated at 761,000, or a little over thirty-one per cent of the whole
area.
As it
became a known fact that the cultivation of timber tended to produce a moisture
which was lacking in the climate and soil of the high central plains, congress
passed an act by the provisions of which a quarter-section of land might be taken
up, and on a certain portion of it being planted with timber, a patent might
be obtained to the whole. Under this act, passed in 1873 and amended in 1874,
between 18,000 and 19,000 acres were claimed in the year ending July 1, 1878,
chiefly in eastern Oregon; while in the same year, under the homestead act,
nearly 86,000 acres were taken up,47 the whole amount of government
land taken in Oregon in 1878 being 139,597 acres. The rapid settlement of the
country at this period, together with the absorption of the public lands by
railroad grants, seems likely soon to terminate the possessory rights of the
government in Oregon, the claims of settlers still keeping in advance of the
United States surveys.
To the
legislature of 1862 was submitted a Code of Civil Procedure, with some general
laws concerning corporations, partnerships, public roads, and other matters,
prepared by a commission consisting of Deady, Gibbs, and Kelly, which was
accepted with some slight amendments; and an act was then passed authorizing
Deady to complete the code and report at the next session. This was done, and
the code completed was accepted in 1864, but four members voting against it on
the tinal ballot, and they upon the ground of the absence of a provision
prohibiting
17H. Ex.
Doc., i. pt 5, 14& 60, 45th cong. 3d sess.; Victor’s Or., 9S; Nash’s Or.,
163; Nordkuff, N, Cal., 211; Dejit Ayric. llc/it, 1875, 331; Ash laud Tidings,
Nov 16, 1877; Cong. Globe, 1876-7, 137; 1877-8, 32.
persons
other than white men from giving evidence in the courts.
The
subject of the equality of the races had not lost its importance. The
legislature of 1862, according to the spirit of the constitution of Oregon,
which declared that the legislative assembly should provide by penal codes for
the removal of negroes and rnulat- toes from the state, and for their effectual
exclusion, enacted that each and every negro, Chinaman, Hawaiian, and mulatto
residing within the limits of the state should pay an annual poll-tax of five
dollars, or failing to do so should be arrested and put to work upon the public
highway at fifty cents a day until the tax and the expenses of the arrest aud
collection were discharged.43
By the
constitution of Oregon, Chinamen not residents of the state at the time of its
adoption were forever prohibited from holding real estate or mining claims
therein. By several previous acts they had been "taxed and protected” in
mining as a means of revenue, the tax growing more oppressive with each
enactment, and as the question of Chinese immigration43 was more
discussed, the law of 1862 being intended to put a check upon it. All former
law's relating to mining by the Chinese having been repealed by a general act
in 1864, the legislature of 1866 passed another, the general features of which were
that no Chinamen not born in the United
iaOr. Gen,
Laws, 1S45, Cl; Or. Code, 1S02, app. 76-7.
19 Since tlie Chinese question la presented
at length in another portion of this work, it will not be considered in this
place. In Oregon, as in California, there was much discussion of the problem of
the probable effect of Chinese immigration and labor on the affairs of the
western side of the continent; and occasionally an outbreak against them
occurred, though no riots of importance have taken place in this state. During
the period of railway building they were imported in larger numbers than ever
before. The Oregon newspapers have never earnestly entered into the arguments
for and against Chinese immigration, as the California papers have done. The
Or. Deutsche Zeitumj lias published some articles in favor of it, and an
occasional article in opposition has appeared iu various journals: but there
hail not been any violent agitation on the subject up to the year 18S1. See
Boise Statesman, April 20, 18G7; Or. Legisl. Dorn, 1870, doe. 11, 5-9; Or.
Lawn, 1870, 103—5; Eugene City Journal, March 14, 1SG8; S. F. Call, Oct. 21,
1868; McMi tnville Courier, Sept. 18, 18GS; S. F. Times, Sept. 2,1808, .Ian.
18,18(JU; Or. Deutache-Zeltuny, Jmy 17, 1869.
States
should mine in Oregon, except by paying four dollars per quarter, upon
receiving a license from the sheriff; failing in the payment of which the
sheriff might seize and sell his property. Any person employing Chinamen to
work in the mines was liable for this tax on all so employed. Chinamen
complying with the law should be protected the same as citizens of the United
States; and twenty per cent of such revenue should go to the state.50
With the
laws against negroes the hand of the general government was destined to
interfere, first by the abolition of slavery in all United States territory,
and finally when citizenship and the right of suffrage were extended to the
colored race. The resolution of congress providing for the amendment to the
constitution of the United States abolishing slavery was passed February 1,
1865. By the 23d of September seventeen states had adopted the amendment.
Secretary Seward wrote to Governor Gibbs askinar for a decis- inn, to obtain
which the legislature w-as convened at Salem on the 5th of December51
by a call of the
50 Or. Laws, 1866, 41-6. In 1861 the revenue
to the state from the tax on Chinamen was $539.25, collected in the counties of
Jackson and Josephine; or a total of §10,785, which shows a mining population
in those two counties of about 900. Or. Jour. House, 1862, ap. 05-6.
51 This was the same elccted in 1864, and
had held their regular session in September and October of that year. It
consisted of the following members— Senate: Baker and Umatilla counties, James
M. Pyle; Benton, A. G. Ilovey; Coos, Curry, and Douglas, G. S. Hinsdale;
Clatsop, Columbia, Washington, and Tillamook, Thos II. Cornelius; Clackamas, H.
XV. Eddy; Douglas, James Watson; Jackson, Jacob Wagner; Josephine, C. M.
Caldwell; Lane, C. E. Chrisman and S. B. Cranston; Linn, Bartlett Curl and D.
W. Ballard; Marion, John W. Grim and William Greenwood; Multnomah, J. II.
Mitchell; Polk, John A. Frazer; Wasco, L. Donnel; Yamhill, Joel Palmer.
House:
Baker county, Samuel Colt and Daniel Chaplin; Benton, J. Quinn Thornton and
James Gingles; Coos and Curry, Isaac Hacker; Clatsop, Columbia, and Tillamook.
P. W. Gillette; Clackamas, E. S. S. Fisher, H. W. Shipley, and Owen Wade;
Douglas, E. W. Otey, P. C. Parker, and A. Ireland; Jackson, James D. Fay, T. F.
Beall, and W. F. Songer; Josephine, Isaac Cox; Lane, G. Callison, J, B.
Underwood, and A. McCornack; Linn, Robert Glass, J. N. Perkins, J. P. Tate, and
H. A. McCartney; Marion, I. R. Moores, J. C. Cartwright, J. J. Murphy, and IL
L. Turner; Multnomah, P. Wasserman, L. H. Wakefield, and John Powell; Polk,
James S. Holman, C. Lafollet; Umatilla, L. F. Lane; Wasco, A. J. Borland;
Washington, W. Bowlby and D. O. Quick; Yamhill, Geo. W. Lawson and H. Warren.
The place of Wade was filled in 1865 by Arthur Warner; the place of Lafol- lrt
by Isaac Smith; the place of Henry Warren by J, M. Pierce. Borland was absent,
aud had no substitute. Or. Jour. House, 1864 and 1865; Or. Jour« Senate, 1864;
National Almanac, 1864.
executive.
The message of Governor Gibbs was dignified aud argumentative in favor of the
abolition of slavery. It was impossible to get a unanimous vote in favor of the
measure, on account of the democratic members who had been elected by the
disunion element. The amendment was, however, adopted, with only seven dissenting
votes in both houses,62 by a joint resolution, on the 11th of
December, and the decision telegraphed to Washington.
When the
fourteenth amendment was presented to another Oregon legislature in the
following year, it was adopted with even less debate, and the clauses of the
constitution of Oregon which discriminated against the negro as a citizen of
the state were thereby made nugatory.65
The
remainder of the political history of Oregon w ill be brief, and chiefly
biographical. The republican party of the United States in 1864 again elected
Abraham Lincoln to be president. Oregon’s majority wTas over
fourteen hundred. At the state election of this year J H. D. Henderson54
was elected repre-
62Gibbs
says, in his Notes on Or. Hist., MS., 25, that ‘every republican except one
voted for it, and every democrat against it.’
-sSee
Or. Jour. Senate, 18GG, '25, 23, 27, 31, 34, 35, 50, 58, 61. Tlie state senate
in 1806, in addition to Cranston, Cornelias, Donnell, Hinsdale, Palmer, Pyle,
and Watson, who held over, consisted of the following newly elected members :
Benton county, J, R. Bayley; P>aker, S. Ison; Clackamas, W. C. Johnson;
"(irant, L. 0. Sterns; Linn, R. It. Crawford, William Cyrus; Lane, H. C.
Huston; Marion, Samuel Brown, J. C. Cartwright; Multnomah, J. N. Dolph, David
Powell; Polk, W. D, Jetfries; Umatilla, N. Ford. House; Baker, A. C. Loring;
Baker and Union, VV. C. Hindman; Benton,
F. A. Chenoweth, James Gingles; Clackamas, J.
D. Locey, J. D. Garrett, W. A. Starkweather; Clatsop, Columbia, and Tillamook,
Cyrus Olney; Coos and Curry, F. G. Lockhart; Douglas, B. Herman James Cole, M.
M. Melvin; Jackson, E. D. Fou Iray, Giles Welles, John E. Ross; Josephine,
Isaac Cox; Multnomah, W. W. Upton, A. Rosenheim, J. P Garliek, John S. White;
Marion, J. I. 0. Nicklin, W. 5. Parris, 0, B. Roland, B. A. Witzel, L. S.
Davis; Polk, J. Stouffer, J. J. Dempsey, William Hall; Grant, Thus II. Brents,
M. M. McKean; Union, Jam(ss Hender*liott; Umatill?, T. W. Avery, H. A. Gehr; WTasco,
0. Humason, F. T. Dodge; Yaunhill, J. Lamson, R. B. Laughlin; Lane, John
Whiteaker, J. E. I’. Withers, R. B. Cochran; Linn, E. B. Moore,
G. R. Helm, J. Q. A. Worth, J. R. South, W. C.
Baird; Washington, G. C. Daj’, A. Ilinman. Or Jour. Senate, 1863.
54 Henderson wap a Virginian and a Cumberland
presbyttrian minister, modest and sensible man of brains. He came to Oregon in
1S51 or 1852, auJ resided at Eugene, where he was principal of an academy and
clerk in *he survryor-gentral’b office. Deady''s Scrap-Book, 77.
sentative
to congress; J. F. Gazley, George L. Woods, and H. N. George, presidential
electors. The senate chose George H. Williams for the six years’ term in tho
United States senate, beginning in March 1865.
With the
close of the war for the union the political elements began gradually to
reshape themselves, many of the union party who had been Douglas democrats
before the war resuming their place in the democratic ranks whan the danger of
disunion was past. To the returning ascendency of the democratic party the
republicans contributed by contests for place among themselves. In 1866 A. C.
Gibbs and J. H. Mitchell were both aspirants for the senatorship, but Gibbs
received the nomination in the caucus of the republican members of the
legislature. Opposed to him was Joseph S. Smith, democratic nominee. The
balloting was long continued without an election, owing to the defection of
three members whose votes had been pledged. When it became apparent that no
election could be had, the name of H. W. Corbett was substitued for that of
Gibbs, and Corbett was elected on the sixteenth ballot. Corbett was not much
known iu politics except as an unconditional union man. Personally he was not
objectionable. He labored for the credit of his state, and endeavored to
sustain republican measures by introducing and laboring for bills that promoted
public improvements.53
In 1868
the legislature had returned to something like its pre-rebellion status,56
passing a resolution in both houses requesting senators Williams and Corbett
to resign for having supported the reconstruction acts.67 The
senate of the United States returned the resolution to both houses of the
Oregon legisla
55 Henry W. Corbett was bom at Westboro,
Mass., Feb. 18, 1S27; received an academic education, and engaged in mercantile
pur suits, first in New York, and then in Portland in 1849, where he acquired a
handsome fortune. He was an ardent unionist from the first. Cong. Directory,
31, 40th cong. 2d sess.
48 There
were 13 democrats and 9 republicans in tho senate, and 17 republicans and 30
democrats in the house. Camp's Year-Book, 1869, 7«58.
57 See
Williams’ speech of Feb. 4, ISOS; Or, Jour, IJouse)
1868,123-5; Or. Laws, 1868, 97-8.
ture by a
vote of 126 to 35.38 Williams and his colleague secured a grant of
land for the construction of a railroad from Portland to the Central Pacific
railroad in California, for which they received the plaudits of the people,
and especially of southern Oregon. When the senatorial term of the former
expired he was appointed attorney-general of the United States, and afterward
chief justice, but withdrew his name, and retired to private life in Portland.
In 186G
George L. Woods was elected governor in opposition to James K. Kelly. To avenge
this injury to an old-line democrat, the legislature of 1868 59 cou-
spired to pass a bill redistricting the state so as to increase the democratic
representation in certain sections and decrease the republican representation
in
68 The
resolution of censure just mentioned originated in the house. The senate at the
same session passed a resolution rescinding the action of the legislature of
1800 assenting to the fourteenth amendment, which resolution \va3 adopted by
the house. Or. Joar. Senate, 1868, 3*2-6. The act was one of political enmity
merely, as the legislature of 18C3 had no power to annul a compact entered into
for the state by any previous legislative body. The senate of Oregon assumed,
however, than any state had a right to withdraw up to the moment of
ratification by three fourths of all the states; and that the states of
Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Alabama, South Carolina, and Georgia were crcated
by a military despotism against the will of the legal voters of those states,
and consequently that the acts of their legislatures were not legal, and did
not ratify the fourteenth amendment. The secretary of state for Oregon was
directed to forward certified copies of the resolution to the president and
secretary, and both houses of congress. But nothing appears in the proceedings
of either to show that the document ever reached its destination.
5a Senate:
Baker county, S. Ison; Washington, Columbia, Clatsop, and Tillamook, T. R.
Cornelius; Benton, J. R. Baylcy; Umatilla, N. Ford; Clackamas, I). P. Thompson;
Union, James Hcndershott; Douglas, Coos, and Curry, B. Herman, C. M.
Pershbaker; Josephine, B. F. Holtzclaw; Yamhill, S. C. Adams; Jackson, J. 'N.
T. Miller; Lane, II. C. Huston, R. B. Cochran; Linn, Wm Cyrus, R. II. Crawford;
Marion, Samuel Miller, Samuel Brown; Multnomah, Lansing Stout; Polk, B. F.
Burch, president.
House:
Baker, R. Beers; Benton, J. C. Alexander, R. A. Bensal; Baker and Union, 1). R.
Benson; Clackamas, J. W. Garrett, I). P. Trullinger; Coos and Curry, Richard
Pender^ast; Columbia, Clatsop, and Tillamook, W. I). Hoxter; Douglas, John G.
Flook, James F. Gazley, James Applegate; Grant, R. W. Neal, Thomas E. Gray;
Jackson, J, B. White, Thomas Smith, J. L. Louden; Josephine, Isaac Cox; Lane,
John Whiteaker, II. H. Oilfrey,
E. N. Tandy; Linn, John T. Crooks, John
Bryant, B. B. Johnson, W. F. Alexander, T. J. Stites; Marion, John F. Denny, J.
B. Lich ten thaler, T. \V. Davenport, John Minto, David Simpson; Multnomah, W.
W. Chapman, T.
A. Davis, James Powell, J. S. Scoggins; Polk,
R. J. Grant, F. Waymire, Ira S. Townsend; Umatilla, A. L. Kirk; Union, II.
Rhinehart; Wasco, D. W. Butler, George J. Ryan; Washington, John A, Taylor,
Edward Jackson; Yamhill, W, W. Brown, G. W. Burnett; speaker, John Whiteaker.
Or. Jour. Seriate, 1868, 4-o; Or. Jour. House, 1868, 4-5.
others,
having for its object the election of a democratic United States senator iu
1870; and further, to recount the gubernatorial vote of I860, to count out
Woods and place Kelly in the office of governor. This return to the practices
of the ‘political zouaves’ of the da}Ts of the Salem clique,
amounting in this case to revolution, was thwarted by the republican minority
under the direction of Woods. In order to carry their poiuts, the democrats
endeavored to prolong the session beyond the constitutional forty days, by
deferring the general appropriation bill, and did so prolong it to the
forty-third day, when fifteen republicans resigned in a body, leaving the
house without a quorum, and unable to pass even a bill to pay their per diem.
In this dilemma, they demanded that the governor should issue write of election
to make a quorum; but this was refused as unconstitutional after the forty days
were passed, and the house, without the power even to adjourn, fell in pieces.63
The
representative to congress elected in 186(5 was Rufus Mallory, republican, who
defeated his opponent, James D. Fay, by a majority of six hundred.61
In 1868
the republican candidate, David Logan, was beaten by Joseph S. Smith, whose
majority was nearly twelve hundred/2 owing partly to the unpopular
standing of Logan even w ith his own party,63 as
60 Or, Jour. House, 1868, 527-54; Wood's
Recollections, INIS., 35-8,
61 Rufus Mallory was a native of Coventry,
N. Y., bom January 10, 1831. He received an acadcmio education, and studied and
practised law. lie was dist atty,in the 1st jud. dist in Oregon in I860, and
111 the 3d jud. dist from 1362 to 1866; and was a member of the sta^e leg. in
1802. ('ongres*. Directory 49th cong. 2d sess., p. 31. James D. Fay married a
daughter of Jesse Applegate. His habits were bad, and he committed suicide at
Coos Bay. He was talented, erratic, and unprincipled.
62 Smith came to Oregon in 1S47, and
preached as a minister of the methodist church. After the gold discoveries and
the change in the condition of the country, he abandoned preaching and engaged
in the practice of law in 1852. He was in 1864 agent for the Salem
Manufacturing Company, in which he was a large stockholder. He is described as
a reserved man, not much read in elementary law, but an acute reasoner and
subtle disputant. Dundy*« Scrap-Book, 81.
03 Tho
federal officers in Oregon in 1868 were: district judge, Matthew P. Deady;
marshal, Albert Zeiber; clerk, Ralph Wilcox; collector of the port of Astoria,
Alanson Himnan; surveyor-general, Elisha Applegate; register of land-office,
Roseburg, John Kelly (A. R. Flint, receiver); register, Oregon
was shown
by the presidential vote in the following November, which gave a democratic
majority of only 160 for presidential electors out of 22,000 votes cast by the
state.
In 1870 L.
F. Grover, who ever since 1864 had been president of the democratic
organization of the state, was elected governor of Oregon, with S. F. Chadwick
as secretary.6*
The
legislature of 1870, following the example of its immediate predecessor,
rejected the fifteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States,
which extended the elective franchise to negroes. The manner of the rejection
was similar to that of the rescinding resolutions of 1868, and like them, a
mere impotent expression of the rebellious sentiments of the ultra -democratic
party in Oregon.63 It had no effect to prevent negroes in Oregon
from voting, of whom there were at this time less than 350. It also, in
obedience to party government, provided for the appointment of three commissioners
to investigate the official conduct of the state officers of the previous administration,
succeeding in discovering a defalcation by Secretary May of several thousand
dollars,63
City, Owen
Wade (Henry Warren, receiver); supt Ind. aff., J. W. P. Huntington; chief clerk
1ti<1. dept, C. S. Woodworth; assessor int.
rev., Thomas Frazar; collector int. rev., Medorum Crawford; deputy assessor,
William Grooms; deputy col., Edwin Backenstos.
Tlie
district judges of the supreme court ol Oregon at this time, beginning ■with the
northern districts, were: 4th dist, W. \V. Upton; 5th dist, J. G. Wilson (east
of the Cascade nits); 3d (list, R. P. Poise; 2d dist, A. A. Skinner; 1st dist,
P. P. Prim: The dist attys in the same order were M. F, Mulkey, James H. Slater,
P. C. Sullivan, J. F. Watson, J. Ii. Neil. McCormick's Portland Dir., ISIjS,
100; Oamp’ft Year-Book, 1809, 434.
11 L. Fleiscbner was elected treasurer, R.
P. Boise was reelected judge, and A. J. Tliayer and L. L. McArthur to succeed
Skinner and Wilson. Id., app 11.
Or. Lam%
1870, 190-1; Sm. Mine. Dock, 50, 41st
cong. 3d sess.; Gov. Meamgt, in Or. Ler/U. Dors, 1870, doe. 11, p. 9.
“The
investigation lasted a year, at $5 per day each to the commissioners for the
time necessarily employed in making the investigation. They brought in a report
against May, and also some absurd charges that the governor had made more
visits to the penitentiary than his dirty required, at the expense of the
state, with other insignificant matters. They discovered that C. A. Reed, the
adjutant-general of the militia organization, had purchased two gold pens, not
needed, his otficc being abolished by the same body which commissioned them,
at an expense of $i:> a day, to discover these two pens.
Legislative
assembly of 1870—Senate: Baker county, A. H. Brown;
through
embezzlement of the five-per-cent fund before mentioned.
When
Governor Grover came into office he found the treasury containing sufficient
funds, less some 66,000, to defray the expenses of the state’s affairs for the
next two years. The legislature at once made an appropriation to build the
penitentiary in a permanent form, and appropriated money from the five-per-cent
fund for the construction of a steamboat canal with locks, at the falls of the
Willamette. A small amount was also devoted to the organization of the
a<mculfu- ral college, thereby^ securing the land grant belonging to it. The
legislature of 1872 passed an act providing for the construction of a state
capitol, and appropriated $100,000 to be set apart by the treasurer, to be
designated as the state-house building fund; but for the purpose of providing
funds for immediate use, the treasurer was authorized to transfer $50,000 from
the soldiers’-bounty fund to the building fund, that the work might be begun
without delay. The same legislature passed an act organizing and locating the
state university at Eugene City, on condition that a site and building were
furnished by the Union Uni-
Dougla«,
L. F. Moslier; Coos mil Curry, C. M. Pershbaker; Jacksun James D. Fay;
Josephine, B. F. Holtzclaw; Lane, A. VV. Patterson, R.
B. Cochran; Liun, Enoch Hoult, R. H. Crawford;
Marion, Samuel Brown, John H. Moores; Multnomah. Lansing Stout, David Powell;
Clackamas, D. P. Thompson; Polk, B. F. Burch; Grant, J. W. Baldwin; Umatilla, T
1. Lieuallen; Union, J. llendershott; Wasco, Victor Treyitt; Washington, Columbia,
Clatsop, and Tillamook, T. R. Cornelius; Yamhill, W. T. Newby; Benton II. S.
Strahan. President, James D Fay; clerks, Syl. C. Simpson ami Orlando M„
Packard.
House:
Baker, H. Porter; Baker and Union, J R McLain; Benton, I). Carlisle, TV. R.
Calloway; Clackamas, Peter I’aqnet, W. A. Starkweather, J. T. Apperson;
Clatsop, Columbia, and Tillamook, Cyrus Ol-net; Coos and Curry, F. G. Lockhart;
Douglas, Jamas C. Hutchinson, C. M. Caldwell, J. C. Drain; Grant, J. M. McCoy.
VV. II. Clark; Jackson, Jackson Rader, James "Wells, A. J. Burnett; Lane.
John Whiteaker, G. B. Dorris, James F. Amis; Linn, W. F. Alexander, G. R. Helm,
Thomas Munkers, John Ostrander', W S. Elkins; Marion, T. W. Davenport, R. I’.
Earhart, J M. Ha.Tison, G. P. Holman, W. R. Dunbar; Multnomah, J. W. Whalley,
Dan. O’liegan, L P. W. Quimby, John C. Carson; Polk, B. Hayden, R. J. Grant, W.
Oomegys; Union, J. T. Hunter; Umatilla, Johnson Thompson, F. A. Da Sheill; Washington
W D. Hare, W. A. Mills; Wasco, James Fulton, 0. S. Savage; Yamhill, Al. Hussey,
Let Longhlio Speaker, Ben Hayden; clerks, E. S. McComas, John Costello, W. L.
White, and John T. Crooks. Or. Jour, Sen- ah, 1S70, 4-1-6) 13; Directory Vac.
Count, 1S71-3, ill.
versity
Association; and setting apart the interest on the fund arising from the sale
of seventy-two sections of land donated to the state for the support of the
university for the payment of the salaries of teachers and officers.
These were
all measures important to the welfare and dignity of the state, and gave to
Grover’s administration the credit of having the interests of the people at
heart. An agricultural college was established by simply paying for the tuition
of twenty-three pupils at an ordinary academy, at ordinary academy charges.67
A university was established, by requiring the town where it was located to
furnish a site and a building, and paying the facidty out of the university
fund. The Modoc war, also, which occurred during Grover’s term of office, added
some consequence to his administration, which, excepting that of Governor
Gibbs, was the most busy, for good or evil, of any which had occurred in the
history of the state. In 1874 Grover was reelected, over J. C. Toltnan, republican,
and T. F. Campbell, independent.63
In 1872
the republicans iu the legislature elected John H. Mitchell to succeed Corbett
m the U. S. senate. He served the state ably.69
n Or.
Governor's Mexmge, 1872, 3-10; Or. Lav:$, 1872, 47-53; Grover’s P»b. Life in
(Jr., MS., 72.
08 Grover’s
opponent in 1S70 was Joel I’almer, who was not fitted for the position, being
past his prime. In 187-4 Grover’s majority over Toliran was 550. Campbell
simply divided tbe vote, and was beaten by 3,181. He was a preacher of the
Christian church, and president of Monmouth college, of which he was also the
founder, and which became a prosperous school.
t9 Mitchell
was born in Penn. June 22, 1835, receiving a fair education, and studying law,
which he practised in his native state. Appearing in Oregon m I860, at the
moment when his talents and active loyalty could be made available, he rapidly
rose iu lavor witli his party, and was appointed prosecuting attorney for the
4th jud. dist, in place of W. W. Page, resigned, but declined, and in 1S64 was
elected state senator. Prom this time he was leader in politics, and a favorite
among men, having many pleasing personal qualities. After having been chosen
senator, a scandal was discovered which dismayed the republicans and gave the
independents that which they desired, a strong leverage against the old party,
whijh was split in consequence, the breach made being so violent that at the
next senatorial election they lost the battle to the democrats Mitchell was not
unseated, however, as had beeu hoped. At the expiration of his term he resumed
the practice of the law, first m Washington city, and later iu Portland, where
he achieved his first political honors, and where the tield is open to talent
to distinguish itself.
On the
meeting of the legislature of 1876, there being a United States senator to be
elected, the choice lay between Jesse Applegate and Grover. The first ballot in
the senate gave Applegate seven and Grover twenty votes, with two votes
scattering. The first ballot in the house gave twenty-seven for Applegate and
twenty-five for Grover, with seven for J. W. Nesmith. In joint convention
Nesmith received on some ballots as many as fourteen votes. But the democrats
were chiefly united 011 Grover and the republicans on Applegate; and at length
the friends of Nesmith gave way, that the candidate of their party might
succeed, and Grover’s vote rose from forty-two to forty-eight, by which he was
elected. In February 1877 he resigned the office of governor, and took his
place in the U. S. senate,70 S. F, Chadwick succeeding to the
gubernatorial office.
In the
mean time there was a growing uneasiness in the public mind, arising from the
conviction that there was either mismanagement or fraud, or both, in the state,
land, and other departments, and the legislature of 1878 appointed a joint
committee to examine into the transactions of the various offices and departments
of the state government. The commission published its report, and the
impression got abroad that a system of peculation had been carried on for some
time past, in which serious charges were made; but notwithstanding the numerous
accusations against the several state officials, there was not sufficient evi ■ dence to
prove that moneys had been illegally drawn from the public funds. Nevertheless,
the administration suffered m reputation in consequence of the report. The
scandal created was doubtless tinged by partisan spirit, more or less. The
improvement in the affairs of the government was substantial and noteworthy,
and at a later date credit was not un-
79See Sen.
Com. Rept, 536, 548, 561, 627, 678, 44th cong. 2d sess.; also, Proceedings of
the Electoral Commission, and CW Globe, 1870-7, 74-0, 209-10, app. 132, 188,
192; Portland Oregonian, Jan. 27, 1377.
Hit5!, ob.. Vol. II. 43
willingly
conceded to the administration, the course of which had been temporarily
clouded by hurtful though unsubstantiated complaints.'1
The
elevation of Grover to the U. S. senate left Stephen F. Chadwick in the
gubernatorial chair, which he filled without cause for dissatisfaction during
the remainder of the term. During Chadwick’s administration eastern Oregon was
visited by an Indian war. During this interval the depredations caused were
very severe, and the loss to the white settlers of property was immense, a
full history of which will be included in those described in my History of
Washington, Idaho, and Montana.
One by one
the former democratic aspirants for place reached the goal of their desires.
Joseph S. Smith was succeeded in congress by James II. Slater, who during the
period of the rebellion was editor of the Corvallis Union, a paper that,
notwithstanding its name, advocated disunion so as to bring itself under the
notice of the government, by whose authority it was suppressed. 2
The
successor of Slater was Joseph G. Wilson, 3 who died at the summer
recess of congress in 1873. A special election chose J. W. Nesmith to fill the
vacancy, who, though a democratic leader, had eschewed some of the practices
of his party, if not the
1 For »
report of the proceedings of the investigating committee, see Or. Legist. Docs,
1878; Portland Oregonian, Dec. 30, 1878.
.fame* H.
Slater was a native of 111., born in 1827. He came to Cal. in 1849, and tlienoe
to Oregon in 1850, residing near Corvallis, where ht taught school and studied
law, the practice of which he commenced in 1S58. lie was elected to the
legislature, several times. He removed to eastern Oregon in 1862, engaging in
mining for a time, bvt finally settled at La Grande. Ashland Tidings, Sept.
20, 187S.
7J Wilson
was born in New Hampshire Dec. 13, 1826, the son ol a dissenting Scotch
presbyterian, who settled in Londonderry in 1710. llis parents removed to
Cincinnati in 182G, settling afterward near Reading, Oosep i receiving his
education at Marietta, college, from which he graduated with the degree of LL.
D He entered the Cincinnati law schoo1 from which he graduated in
1832 and went to Oregon. He rose step by step to be congressman. His wife was
Elizabeth Millar, daughter of Rev. James 1’. Millar of ■Mlany, a
talented and cultivated lady, who. after her husband’s untimely death, received a commission as postmaster at
The Dalles, which she held for many years.
love of
office. His majority was nearly 2,000 over his opponent, Hiram Smith. He was in
turn sue-1 ceeded by George La Dow,74 a man little known
in the state, and who would not have received the nomination but for the
course of the Oregonian in making a division in the republican ranks and
running Richard Williams, while the regular party ran T. W. Davenport. The
vacancy caused by the death of La Dow was tilled by La Fayette Lane, specially
elected October 25, 1875. At the next regular election, iu 1876, Richard
Williams73 received a majority of votes for representative to
congress, serving from March 1877 to March 1879. He was succeeded by ex-Governor
John Whiteaker, democrat, and he by M. C. George, republican, who has been
returned the second time. 1
In 1878
the republicans again lost their choice for governor by division, and C. C.
Beekman was defeated by W. W Thayer,76 who was followed by Z. F.
Moody77 in 1882. The U. S. senator elected in 1882,
George A.
La Dow was bom in Cayuga-co., N. Y., March 18, 1826. Hi? father emigrated to
III. 1839, where George was educated for the practice ot law. Subsequently
settling in Wisconsin, he wa3 elected dist atty for Wau paca co. In 1869 he
came to Oregon and settled in Umatilla CO., being elected representative il
1872. S. F. Examiner, in Salem Statesman, .Juno 13, 1874.
75 Richard
Williams was a son of Elijah Williams, a pioneer. He was i. young man of
irreproachable character and good talents, a lawyer by profession, who had
been appointed dist atty in 1867. S. F. Call, March 24, 1807.
f*W. W.
Thayer, /brother of A. J. Thayer, was born at Limp, N, Y., July 15, 1827. He
received a common-school education, and studied law being admitted to the bar
by the sup. ct at Rochester, in March 1851. He subsequently practised at
Tonawanda and Buffalo, until 1862, when he came to Oregon, intending to settle
at Corvallis. The mining excitement of 18G3 drew him to Idaho; he remained at
Lewiston till 1867, when he returned to Oregon and settled in East Portland,
furming a law partnership with Richard WTilliams. He was a member of
the Idaho legislature in 1866, and was aiso dist atty of the 3d jud. dist.
During his administration as governor, the state debt, which had accumulated
under the previous administration, was paid, and the financial condition of the
state rendered sound and healthy The insane asylum was commenced with Thayer as
one of a board of commissioners, and was about completed when his t<-rm
expired. It is an imposing briek structure, capable of accommodating 400 or
500.
7: Zenas
Ferry Moody w as a republican of New England and revolutionary :_
stock, and has not been without pioneer experiences, coming to Oregon iu 1851.
He was one of the first U. S. surveying party which established the initial
point of the Willamette meridian, and continued two years in the ser- j vice.
In 1853 he settled in Brownsville, and married Miss Mary Stephenson, . their
children bung four sons aud one daughter. In 1856 he was appointed
after a
severe and prolonged contest between the friends of J, H. Mitchell and the
democracy, uniting with the independents, was Joseph X. Dolph,71
Mitchell’s former partner and friend.
The time
has not yet come, though it is close at hand, when Oregon-burn men shall till
the offices of state, and represent their country in the halls of the national
legislature. Then the product of the civilization founded by their sires in
the remotest section of the national territory will become apparent. Sectionalism,
which troubled their fathers, will have disappeared with hostility to British
influences. Homogeneity and harmony wdl have replaced the feuds of the
formative period of the state’s existence. A higher degree of education will
have led to a purer conception of public duty. Home-bred men will repel
adventurers from other states, who have at heart no interests but their
individual benefits.
When that
period of progress shall have been reached, if Oregon shall be found able to
withstand the temptations of too great wealth in her morals, and the
oppressiveness of large foreign monopolies in her business, she will be able
fully to realize the raost sanguine expectations of those men of destiny, the
Oregon Pioneers.
inspector
of U. S. surveys in Cal., afttrward residing foi some time in 111., hut
returning to The Dalits in 1862. The country being in a state of rapid
development on account of the mming discoveries in the eastern part of the
state and in Idaho, he established Limselt at L,ruatilla. where he
remained in business for three years. In the spring of 1806 lit- built the
steamer Mary Moody on Vend d’Oreille Lake, and afterward aided in organizing
the Oregon and Montana Transportation Company, which built two other
steamboats, and improved the portages. In 1867 he was merchandising in Bois6
City, returning to The Dalles in 1869, where he took charge of the business of
Well* Fargo & Co. At a later period he was a mail contractor, and ever a
busy and earnest man. He was elected in 1872 to the state senate, ami in 18S0
to the lower house, being chosen speaker. In 1882 he was nominated for
governor, and elected over Joseph II. Smith by a majority of 1,452 votes.
Representative Men of Or., 1-111
7SDolph was
bom in 1835. in N. Y., <md educated at (lenessei college, after which he
studied law He. came to Oregon in 1862, where hi 3 talnnts soon made him
prominent in his profession, and secured him a lucrative prac tice Hi- married,
in 1864, a daughter of Johnson Mulkey, a pioneer of 1847, by whom he had 0
children, At the time of his election he was attorney for and vice-president of
the Northern Pacific railroad
The early history of
the Methodist Church is the history of the first American colonization, and has
been fully given in a former volume; but a sketch of the Oregon methodist
episcopal church proper must begin at a later date. From 1844 to 1853 the
principal business transactions of the church were at the yearly meetings,
without any particular authority from any conference.
On the 5th
of September, 1849, the Oregon and California Mission Conference was organized
in the chapel of the Oregon Institute, Salem, by authority of the general
conference of 1848, by instructions from Bishop Waugh, and under the
superintendence of William Roberts. The superintendents of the Oregon Mission
were, first, Jason Lee, 1834-1844; George Gary, 18441847; William Roberts, 1847-1849,
when the Mission Conference succeeded the Oregon Mission, under Roberts, The
mission conference included New Mexico, and possessed all the rights and
privileges of other similar bodies, except those of sending delegates to the
general conference and drawing annual dividends from the avails of the
book-concems and chartered funds. Four sessions were held, the first three in
Salem, and the fourth at Portland. Under the mission conference the following
ministers were appointed to preach in Oregon: in 1849-50, W. Roberts, David
Leslie, A. F. Waller. J. H. Wilbur, J. L. Parrish, William Helm, J. 0. Raynor,
J. McKinney, C. O. Hosford, and J. E. Parrott; in 1850-1, I. McElroy, F. S.
Hoyt, and N. Doane were added; in 1851-2, L. T. Woodward, J. S. Smith, J.
Flinn, and J. W. Miller; in 1852 -3, Isaac Dillon, C. S. Kingsley, P. G.
Buchanan, and T. H. Pearue—never more than fourteen being in the field at the
same time.
In March
1853 Bishop E. R. Ames arrived in Oregon, and on the 17th the Oregon Annual
Conference was organized, including all of Oregon and Washington, which held
its first session at Salem, and gave appointments to twenty- two ministers,
including all of the above-named except Leslie, Parrish, Helm, McElroy,
McKinney, and Parrott, and adding G. Hines, H. K. Hines, T. F. Royal, G. M.
Berry, E. Garrison, B. Close, and W. B. Morse. Since 1853 there have been from
thirty-three to seventy-four preachers annually furnished appointments by the
conference. In 1873 the conference was divided, and Washington and eastern
Oregon set off, several of the pioneer ministers being transferred to the new
conference. According to a sketch of church history by Roberts, there were, in
1876, 3,249 church members, and 683 on probation; 74 local preachers; GO
churches, valued at $167*750; parsonages valued at $29,850; Sunday-schools, 78;
pupils, 4,469; teachers, 627; books in Sunday- school libraries, 7,678, besides
periodicals taken for the use of children. The first protestant church edifice
erected on the Pacific coast, from Cape Horn to Bering Strait, was the
methodist church at Oregon City, begun in 1842 by Waller, and completed in 1844
by Hines. Abernethy added a bell in 1851, weighing over 500 pounds, the largest
then in the territory. He also purchased two smaller ones for the churches in
Salem and Portland, and one for the Clackamas academy at Oregon City. Or.
Statesman, July 4, 1851. These were not the first bells in Oregon, the
catholics having one at Cham- poeg, if not others. Religious services were held
in Salem as early as 1841, at the Oregon Institute chapel, which served until
the erection of a church, which was dedicated January 23, 1853, and was at this
time the best protestant
(677)
house, in
Oregon. Home Missionary, xxvi. 115-6. About 1871 a brick edifice, costing
$35,000, was completed to take the place of this one. A methodist church was
also erected at South Salem.
The
methodist church of Portland was organized in 184S, a church building was
begun by Wilbur in 1850, »nd the first methodist episcopal church of Portland
incorporated January 26. 1853. The original edifice was a plain but roomy frame
building, with its gable fronting on Taylor Street, near Third. A
reincorporation took place in 1867, and in 1869 a brick church, costing
$35,000, was completed on the comer of Third and Taylor streets, fronting on
Third. A second edifice was erected on Hall Street. During the year 1884, a new
society, an offshoot from tilt Taj lor-Stree* church, was organized under the
name of the Grace Methodist Episcopal Church, taking with it $40,000 worth of
the property of the former. The methodist church at The Dalles was built in
1862 by J. F. Devore, at a time when mining enterprises were beginning to
develop the eastern portion of the state.
The
inethodists have been foremost in propagating their principles by means of
schools, as the history of the Willamette University illustrates. In new
communities these moans seem to be necessary to give coherence to effort, and.
have proved beneficial. Willamette University, which absorbed the Oregon
Institute, was incorporated January 12, 1853. It opened with two departments, a
preparatory, or academic, and a collegiate course, and but few pupils took more
than the academic course for many years. It had later six departments, thirteen
professors and tutors, and four academies which fed the university. The
departments were college of liberal arts, medical college, woman’s college,
conservatory of music, university academy, and correlated academies. College
Journal, June 1882. The correlated academies were those of Wilbur, Sheridan,
Santiam, and Dallas. Tho medical college, one of the six departments of the
university, was by the unanimous vote of the faculty removed to Fortlund in
1877.
The
Clackamas seminary for young ladies, established at Oregon City in 1851, was
the combined effort of the methodists and congregationalists, and prospered for
a time, but an a seminary has long been extinct; $11,000 were raised to found
it, and John McLoughlin gave a block of land. Harvey Clark was the first
teacher, after which Mrs Thornton and Mr and Mrs II. K. llines taught in it.
Or. Spectator, June G, 1S51; Or. Argus, Nov. 10. 1855. 'Santiam and Umpqua
academies were established about 1854. La Creole Academic Institute, at Dallas,
was incorporated in 1856. The incorporators wore Frederick Waymire, William P.
Lewis, John E. Lyle, Horace Lyman, Reuben P. Boise, Thomas J. Lovelady,
Nicholas Lee, James Frederick, and
A. W. Swaney Or. Laics, 1860, 93. The act
provided that at no time should a majority of the trustees be of one religious
denomination. The academy is nevertheless at present one of the branches of the
Willamette University. Philomath college, a few miles froia Corvallis, is also
controlled by a board of trustees elected by the annual conference. This
college has an endowment of over $16,000 and a small general fund. The
buildings are chiefly of brick, and cost §15,000.
The
Portland academy was opened In 1852 by C. S. Kingsley and wife, who managed it
for several y ears, and after them others. The property was worth, in 1876,
§20,000, but the usefulness of the school, which had no endowment, had passed,
and it has since suspended. Hines' Or., 105-6; Olympia Columbian, Sept.
18,1852; Pub. Instruc. Rept, in Or. Mess, and Doc., 1876, 146. Corvallif
college was founded by the methodist church south, iu 1865, and incorporated
August 22, 1868, since which time it has had control of the state agricultural
college, as stated in another place; 150 students were enrolled in 1878. The
Ashland college and normal school, organized in 1878 from the Ashland academy,
is also under the management of the confcrence.
The
Catholic Church, next in point of time, had a rude church at Cham- poeg on
their first entrance into the Willamette valley in the winter of 1S39- 40. In
February 1846 a plain wooden church was dedicated at Oregon City, and in
November St Paul’s brick church was consecrated at Champoeg. In
the autumn
of 1851 a church was begun in Portland, which was dedicated in February 1852 by
Archbishop Blanchet. In 1854 this building was removed to Stark Street, near
Third, and ten years later had wings added for library and other uses, being
reconsecrated in 1S64. In 1871 the building was again enlarged, and used until
1878, when it was removed to make room for St Mary’s cathedral, a fine brick
structure costing $00,000, tho corner-stone of which was laid in August of that
year. Portland Daily Bee, May 1G, 1878; Portland Oregonian, Aug. 24, 1878;
Portland Herald, Feb. 9, 187.'! -<
There is
also in Portland the chapel of St Mary attached to the convent of the sisters
of the most holy names of Jesus and Mary, between Mill and Mar ket streets. The
sisters hare a day and boarding school, ordinarily attended by 150 pupils. St
Joseph’s day-school for boys, near the church, liad an aver age attendance in
1808 of 75. St Michael's college, for the higher education oi young men, is a
later institution, ami well supported. The church of St John the Evangelist, at
the corner of Chamekata and College streets, Salem, was dedicated April 10,
1864. Forty or fifty families attend services here, and a large number of
children receive, instruction in the Sunday-school. Tne academy of the Sacred
Heart, under the care of the sisters, a substantial brick structure, is a
boarding and day school where eighty girls are taught the useful and
orn.;mental branches. This institution was dedicated in 1803, but the present
edifice was not occupied till 1873. There is also a catholic ■church,
and the academy of Mary Immaculate at The Dalles, located on Third Street; St
Mary’s academy at Jacksonville, Notre Dame academy at Baker City, Mater
Dolorosa mission at Grande Ronde reservation, and St Joseph’s hall, a female
orphan asylum, at Portland.
The oldest
Congregational Church in Oregon is that of Oregon City, organized ill 1844 by
Harvey Clark, independent missionary who also set on toot educational matters,
and organised a church at Forest Grove. See Atkinson’s Cong. Church, 1-3, a
centennial review of Congregationalism in Oregon. The American home missionary
society about this time projected a mission to Oregon, and in 1847 sent George
H. Atkinson and wife t'> labor in this field They settled in Oregon City in
June 1848, at the time the discovery of gold in California nearly depopulated
that place. Atkinson, Eells, anil Clark proceeded to form, with other
congregationalists, the Oregon Association, which held its first meeting at
Oregon City September 20th, and appointed, together with the presbyterian
ministers, trustees for the Tualatin academy. Home Missionary, xxii. 43, 63. In
November 184!) arrived Horace Lyman and wife, also sent out by the home
missionary society in 1817, but who had lingered aud taught for one year in San
Jost', California. Lyman settled at Portland, where he began to build up a
church. There were at Oregon City in 1849 but eight members, but they undertook
to build a plain meeting-house. 24 by
40 feet, ceiled, and without belfry or
steeple, the cost of which was §3,550.
Atkinson
preached at Portland tirst in June 1849, ill a log-house used as a
shingle-factnry. The congregation was attentive, and the citizens subscribed
$2,000 to ercct a school-house, which was to be at the service of all denominations
for religious services. It was arranged that the congregational ministers
should preach there once in two weeks. At the second meeting, iu July, Captain
Wood of the U. S. steamer Massachusetts was present, to the delight of the
minister as well as the people. When Lyman arrived he began teaching and
preaching in the school-house. Portland Oregonian, May 24, 1864; Lyman, in Pac.
Christian Advocate, 1865. As there was then no church to organize in Portland,
and as his salary was only $500—the rent of a dwell ing being quite all of
that—he was compelled to solicit aid. The tow n pro prietorf offered a lot. In
the forest, on the rising ground at the south end of Second Street, Lyman made
his selection, anil $5,000 were subscribed, aud the building, 32 by 48 feet,
was begun. Lyman worked with his own hands in clearing the ground for his house
and the church, ami making shingles for the former, falling ill from his
unwonted exertions and the malaria of the newly exposed earth. But the citizens
of Portland came kindly to his assistance; he was nursed back to health; the
house and church were completed,
t’hiefly
by their aid, and on the 15th of June, 1851, the First Congregational Church of
Portland was organized, with ten members, and the church edilice dedicated.
Thin building had a belfry and small spire, and cost $0,400, seating some 400
persons. See Lyman, iu Cong. Asso. Or. Annual Meeting, 1876, 35, a
quarter-centennial review, containing a complete history of the First
Congregational Church of Portland; also Home Missionary, xxiv. 137-8.
Ihe
membership of the other churches amounted to 50 at this time; 25 at Tualatin
plains, Hat Oregon City, three at Milwaukee, and eight at Cala- pooya, where a
church was organized by II. H. Spalding; but congregations and Sunday-schools
-were sustained at a few other points.
In January
1852 the Oregon Association held its third annual meeting, five ministers being
present. It was resolved that Atkinson should visit the eastern states to
solicit aid for the educational work of the church, particularly of the
Tualatin academy and Paeiiic university, and also that other parts of Oregon
should be pointed out to the homo missionary society as fields for
missionaries. The result, in addition to the money raised, was the appointment
of Thomas J. Condon and Obed Dickinson missionaries to Oregon, the former to St
Helen, and the latter to Salem, where a church of four members had been
organized. They arrived in March 1853, by the bark Trade Wind, from New York.
Their advent led to the organization of two more of what may properly be styled
pioneer churches.
Soon after
the arrival of Dickinson, W. II. Willson of Salem offered two town lots. About
half the sum required for a building was raised, while the church held its
meetings in a school-house; but this being too small for the congregation, a
building was purchased and fitted up for church services, in September 1854. It
was not till 1863 that the present edifice, a modest frame structure, was
completed and dedicated. Dickinson continued in the pastorate till 1867, when
he resigned, and was succeeded by P. S Knight. Condon ■went first
to St Helen, where the town proprietor had erected a school house and church in
one, surmounted by a beliry with a good bell, and a small spire. Thiii
building, which is still standing, was not consecrated to the use of any denomination,
but was free to all, and so remained. In 1854 Condon was appointed to Forest
Grove. They were not able to build here till August 185!), when a church was
erected, costing some §9,000. Or. Statesman, Aug. 30, 1S59. Near the close of
1853 Milton B. Starr, who had preached for several years in the western states,
came to Albany, Oregon, and organized a church. The following spring Lyman wat
sent to Dallas to preach, and Portland was left without i pastor In 1859 Condon
organized a church at The Dalles, build'ng in 1862. He remained at The Dalles
for many years, leaving there finally to go to Forest Grove, w'bere his
attainments in natural science were in demand. On the opening of the state
university he accepted a professorship in that institution. Atkinson was
settled as pastor of the church in Portland in 1863, where he continued some
ten years, when, his health failing, he went north to establish congregations.
During his pastorate a new church edifice wras erected on the ground
selected in 1S50; and more recently Plymouth church on Fourteenth and E
streets The organized congregational churches reported down to 1878 were nine:
Albany, Astoria. Dalles, Forest Grove, Hillsboro, Oregon City, Portland, East
Portland, and Salem. (Jong. As#o. Minutes, 1878, 51. Plymouth church was a
later organization.
Pacific
university, founded by congregationalists, was non-sectarian. 1* had §50,000 in
grounds and buildings, $1,000 in cabinet and apparatus, ®S3,0G0 in productive
funds, and a library containing 5,000 volumes.
The first
minister of the Presbyterian denomination in Oregon was Lewis Thompson, a
native of Kentucky, ar.d an alumnus of Princeton theological seminary, who came
to the Pacific coast in 1840 and settled on the Clatsop plains. Wood's Pioneer
Work, 27. There is a centennial history of the presbytery of Oregon, by Edward
K. Geary, in Portland Pac. Christian Advocate, July 27, 1876. On the 19th of
September, 1846, Thompson preached a sermon at the house of W. H. Gray, albeit
there were none to hear him exccpt a ruling elder from Missouri, Alva Condit,
Lis wife Ruth Condit, and Gray aud
his wife.
Truman P. Powers of Astoria was the first ordained elder of the presbyterian
church on the Pacific coast. He came to Oregon in 1846. In October Thompson was
joined by a young minister from Ohio, Robert Robe, and on the 19th of November
they, together with E. R. Geary of Lafayette, at the residence of the latter,
formed the presbytery of Oregon, as directed by the General Assembly at its
session in that year.
In 1853
there were five presbyterian ministers in Oregon, the three abovementioned, J.
L. Yantis, and J. A. Hanna. The latter had settled at Marysville (now
Corvallis) in 1852 and organized a church, while Yantis had but recently
arrived. A meeting of the presbytery being called at Portland in October, Hanna
and Yantis became members, aud it was determined to organize a church in that
place, of which Y^antis was to have charge, together with one he had already
formed at Calapooya. This was accordingly done; and through the stormy winter
the resolute preacher held service twice a month in Portland, riding eighty
miles through mud and rain to keep his appointments, until an attack of
ophthalmia rendered it impracticable, and George
F. Whitworth, recently arrived with the
design of settling on Puget Sound, was placed temporarily in charge of the
church in Portland. On his removal to Washington the society became
disorganized, and finally extinct.
Meantime
Thompson had built a small church at Clatsop, and was pursuing his not very
smooth way in that foggy, sandy region, where he labored faithfully for
twenty-two years before he finally removed to California. ILobe organized a
church at Eugene City in 1855, remaining there in the ministry till 1863,
during which time a building was erected. Geary, who had undertaken a
boarding-school, became involved in pecuniary embarrassment, and was compelled
to take a clerkship under Palmer in the Indian department; but being discharged
for seeming to covet the office of his employer, he took charge of the
Calapooya church, and organized that of Brownsville, where he fixed his
residence, and where a church building was erected by the members. A charter
was procured from the legislature of 1857-8 for the Corvallis college, which
would have been under the patronage of the presbyterians had it reached a point
where such patronage could be claimed. There is nothing to Bhow that it was
ever organized.
An effort
was made about the beginning of 18G0 to revive the presbyterian church in
Portland. McGill of the Princeton seminary, being appealed to, procured the
cooperation of the Board of Domestic Missions, and P. S. Caffrey was
commissioned to the work. He preached his first sermon in the courthouse June
15, 1860. On the 3d of August the first presbyterian church of Portland was
reorganized by Lewis Thompson of Clatsop, with seventeen members, and regular
services held in a room on the corner of Third and Madison streets. Caffrey’s
ministrations were successful; and in 1S63 the corner-stone of a church edifice
was laid on Third and Washington streets, which was finished the following
year, at a cost of $20,000. Geary's Or. Presbytery, 2; Portland Herald, Jan.
26, 1873; Deadi/s Scrap-Book, 43, 85. When in 1869 Caffrey resigned his charge
to Lindsley, there was a membership of 103, and the finances of the church were
in good condition. In 1882 the church divided, and a new edifice was erected,
costing $25,000, at the north-east corner of Clay and Ninth streets, called
Calvary Presbyterian Church, with E. Trumrell Lee first pastor. The church
edifice at Corvallis was begun in I860 and completed in 1864, at a cost of
$6,000, Hanna contributing freely of his own means. Richard Wylie, assigned by
the board of missions to this place in tlae latter year, was the first pastor
regularly installed in this church. Richard Wylie was one of three sons of
James Wylie, who graduated together at Princeton. In 1865 the father and James
and John, Richard’s brothers, came to the Pacific coast, James accepting a
pastorate in San Jose, California, and John being assigned to the church in
Eugene City. James Wylie, sen., was examined for the ministry by the Oregon
presbytery, licensed to preach, and finally ordained for the full ministry.
Gearifs Or. Presbytery, 2.
In 1866
the presbytery consisted of the ministers above named, with the addition of W.
J. Monteiiih, Anthony Simpson, and J. S. Reasoner, the former
assigned
to Albany, and Simpson to Olympia, which by the lapse of the Tuget Sound
presbytery, erected in 1868, came again under the care of Oregon. A church was
organized at Albany by Monteiih, and it, private classical school opened, which
grew into the Albany collegiate institute under the care of the presbytery, a
tract of live acres being donated by Thomas Monteith, one of the town owners,
and brother of W. J Monteith. The citizens erected a substantial building, and
in spite of some drawbacks, the institution grew in refutation and means,
Reasoner was not called upon to labor for the church, being advanced in years
and a farmer. In 18C8 II. H. Spalding, whom the congregational association had
advised to accept an Indian agency, became a member of the presbytery, but he
was not given charge 'if a church, being broken in mind and body by the tragedy
of Waiilatpu. Ilis death occurred at Lapwai, where he was again acting as
missionary to the Nez; Perces, August 3, 1S74, at the age of 73 years. The
first presbytenan church of Salem was organized May "20, 18G9, with
sixteen members. Their church edi fiee wras erected in 1871, at a
cost of §0,00'J. Within the last ten years churches have been organized and
houses of worship erected in Roseburg, Jacksonville, and Marshfield in southern
Oregon
All that
has been said above of presbyteriani, relates to the old-school division of
that church. There were in Oregon, however, others, under the names of
Cumberland prosbyterians, associate presbyterians, and associate reformed. In
1S51 James I’. Millar, of Albany, N. Y., arrived in Oregon as a missionary of
one of these latter societies; but finding here ‘200 members and half a dozen
ministers of the two societies, he entered into a scheme to unite them in one,
to be knuwn as the United Presbyterian church of Oregon, constituting one.
presbytery, and being independent of any allegiance to any ecclesiastical <
ontrol out of Oregon. Tho men who formed this church were James P. Millar,
Thomas S. Kendall, Samuel G. Irvine, Wilson Blain, James Worth, J. M. Dick, and
Stephen I). Gager. Or. Statesman, Dec. 18, 1852. In
1858 they founded the Albany academy, with Thomas
Kendall, Delazon Smith, Dennis Beach, Edward Geary, Walter Monteith .1 P. Tate,
John Smith, James H. Foster, and R. II. Crawford trustees. This school was
superseded by the Albany institute is 13(57. Or. Laws, Special, 1857-8, 9--10;
Mess, and Docs, Pub. Instruction, 1878, Sl-2. A college, known as the
Sublimity, was created by legislative act in .January 1858, to be controlled by
the United llrethrei- n Christ; but whether this was a school of the united
presbyterians I am unable to determine.
The
pioneer of the Cumberland presbyterians was J. A. Cornwall of Arkansas, who
came to Oregon in 1840 by the southern route, as the reader may remember
Cornwall was the only ordained minister until 1851, when two others, Neill
Johnson of Illinois, and Joseph Robertson of Tennessee, arrived. By order of
the Missouri synod, these ministers met in 1847, at the house of Samuel Allen
in Marion county, tnd formed the Oregon presbytery of the Cumberland
presbyterian church, W. A. Sweeney, another minister, being present. Five
ruling elders, who bad partially organized congregations, were admitted to
seats in the presbytery, as follows; John Purvine from Abiqua, Joseph Carmack
from La Creole, Jesse C. Henderson from Yamhill, David Allen from Tualatin, and
D. M. Keen from Suntiam. There were at this time four licentiates iu the
territory; namely, B. F. Music, John Dillard, William Jolly, and Luther White.
The whole number of members in communion was 103.
There was
no missionary society to aid them, the ministers being supported by voluntary
offerings. But iu the spring of 1853 an effort was made to raise funds to found
a college under their patronage, and in the following year a building was
erected at Eugene City, costing §4,000, with an endowment fund amounting to
$20,000. The school was opened in November 185G, under the presidency of E. P.
Henderson, a- graduate of Waynesville college, Pennsylvania, with fifty-two
students. Four days after this auspicious inauguration the college building
was destroyed bj an incendiary tire. Not to ba defeated, however, another house
was procured and the school continued,
while a
second building was erected at a cost of S3,000, the second session doubling
the number of students. T.ie attendance increased to 150 in 1857, but again, on
the night of the 26th of February, 1858, the college was burned. A stone
building was then begun, and the walls soon raised. Before it was completed a
division took place on the issue of bible-rcading and prayer in the school, and
those opposed to these observances withdrew their aid, and the unfinished
building was sold by the sheriff to satisfy the mechanics. I find among the
Oreyon Special Laws of 1857-8 an act incorporating the Union University
Association, section 4 of which provides that the ' utmost care shall bo taken
to avoid every species of preference for any sect or party, either religious or
political.’ This was probably the form of protest ajainst sectarian teaching
which destroyed the prospects of the Cumberland school Henderson, after a
couple of sessions in a rented house, seeing no hope for the future, closed his
connection with the school, which was “us~ pended soon after, and never
revived.
About 1875
W. 11. Bishop of Brownsville completed a commodious school building as an
individual enterprise, and established a school under the name of Principia
Academy, with a chapel attached. In 1801 the Oregon Cumberland presbytery was
divided, by order of the Sacramento synod to which it belonged, and ail of
Oregon south of Calapooya ('reek on the east side of the Willamette River, and
all south of La (Jreole River on the west side of the Wiilamette, was detached
and made to form the Willamette presbytery, while all north of that retained
its former name. In 1874 the Oregon presbytery was again divided, that part
east of the Cascade Mountains and all of Washington being set oil and called
the Cascade presbytery, with four ordained ministers, the Oregon presbytery
having begun its operations in the Walla Walla Valley in 1871, when A. W.
Sweeney organized a church at Waitsburg with eighteen members, since which time
several other* have been formed, and churches erected. By order oi the general
assembly of the Cumberland in May 1875, the Oregon synod was constituted,
composed of these three presbyteries, which have in communion 700 members, and
own thirteen houses of worship, worth ^19,000. See centennial sketch by Neill
Johnson, in Portland Pac. Christian Advocate, May 4, 1876.
Among the
early immigrants to Oregon were many Baptists, this denomination being
numerous in the western and south-western states. As early as 1848 a society
was organized and a church building erected at Oregon City. Other churches soon
followed, Portland having an organized society in 1855, although not in a
flourishing state financially. It was not until June 1SC0 that a missionary,
Samuel Cornelius of Indianapolis, arrived, appointed by the American Baptist
Home Mission, to labor in Portland. His introductory sermon was preached in the
methodist church on the first Sunday in July, but a public hall was soon
secured, and the organization of the Frst Baptist Church of Portland took place
on the 12th of August, with twelve members; namely, Samuel Cornelius and wife,
Josiah Failing and wife, Douglas W. Williams, Elizabeth Failing, Joshua Shaw
and wife, 11. Weston and wifu, and George Shriver and wife. First Bapti t
Church Manual, 1. This small body made a call on Cornelius to become their
pastor, which was accepted, and on him and the two deacons, Williams and
Failing, devolved the task of building a house of worship. A half block of land
on the corner of Fourth and Alder streets had been donated for the site of a
baptist church by Stephen Collin several years before, and on this was begun a
building, ^ hicli was so far completed by January 5, 1862, that its basement
was occupied for religious services. In September 1804 Cornelius returned to
the east, leaving a membership of 49 persons, and the church was without a
pastor for two years, during which the deacons sustained as best they couli'
the burden of the society to prevent it from falling to pieces. Then came E. C.
Anderson of Kalamazoo, Michigan, sent by the Home Mission Society to act as
pastor, in December 1800 The church was incorporated in March 1867. Anderson
continued in the pastorate five years, and increased the membership to seventy,
the church edifice costing #12,500, being dedicated in January 1870. The
incorporators were Josiah
‘Failing,
Joseph >i. Dolpb, W. S. Caldwell, John S. White, George C. Chandler, and W.
Lair Hill. Again no ont was found to supply the place of pastor for a year and
a half, when A R. Medbury of San Francisco accepted a call, and remained with
this church three years, during which forty new members were added, and a
parsonage was presented to the society by Henry Failing, since which time the
church has been fairly prosperous. In 1801 the number of baptists in Oregon was
484, of churches 13, ard ordained ministers 10.
The first
baptist school attempted was Corvallis Institute, which seems not to have had
any history bey ond the act of incorporation iu 1856-7. An act was also passed
the following year establishing a baptist school under the name of West Union
Institute, in Washington county, with David T Lennox, Ed H. Lennox, Henry
Sewell, William Mauzey, John S. White, and George C. Chandler as trustees. At
the same session a chartei was granted to the baptist college at McMinnville, a
school already founded by the Disciple or Christian church, and turned over to
the baptists with the belongings, six acres of ground and a school building, as
a free gift, upon condition that they should keep up a collegiate school Tho
origin of McMinnville and its college was as follows: In 1862-3, W. T. Newby
cut a ditch from Baker Creek, a branch of thts Yamhill River, to Cozine Creek,
upon his land, where he erected a grist-mill. In 1S54 S. C1. Adams,
who lived on his donation claim i miles north, took a grist to mill, and in the
course of conversation with Newby remarked upon rbe favorable location for a
town which his land presented, upon which Newby replied that if he, Adam3,
would start a town, he should have half a block of lots, and select his own
location, from which point the survey should commence. In the spring of 1855
Adams deposited the lumber for his house on the spot selected, about 200 yards
from the mill, and proceeded to erect his honse. where, as soon as it was
completed, he went to reside. Immediately after lie began to agitate the
subject of a high school as a nucleus for a settlement, and as he and most of
the leading men in Yamhill were of the Christian church it naturally became a
Christian school. James McBride, William Dawson, W. T. Newby, and Adams worked
up the matter, bearing the larger part of the expense. Newby gave six acres of
land. The building erected for the school was large and commodious for those
times. Adams, who was a teacher by profession, was urged to take charge of the
school, and taught it for a year and a half. Among his pupils were John It.
McBride, L. L. How land, J. C. Shelton, Georgs L. Woods, and WmD. Baker. But
there had not been any organization, or any charter asked for, and Adams, who
found it hard and unprofitable work to keep up the school alone, wished to
resign, and proposed to the men interested to place it in the hands of the
baptists, who were about founding the West Union Institute. To this they made
no objection, as they only wished to have a school, and were not sectarian in
feeling. Accordingly, Adams proposed the gift to the baptists, and it was
accepted, only one condition being imposed, and agreed to in writing, to employ
at least one' professor in the college department continuously. It was
incorporated in January 1858 as the baptist college at McMinnville, by Henry
Warren, James M. Fulkerson, Ephriam Ford, Reuben C. Hill, J. S. Holman, Alexius
N. Miller, Richard Miller, and Willis Gaines, trustees. The Washington county
school was allowed to drop, and the McMinnville college was taken in charge by
G. 0. Chandler in the collegiate department, and Mrs N. Morse in the
preparatory school. The incorporated institution received the gift of twenty
acres ot 1 md tor a college campus from Samuel and Mahala Cozine and Mrs I’. W.
Chandler. It owned m 1S82 three thousand dollars in outside lands, a building
fund of twenty-one thousand dollars, aud an endowment fund of over seventeen
thousand, besides the apparatus and library. From addresses by J. N. Dolph md
W. C. Johnson in McMinville Colleye and Catalogue, 1882. A new ami handsome
edifice has been erected, whose corner-stone was laid in 1882. The Beacon, a
monthly denominational journal, was published at Salem as the organ of the
baptists.
Several
attempts were made to have colleges free from sectarian influence, which rarely
succeeded. The Jefferson institute, incorporated in January
1857, and
located at Jefferson, is ail exception. This school is independent, and has
been running since its founding in 1856-7. Any person may become a member by
paying $50 into the endowment fund, which amounts to about $4,000. The board
consists of fifteen trustees, five of whom are annually elected by the members.
Three directors are elected by the board from their own number, who have the
general management of school affairs. The first board of trustees were Geo. II.
Williams, J. H. Harrison. .Jacob Conser, K. K. Parrish, W. F. West. T Small, H.
A. Johnson, C. A. Reed, N. R. Doty, J.
B. Terhune, J. S. Miller, James Johnson, L.
Pettyjohn, Manuel Gonzalt*, and Andrew Cox. Mrs Conser gave a tract of land in
eight town lots. Thi building cost ijp3,0iX). C. H. Mattoon was the first
teacher, in 1S57. Portland Pac. Adrocate, Feb. 24 and March 2, 1876; Kept of
Supt Pub. Instruc., 1878, 91-2. The number of pupils in 1884 was about oue
hundred. The curriculum does not embrace a college course, but only the
preparatory studies. The Butteville Institute, established by legislative act
iu January 1S59, was an independent school, which, if ever successful, is now
out of existence.
The
pioneer of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Oregon was St M. Faultier, who
crossed the plains with the immigration of 1847 in search of health, ot' whom I
have spoken in another place. He found a few members of this* church in Oregon
City, and held occasional services in 1848 at the house of A. McKinlay, but
without attempting to organize a church The first, missionary of the episcopal
c-hureh in the east wa» William Richmond of the diocese of New York, appointed
by the Board of Domestic Mission:} in April 1851 to labor in Oregon, and who
organized congregations at Portland, Oregon City, Milwaukee, Salem, Lafayette,
and other places before the close of that jear, adding Champoeg, Chehalem, and
Tualatin plains the follow ing year. In the fall of 1852 he was joined by James
A. Woodward of the diocese of Pennsylvania, who like Fackler had made the
overland journey to better his physical condition, and had succeeded, which
Fackler did not. After the arrival of Woodward, services were held in the
congregational church at Oregon City until a loom was fitted up for the
purpose.
in January
1853 John McCarty of New York dioccse arrived as army chaplain at Va ncouver.
At this time there were about twenty members in Portland who formed Trinity
Church organization. At the meeting of the general convention held in New York
in October 1853, Thomas Fielding Scott of the diocese of Georgia was elected
missionary bishop of Oregon and Washington, but before hi* arrival Richmond
and Woodward had returned to tho east, leaving only Fackler and McCarty as aids
to the bishop. Two church edifices had already been erected, the first. St
Juhn’sat Milwaukee, the second, Trinity at Portland. The latter was consecrated
September 24th, about three months after the arrival of Scott. In 1S55 the church
at Milwaukee and another at Salem were consecrated, but without any increase of
the clerical force until late in this year, when Johnston McCormack, a deacon,
arrived, who w-as stationed temporarily at Portland. In 1856 arrived John
Sellwood a’ld his brother, James R. W. Sellwood; but having been wounded in the
P. naniA riot of that year, John was not able for some months to enter upon his
duties. His brother, however, took charge of the church at Salem. The first
episcopal school for boys was opened this year at Oswego, under thr management
of Bernard Cornelius, w ho had recently taught iu Olympia, and was .» graduate
of Dublin university. Seventy acres of land, and a large dwelling-house,
pleasant'.y situated, were purchased for this purpose. J ames
I. Daly w as ordained deacon in May, giving a
sligh t increase to the few work ■ ers in
the field. St Mary’s church
at Eugene City was consecrated in January
1859 by Bishop Scott; and there arrived, also, this
year five clergymen, Carlton P. Maples, T. A. Hyland, D. E. Willes, W. T. B.
Jacks in and P. E. Hyland. Two of them returned east, and one, P. E. Hyland,
went to Olympia T. A. Iljland married a daughter of Steams of Douglas county.
He was for many years a pastor and teacher at Astoria, but returned to Canada
afterward. St i’aul’s chapel at Oregon City was dedicated in the spring of
1861; and in the autumn Scott opened a girls’ school at Milwaukee,
which was
successful from the first. The Oregon Churchman, a small monthly publication in
the interests of the church, was first issued this year.
The
episcopal church was making steady advances when in 18G7 Bishop Scott died,
universally lamented. Over 200 persons had been confirmed, not all of whom
remained steadfast during an interval of two years when the diocese was without
a head. A fresh impetus was imparted to the life of the church when a new
missionary bishop, B. Wistar Morris, arrived in Oregon, in Jane 1809. A block
of land was purchased in Portland, on Fourth Street, between Madison and
Jefferson, and St Helen Hall built. By the Oth of September it had fifty
pupils. In the following year it was enlarged, and began its second year with
123 pupils. The Scott grammar and diviniLy school for boys was erected in 1870,
on a tract of land in the western part of Couch’s addition, commanding a fine
view of Portland and the Willamette Iliver. Both of these insti.utionsv.ere
successful, the grammar school having to be enlarged in 1872. The building was
burned in November 1877, but rebuilt larger than before, at a cost of §23,000.
In the. same year the congregation of trinity church erected a new edifice on
the block occupied by the former one between Oak and Pino, but facing on Sixth
Street, and costing over $30,000, the bishop being assisted by several clergymen.
A church had been organized in Walla Walla by Wells, who extended his labors to
several of the towns of eastern Oregon in 1373 Iu 1874 the bishop laid the
corner-stones of five churches, and purchased four acres of land in the
north-western quarter of Portland, on which was ereetod a hospital and
orphanage, under the name of Good Samaritan. the energy of Morris and the
liberality of the people of Portland placing the episcopal society in the
foremost rank in point, of educate mal and charitable institutions. When Scott
entered upon his diocese, it included all of the original territory of Oregon,
but occupied later only Oregon and Washington. In the latter, in 1870, there
were seven churches, one boarding-school for girls—at Walla Walla—one parish
school, one rectory, and 157 communi cants. Episcopal Church in Or., a history
prepared for the centennial commissioners, 1870, Vancouver, 1870; Seattle
Intelligence, Aug. 24, 1879
Among the
other religious denominations of Oregon were the Campbellites. Like the other
churches, they knew the value of sectarian schools, and according to one of
their elders, would have bad one in every county had it been practicable. As I
have before said, they founded the school at McMinnville, which became a
baptist college, James McBride, William Dawson, and S. C. Adams erecting the
first college building. Adams taught the school just previous to its transfer.
A little later than the MeMlnnv ille school was the founding of the Bethel
Academy in 1856. The promoters of this enterprise were Elder G. O. Burnett,
Amos Harvey, Nathaniel Hudson, and others. In 1855 it was chartered by the
legislature as the Bethel Institute. In October they advertised that they were
ready to receive pupils, aud also that ‘students will be free to attend upon
such religious services on each Lord’s day as they may choose.’ The institute
opened in November with fifty or sixty pupils in attendance, and we learn that
‘Judge Williams addressed the people’ at a meeting of the trustees in February
following. L. L. Rowland and N. Hudson were teaching in 1S39, and in 1800 the
act of incorporation was amended to read Bethel College. Or. Laws, 1800, 102-3.
At this time the Bethel school was prosperous. It had a well-selected library,
and choice apparatus in the scientific departments.
But
liethel had a rival in the same county. In 1855 measures were taken to found
another institution ot learning, the trustees chosen being Ira F. Butler, J.
E. Murphy, R. P, Boise, J B. Smith, S. Simmons, William Mason, T. II. Hutchison,
H. Burtord, T. II. Lucas, D. R. Lewis, and S. S. Whitman, This board organized
with liutler for president, Hutchison secretary, and Lucas treasurer A charter
was granted them the same year, incorporating Monmouth University; 4G0 acres of
laud were donated, Whitman giving 200, T II. Lucas 80, A. W. Lucas 20, and J.
B. Smith and Elijah Davidson each 80, This land was laid out m a town site
called Monmouth, and the lots sold to persons desiring to reside near the
university. In the abundant
charity of
their hearts, and perhaps with a. motive to popularize their institution, the
trustees passed a resolution to establish a school lor orphans in connection
with the university; but this scheme being found to he impracticable, it was
abandoned, and the money subscribed to the orphan school refunded.
Notwithstanding
its ambitious title, the Monmouth school only served to divide the patronage
which would have been a support for one only, ana after ten years of
unprofitable effort, it was resolved iu convention by the Christian chuieh to
unite Bethel and Monmouth, under the name of Monmouth Christian College, which
was done. The first session of this college is reckoned from October 1866 to
June 1807. The necessity for an endowment led, iu 18GS, to the sale of forty
scholarships at five hundred dollars each, by which assistance the institution
became fairly prosperous. On the organization of the college, L. L. Rowland of
Bethany college, Virginia, was made principal, with X. Hudson assistant. In
1<8G9 a more complete organization took place, and T. F. Campbell, a native
of Mississippi and graduate of Bethany college, Was placed at the head of the
college as principal, being selected president the following year, a situation
which he held for thirteen years with profit to the management. A substantial
brick building was erected, a newspaper, the Monmouth Christian Messenger,
published, and the catalogue showed 200 students. In 1882 Campbell resigned and
returned to the east, leaving the college on as good a basis as any in the
state, having graduated twenty-three students in the classical and forty-one in
the scientific course. The college property is valued at twenty thousand
dollars, and the endowment twenty- five thousand. The census of 1870 gives the
number of Christian churches at twenty-six, and church edifices at sixteen. At
a Christian cooperation convention held at Dallas iu 1877, thirty-one
societies were represented. Later h church was organized in Portland, and a
building erected for religious services.
Baker City
Academy, an incorporated institution was opened in 1868, with F. II. Grubbe
principal, assisted by his wife, Jason Lee’s daughter. Grubbe subsequently took
charge of The Dalles High school, his wife dying at that place in 1881. He was
succeeded in the Baker City academy by S. P. Barrett, and later by William
Harrison. As the pioneer academy of eastern Oregon, it did a good work The
corner-ston.i of the Blue Mountain University at La Grande was laid in 1874. In
1878 it was in successful operation, with colleges of medicine, law, and
theology promised at an early day. In addition to the preparatory and classical
departments, there were two scientific courses of four years. The school was
non-sectarian. G. E. Ackerman was first president. A good school was also
established at Union, and the Independent Academy at The Dalles. The latter
institution acquired possession of the stone building partially erected for a
mint in 1869-70, but presented to the s'ate when the mint was abandoned, and by
the state transferred to this school.
The First
Unitarian Church of Portland, incorporated in 1865 by Thomas Frazier, E. I).
Shattuek, and R. II. Thompson, was the first of that denomination in the
state. Its first house of worship wras located on the corner of
Yamhill and .Seventh streets, a plain building of wood, the lot costing §7,000,
with free seats for 300 people. Its pastor, T. L. Eliot, drew to this modest
temple goodly congregations; the society grew, and in 1878 was laid the corner-stone
of the present church of Our Father, one of the most attractive edifices in the
city, which was dedicated in 1879. Ulytnjna Unitarian Advocate, Aug. 1878;
Portland Oregonian, July 27, 1878, June 14, 1879. There is a small number of
universalists in the state. They had a church at Coquille City, organized by
Zcnas Cook, missionary of this denomination. They erected a place of worship in
1878.
The
Evangelical Lutherans organized a church at Portland in 1807, A. Myres, of the
general synod, acting. A house of worship was erected in lt>G9, being the
first lutheran church iu Oregon. Through some mismanagement of the b lilding
committee, the church became involved iu debt, and after bcveral
years of
struggle against a.lverse circumstances, the building-was sold by
the sheriff in .May 1875. Another lutheran church ^ais organized in 1871, by A
E. Fridrichsen, from the Danes, Swedes, and
Norwegians of Portland, and. incorporated June 9, 1S71, under the name of the
Scandinavian Evangelical Lutheran Church of Portland. Being offered building
ground in East Portland by James B. Stephens and wife, they built there, but
services were also held in the basement of the lirst presbyterian church, where
a discourse iu the Swedish tongue was preached Sunday evenings. As there was
considerable immigration from the Scandinavian and German countries, the
lutheran church rapidly increased in Oregon and Washington. From centennial
report by A. Emil Fridrichsen, in Portland Ohrintian Advocate, May 11, 1876.
Portland
had also a German church, an African Methodist Episcopal Zion church, two
Jewish societies, Beth Israel with a synagogue at the corner of Fifth and Oak,
and Ahavai Sholom with a synagogue on Sixth street, between Oak and Pine, and a
Chinese temple on Second street, betw een Morrison and Adler streets.
The
Seventh-Day Adventists had a church incorporated in September 1878, at Milton,
Umatilla county, by J, C. Burch, W. Russell, and W. J. Goodwin
The First
Society of Humanitarians of Astoria was incorporated in January 1878, by
Janies Taylor, L 0. Fruit, and John A. Goss.
The
Methodist G. Church South was organized at Wiugville, Baker county, in 1878,
Hiram Osborne, C. G. Chandler, and E. C. Perki-is, trustees
The
Emanuel Church of the. Evangelical Association of North America, of Albany, was
incorporated July 22, 1878, by E B. Purdom, F. Martin, and L, G Allen.
There were
Hebrew Congregations at Astoria and Albany. Or. Sec. State Rept, 1878, 112-20.
The latest
available statistics, those of 1875, gave the number of religious organisations
in Oregon, of all denominations, at 351, with 24'2 churches, 820 clergymen,
14,324 communicants, Rud 71,630 adherents. The assessed value of the church
property was §654,000. During the years following there was s large increase in
numbers and property. With respect to numbers, the different denominations rank
as follows: Methodists, baptists, catholics, episcopalians,
eongregationalists, and other minor sects.
PUBLIC
SCHOOLS AND BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS.
That
section of the organic act which conferred 1,280 acres of land upon every tov.
nship for the support of public schools made a system of free education
obligatory upon the people, & ml one of the first acts of the legislature
of 1849 w’as a law iu consonance with this gift, providing for the appropriation
of the interest of the money arising from the sale of school iands to th»
purposes of public insruction. The law, in a revised form, exists still. But
th« ../come of the school fund arising from sales of school land was not
sufficient for the support of the common schools, and in 1853-4 the revised law
provided for levying a tax in every county, of two mills on the dollar anil
also that the eounty treasurer should set apart all moneys collected from fines
for breach of any of the penal laws of the territory, in order to give
immediate effect to the educational system. The legiolature of 1854 -5 made
every school district a body corporate to assess and eollect taxes for the
support of the public schools for a certain portion of the year.
When
Oregon became a state it was pven more richly endowed w ith lands for
educational purposes, and in its constitution generously set apart much of its
dower for the same purpose. In 1S76 the common-school fund amounted to over
half a million dollars. For the school year of 1877-8 the. interest on the
school fand amounted to over $48,000. As the fund increases vv ith the gradual
sale of the school lan-!?, it is expected that an amount will eventually be
realized from the three million acres remaining which will meet the larger part
of the expense of the public schools. In Portland, where the schools are
more
perfectly graded than elsewhere, the cost per year for each pupil ha? been
about twenty-one dollars. The total value: of public school property in the
state iu 1S77-8 was nearly half a million dollars, comprising 752 school-
houses and their furr iture. The lowest average monthly salary in «ny county
was thirty-five dollars, and the highest seventy-one. Biennial liept Stfd Pub.
Jnstruc. Or., 1878, 26. The course of study in the common schools, which is
divided i':to seven grades, preparatory to the high-school course, is more
fully exemplified in Portland than elsewhere. The whole city is comprised in
one district, with buildings at convenient distances and of ample size. The
Central school was iirst opened in May 1858. It was built on a block of land
between llorrison and Yamhill and Sixth and Seventh streets, for which in 1856
§1,000 was paid, and a wing of the main building erected, costing $->3,000,
the money being raised by taxation, according to the school law. The following
year another $4,000 was raised and applied to the completion of the building;
111 pupils were present at the opening, the principal being L. L. Terwilliger,
assisted by O. Connelly and Mrs Hensill. In 1872-3 the original structure was
moved and added to, making a ncv and commodious house at a cost of over
$30,000. In 1S83, the block on which it stood being needed for a hotel, the
building was moved to a temporary resting-place on the next block north. The
second school building was erected in 1865, at the corner of Sixth and
Ilarrison streets, eleven blocks south of the Central, at acostof about ten
thousand dollars. It was twico enlarged, in 1871 and 1877, at a total cost of
nearly 021,000. The Harrison-Strect school was opened in January 1866 by R. K.
Warren, principal, assisted by Misses Tower, Stephens, and Kelly. In May 1S79
it was nearly all destroyed by fire, but was rebuilt the same year at a cost
of $18,000, and reopened in February 1880. The third school building erectcd in
the district was called the North School, and was located between Tenth and
Eleventh and C and I) streets, in Couch’s Addition. It was built in 1867, the
block and house costing over seventeen thousand dollars. Two wings were ad led
in 1877, with an additional expenditure of over four thousand. The first
principal wasG. S. Persian, assisted by Misses May, Northrup, and Polk. The
fourth, or Park School, was erected in 1S78- 9, on Park Street, at a cost of
§42,000. The high school occupied the upper floor, and some grammar classes the
lower. Each of these four schools had in 188J a sealing capacity of some 650,
while the. attendance was about four hundred and seventy-fivefor each. Two fine
school buildings have been added since 18S0. one in the north end of the city,
called the Couch School, and one in the south end, named the Failing School,
after two prominent pioneers of Port’and. There was a high echool, three
stories and basement, of the most modern design, which cost §150,000.
The State
University, which received an endowment from the general government of over
43,000 acres of land, has realized therefrom over §70,000, t le interest on
which furnishes a small part of the means required for its support, the remainder
being derived from tui tion fees. The institution passed through the same
struggles that crippled private institutions.
After
expanding the money appropriated by congress in political squabbles, it wan
for » long time doubtful if a miversity would be founded within the generation
tor whom it was intended, when Lane county came to the rescue in the following
Danner: The citizens of Eugene City resolved in
1872 to have an institution of learning of a higher
grade than the common schools. An association was incorporated in August of
that year, consisting of J. M. Thompson, J. J. Walton, Jr, W. J. J. Scott, B.
F. Dorris, J. B. Underwood, J. J. Comstock, A. S. Patterson, S. II. Spencer,
E. L. Bristow, E. L. Applegate, and A. W. Patterson, of Lane county, which was
called the Union University Association, with a capital stock of §50,000, in
shares of §100 each. During the discussions consequent upon the organization, a
proposition was made and acted upon, to endeavor to have the state university
located at Eugene. When half the stock was subscribed and directors elected,
the matter was brought before the legislature, of which A. W. Patterson w as a
member. An act was passed establishing the statt. raiversity Hiu> ob., Vol. II. 41
in
September 1872, upon the condition that the Union University Association should
procure a suitable build ing site, and erect thereon a building which with the
furniture and grounds should be worth not less than >0,000, the property to
be deeded to the board of directors of the state university free of
a.11
incumbrances, which was done. The law provided that the board' of state
university directors should consist of six appointed by the governor, and three
elected by the Union University Absociuiiun. The governor appointed Matthew P.
Deady, L. L. McArthur, Ii. S. Strahan, T. G. Hendricks, George Humphrey, and
J. M. Thompson, the three elected being B. P. Dorris, W. J. J. Scott, and J. J.
Walton, Jr. At the first meeting of the board, in April 1873, Deady was elected
president.
The
legislature gave substantial aid by appropriating $10,000 a year for 1877-S.
Eighteen acres of land were secured in a good situation, ami a building
erected of brick, SO by 57 feet, three stories in height, with porticoes, mansard
roof, and a good modern arrangement of the interior; eost, $80,.000.
It was
necessary to provide for a preparatory department. The institution opened
October 16, 1870. with 80 pupils in the collegiate and 75 in the preparatory
departments; 43 in the collegiate department were non-paying, the university
law allowing one free scholarship to each county, and 'me to each member of the
legislature. Owing to the want of money, there was not a full boaril of
professors; those who were first to organize a class for graduation had many
difficulties to contend with. The first faculty consisted only of J. W.
Johnson, president and professor of ancient classics, Mark Bailey, professor of
mathematics, and Thomas Condon, professor of geology ami nat ural history The
preparatory school was in charge of Mrs Mary P. Spiller, assisted by Miss Mary
E. Stone. From these small beginnings was yet to grow the future university of
the state of Oregon. In 1884 there were 7 regular professors, 2 tutors, 215
students, and 19 graduates. Regents' Rept, 187S, Stott University; Or. Mesa,
and Docs, 1870, 148-53; Deady’s Hist. (Jr., MS., 55; Univer. Or. Catalogue,
1878, 18.
State
institutions for the education of deaf, dumb, and blind persons remained
backward. The deaf-and-dumb school at Salem was organized in 1870, with
thirty-six. pupils in attendance, in the building formerly occupied by the
academy of the Sacred Heart, which was removed into a new one. The legislature
provided by act of 1870 that not more than £'2,000 per annum of public money
should be expended on the instruction of deaf-mutes. Tho legislature of 1874
appropriated §10,000 for their maintenance, and the legislature of 1876,
$12,000. The first appropriation for the blind was made in 1872, amounting to
$2,000; in 1874, $10,000 was appropriated; in 1876, §8,000; and in 1878 a
general appropriation of $10,000 was made, with m directions for its use,
except that it was to pay for teachers and expenses of the deaf, dumb, and
blind schools. In 1S78 tlie institute for the blind was closed, and the few
under instruction returned to their homes; it w as reopened and closed again in
1884, waiting the action of the legislature. These institutions hive no fund
for their isupport, but depend upon biennial appropriations. Like £dl the
other public schools, they were for a time under the management of the state
board of education, but the legislature of 1880 organized the school for
deaf-mutes by placing it under a board of directors. Or. Mess. and .Docs, 1882,
32.
A prot(5g6
of the general government was the Indian school at Forest Grove, where a
hundred picked pupils of Indian blood were educated at the nation’s expense.
The scheme was conceived by Captain C. M. Wilkinson of the 3d U. S, infantry,
who procured several appropriations for the founding and conduct of the school,
of which hr was made first superintendent. The experiment began in 1880, and
promised well, although the result can only lie known when the pupils have
entered actual life for themselves.
Of special
schools, there were a few located at Portland. The homeopathic medical college,
H. McKinnell, president, was a society rather than a school.
The Oregon
school and college association of natural history, under the presidency of
Thoina3 Condon, was more truly a branch at large of the state
university.
P. S. Knight, secretary, did much in Salem to develop a taste for studies iu
natural history, by example, lecturing, and teaching; while Condon, whose name
was synonymous with a love of geological studies and other branches of natural
science, did no less for The Dalles, Portland, Forest Grove, and Eugene. These
with other friends of science formed an association for the cultivation and
spread of the natural science branches of education, the seat of which was
Portland.
The Oregon
Medical College of Portland was formed by the union of the Multnomah County
Medical Society and the medical department of the Wil- •lamette University. The
former society was founded about the beginning of 1SC5, and the latter
organized in ISO". Eighty-three doctors of medicine were graduated from
the university in ten years. In 1S77 it was determined to remove this branch of
the university to Portland, where superior advantages might be enjoyed by the
students, and iu February 1873 the incorporation of the Oregon Medical College
took place, the incorporators being R. Glisan, Philip Harvey, W. 13. Cardwell,
W. H. Watkins, R. G. Rex, 0. P.
S. Plummer, Matthew P. Deadj, and W. H.
Saylor.
LITERATURE.
It cannot
be said that Oregon has a literature of its < *wn. Few states have ever
claimed this distinction, and none can properly do so before the men and women
bom on its soil and nurtured in its institutions have begun to send forth to
the world the ideas evolved from the culture and observation obtained there.
That there w as rather more than a usual tendency to authorship among the
early settlers and visitors to this portion of the Pacific coast is true Wy
because of the great number of unusual circumstances attending the immigration,
the length of the journey, the variety of scenery, and the political situation
of the country, which gave them so much to write about that almost without
intention they appeared as authors, writers of newspaper letters, pamphleteers,
publishers of journals, petitioners to congress, and recorders of current
events. It is to their industry in this respect that I am indebted for i large
portion of my material. Besides these authors, all of whom have been mentioned,
there remain a few sources of information to notice.
The Oregon
Spectator has preserved some of the earliest poetry of the country, often
without signature. Undoubtedly some of the best was written by transient
persons, English officers and others, who, to while away the tedium of a
frontier life, dallied with the muses, and wrote verses alternately to Mount
Ilood, to Mary, or to a Columbia Ri\er salmon. Mrs M. J. Bailey, George L.
Curry, J. H. P., and many noms de plume appear in the Spectator. Mount Hood was
apostrophized frequently, and there appear verses addressed to the different
immigrations of 1843, 1845, and 1846, all laudatory of Oregon, and encouraging
to the new-comers. Lieutenant Drake of the Modeste •w rote frequent effusions
for the Spectator, most often addressed ‘To Mary;’ and Henry N. Peers, another
English officer, wrote ‘The Adventures of a Coln"i- bia River Salmon,’ a
production worth preserving on account of its descriptive as well as literary
merit. It is fouud in Or. Spectator, Sept. 2, 1847; Clyman’fi Note-Book, MS.,
9-10, refers to early Oregon poets.
In point of
time, the first work of fiction written in Oregon ■« as The Prairie Flower, by S. W. Moss of Oregon City. It
was sent east to be published, and appeared with some slight alterations as one
of a series of western stories by Bn merson Bennett of Cincinnati. One of its
foremost characters was modelled after George W. Ebberts of Tuj.latin plains,
or the Black Squire, as he was called among mountain men. Two of the women in
the story were m.-ant to resemble the wife ami mother-in law of Medorum
Crawford. Mom’* Pictures Or. City, MS., IS. The second novel was Captain Gray’?
Company, by Mri A. S. Paniway, the incidents of which showed little imagination
and a too literal observation of camp life in crossing the plains. Mrs Duniway
did better work later, although her abilities lie rather with solid prose than
fiction.
Charles Applegate wrote and published some tales of western life, which he
carefully concealed from those who might recognize them. The list of this class
of authors is short. I do not know where to turn for another among the founders
of Oregon literature. Every college and academy had its literary society, and
often they published some small monthly or bi-monthly journal, the
contributions to which may be classed with school exercises rather than with
deliberate authorship.
Mrs Bells
\Y. Cooke of Salem wrote some graceful poems, and published a small volume
under the title of Tears and Victory. Mrs Cooke was mother of one of Oregon’s
native artists, Clyde Cooke, who studied in Europe, and inherited his talent
from her. Samuel A. Clarke of Salem, author of Sounds by the. Western S(a, and
other poems, wrote out many local legends in verse, with a good deal of
poetical feeling. See legend of the Cascades, in Harper's .Magazine xlviii.,
Feb. 187-1, 313-19. H. C. Miller, better known as Joaquin Miller, became the
most widely famous of all Oregon writers, and lias said some good things in
verse of the mountains and woods of his state. It is s, pity he had not evolved
from his inner consciousness some loftier human ideals than his fictitious
characters. Of all his pictures of life, none i3 so fine as his tribute to the
Oregon pioneers, under che title of Pioneers of the Pacific, which fits
California as well.
Miller
married a v. onian who as a lyrical poet was fully his equal; but while he went
forth free from their brief wedded life to challenge the plaudits of the world,
she sank beneath the blight of poverty, and the weight of woman’s inability to
grapple with the human throng which surges over and treads down those that
faint by the way; therefore Minnie Myrtle Miller, still in the prime of her
powers, passed to the silent land. Among the poets of the Willamette Valley,
Samuel L. Simpson deserves a high rank, having written some of the finest
lyrics contributed to local literature, though his style is uneven. A few
local poems of merit have been written by Mrs F. P. Victor, who came to Oregon
by way of San Francisco in 1865, and published several prose books relating to
the country. It seems most natuial that all authorship should be confined to
topics concerning the country, its remoteness from literary centres and paucity
of population making it unlikely that anything of a general interest would
succeed. This consideration also cramps all intellectual efforts except such as
can be applied directly to the paying professions, such as teaching, medicine,
and law, and /estricts publication so that it does not fairly represent the
culture of the people, which crops out only incidentally in public addresses,
newspaper articles, occasionally a pamphlet and at long intervals a special
book. I allude here to such publications as Multan's Qverland Guide, Drew’s
Owyhee Reconnaissance, Condon's Report on State Geology, Small’s Oregon and her
Resources, Dufur’s Statistics of Oregon, Deady’s WallamH vs. Willamette, and
numerous public addresses in pamphlet form, to contributions to the Oregon
pioneer association’s archives, Victor’s A !l Over Oregon and Washington,
Murphy’s State Directory, Gitisan’s Journal of Army Life, and a large number of
descriptive publications in paper covers, besides monographs and morceaux of
every descripton.
The number
of newspapers and periodicals published in Oregon in 1880, according to the
tenth census, was 74, againsi 2 in 1830, 16 in 18U0, and 35 iu 1870. Of these,
7 were dailies, 59 weeklies, 6 monthlies, 1 semi-monthly, and 1 quarterly. A
few only of these had any particular significance. The Astorian, founded in
1872 by I). C. Ireland, on account of its excellence as a commercial and marine
journal, should be excepted. The Inland Empire of The Dalles is also deserving
of mention for its excellence iu disseminating useful information on all topics
connected with the development of the coun try. The West Shore, a Portland
monthly publication, founded ’n August
1873 by L. Samuels, grew from an eight-page journal
to a magazine of from twenty to thirty quarto pages, chiefly local in
character, and profusely illustrated with cuts representing the scenery and
the architectural improvements of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana ind
British Columbia. The locality longest without a newspaper was Cooa Bay, which,
although settled early,
isolated
by a lack of roads from the interior, and having considerable business, had no
printing-press until October 1870, when the Monthly Guide was started at Empire
City, a sheet of 4 pages about 6 by 4 inches in size. It ran until changed into
the Good Bay News in March 1873, when it was enlarged to 12 by 18 inches. In
September of the same year it was removed to Marshfield and again enlarged.
PIONEER
ASSOCIATION.
The Oregon
Pioneer Society was organized October 8 and 9, 18G7, at Salem, in the hall of
the house of representatives, W. H. Gray being prime mover. The officers
elected were J. W. Nesmith president, Matthew P. Deady vice-president, I. N.
Gilbert treasurer, and Medorum Crawford secretary. Resolutions were offered to
form committees to obtain facts concerning the immigration of 1843, and in
reference to the civil and political condition of the country from its earliest
settlement.
In the
mean time W. H. Gray had founded the Oregon Pioneer and Historical Society,
with its office at Astoria, which society made less of the social reunions and
more of the collection of historical documents, and which held its first
meeting in 1872. I have not been able to find a schedule of its first
proceedings. Truman P. Powers, one of Oregon’s most venerable pioneers, was its
president in 1875. He has only recently died. It strikes one, in looking over
the proceedings of that year, that less sectarianism would be conducive to
abetter quality of history material.
On the
ISth of October, 1873, the original society reorganized as the Oregon Pioneer
Association, with F. X. Mathieu president, J. W. Grim vicepresident, W. H.
Rees secretary, and Eli Cooley treasurer. It held its anniversaries and
reunions on the 15th of June, this being the day on which the treaty of
boundary between Great Britain and the United States was concluded. Addresses
were annually delivered by men acquainted with pioneer life and history.
Ex-governor Curry delivered the first annual address November 11, 1873, since
which time, Deady, Nesmith, Strong, Rees, Holman, Bois6, Minto, Geer, Atkinson,
Thornton, Evans, Applegate, Staats, Chadwick, Grover, and others have
contributed to the archives of the society valuable addresses. A roll of the
members is kept, with place of nativity and year of immigration, and all are
eligible as members who came to Oregon while the territory was under the joint
occupancy of the United States and Great Britain, or who were born or settled
in the territory prior to January 1, 1854. Biographies form a feature of the
archives. The association offered to join with the historical society in 1874,
but the latter decided that ‘any material change in its organic existence would
defeat the prime object of the society,’ and they remained apart. The
association is a popular institution, its reunions being occasions of social
intercourse as well as historical x’eminiscences, and occasions for the display
of the best talent in the state. The transactions of each annual meeting are
published in a neat pamphlet for preservation. In IS77 the men and women who
settled the Rogue River and other southern valleys, and whose isolation, n
lining adventures, and Indian wars gave them a history of their own, hardly
identical with but no less interesting than that of the settlers of the
Willamette Valley, met at the picturesque village of Ashland and founded the
Pioneer Society of Southern Oregon on the 13th of September of that year, about
800 persons being present. Its firtft officers were L. C. Duncan president,
William Hoffman secretary, N. S. Hayden treasurer. E. L. Applegate delivered
an address, in which he set forth the motives which animated, and the exploits
which were performed by, the pioneers. Other addresses were made by Thomas
Smith, E. K. Anderson, and John E. Ross. The society in 1885 was in a
prosperous condition. Portland Orego« nian, Nov. 18, 18(37; Portland Advocate,
Sept. 14, 1S67; Astoria Astorian, April 3, 1875; Sac. Record-Union, April 3,
1875; Portland Bulletin, Dec.
6, 1871; Portland Oregonian, March 9,1872;
Ashland Tidings, Sept. 28, 1877; Jacksonville Times, April 12, 1878.
LIBRARIES.
The
original State Library of Oregon, as the reader knows, was destroyed by fire in
1855. The later collection numbered in 1885 some 11,000 volumes, and was simply
a law library, as there were few miscellaneous books. It contained no state
historical documents or writings of local authors to speak of. The annual
appropriation of $730 was expended by the chief justice in purchasing books for
the supreme court.
The
Library Association of Portland had the largest miscellaneous collection in
the state. It was founded in February 1864 by subscriptions from a few
prominent men, amounting in all to a little over $2,500. At the end of the
first year it had 500 volumes, and increased annually till in 1885 there were
some 12,000 volumes. Although not large, this library was selected with more than
ordinary care, the choice of books having been made principally by Judge
Deady, to whose fostering care its continued growth may be principally
ascribed, although the institution is scarcely less indebted to W. S. Ladd, for
the free use of the elegant rooms over his bank for many years. The first board
of directors was W. S. Ladd, B. Goldsmith, L. H. Wakefield, H. W. Corbett, E.
D. Shattuck, C. H. Lewis, William Strong, W. S. Caldwell, P. C. Schuyler, Jr,
and Charles Calef. The directors were divided into five classes by lot, the
first class going out at the expiration of two years, the second in four years,
and so ou to the end, two new directors being elected biennially. Tlie first
officers of the association were W. S. Ladd, president; William Strong,
vice-president; Bernard Goldsmith, treasurer; Henry Failing, corresponding
secretary: W. S. Caldwell, recording secretary; H. W. Scott, W. B. Cardwell,
and C. C. Strong, librarians. In 1872 the association employed Henry A. Oxer
as librarian and recording secretary, whose qualifications for the duties
materially assisted to popularize the institution. Judge Deady has been
presiding officer for many years.
The
Pacific University, State University, Willamette University, Monmouth
University, McMinnville and other colleges and schools, and the catholic church
of Portland, maintained libraries for the use of those under tuition, and there
were many private collections in the state.
IMMIGRATION
SOCIETY.
The first
society for the promotion of immigration was formed in 1856, in New York, under
the title of New Yrork Committee of Pacific Emigration. S. P. Dewey
and W. T. Coleman of San Francisco, and Amory Holbrook and and A. McKinlay of
Oregon City, were present at the preliminary meeting at the Tontine House. An
appeal was made to the people of Oregon to interest themselves in sustaining a
board of immigration, and keeping an agent iu New York in common with the
California Emigration Society. Or. Statesman, Feb, 3, 1857. The matter,
however, seems to have been neglected, nothing further being heard about
immigration schemes until after the close of the civil war, and after the
settlement of Idaho and Montana had intercepted the westward flow of
population, reducing it to a minimum in the Willamette Valley and everywhere
west of the Cascades. About 1868 the State Agricultural Society appointed A.
J. Dufur, its former president, to compile and publish facts concerning the
‘physical, geographical, and mineral’ resources of the state, and a
‘description of its agricultural development/ which he accordingly did in a
pamphlet of over a hundred pages, which was distributed broadcast and placed
in the way of travellers. Dufur’s Or. Statistics, Salem, 1869.
In August
1869 a Board of Statistics, Immigration, and Labor Exchange was formed at
Portland, with the object of promoting the increased settlement of the country,
and furnishing immigrants with employment. The board consisted of ten men, who
managed the business and employed such agents as they thought best, but the
revenues were derived from private subscriptions. Ten thousand copies of
pamphlets prepared by the society were distributed the
first year
of its existence, and the legislature was appealed to for help in fur • nishing
funds to continui these operations, w hich were assisted by a subordinate
society at Salem. Or. Legisl, Docs, 1870, 11, app. 1-11. In 1872 E. L.
Applegate was appointed a commissioner of immigration by the legislature, with
power to equip himself with maps, charts, and statistics in a manner properly
to represent Oregon in the United States and Europe, and to ‘counteract
interested misrepresentations ’ Or. Lawn, 1872, 38. The compensation for this
service was left blank in the law, from which circumstance, and from the
additional one that Applegate returned to Oregon in the spring of 1872 as a
peace commissioner to the Modocs under pay. it is just to conclude that his
salary as a commissioner of immigration was insufficient to the service, or
that his services were inadequate to the needs of the country, or both.
At the
following session in 1874 the State Board of Immigration was created, October
28th, the members of which were to be appointed by the governor to the number
of five, who were to act without salary or other compensation, under rules of
their own making. This act also authorized the governor to appoint honorary
members in foreign countries, none of whom were to receive payment. Or. I.au-s,
1874, 113. The failure of the legislature to make an appropriation compelled
the commissioners appointed by the governor to solicit subscriptions in
Portland. Considerable money was collected from business iirms, aud an agent
was sent to San Francisco Upon recommendation of the state board, consisting
of W. S. Ladd, H. W. Coibett, B. Goldsmith, A. Lienenw eber and William Jieid,
the governor appointed twenty- four special agents, ten in the United States,
ten in Europe, two in New Zealand, and two in Canada. The results were soon
apparent Nearly li,000 letters of inquiry were received in the eighteen months
ending in September
1876, and a perceptible movement to the north-west
was begun. The eastern branch of the state board at Boston expended $24,000 in
the period just mentioned for immigration purposes; half-rates were scoured by
passenger vessels and railway lines from European ports to Portland, by which
means about 4,000 immigrants came out in 1875, and over 2,000 in 1870, while
the immigration of the following year was nearly twelve thousand. Or. Jless,
arul Docs, 1S76, It. 10; Portland Board of Trade, 1877, 17.
On the
24th of January, 1877, the Oregon State Immigration Society organized under the
private-corporations act of 1S62, with a capital stock cf SoUOjOOU, in shares
of $5 each, the object being to promote immigration, collect and diffuse
information, buy and sell real estate, and do a general agency business. Th.
president of the incorporated society was A. J. Dufur, vicepresident D. II.
Stearns, secretary T. J. Matlock, treasurerL. P. W. Quimby. Dii-Laws Or. Eniig.
Soc., 16. An office, was opened in Portland, and tlie society, chiefly through
its president, performed considerable labor without any satisfactory pecuniary
returns. But there was by this time a wide-spread interest wakened, which led
tostatisical and descriptive pamphlets, maps, and c.rculars by numerous
authors, whose works were purchased and made use of by the Oregon a id
California and Northern Pacific railroad companies to settle their lands, ami
by other transportation companies to swell their passenger lists. The result of
these efforts was to fill up the eastern portion of Oregon and Washington with
an active population in a few years, and to materially increase the wealth of
the state, both by addition to its producing capacity, and by a consequent rise
in the value of lands in every part of it. The travel over the Northern
Pacific, chiefly immigration, was large from the moment of its extension to the
Rocky Mountains, and was in 1885 still on the increase.
RAILROADS.
_ In
February 18.->3 the Oregon legislative assembly, stirred by the discussion
in congress of a transcontinental railroad, passed a memorial ill) elation to
such a road from the Mississippi River to some point on the Pacific coast, this
being the first legislative action with regard to railroads in Oregon after the
organization of the territory, although there hail been a project spoken of,
and even
advertised, to build a railroad from St Helen on the Columbia to Lafayette in
Yamhill county as early as 1S50. Or. Spectator, Jan. 30, 1850. Knighton, Tappan,
Smith, and Crosby were the projectors of this road.
In the
latter part of 1853 came I. I. Stevens to Puget Sound, full of the enthusiasm
of an explorer, and sanguine with regard to a road which should unite the
Atlantic and Pacific states. Under the excitement of this confident hope, the
legislature of 1853-4 granted charters to no less then four railway companies
in Oregon, and passed resolutions asking for aid from congress. Or. Jour.
Council, 1853-4, 125. The Willamette Valley Railroad Company, the Oregon and
California Railroad Company, the Cincinnati Railroad Company, and the
Clackamas Railroad Company were the four mentioned. The Cincinnati company
proposed to build a road from the town of that name in Polk county to some coal
lands in the same county. Id., 125; Or. Statesman, Apiil 18, 1854. The act
concerning the Clackamas company is lacking among the laws of that session,
although the proceedings of the council show that it passed. It related to the
portage around the falls at Oregon City. Or. Jour. Council, 94, 95, 107- 116,
120. One of these companies went so far as to hold meetings and open books for
subscriptions, but nothing further came of it. The commissioners were Frederick
Waymire, Martin L. Barker, John Thorp, Solomon Tetherow, James S. Holman,
Harrison Linnville, Fielder M. Tliorp, J. C. Avery, and James O’Neil. Or.
Statesman, April 11 and 25, 1S54. This lias called the Willamette Valley
Railroad Company.
A charter
was granted to a company styling itself the Oregon and California Railroad
Company, who proposed to build a road from Eugene City to some point on the
east side of the Willamette River below Oregon City, or possibly to the
Columbia River. The commissioners for the Oregon and California road were Lot
Whitcomb, N. P. Doland, W. Meek, James B. Stephens, William Holmes, Charles
Walker, Samuel Officer, William Barlow, John Gri'oble, Harrison Wright, J. D.
Boon, J. 1.. Parrish, Joseph Holrnau, William H. Rector, Daniel Waldo, Benj.
F. Harding, Samuel Simmons, Ralph
C. Geer, William Parker, Augustus R. Dimiek,
Hugh Cosgrove, Robert Newell, W. H. Willson, Green McDonald, James Curl, K. II.
Randall, Luiher Elkins, John Crabtree, David Claypole, Elmore Keyes, James H.
Foster, George Cline, John Smith, Anderson Cox, John H. Lines, Teremiah Duggs,
John N. Donnell, Asa McOully, Hugh L. Brown, James N. Smith William Eatle, W.
W. Bristow, Milton S. Riggs, Janies C. Robinson, P. Wilkins, William Stevens,
Jacob Spores, Benjamin Richardson, E. F. Skinner, James Hetherly, Felix Scott,
Henry Owen, Benjamin Davis, Joseph Bailey, J. W. Nesmith, and Samuel Brown.
Id., April 4, 1854. Of this likewise nothing came except the name, which
descended to a successor. Another corporation received a charter in 1857 to
build a road to Newport on Y’aquina Bay, which was not built by the company
chartered at that date. The only railroads in Oregon previous to the
organization of the Oregon Central Railroad Company, of which I am about to
give the history, were the portages about the cascades and dalles of the Columbia
and the falls at Oregon City.
In 18G3 S.
G. Eliot, civil engineer, made a survey of a railroad line from Marysville in
California to Jacksonville in Oregon, where his labors ended and his party was
disbanded. This survey was made for the California and Columbia River Railroad
Company, incorporated October 13, 18(33, at Marysville, California. Eliot
endeavored to raise money in Oregon to complete his survey, but was opposed by
the people, partly from prejudice against Californian enterprises. Marysville
Appeal, June 27, 1833; Portland Oregonian, Jan.
4, 1804; Deady’s Scrap-Book, 37, 56; Portland
Oregonian, Dcc. 17, 1803. Joseph Gaston, the railroad pioneer of the
Willamette, then residing in Jackson county, being deeply interested in the
completion of the surrey to the Columbia River, took it upon himself to raise a
company, which he placed under the control of A. C. Barry, who after serving in
the civil war had come to the Pacific coast to regain his health. Barry was
ably assisted by George
H. Belden of ihe U. S. land survey. As the
enterprise was wholly a volunteer undertaking, the means to conduct it had to
be raised by contribution,
and to
this most difficult part of the work Gaston applied himself. A circular was
prepared, addressed to the leading fanners and business men of the country
through which the surveying party would pass, inviting their support, while
Barry was instructed to subsist his men on the people along the line and trust
to the favor of the public for his own pay.
The novelty
and boldness of these proceedings, while eliciting comments, did not operate
unfavorably upon the prosecution of the survey, which proceeded without
interruption, the party in the field living sumptuously, and often being
accompanied and assisted by their entertainers for days at a time. It was not
always that the people applied to were so enthusiastic. One prominent man
declared that so far from the country being able to support a railroad, if one
should be built the first train would carry all the freight in the country, the
second all the passengers, and the third would pull up the track behind it and
carry off the road itself. ‘This same man,’ remarks Mr Gaston, ‘managed to get
into office in the first railroad company, and has enjoyed a good salary
therein for 13 years.’ Gaston's Railroad Develo pment in Oregon, MS., 8-9.
Gaston continued to write and print circulars, which were distributed to
railroad men, county officers, government land-offices, and all persons likely
to be interested in or able to assist in the organization of a railroad
company, both on the Pacific coast and in the eastern states. These open
letters contained statistical and other information about the country, and its
agricultural, mineral, commercial, and manufacturing resources. Hundreds of
petitions wvere at the same time put in circulation, asking congress
to grant a subsidy in bonds and lands to aid in constructing a branch railroad
from the Central Pacific to Oregon.
By the
time the legislature met in September, Gaston had Barry’s report completed and
printed, giving a favorable view of the entire practicability of a road from
Jacksonville to the Columbia at St Helen, to which point it was Barry’s opinion
any road through the length of the Willamette River ought to go, although the
survey was extended to Portland. To this report wras appended a
chapter on the resources of Oregon, highly flattering to the feelings of the
assembly. The document was referred to the committee on corporations, and James
M. Pyle, senator from Douglas county, chairman, made an able report, supporting
the policy of granting state aid. Cyrus 01- ney, of Clatsop county, drew up the
first state subsidy bill, proposing to grant $2<50,000 to the company that
should first construct 100 miles of railroad in the Willamette Valley. The bill
became a law, but no company ever accepted this trifling subsidy. Portland
Oregonian, Sept. 7 and 13, 1864; Barry's Cal. <£ Or. It. Ii. Survey, 34; Or.
Journal Senate^ 1864, ap. 36-7; Portland Orego- nian, Nov. 5, 1S64; Or. Jour.
House, 1804, ap. 185-9; Or. Statesman, July 23, 1804; Portland Oregonian, June
20, July 27, Aug. 11, Sept. 13, Oct. 29, 1864. In November, however, after the
adjournment of the legislature, an organization was formed under the name of
the Willamette Valley Railroad Company, wThich opened books for
subscription, and filed articles of incorporation in December. Id., Nov. 12
and 17, and Dec. 2, 1864; Deady’s Scrap-Book, 107. The incorporators were J. C.
Ainsworth, H. W. Corbett, W. S. Ladd, A. C. Gibbs, C. N. Carter, I. R. Moores,
and E. N. Cooke. Ainsw^orth was president, and George H. Belden secretary.
Belden. was a civil engineer, and had been chief in the surveyor-general’s
office, but resigned to enter upon the survey of the Oregon and California
railroad. Or. Argus, May 25, 1863. Barry meantime proceeded with his reports
and petitions to Washington, where he expected the cooperation of Senators
Williams and Nesmith. The latter did indeed exert his influence in behalf of
congressional aid for the Oregon branch of the Central Pacific, but Barry
became weary of the uncertainty and delay attendant upon passing bills through
congress, and giving up the project as hopeless, went to Warsaw, Missouri, wrhere
he entered upon the practice of law.
Before
Barry quitted Washington he succeeded in having a bill introduced in the lower
house by Cole of California, the terms of which granted to the California and
Oregon Railroad Company of California, and to such company
organized
under the laws of Oregon as the legislature of the state should designate,
twenty alternate sections of land per mile, tun on each side of the road, to
aid in the construction of a line of railroad and telegraph from some point on
the Central Racific railroad in the Sacramento Valley to Portland, Oregon,
through the Rogue River, Umpqua, and Willamette valleys, the California
company to build north to tho Oregon boundary, and the Oregon company to build
south to a junction with the California road. Cong. Globe, 18Gj-6, ap. 388-9;
Zdbrinkie’s Land Laws, @37; Veatche’s Or., 12-21. This bill, which was
introduced in December 1S04, did not become a law until July 25, 1SG6, and was
of comparatively little value, as the line of the road passed through a country
where the best lands were already settled upon. The bill failed in congress in
1865 because Senator Conness of Califi-.nia refused to work with Cole. It
passed the house late, and the senate not at all. S. F. Bulletin, March 8,
1865; Ewjene Review, in Portland Oregonian, April 1 aud 26, 1865. The
California and Oregon railroad had already filed anicles of incorporation at
Sacramento, its capital stock being divided into 150,00U shares pt $100 a
share. When the subsidy bill became a law the Oregon Central Railroad Company
was or ganized, and the legislature, according to the act of congress,
designated this company as the one to receive the Oregon portion of the laud
grant, at the same time passing an act pledging the state to pay interest at
seven per cent on one million dollars of the bonds of the company, to be issued
as the work progressed on the- first hundred miles of road. This act was
repealed as unconstitutional in 1868. Or. Laws, 1866, 1808, 44-5; Deady’s
Scrap-Book, 170; S. F. Bulletin, Oct. 25 and Nov.
2, 1S66. See special message of Gov. Woods,
in Sac. Union, Oct, 22, 1866. Articles of incorporation were tiled November 21,
1866. The incorporators were R. R. Thompson, E. D. Shattuck, J. C. Ainsworth,
John McCracken,
S. G. Reed, W. S. Ladd, H. W. Corbett, C. II.
Lewis of Portland, M. M. Melvin, Jesse Applegate, E. R. Geary, S. Ellsworth, F.
A. Chenoweth, Joel Palmer, T, H. Cox, I. R. Moores, George L. Woods, J. S.
Smith, B. F. Brown, and Joseph Gaston. Gaston's Railroad Development of Or.,
MS., 15-16.
The
incorporators elected Gaston secretary and general agent, authorizing him to
open the stock-books of the company, and canvass for subscriptions, which was
done with energy and success, the funds to construct the first twenty-live
miles being promised, when Eliot, before mentioned, suddenly appeared in Oregon
with a proposition signed A. J. Cook & Co., whereby the Oregon company was
asked to turn over the whole of its road to the people of California to build.
The compensation offered for this transfer was the sum of §50,000 to each of
the incorporators, to be paid in unassessable preferred stock in the road. To
this scheme Gaston, as the company’s agent, offered an earnest opposition,
which was sustained by the majority of the incorporators; but to the Salem men
the bait looked glittering, and a division ensued. A now company was projected
by these, in the corporate name of the first, the Oregon Central Railroad
Company, with the evident intention of driving from the field the original
company, and securing under its name the land grant and state aid. A struggle
for control now set in, which was extremely damaging to the enterprise. Seeing
that litigation ami delay must ensue, the capitalists who had contracted to
furnish funds for the first twenty-five miles of road at once cancelled their
agreement, refusing to support cither party to the contest. Gaston, who
determined to carry out the original object of his company, in order to avoid
still further trouble with the Salem party, located tho line of the Oregon
Central on the west side of the Wlilamette River, and proceeded again with the
labor of securing financial support. Tlie Salem company naturally desiring to
build on the east side of the river, and assuming the name of the original
corporation, gave rise to the custom, long prevalent, of calling the two
companies by the distinctive titles of East-Side and West-Side companies.
While
Gaston was going among the people delivering addresses and taking subscriptions
to the-west-side road, the east-side company, which organized
April 22,
1867, proceeded in an entirely different manner to accomplish their end. Seven
men subscribed each one share of stock, at $100, and electing one of their
number president, passed a resolution authorizing that offieer to subscribe
seven million dollars for the company. This manoeuvre was contrary to the
incorporation law of the state, which required one half of the capital stock of
a corporation to be subscribed before the election of a board of directors. The
board of directors elected by subscribing $100 each were J. H. Moores, I. R.
Moores, George L. Woods, E. N. Cooke, Samnel A. Clarke. Woods was elected
president, and Clark secretary. To these were subsequently added J. H,
Douthitt. F. A. Chenoweth, Green B, Smith, S. Ellsworth, J. II. D. Henderson,
S. F. Chadwick, John E. Ross, A. L. Love- joy, A. F. Hedges, S. B. Parrish,
Jacob Conser, T. McF. Patton, and John
F. Miller. Gaston's Railroad Development in
Or., MS., 22-3. Before the meeting of the next legislature, thirteen other
directors were added to the board, being prominent citizens of different
counties, who it was hoped would have influence with that body, and to each of
these was presented a share of the stock subscribed by the president. So far
there had not been a bona fide subscription by any of the east-side company. In
order to hold his own against this specious financiering, Gaston, after raising
considerable money among the farmers, subscribed in his own name half the
capital stock, amounting to $2,500,000. As a matter of fact, he had 110 money,
but as a matter of law, ib was necessary to have this amount subscribed before
organizing a board of directors for his company. This board was electcd May 25,
1867, at a meeting held at Amity. The first board of directors of the Oregon
Central (west-side) were W. C. Whitson, James M. Belcher, W. T. Newby, Thomas
R. Cornelius, and Joseph Gaston. Gaston was elected president, and Whitson
secretary. Both companies, being now organized, proceeded to carry out their
plans as best they could. Elliot, as agent of the east-side party, went east to
find purchasers for the bonds of the company, while Gaston continued to
canvass among the people, and also began a suit in equity in Marion county to
restrain the Salem company from using the name of the Oregon Central company,
Gaston appearing as attorney for plaintiffs, and J. H. Mitchell for the
defendants. On trial, the circuit judge avoided a decision by holding that no
actual damage had been sustained. Mitchell then became the leading spirit of
the east-side company, and the two parties contended hotly for the ascendency
by circulating printed documents, and holding correspondence with bankers and
brokers to the injury of each other. A suit was also commenced to annul the
east-side company, on the ground of illegal organization. Meanwhile Elliot was
in Boston, and was on the point of closing a contract for a large amount of
material, when Gaston’s circulars reached that city, causing the failure of the
transaction, and compelling Elliot to return to Oregon, having secured only two
locomotives and some shop material, which he had already purchased with the
bonds of his company. A compromise would now have been accepted by the
east-side party, but the west-side would not agree to it, and in point of fact
could not, because the people on that side of the valley, who were actual
subscribers, would not consent to have their road run on the cast side, and the
people on that side would not subscribe to a road on the other.
By the
first of April, 1868, both parties had their surveyors in the field locating
their lines or road. Portland Oregonian, March 11, 1868. The west- side company
had secured $25,000 in cash subscriptions in Portland, and aa much more in cash
and lands in the counties of Washington and Yamhill. The city of Portland had
also pledged interest for twenty years on $250,000 of the company’s bonds.
Washington county had likewise pledged the interest on $50,000, and Yamhill on
$75,000. Thus $375,000 was made available to begin the construction of the Oregon
Central. The east-side company had also raised some money, and advertised that
they would formally break ground near East Portland on the 16th of April, 1868,
for which purpose banda of music and the presence of the militia were engaged
to give eclat to the occasion. An address by W. W. Upton was announced.
The
west-side company refrained from advertising, but made preparations to break
ground on the 14th, and issued posters on the day previous only. At ten o’clock
of the day appointed a large concourse of people were gathered in Caruther’s
addition to celebrate the turning of the first sod on the Oregon Central.
Gaston read a report of the condition of the company, and speeches were made by
A. C. Gibbs and W. W. Chapman. This ended, Mrs David
C. Lewis, wife of the chief engineer of the
company, lifted a shovelful of earth and cast it upon the grade-stake, which
was the signal for loud, long, and enthusiastic cheering, which so excited the
throng that each contributed a few minutes labor to the actual grading of the
road-bed. Thus on the 14th of April, 1868, was begun the first railroad in
Oregon other than the portages above mentioned. On the 16th the grander
celebration of the east-side company was earned out according to programme, at
the farm of Gideon Tibbets, south of East Portland, and on this occasion was
used the first shovel made of Oregon iron. Portland Oregonian, April IS, 1868;
McCormick's Portland Dir., I860, 8-9. The shovel was ordered by Samuel M.
Smith, of Oswego iron, and made at the Willamette Iron Works by William
Buchanan. It was shaped under the hammer, the handle being of maple, oiled with
oil from the Salem mills. It was formally presented to the officers of the
company on the 15th of April. Portland Oreyonian, April 14, 1G, and 17, 1868.
Actual
railroad building was now begun on both sides of the Willamette River; but the
companies soon found themselves in financial straits. The east- side management
was compelled in a short time to sell its two locomotives to the Central
Pacific of California, although they bore the names of George L. Woods and I.
R. Moores, the first and second presidents of the organization. A vigorous
effort was made to induce the city council of Portland to pledge the interest
for twenty years on $600,000 of the east-side bonds, in which the company was
not successful. It is related that, being in a strait, Elliot proposed to
inform the men employed, appealing to them to work another month on the promise
of payment in the future. But to this proposition his superintendent of
construction replied that a better way would be to keep the men in ignorance.
He went among them, carelessly suggesting that as they did not need their money
to use, it would be a wise plan to draw only their tobaceo-money, and leave the
remainder in the safe for security against loss or theft. The hint was adopted,
the money was left in the safe, and served to make the same show on another
pay-day, or until Holladay came to the company’s relief. Gaston's Railroad
Development in O/*., MS., 34^-5. Nor was the west-side company more at ease.
Times were hard with the farmers, who could not pay up their subscriptions. The
lands of the company could not be sold or pledged to Portland bankers, and
affairs often looked desperate.
The
financial distresses of both parties deterred neither from aggressive warfare
upon the other. The west-side company continually pressed proceedings in the
courts to have its rival declared no corporation, but no decision was arrived
at. Gaston declares that the judges in the third and fourth judicial districts
evaded a decision, ‘ their constituents being equally divided in supporting the
rival companies.’ Id., 38. Failing of coming to the point in this way, a
land-owner on the east side was prompted to refuse the right of w*ay, and when
the case came into court, the answer was set up that the company was not a
lawful corporation, and therefore not authorized to condemn lands for its
purposes. The attorneys for the company withdrew from court rather than meet
the question, and made a re-loeation of the road, thus foiling again the design
of the west-side company.
Portland
being upon the west side of the river, and the emporium of capital in Oregon,
it was apparently only a question of time when the west-side road should drive
the usurper from the field, and so it must have done had there been no foreign
interference. But the east-side company had been seeking aid in California,
and not without success. In August 1S68, Ben Holla- day, of the overland stage
company and the steamship line to San Francisco, arrived in Oregon. He
represented himself, and was believed to be, the pos-
Ses^or uf
millio \s. A tranpfer of all the stock, bonds, contracts, anti all property,
real and personal, of the east-side company was made to him. The struggle,
which had before been nearly equal, now became one between a corporation
without money and a corporation with millions, and with the support of *hose
who wished to enjoy the benefits to be conferred by this wealth, both in
building railroads and in furnishing salaried situations to its friends. The
tirst thing to be done was to get rid of the legislative enactments of
18Gt>, designating the original Oregon Central company as the proper
recipient of the land grant and state aid.
On the
convening of the legislature, Holladay established himself at Salem, where he
kept open house to the members, whom he entertained royally as to expenditure,
and vulgarly as to all things else. The display and the hospitality were not
without effect. The result was that the legislature of 1808 revoked the rights
granted to the Oregon Central of 18l36, and vested these rights in the later
organization under the same name. The cause assigned was that ‘at the time of
the adoption of the said joint resolution as aforesaid no such company as the
Oregon Central Railroad Company was organized or in existence, and the said
joint resolution was adopted under a misapprehension of facts as to the
organization and existence of such a company.’ Or. Laws, 1SC8, 109-10. It was alleged
that the original company, in their haste to secure the land grant by the
designation of the legislature, which meets only once in two years, had
neglected to file their incorporation papers with the secretary of state
previous to their application for the favor of the legislature, the actual date
of incorporation being November 21st, whereas the resolution of the legislature
designating them to receive the land grant was passed on the 20th of October, a
month and a day before the company had a legal existence. In his Railroad
Development in Or., MS., 15, Gaston says that the Oregon Central filed ics
incorporation papers according to law before the legislative action, but
withdrew them temporarily to procure other incorporations, and it was this act
that the other company turned to account. By the terms of the act of congress
making the grant of land, the company taking the iran- chise must tile its
assent to the grant within one year from the passage of the act, and complete
the first twenty miles of road within two years. The west- side company had
filed its assent within the prescribed time, which the other had not, an
illegality which balanced that alleged against the west-side, even had both
been ill all other respects legal.
And now
happened one of those fortuitous circumstances which defeat, occasionally, the
shrewdest men. The west-side management had sent, in May, half a million of its
bonds to London to be sold by Edwin Russell, manager of the Portland branch of
the bank of British Columbia. Just at the moment when money was most needed, a
cablegram from Russell to Gaston informed him that the bonds could be disposed
of so as to furnish the funds and iron necessary to construct the first twenty
miles of road, by selling them at a low price. Gaston had the power to accept
the offer, bu* instead of doing so promptly, and placing himself on an equality
with Holladay pecuniarily, lie referred the matter to Ainsworth, to -whom he
felt under obligations for past favors, and whom he regarded as a more
experienced financier than him- s-df, and the. latter, after deliberating two
days on the subject, cabled a refusal of the proposition.
Ainsworth
had not intended, however, to reject all opportunities, but a contract was
taken by S. G. Reed & Co., of which firm Ainsworth was a member, to
complete the twenty miles called for by the act of congress, of which five of
the most expensive portion had been built, and Reed became involved with
Gaston in the contest for supremacy between the two companies, while at the
-lame time pushing ahead the construction of the road from Portland to
Hillsboro, by which would be earned the Portland subsidy of a Quarter of a
million.
To prevent
this, Holladay’s attorneys caused suits to be brought declaring the west-side
company’s acts void, and to prevent the issuance to it of the bonds of tiie
city ot Portland and Washington county, in which suits they
were
successful, thus cutting off the aid expected in this quarter. At the same time
the quarrel was being prosecuted in the national capital, the newly elected
senator, Corbett, befriending the original company, and George II. Williams,
whose term was about to expire, giving his aid to Holladay. See correspondence
in Sen. Ilept, 3, 1869, 41st cong. 1st sess.
An appeal
was made to the secretary of thi Interior, whose decision was, that according
to the evidence before him neither company had a legal right to the land grant
in Oregon, w hich had lapsed throug’ the failure of any properly organized and
authorized company to file acceptance, and could only t;e revived by further
legislation. This decision was in consonance with Williams’ views, who had a
bill already prepared extending the t ime for filing assent so as to allow any
railroad company heretofore designated by the legislature of Oregon to file its
assent in the department of the interior within one year from the date of the
passage of the act; provided, that the rights alri ady acquired under the
original act were not to be impaired by the amendment, nor more than one company
be entitled to a grant of land. Cony. Globe, 1SG9, app. 31, 41st cong. 1st
sess. This legislation placed the companies upon an equal footing, and left the
question of legality to be decided in the Oregon courts, while it prevented
the state of Oregon from losing the- franchise should either company complete
twenty miles of road which should be accepted by commissioners appointed by the
president of the United States. The act of April 10, 1869, does not mention any
extension of time for the completion of the lirat twenty miles, but by
implication it might be extended beyond the year allowed for riling assent.
While the
east-side company wass thus successful in carrying out its endeavor to
dislodge the older organization, tuit was brought, in the United States
district court, Deady, justice, to enjoin the usurper from using the name of
the original company, Deady deciding that although no actual damage followed,
as the defence attempted to show, no subsequently organized corporation could
lawfully use the name of another corporation. This put an end to the east-side
Oregon Central company, which took steps to transfer its rights, property, and
franchises to a new corporation, styled the Oregon and California ltailroad
Company. The action of congress iu practically deciding in favor of the
Holladay interest caused S. G. Reed k Co. to abandon the construction contract,
from which this firm withdrew in May 1809, leaving the whole hopeless
undertaking iu the hands of Gaston. Without resources, and in debt, he resolved
to persevere. In the treasury of Washington county were several thousand
dollars, paid in as interest on the bonds pledged. He applied for this mrrney,
which the county officers allowed him to use in grading the road-bed during
the summer of 18G9 as far as the town of Hillsboro, ltds done, he resolved to
go to Washington, aud before leaving Oregon made a tour of the west-side
counties, reminding the people of the injustice they had snffered at the hands
of the courts and legislature, and urging them to unite in electing men who
would give them redress.
Gaston
reached the national capital in December 1869, Holladay having completed in
that month twenty miles of the Oregon anti California road, and become entitled
to the grant of land which Gaston had been the means of securing to the
builder of the first railroad. His business at the capital v.as to obtain a new
grant for the Oregon Central, and in this he was successful, being warmly
supported by Corbett and Williams, the latter, however, refusing tolet the road
be extended farther than McMinnville, lest it should interfere with the designs
of Holladay, but consenting to a branch road to Astoria, with the accompanying
land grant. A bill to this effect} became a law May 1, 1870. Cong. Globe,
1SG9-70., ipp. 044-5. While the bill was pending, Gaston negotiated a contract
in Philadelphia for the construction of 130 miles of railroad, which would
carry the line to the neighborhood of Eugene City, to which point another bill
then before congress proposed to give a grant of land. The Oregon legislature
passed a joint resolution, instructing their senators in Washington to give
their support to the construction of a railroad from Salt Lake to the Columbia
River, Portland, aud Puget Sound; and to a railroad
from the big bend of
Humboldt River to Klamath Lake, and thence through the Rogue, Umpqua, and
Willamette valleys to the Columbia Eiver. Or. Lutes, 1S68, 124-5; U. #. Hen.
Misc. iJoc., 14, 41st cong. 3d sess.; Or. Laws, 1870, 179-82. 194
Anticipating its
success, Gaston ventured to believe t hat he could secure, as it was needed, an
extension of his grant, which should enable him to complete the line from
Winnemucca ou the Humboldt to the Columbia. This also was the agreement between
_B J. Pengra, who represented the Winnemucca scheme, Gaston, and the senators.
But Holladay, who was in Washington, fearing that Pengra woald bring the
resources of the Central l’acilic into Oregon to overpower him, demanded of
Williams that Pengra’s bill should be amended so as to compel the Winnemucca
company to form a junction ■with the Oregon and
California at some point in southern Oregon. The amendment had the effect to
drive the Central Pacific capitalists away from the Winnemucca enterprise, and
the Philadelphia capitalists away from the Oregon Central, leaving it, as
before, merely a local line from Portland to lie- Mintrville. Thus Holladay
became master of the situation, to build up or to destroy the railroad
interests of Oregon. He had, through Latliam of California, sold his railroad
bonds in Germany, and had for the time being plenty of funds with which to hold
this position. In order to embarrass still further the Oregon Central, he
bought in the outstanding indebtedness, and threatened the concern with the
bankruptcy courn and consequent annihilation. To avert this disastrous
termination of a noble undertaking, Gaston was compelled to consent to sell
out to his enemy, upon hi- agreement to assume all the obligations of the road,
aud complete it as designed by him.
Having now obtained
full control, and being more ardent than prudent in his pursuit of business aud
pleasure a’ike, Holladay pushed his two roada forw ard rapidly, the Oregon and
California being completed to Albany in 1S71, to Eugene in 1872, and to
lloseburg in 1S73. The Oregon Central was opened to Cornelius in 1871, and to
St Joe in 1872. These roads, although still merely local, had a great influence
in developing the country, inducing immigration, sad promoting the export of
wheat from Willamette direct to the markets of Europe.
But the lack of
prudence, before referred to, and reckless extravagance in private
expenditures, shortened a career which promised to be useful a,s it was
conspicuous; ami when the Oregon and California road had reached Roseburg, the
German bondholders began to perceive some difficulty about the payment of the
interest, which difficulty increased until 1876, when, after au examination of
the condition of the road, it was taken out of Holladay’- hands, and placed
under the management of Henry Villard, whose brief career ended in financial
failure.
Joseph Gaston, a
descendant of the Huguenots of North Carolina, was born in Belmont county,
Ohio. His father dying, Joseph worked on a farm until
16 years of age, when he set np in life for
himself, having but a conimon- sehool education, and taking hold of any
employment which offered until by study he had prepared himself to practice law
in the supreme court of Ohio. His grand-uncle, William Gaston, was chief
justice of the supreme court of North Carolina, and for many years member of
congress from that state, as also founder of the town of Gaston, N. C. His
cousin, William Gaston, of Boston, was elected governor of Massachusetts in
1874, being the only democratic governor of that state within 50 years Joseph
Gaston came to Jackson county, Oregon, in 18G2, bat on becoming involved in
railroad projects, removed to Salem, and afterward to Portland. Although
handling large sums of money and property, he was not benefited by it. When
Holladay took the Oregon Central off his hands, he accepted a position gis
freight and passenger agent oil that road, which he held untu 1875, when he
retired to his farm it Gaston, in Washington county, where he remained until
1878, when ht built and put in operation the narrow-gauge rai’road from Dayton
to Sheridan, with a branch to Dallas. This enterprise was managed solely by
himstlf, with the support of the fanners of
that
section. In 1880 the road was sold to a Scotch company of -Pillnice, represented
by William Reid of Portland, who extended it twenty miles farther, and built
another narrow-gauge from Pay landing, below tht Yamhill, to Brownsville, all
of which may be properly said to have resulted from Gaston’s enterprises. Then
he went to live in Portland, where he did not rank among capitalists—iu these
days of sharp practice, not always a dishonorable distinction
No sooner did
railroad enterprises begin to assume a tangible bhape in Oregon, than several
companies rushed into the field to secure laud grants and other franchises,
notably the Portland, Dalles, and Salt Lake company, the Winnemucea company,
the Corvallis and Yaquina Bay company, and til© Columbia River and Hillsboro
company. Vancouver Register, Aug. 21, 18G9; Or. Laws, 1S6S, 127-8, 140- J, 143;
Id., 1870; II Ex. L)oc., 1, pt iv. vol. vi., pt 1, p. xvii , 41st cong. 3d
sess.; Zabriskie’s Land Laws, supp. 1S77, 6; Port!and Board of Trade Rept,
1875, 0-7, 28; Id.. 1S76, 4-G; Id.. 1877, 14-15.
Owing to a conflict
of railroad interests, and fluctuations in the money market, neither of these
roads was begun, nor any outlet furnished Oregon toward the cast until Villard,
in 1879, formed the idea of a syndicate of American and European capitalists
to facilitate the construction of tht Northern Pacific, and combining its
interests with those of the Oregon roads by a joint management, which he was
successful in obtaining for himself. E. V. Smalley, in hix History of the
Northern Pacific Railroad, published in 18S3, has given a minute narrative of
the means used by Villard to accomplish his object, pp. 2G2-76. Under his
vigorous measures railroad progress in Oregon and Wash' ington was marvellous.
Not only the Northern Pacific v.as completed to Portland, and the Columbia
River, opposite the Pacific division at Ka'ains, in 18S3-4, but tho Oregon
system, under the names of the Oregon Railway and Navigation and Oregon and
Transcontinental lines, was extended rapidly. The Oregon Railway and Navigation
Company owned all the property of the former Oregon Steam Navigation and Oregon
Steamship companies. It was incorporated Jane 13, 1S79, Villard president, and
Dolph vice-president. Its first board of directi >r s consisted of Artemus
H. Holmes, Willif, .nil. Starbuck, James B. Fry, and Villard of New Yotk, and
George W. Weidler, J. C. Ainsworth, S. G. Reed, l’anl Schulze, H. W. Corbett,
C. II. Lewis, and J. N. Dolph of Portland. The Oregon and Transcontinental
company was formed Junt 1881, its object being to bring under one control the
Northern Pacific and Oregon Railway and Navigation companies, which was done by
the wholesale purchase of Northern Pacific stock by Villard, the president of
the other company. Its first board of directors, chosen September 15, 1SS1, consisted
of Frederick Billings, Ashbel H. Barney, John W Ellis, Rosewell G. Rolston,
Robert Harris, Thomas F. Oakes, Artemus H. Holmes, and Henry Villard of New
York, J. L. Stackpole, Elijah Smith, and Benjamin P. Cheney of Boston, John C.
Bullitt of Philadelphia, and Henry E. Johnston of Baltimore. Villard was
elected president, Oakes vice-president, Anthony J Thomas second
vice-president, Samuel Wilkinson secretary, and Robert L. Belknap treasurer.
Smalley’s Hist. N. P. Railroad, 270-1.
Seven years after
Holladay was forced out of Oregon, the Oregon Central was completed to Eugene,
the Oregon and California to the southern boundary of Douglas county, the
Dayton and Sheridan narrow-gauge road constructed to Airley, twenty miles south
of Sheridan, and another narrow-gauge on the east bide of the Willamette making
connection with this one, and running south to Coburg in Lane county, giving
four parallel lines through the heart of the valley. A wide-gauge road was
constructed from Portland, by the way of the Columbia, to The Dalles, and eastward
to Umatilla, Pendleton, and Baker City, on its way to Snake River to meet the
Oregon short line on the route of the Portland, Dalles, and Salt I-akt road of
1868-9. North-eastward from Umatilla a line of road extended to Wallula, Walla
Walla, Dayton, Grange City in Washington, and Lewiston in Idaho; while tht
Northern Pa- cilic sent out a branch eastward to gather in the crops of the
Palouse region at Colfax, Farmington, and Moscow; and by the completion of the
Oregon
short line and the
Oregon and California branch of the Central Pacific, there were three
transcontinental routes opened from the Atlantic to the Columbia River. Iu
lS85a railroad was in process of construction from the Willamette to Yaquina
Bay, destined to be extended east to connect with an overland road, ami another
projected. The projectors of the Winnemucca and Salt Lake roads deserve
mention. Both had been surveyor-generals of Oregon. W. W. Chapman, who was
appointed in territorial times, and was thoroughly acquainted with tho
topography of the country, selected the route via the Columbia and Snake,
rivers to Salt Lake, both as one that would be free from snow and that would
develop rastem Oregon and Washington and the mining regions of Idaho. He made
extensive surveys, attended several sessions of congress, and sent an agent to
London at his own expense, making himself poor in the effort to secure his
aims. The state legislature granted the proceeds of its swamp-lands in aid of
his enterprise, and the city council of Portland granted to his company the
franchise of building a bridge across the Willamette at Portland. But he
failed, because the power of the Central Pacific railroad of California was
exerted to oppose the construction of any road connecting Oregon with the east
which would not be tributary to it.
Chapman died in 1884,
after living to see another company constructing a road over the line of his
survey. He had been the first surveyor-general of Iowa, its first delegate in
congress, and oue of its first presidential electors. On coming to Oregon he
became one of the owners in Portland town site, and with his partner, Stephen
Coffin, built the Gold Hunter, the first ocean steamer owned iu Oregon, which,
through the bad faith of her officers, ruined her owners. Gaston's liailroad
Development in Or., 73-8. B. J. Pengra, appointed by President Lincol:., was,
as I have already said, the founder of the Wimre- mucca scheme. While in office
he explored this route, and secured irom congress the grant to aid iu the
construction of a military wagon-road to Owyhee, of which the history has been
given. His railroad survey passed over a considerable portion of the route of
the military road, the opening of which promoted the settlement of the
country. But for the opposition of Hollai (ay to his bind-grant bill, it would
have passed as desired, <tnd the Central Pacific would have constructed this
branch; but owing to this opposition it failed. Pengra resided at Springfield,
where he had some lumber-mills.
A man who has had
much to do with Oregon railroads is James Boyce Montgomery, who was bom in
Perry co., Penn., in 1S32, and sent to school in Pittsburgh. He learned
printing in Philadelphia, in the office of the Bulletin newspaper, and took an
editorial position on the Iteyister, published at Sandusky, Ohio, owned by
Henry D. Cooke, afterwards first governor of the District of Columbia. From
Sandusky he returned to Pittsburgh in 1853, and purchased an interest in the
Daily Morning Post About 1857 he was acting as tire Harrisburg correspondent of
the PhV.adtll>hl.a Press for a year or more. Following this,
he took a contract to build a bridge over the Susquehanna River for the
Philadelphia and Erie railroad, 0 miles above Williamsport, Penn., liis first
railroad contract. Subsequently he took several contracts on eastern roads,
building portions of the Lehi and Susquehanna, the Susquehanna Valley, ami
other railroads, anti was an original owner in the Baltimore and Potomac
railroad with Joseph D. Potts, besides having a contract to build 150 miles of
the Kansas Pacific, and also a portion of the Oil Creek and Alleghany railroad
in Penn. In 1870 Montgomery came to the Pacific coast, residing for one year on
Puget Sound, since which time he has resided in Portland, where he has a
pleasant home. His wife is a daughter of Gov. Phelps of Mo. The first railroad
contract tiken in the north-west was tin first 25-mile division of the Northern
Pacific, beginning at Kaiama, on the Columbia River, and extending towards
Tacoma. Since that he has completed the road from Kaiama to Tacoma, and from
Kaiama south to Port- lazi, i, Montgomery started the subscription on which the
first actual money was raised to build the Northern Pacific, in Dec. 18G9. Jay
Cooke had agreed to furnish l?5,600,00v to float the bonds of the company by
April 1. 1870, and Montgomery, at his request, undertook to raise a part of it,
in which he was Hist. Ob., Yul, II.
45
successful. J. G.
Morehead, H. J. Morehead, William Phillips, William M. Lyon, Henry Loyd, Joseph
Dttworth, James Watts, and others subscribing $800,000. This money was expended
in constructing the first division of the road. Montgomery at the same time
took a contract to build a drawbridge across the Willamette at Harrisburg, the
first drawbridge in Oregon, 8U0 feet long, with a span of 240 feet.
Subsequently he went to Scotland to organize the Oregon Narrow-Gauge Company,
Limited, which obtained control of the Dayton, Sheridan, and Corvallis narrow
gauge road built by Gaston, in which he was interested, as well as some Scotch
capitalists. It was Vil- lard’s idea to get a lease of this ami the
narrow-guage mad on the east side of the valley, to prevent the Central or
Union Pacific railroads from controlling them, as it was thought they vs ould
endeavor to. They were accordingly leased to the Oregon Railway and Navigation
Company, but to the detriment of the roads, which are not kept ill repair. At
one time the directors of the 0. R. & N. Co. refused to pay rent, and the
matter was in the courts. Montgomery erected a sav.~ mill at Skamoekawa, on the
north side of the Columbia, which will cut 15,000,000 feet of lumber annually.
He is also in the shipping business, ami ships a large quantity of wheat
yearly. This, with a history of the N. P R. R., I have obtained from
Montgomery's Statement, Ms., 1-30.
The condition of
counties and towns which I shall briefly give in this place will fitly
supplement w hat I have already said. They are arranged in alphabetical order.
I hav e taken the tenth census as a basis, in order to put all the r-ounties on
the same footing.
Baker county, named
after E. D. Baker, who fall at the battle of Edwards’ ferry in October 1861,
was organized September 22, 18G2, with Auburn as the county seat. An enabling
act wa3 passed and approved in 1866, to change the county seat to Baker City by
a vote of the county, which wa3 done. In 1872 a part of Grant county was added
to Baker. The county contains 15,912 square miles, about 50,000 acres of which
is improved among 453 fanners, the principal productions being barley, oats,
wheat, potatoes, and fruit. The whole value of farm products for 1S79, with
buildings ami f ences, was $799,468. The value of live-stock was $1,122,765, a
difference which shows stock-raising rather than grain-growing to bo the
business of the farmers. About 50,000 pounds of wool was produced. The total
value of real estate and personal property for this year was set down at a
little over $931,000. The population for the same period was 4,016, a
considerable portion of whom were engaged in inir -ng in the mountain
districts. Comp. X. Census, xl. 48, 723, 806-7. Baker City, the county seat,
was first laid out under the United States town-site law by R. A. Pierce in
1S68. It is prettily located in the Powder River Valley, and is sustained by a
flourishing agricultural and mining region on cither hand. It has railroad
communica tion with the Columbia. It was incorporated in 1874, and has a
population of 1,258. Pacific North-west, 41; McKinney'n Pac. 255; Or. Laws, 1874,
145-55. Tiic famous Virtue mine is near Baker City. The owner, who does a
banking business in the town, had a celebrated cabinet of minerals, in which
might be seen the ores of gold, silver, copper, lead, cinnabar, iron, tin,
cobalt, tellurium, and coal, found in eastern Oregon, besides which were curios
in minerals from every part of the world. Auburn, the former county seat, w as
organized by the mining population June 17, 1862, and incorporated n the
following 25th of September, to preserve order. Ehey'.t Journal, MS., viii.
81-2, 84, 87, 94; Or. Jour. House, 1862, 113, 128. The other towns and postoffices
of Baker county are Wingville, Sparta, Powderville, Pocahomas, Express Ranch,
El Dorado, Clarksville, Mormon Batiin, Amelia City, Rye Valley, Humboldt Basin,
Stone, Dell, Weatherby, Conner Creek, Glenn, Malheur, Jordan Valley, and North
Powder.
Benton county, named
after Thomas II. Benton of Missouri, was created and organized December 23,
1847, including at that time all the country on
the w eat pide of the
Willamette Iliver, south of Tolk county and north of the northern boundary line
of California. On the loth ot January, 1851, the present southern boundary was
fixed. It contain? 1,870 square miles, extending to the I’acifie ocean, and
including the harbor of Yaquina Bay. Population in 1879, 0,403. The amount of
land under improvement in this year was 138,634 acres, valued at $3,188,231,
The value oi farm products was $716,096; of live-stock, $423,682; of orchard
products, §16,404. Assessed valuation of real and personal property in the
county, SI,726,387. Grain- raising is the chief feature of Benton county
farming, but dairying, sheep- raising, and fruit-culture are successfully
carried on. Coal was discovered in
1869, but has not been worked.
Corvallis, called
Marysville for five or six years by its founder, .T. C. Avery, is Benton’s
county seat, and as incorporated January 28, 1857. It is beautifully situated
in the heart of the valley, as its name indicates, and has a population of
about 1,200. It is the seat of the state agricultural college, and has
connection with the Columbia, and the Pacific ocean at Yaquina Bay, and also
with the southern part of the state by railroad It is more favorably located in
all respects than any other inland town. Philomath, a collegiate town, is
distant about eleven miles from Corvallis, on the Yaquina road. It was
incorporated in October 1882. Monroe, named after a president, on the Oregon
Centra? railroad, Alseya on the head-waters of Alseya Iliver, Newport on Yaquina
Bay near the ocean, Elk City at the head of the bay, Oyster- ville on the south
side of the bay, Toledo, Yaquina, Pioneer, Summit, Newton, Tidewater,
Waldoport, and Wells are all small settlements, those that are situated on
Yaquina Bay having, it is believed, some prospects in the future.
Clackamas county,
named from the tribe of Indians inhabiting the shores of a small tributary to
the Willamette coming in below the falls, was one of the four districts into
which Oregon was divided by the first legislative committee of the provisional
government, in July 1843, and comprehended ‘all the territory not included in
the other three districts,’ the other three taking in all south of tiie
Columbia except that portion of Clackamas lying north of the ‘Auchiyoke River.’
Pudding River is the stream here meant. Its boundaries were more particularly
described in an act approved December 19, 1845, and still further altered by
acts dated January 30, 1856, October 17, 1860, and October 17, 1862, when its
present limits were established. Or. Archives, 26; Or. Gen, Laws, 537-8. It
contains 1,434 square miles, about 71,000 acres of which is under improvement.
The surface being hilly, and much of it covcred with heav y forest, this county
is less advanced in agricultural wealth than might be expected of the older
settled districts; yet the soil when cleared is excellent, and only time is
required to bring it up to its proper rank. The value of its farms aud
buildings is considerably over three millions, of live-stock a> little over
four hundred thousand, and of farm products something over six hundred thousand
dollars. In manufactures it has been perhaps the third county ia the state, but
should, on account of its facilities, exceed its rivals in the future. It is ditficu't
to say whether it is the second or third, Multnomah county being first, aud
Marion probably second. But tho difference in the amount of capital expended
and results produced leave it almost a tie between the latter county and
Clackamas. Marion has $608,330 invested ill manufactures, pays out for labor
§147,945 annually, uses? 1,09."),920in materials, and produces 51,424,979;
while Clackamas has invested $787,475, pays out for labor $156,927, uses
$816,625 in materials, and produces $1,251,691. Marion has a little the most
capital invested, and produces a little the most, but uses $278,295 more
capital ; i materials, while paying only (?8,982 less for labor. Comp. X.
Cenwn, ii. 1007-8. The principal factories are of woollen goods. Assessed
valuation considerably jver six millions, Poprlation, 9,260. Oregon City,
founded by John Mc- Loughlin in 1842, is the county seat, whose history for a,
number of years was an important part of the territorial history, being the
first, and for several years the only, town in the Willamette Valley It was
incorporated Septem-
bcr 28, 1S49. Its
principal feature was its enormous water-power, estimated at a million
horse-power It had early a woollen-mill, a grist-mill, a. lumber- mill, a
paper-mill, a fruit-preserving factory, and other minor manufactures. The
population of Oregon City is, according to the tenth census, 1,263, although
it is given ten years earlier at 1,382. It is on Hie line of the Oregon and
California railroad, and has river communication with Salem and Portland. A few
miles north of the couuty seat is Milwaukee, founded by Lot Whitcomb as a rival
to Uregon City, in March 1850. It is the seat of one of the finest flouring
mills in the state, and is celebrated for its nurseries, which have furnished
trees to fruit-growers all over the Pacific coast. Its population is insig-
l.ificant, A mile oi two south of Oregon City is Canemah, founded by F. A.
Hedges about 1845, it being the lowest landing above the falls, and where all
river craft unloaded for the portage previous to the construction of the basin
and breakwater, by which boats were enabled to reach a landing at the town. It
afterward became a suburb of Oregon City, boats passing through locks on the
west side of the river wiihout unloading. About half-way between the falls and
Portland was established Oswego, mother small town, but important as the
location of the smelting-works, erected in 1867 at a cost of §100,000, to test
the practicability of making pig-iron from the ore found in that vicinity, which
experiment was entirely successful. Other towns aud post-offices in Clackamas
county are Clackamas, Butte Creek, Damascus, Eagle Creek, Glad Tidings,
Highland, Molalla, Needy, New Era, Sandy, Springwater, Union Mills, Viola,
Wilsomille, Zion.
Clatsop county, named
after the tribe which inhabited the sandy plains west of Young Bay, at the
mouth of the Columbia, was established June 22, 1844, on the petition of Josiah
L. Parrish. The present boundaries were fixed January 15, 1855, giving the
county 8G2 square miles, most of which is heavily timbered land. The value of
farms, buildings, and live-stock is a little over $307,000; but the assessed
valuation of real and personal property is a trifle over $1,136,000, and the
gross value nearly double that amount.
The
principal industries of the county are lumbering, fishing, and dairying. The
population is about 5,500, except in the fishing season, when it is temporarily
at least tw o thousand more. Resources Or. and Wanh., 18S2, 213; Comp. X.
Cenms, 367. Astoria, the county seat, was founded in 1S11 by thePacitic
I ur Company, and named after John
Jacob Astor, the head of that company. It passed through various changes before
being incorporated bj the Oregon legislature January 18, 1856. Its situation,
just within the estuary of the Columbia, has been held to be sufficient reason
for regarding this as the natural and proper place for tho chief commcrcial
town of Oregon. But the application of steam to sea-going vessels has so
modified the conditions upon which commerce had formerly sought to establish
centres of trade that the customhouse only, for many years, compelled vessels
to call at Astoria. It has now, liow'ever, a population of about 3,000, and is
an important shipping point, the numerous fisheries furnishing and requiting a
large amount of freight, and in the season of -ow water in the Willamette,
compelling deep-water vessels to load in the Columbia, receiving and handling
the immense grain and other exports from the Willamette. Valley and eastern
Oregon. Its harbor is sheltered by the point of the ridge on tho east side of
Young Bay from the storin-w iuds
ol vrinter, which come from the
south-west. There is but little level land for building purposes, but tbe hills
have been graded down into terraces, one street ■.■sing above
another parallel to the river, affording fine views of the Columbia and its
entrance, which is a dozen miles to the west, a little north. Connected by rail
with the Willamette Valley and eastern Oregon, the locks at the cascades of the
Columbia at tho same time giving uninterrupted navigation from The lJallfsto
the mouth of the river, Astoria is destined to assume yet greater commercial
importance. There are no other towrnb of consequence in this county.
Clatsop, incorporated in 1870, Sldppanon, Clifton, Jewell, Knapp*, Olney,
Mishawaka, Seaside House, Fort Stetens, and Westport are either fishing and
lumbering establishments, or small agricultural settlements. Westport if) the
most thriving of these settlements, half agricultuial aud half commercial. ”
Columbia county,
lying east of Clatsop in the great bend of the lower Columbia, was cut iff from
Washington county January 23, 1854. It contains 575 square miles, and Las a
water line of over fifty miles in extent. It has between fourteen and fifteen
thousand acres of land under improvement, valued, with the buildings, at
$106,1100, with live-stock worth over $77,000, and farm products worth |73,000,
consisting of the cereals, hay, potatoes, butter and cheese. It has sev eral lumbering
establishments and a few smaller manufactories. The natural resources of the
county are timber, coal, building-stone, iron, fish, and grass. The assessed
valuation upon real and personal property in 1879 was §305,283. The population
was little over ‘2,000, but rapidly increasing. St Helen, situated at the
junction of the lower AVillamette with the Columbia, is the county seat. It was
founded in 1S4S by H. M. Knighton, the place being first known as Plymouth
Rock, but having its name changed on being surveyed for a town site. It is
finely situated for a shipping business, and has a good trade with the
surrounding country, although the population is not above four hundred. There
are coal and iron mines i i the immediate vicinity. Columbia City, founded in
1807 by Jacob and Joseph Caples, two miles below St Helen, is a rival town of
about half the population of the latter. It has a good site, and its interests
are identical with those of St Helen. The Pacific branch of the Northei’n
Pacific railway passes acrots both town-plats, coming near the river at
Columbia City. Rainier, twenty- miles below Columbia City, was laid off in a
town by Charles E. Fox about 1852. Previous to 1S65, by which time a steamboat
line to Monticello on the Cowlitz w as established, Rainier was the waj
-station between Olympia and Portland, and enjoyed considerable trade. Later it
became a lumbering and fishing establishment. The other settlements in
Columbia county are Clf-tskanic, Marshland, Pittsburg, Quinn, Riverside, Scappoose,
Ver- nonia, Neer City, Bryantviile, a .id Vesper.
Coos county was
organized December 22, 1853, out of portions of Umpqua and Jackson counties.
The name is that of the natives of the bay county. It contained about the same
area as Clatsop, and had over 25,000 acres of improved land, valued, with the
improvements, at $1,188,349. The legislature enlarged Coos county by taking
off from Douglas on the north and east enough to straighten the north boundary
and to add two rows of townships on the. east. Or. Jour. IJovse, 18S2, 200. It
is now considerably larger than Clatsop. Ihe live-stock of the county is valued
s* over $161,000, and of farm products fur 1879 over £209,000. Total of real
and personal assessed valuation was between $800,000 and £900,000. Th*. gross
valuation in 1881-2 wa3 over $1,191,000, the population being a little over
4,800, the wealth of the county per capita being $329. This county is the only
one iu Oregon where coal mining has been tarried on to any extent. A line of
steamers has for many years been carrying Coos Bay coal to S. F. market. The
second industry of the county is lumbering, and the third ship-building, the
largest ship-yard in the state being here. Farming has not been much followed,
most of the provisions consumed at Coos Bay being brought from California.
Fruit i; increasing in production, and is of excellent quality. Beach-mining
for gold has been carried on for thirty years. Irun and lead ores are known to
exist, but have not been worked. There are also extensive quarries of a fine
quality of slate. The valleys of Coos and Coquille rivers are exceedingly
fertile, and the latter produces the best white cedar timber in the state,
while several of the choice woods used in furniture factories abound in this
county. Empire City, situated four miles from the entrance to Coos Bay, on the
south shore, is the county seat, with a population of less than two hundred.
It was founded in the spring of 1S53 by a company of adventurers, of which au
account has been given in a previous chapter, and for some years was the
leading town. Marshfield, founded only a little later by J. C. Tolman and A. J.
Ilavis, soon outstripped all the towns iu the county, having about 900
inhabitants and a thriving trade. It is situated four miles farther from the
ocean than Empire City, on the same shoiv. Between the two is the lumbering
establishment of North Bend.
The place
is beautifully situated, and would be rapidly settled did not the proprietors
refuse to sell lots, preferring to keep their employes away from the
temptations of miscellaneous associations. Still farther up the bay and liver,
beyond Marshfield, are the settlements of Coos City, Utter City, Coaledo,
S-irraer, and Fairview. Coquille City is prettily situated near the mouth of
Coquille River, and has ibout two hundred ,nliabitants, It is hoped by
improving the channel of the river, which is navigable for 40 miles, to make it
a rival of Coos Bay as a port for small sc a-going vessels, tbs government
having appropriated £130,000 for jetties at this place, which have been
constructed for half a mile on the south side of the entrance. Myrtle l'oint,
at the head of tide-water, is situated on a high bluff on the light bank of the
Coquille, in the midst of a tine lumber and coal region. It was settled iu 1858
by one Myers, who sold out to C. Lehnhere, and in 1877 Iiiuger Herman, elected
in 1884 to congress, bought the land on which the town stands, and has built up
a. thriving settlement. Other settlements in the Coquille district are Dora,
Enchanted l’rairie, Freedom, Gravel Ford, Norway, Randolph, Boland, and
Cunningham. Gale's Coos Co. Dir., 1875, 80—61; Official P. O. List, Jan. 1885,
409; Roseburg Plaindtaler, Aug. 15, 1874. '
('rook county, named
after General George Crook, for services porfoont-d iu Indian campaigns in
eastern Oregon, was cut oif from the south end of Wasco county, by leglsla ive
act, October 9, 1882. The north line is dravi n west from the Lend of the John
Day River, and east up the centre of the Wasco cliannfll of said river to the
west boundary of Grant county, thence on the line between Grant and Wasco
counties to tbo south-east corner of Wasco, thence west to the summits of the
Cascade Mountains, and thence along them to the intersection of the north line.
It lies in the billy region where the Blue Mountains intersect the foot-hills
of the Cascade Range, and for years has been the grazing-ground of immense
herds of cattle. There are also mauy valleys fit for agriculture. Prineville is
the county seat. It is situated on Ocboco River, near its junction with Crooked
River, a fork of Des Chutes, and lias a population of several hundred. It was
incorporated in 18S0. Uchoco, Willoughby, Bridge Creek, and Scissorsville are
the subordinate towns.
Curry county, named
after Governor George L. Curry, organized December IS, 1855, is comparatively
an unsettled ccuntry, having only a little more than 1,200 inhabitants. Its
area is greater than that of Coos, the two counties comprising 3,331 square
miles, not much of which belonging to Curry lias been surv eyed. The value of
farm property is estimated at between five and six hundred thousand dollars.
The assessed valuation for 1879 w as about
8220,000. The territorial act establishing the county
provided for the selection ot a county seat by votes at the next general
election, which was prevented by the Rogue River Indian war. At the election
of 1858 Eliensburg, a mining town, was chosen, and the choice confirmed by
state legislative enactment in October 1800. Port Orford is the principal port
in Curry county. Chetcoe is the only other town on the coast. 1’liere is no
reason for the unsettled condition o£ Curry except its inaccessibility, which
iii be overcome in time, when its valuable forests and minerals will be made a
source of wealth by a numerous population. Salmon-fishing is the principal
industry aside from lumbering and farming.
Douglas county, named
after Stephen A. Douglas, was created January 7,
1S52, out of that part of Umpqua county which lay
west of the (’oast Range. Iu 18G4 the remainder of Umpqua was joined to
Douglas, and Umpqua ceased to be. Its boundaries have been several times
altered, the. last time in 1882, when a small strip of country was taken off
its western border to give to Coos. Its area previous to this partition was
5,700 square miles. The valuation of its farms, buildings, and live-stock is
nearly five million dollars. A 1'irge portion of its wealth comes from
sheep-raising and wool-growing. In 1880 Douglas county shipped a million pounds
of wool, worth three to foui cents more per pound thau Willamette Valley wool,
and sold 27,000 head of sheep
to Nevada farmers.
The valuation of assessable real and personal property is between two and three
millions. In that part of the county which touches the sea-coast lumbering an i
fishing are important industries. Gold-mining is still followed in some
1<icalities with moderate profits. The population is between nine and ten
thousand. Roseburg, named after its founder, AaroD Rose, was made the county
seat in 1853. It w as often called Deer creck until about 1S56-7. It is
beautifully situated at the junction of Deer creek with the south fork of the
Umpqua, in tho heart of tiie Umpqua Valley, has about 900 inhabitants, aud is
the principal town in the valley, ltwos incorporated in 1868. Oakland is a
pretty town of 430 inhabitants, so named by its founder,
D. S. Baker, from its situation in an oak
grove. Deads’s Hist. Or., MS., 79. It is on Calapooya creek, a branch of the
Umpqua River, and the Oregon and California railroad passes through it to
Roseburg. Wilbur is another picturesque place on the line of this road, named
after J. H. Wilbur, founder of the academy at that place. It is only an
academic town, with two hun dred population. Caiionville, at the north end of
tne Umpqua ^anon, hcis a population of two or three hundred. Winchester, named
for Colonel Winchester of the Umpqua Company, the first, county scat of
Douglas county, Galesville, name 1 from a family of that name, Myrtle Creek,
Camas Valley, Looking Glass, Ten Mile, Cleveland, Umpqua Ferry, Cole’s Valley,
Iiice Hill, Yonealla. Drain, Comstock, Elkton, Sulphur Springs, Fair Oak?,
Civil Bend, Day Creek, Elk Head, Kellogg, Mount Scott, Patterson's Mills, Round
Prairie, are the various smaller towns and post-offices in the valley.
Scottsburg, situated at the head of tide-water on the lower river, named for
Levi Scott, its founder in 1850, and by him destined to be the commercial
entrepot of south em Oregon, is now a decayed mountain hamlet. The lower town
was all washed away in the great flood of 1861-2, and a whole, street of the
upper town, with the military road connecting it with the interior country, was
made impassable. Another road has been constructed over the mountains, end an
attempt made to render the Umpqua navigable to Roseburg, a steamer of small
dimensions and light draught being built, which made one trip and abandoned the
enterprise, condemning Scottsburg to isolation and retrogression. Gardiner,
situated on the north bank of the Umpqua, eighteen miles lower down- -named by
A. C. Gibbs after Captain Gardiner of the Bostonian, :i vessel wrecked at the
entrance to the river in 1850—laid out in 1851, was the seat of customs
collection for several years, during which it was presumed there was a foreign
trade. At present it is the seat of two or more lumbering establishments, a
salmon-cannery, and a good local trade.
Gilliam county was
set off mostly from Wasco, partly fr m Umatilla, in the spring of 1885. First
county officers: commissioners, A. H. Wetherford,
W. W.
Steiver; judge, J. W. Smith; clerk,--------- Lucas;
sheriff, J. A. Blakely;
treasurer, Harvey
Condon; assessor. J. C. Cartwright. The town site of Alkali, tht present county
seat, was laid off in 1882 by James W. Smith, a native of Mississippi. First
house built in the latter part of 1881, by E. W. Rhea.
J. II. Parsons, born
in Randolph co., Va, came to Cal. in 1857, overland, with a train of 30 wagons
led bj Ci.pt. L. Mugett, and located in San Jose Valley, where for twelve years
he was a lumber dealer. In 1869 he went ti British Columbia and was for 8 years
engaged in stook-raising on Thompson’s River, after which he settled on John
Day River, Oregon, in what is now Gilliam co. He married, in 1877, Josephine
Wrifcsmmi, and has 4 children. He owns 320 acres of bottom land, has 5 square
miles of pasture under fence, has 2,000 head of cattle, and 200 horses. Hia
grain land produces 30 bushels of wheat or 60 bushels of barley to the acre.
Grant county, called
after U. S. Grant, occupying a "central position in eastern Oregon,
contains over fifteen square mile*, of which only about one- kinth has been
surveyed, less than 200,000 acres settled upon, and less than forty thousand
improved. It was organized out of Wasco and Umatilla counties, October 14, ]
864, during the rush of mining population to ita placers yn the neau waters ot
the J ohn Day . Spec. Laws, in Or. Jour. Sen., 1864, 43-4.
Its boundaries were
defined by act in 1870. Or, Lain, 1870, 167-8. Iu 157'- a part was taken from
Grant and added ti > Baker county. Or. Laws, 1872, 31—3. These pl*eers no
longer yield profitable returns, and are abandoned to the Chinese. There are.
jo...l quartz mines m the county, which will be ultimately developed. The
principal business of the inhabitants is horse- breeding and cattle-raising;
but there is an abundance of good agricultural laud in the lower portions. The
population is about 5.000, The gross valuation of all property in 1881 was
over SI,838,000. the chief part ot which was in live-stock.
Canon City, the
county seat, was founded in 1802, and incorporated in 1864. It ia situated in a
canon of the head-waters of John Day River, in the centre of a rich mining
district now about worked cut. It had 2,500 inhabitants in 1865. A fire in
August 1870 destroyed property worth a quarter of a million, -which has never
been replaced. The present population is less than 600 for the whole precinct
in which Canon City is situated, which comprises
some of
the oldest mining camps, Prairie City, a few d______ es distant, Robin
sooville, Mount
Vernon, Monument, Long Creek, John Day, Granite, Camp Harney, and Soda Spring
art the minor settlements.
Jackson county, from
Andrew Jackson, president, wa3 created January 12, 1852, out of the territory
lying south of Douglas, comprising the Rogue River Valley and the territory
west of it to the Pacific ocean. Its boundaries have been several times
changed, by adding to it a portion of Wasco and taking trora it the county of
Josephine, with other recent modifications. Its present area is 1,689 square
miles, one third of which is good agricultural land, about 91,000 acres of
which is improved. Corn and grapes are successfully cultivated in Jackson
county in addition to the other cereals and truits. The v iluation of its farms
ami buildings is over $1,600,000, of live-stock half a million, and of farm
products over half a million annually. The valuation of taxable property i»
nearly two millions. The population is between eight and nine thousand. Mining
is the most important industry, the placers still yi< lding well to a
process of hydraulic mining. Jacksonville, founded in
1852, -nas established as the county seat January 8,
1853, and incorporated in 1864. It owed its location, on Jackson creek, a
tributary of Rogue River, to the existence of rich placers in the immediate
vicinity, yet unlike ^aost mining towns, it occupies a beautiful site in the
centre of a fertile valley, where it must continue to grow and prosper. It is
now, a3 it always has been, an active business place. The population has not increased
in twenty years, but has remained stationary at between eight and nine hundred.
This is owing to the isolation of the Rogue River V’alley, the ownership of the
mines by companies, and the competition of the neighboring town of Ashland.
BoU'les’ New IVest, 449; Hints' Ur., 78-9; Bancroft (A. L.), Journey to Or.,
1862, MS., 44. The town of Ashland, founded in 1S52 by J. and E. Emry, David
Hurley, and J. A. Cardwell, and named after the home of Henry Clay, has a
population about equal to Jacksonv ille. It is the prettiest of the manj pretty
towns in southern Oregon, being situated on Stuart creek, where it tumbles down
from the foot-hills of the Cascade Range with a velocity that makes it a
valuable power ui operating machinery, and overlooking one of the most
beautiful reaches of cultivable country on the Pacific coast. It has the oldest
mills in the county, a woollen factory, marble factory, and other
manufactories, and is the seat of tbe state normal school. Cardwell’s Emigrant
Company, MS., 14; Ashland Tidings, May 3, 1878. The minor towns in this county
are Barron, Phoenix, Central Point, Willow Springs, Rock Point, Eagle Point,
Big Butte, Browusborough, Pioneer, Sam’s Valley, Sterlingville, Thomas’ Mill,
Uniontown, Woodville, and Wright.
A pioneer of Jackson
cminty is Thomas Fletcher Beall, who was bom in Montgomery co., Md, iu 1793,
his mother, whose maiden name was Doras Ann Bedow, being bora in the same state
when it was a colony, and dying in it. In 1836 his father, Thomas Beall,
removed to Illinois, and his bon ac companied him, remaining there until 1852,
when he emigrated to Oregon, settling in Rogue River Valley. In 1859 he married
Ann Hall of Champaign
CP., Ohio, then
living in Douglas co., Or. They havo 12 children—8 boys and 4 girls. Beall was
elected to the legislature, and served at the regular session of 1864, and at
the called session of 1865 for the purpose of ratifying the 15th amendment of
the U. S. constitution. He wss again elected in 1884. He has served as school
director in his district for 25 years, less one term.
John Lafayette Rowe
bora in Jaikson co., Or., in 1859, his parents being pioneers. He married
Martha Ann Smith, Jan. 1, 1883.
Mrs John A. Cardwell,
widow first of William Steadman, was bom in Ireland in 1832, removed to
Australia in 1849. married Steadman in 1850, removed to San Francisco in 1851, ■: 111 was
left a widow in 1855. She married Cardwell, an Englishman, the following year,
and they removed to Sanis Valley in Jackson co., Or., where Cardwell died in
May 1882. Mrs Cardwell has had 5 sons and 6 daughters, one of whom died in
1868. Cardwell wrote the Emigrant Company, MS., from which I have quoted.
Andrew S. Moore, born
in Susquehanna co., Ohio, in 1830, emigrated to Oregon in 1859, settling in
Sams Valley, Jackson co., where he has since resided, engaged in farming. In
1S64 he married Melissa Jane Cox, of Linn co., Iowa. They have 7 sons and 4
daughters.
Arad Comstock
Stanley, born in Missouri in 1835, wan bred u physician, and emigrated to
California in 1864, settling near Woodland. He removed to Jackson co., Or., in
1875, settling in San is Valley where he has a farm, but practices his
profession. He married Susan Martin in 1862. Their only child is Mrs Sedotha L.
Hannah, of Jackson eo.
Tohn B. Wrisley, born
in Middlebury, Vt, in 1819, removed to New York, Michigan, and Wisconsin, where
he married Eliza Jane Jacobs of Iowa co., in 1843. He came to California in
1849. and to Hogue River Valley in 1852. His daughter Alice w as the first
white girl bom in the valley. She married C. Goddard of Medford, Jackson co.
Wrisley voted for the state constitutions of Wisconsin, California, and
Oregon; has been active in politics, but always rpjected office.
Joshua Patterson was
born in Michigan in 1857, immigrated to Oregon in 1862, and settled in Rogue
River Valley He married, in 1880, Ella Jane Fewel, and resides at Ashland. Has
2 children.
Thomas Curry, born
near Louisville, Ky, in 1833. removed with his parents to 111., and came to Ur.
in 1853, settling in the Rogue River Valley, where he has since resided. In
1863 he married Mary E. Sutton, who came with her parents to Or. in 1854. Of 5
children bom to them, 2 an now living.
Jacob Wagner, an
immigrant ol 1851, w as bom in Ohio in 1820, ;. ;d removed with his parents first
to Ind. and afterwards to Iow a. Settling in Ashland, he has been engaged in
farming and milling during u. generation. He married Ellen Hendricks of Iowa,
in I860, by whum he has Lad 7 children,
2 of whom are dead.
Franklin Wertz, boru
in Pa in 1836. married Martha E. V. Beirly of his state, and the couple settled
at Medford, where 5 children have beeu bom to them.
Josephine county, cut
oft from Jackson January 22, 1856, was named after Josephine Rollins, daughter
of the discoverer of gold on the creek that also bears her name Its area is
something less than that of Curry or Jackson, between which it lies, and but a
small portion of it is surveyed. The amount of land cultivated is not over
20,000 acres, nor the value of farms and improvements over 8100,000, while
another $300,000 would cover the value of livestock and farm products. The
valuation of taxable property is under S100,-
000. Yet tins county has a good proportion of
fertile land, and an admirable climate with picturesque scenery to make it lit
for settlement, and only its exclusion from linos of travel and facilities for
modern advantages of education and society has prevented its becoming more
populous. Mining is the chief vocation of its 2,500 inhabitants. When its mines
of gold, silver, and copper come to bo worked by capitalists, it will be found
to be possessed of immense resources. Kirbyviile, founded in 1852, is tho
county seat. The
people of this small
town have attempted to change its name, but without success. An act was passed
by the legislature i i 1858 to change it to Napoleon—a questionable
improvement. Or. Laws, 1858-9, 91. It was changed back by the legislature of
i860. Or. Jour. Sen., 1860, 68. The question of whether the county seat should
be at Wilderville or Kirbj ville was put to vote by the people in 1876, and
resulted in a maioritv for Kirbyville. Or. Jour. House. It retains not only its
original appellation, but tho honor of being the capital of the county. The
towns of Altliouse, Applegate, Waldo, Slate Creek, Murphy, Galice, and Inland
are contemporaries of the county seat, having all been mining camps from 1852
to the, present. Lucky t^ueen is more modern.
Klamath county, the
name being of .-.boriginal origin, was established October 7, 1882, out of the
western part of Lake county, which was made out of that par e of Jackson county
which was taken t:-om the south end of Wasco coiihtj. It contains 5,541 square
miles, including the military reservation and the Klamath Indian reservation.
The recent date of the division of territory leaves out statistical
information. The altitude of the country on the east slope of the Cascade
Mountains makes this a grazing rather than an agricultural county, although
the soil is good and the cereals do well, excepting Indian com. Linkville,
situated on Link Iliver, between the Klamath lakes, was founded by George
Nourse, a sutler from Port Klamath, about 1S71, who built a bridge over the
stream and a hotel on the east side, and so rixed the nucleus of the first town
in the country. It is the county seat and a thriving business centre. Nourse
planted the first fiuit-trees in the Klamath country, V hich in 1S73 were doing
well. It contains the minor settlements of Fort Klamath, Klamath Agency,
Langell, Bonanza, Mergauser, \ ainax, Tu'ie Lake, and Sprague Iliver.
Simpson Wilson, bom
in Yamhill co. in 1819, is a son of Thomas A. Wilson, who migrated to Oregon
in 18-47. rather and son removed to Lau^ell Valley, in what is now Klamath co.,
in 1870, to engage in stock-raising. Simpson WTilson married, on
the 16th of July, 1871, at Luikville, Nancy Ellen Hall, who came across the
plains with lier parents from Iowa, in 1858. This was the first marriage
celebrated in Klamath co. They have 2 sons and 3 daugh ters,
John T Fulkerson was
born in Williams co., Ohio, in 1840, his parents having migrated from N. Y. in
their youth. In 1860 John T. joined a train of Arkansas emigrants under Captain
Joseph Lane, migrating to Cal. r.nd settling in the San Joaquin Valley, where
he remained until 1865, when he removed to Jackson eo., Oregon, and in 1867 to
Langell Valley, being one of the earliest settlers of this region, then still a
part of J a<-kson co. He married, in i860, Ellen E. Hyatt, formerly of
Iowa, who in crossing tho plains a few years previous lost her mother and
grandmother. They have 4 sons and
3 daughters.
Jonathan Howell, bom
in Guilford co , N. C., in 1«28, and brought up in 111. lie came to Cal. in
1850, overland, and located in Mariposa oo., residing there and in Merced and
Tulare 9 years, after which he returned to the east and remained until 1876,
living in several states during that time. Wfaeo he returned to the Pacific
coast it wa? to Hogue River Valley that he came, removing soon after to the
Klamath basin, and settling near the town of Bonanza He .xiarried, in 1860,
Susanna Stats man, born in Schuyler co., 111. They have living, 2 sons and 1
daughter.
Thumas Jefferson
Goodwyn, bom in Suffolk co., England, in 1846, went to Australia in 1864, and
from there migrated to Oregon ten years later, setiling at Bonan/a. He married
Genevieve Roberts of Treason co., in 1881, and has
2 sons and 2 daughters.
John McCurdy, bom in
Pugh co., Va, in 1836, and reared in 111.; migrated to Portland, Oregon, in
1864, where he chiefly resided until 1880, when he settled in Alkal: Talley,
Klamath co. He married Frances M. Thomas_ of McDonough co., III., in 1857. They
hail 2 sons and I daughter, when in im migrating Lis wife died, and was’ buried
in the Bitter Boot Mountains.
McCurdy has a
brother, Martin V., in Lassen co., Cal., and another brother, Joseph, in
Nevada.
ilike county,
organized October 23, 1874, took its name from the nnraber of lakes occupying a
considerable portion of its surface. It
formerly embraced Klamath county, and its first county wat w as at Linkviile.
But by a vute of the people, authorized bj the legislature, the county seat was
removed to I.akoview, on the border of Goose Lnke, in 1876, previous to the
setting-off of Ivlamath county. It contains 0,708 square miles, less than
44,000 acres being improved. Its farms and buildings are valued at $1,"}
1,000, the assessed valuation of real and personal property being about
$700,000, and the total gross valuation over $1,039,000. This valuation is for
the county of Lake before its division, there being nothing later to refer to.
Tne population is less than 3,000 for the two counties of Lake and Klamath. The
settlements' are Drew Valley, Antler, Hot Springs. Chewauean, White Hill,
Sumner, and Silver Lake.
Among the settlers of
tins comparatively new county are Thomas O. Blair, born in Ohio, who emigrated
in 1859 by ox-team. Before starting he n.arried Lovisa Anderson. They reside on
Crooked Creek, near Lskeview. Charles A. Rehart, born in Berry co., Ohio, came
to Oregon overland in 1S65. He follows farming and sheep-raising m the
Chewaucaon Valley. He married Martha Ann Brooks in Dec. 1876.
Michael Suit, born in
Marion co. Ohio, emigre,ted overland to Oregon in 1859, in company with his
sister, Mary Cruzan He farms and raises stock at Summer Lake. He married, in
1880. Laura Be" Conrad.
George Clayton
Duncan, who was bom in 111. in 1S27, emigrated to Oregon in 1854, and resides
at Paisley, in Lakt co. He married Eliza Rinehart in 184S. They Lave 3 sons and
3 daughters.
Thomas J. lirattain,
born iu 111. in 1829, came to Oregon in 1850, overland, and resides at
Paisley. He married l’ermetin J. Gillespie in 1859. They have 3 sons and 1
daughter. There came w ith them to Oregon John, Alfred, William C., Francis M ,
end James C. Brattain, brothers; and Elizabeth Ebbert, Mary Brattain, Millie
A. Smith, and Martha J. Hadley, sisters.
Lane county, uamed
after Joseph Lane, was organized January 24, 1851, out of Lmn and Benton. Its
southern boundary was defined December 22,
1853. Its area is 4,492 miles, of which about 229,0C0
acres arc improved. The value of farms and buildings is 64,600,000; of
live-stock, $7GO,000; of farm products, $900,000; and of all taxable property,
about $3,400,000. 1 he popu ation is between nine and ten thousand. Extending
from the Cascade Mountains to the ocean, Lane county comprises a variety of
topographical features, including the foot-hills of Calapooya Range. and the
rougher till land of the Coast Bange, with the level surfaces of the \\
illamctte plains. Its productions partake of this variety. Besides grains,
vegetables, fruits, and dairy produce, it is the largest hop-producing county
in Oregon, the crop of 1S82 selling for a million dollars. Eugene City, the
principal town, was founded in 1S47 by Eugene Skinner. It was chose: for the
county seat by a vote of the people in 1853, and incorporated in 1804. It is
well located, near the junction of the coast and McKenzie fork of the
Willamette, at the head of navigation, sur rounded by the picturesque scenery
of the mountains which close in the valley a few miles farther south. It is the
seat of the state university, with a population of about 1,200. Junction City,
at the junction of the Oregon Central and Oregon and California railroads, was
built up by the business of these roads. It was incorporated in 1872, and has
between three and four hundred inhabitants. The lesser settlements are Cottage
Grove, Divide, Latham, Cresswell, Rattlesnake, Goshen, Springfield, Leaburg,
Willamette Forks, Irving, Cartwright, Cheshcr, Linslaw, Spencer Creek, (’amp
Creek, Cannon, Crow .Dexter, Florence, Franklin, Ida, Isabel, Long Ton .
McKenzie Bridge, Mohawk, Pleasant Hill, Tay, Trent, and Waltervilie.
Linn county, uamed in
honor of Lewis I’. Linn of Missouri, was organized December 28, 1»47, lout
of all that territory lying south of Chainpoeg a.id east of Bentcn.' Its
southern boundary was established January i, 1851,
giving an area of
about 2,()00 equart miles, of which 256,000 acres arc improved. The valuation
of farms £ nd buildings for 1879 was over seven millions, of live-stock nearly
a million, anu of fat in products almost a million and a half, The total
valuation of assessable property reached to considerably over four million
dollars. The population is between twelve and thirteen thousand. This county
has three natural divisions, the first lying between the north and south San
tiara rivers; the second between Santiam River and Calapooya creek, and the
third between Calapooj a creck and the south boundary line, each of which ha' a
business centre of its own. Albany, the county Boat, founded in 1S48 by Walter
nd Thomas Montieth, named after Albany, N. Y., by request of James P. Millar,
and incorporated in 1864, is the principal town in the county, and the centre
of trado for the country between tho Santiam and Calapooya rivers. It has a
fine water-power, and several manufactories, and is the seat of the
presbyterian college. The population is 2,000. Brownsville, incorporated in
1874, Lebanon, and Waterloo, each with a few hundred inhabitants, arc thriving
towns in this section. Scio, in the forks of the Santiam, incorporated in 1866,
is the commercial centre of this district, with a population of about 500.
Harrisburg, situated on the Willamette River and the Oregon and California railroad,
is the shipping point for a rich agricultural region. It was incorporated in
1866. The present population is 600. Halsey, named after an officer of tue
railroad company, was founded about 1872, and incorporated in 1876. The lesser
towns in this county are Pine, Shedd, Sodavilli, Tangent, Uukville, Pox Valley,
Jordan, Mabel, Miller, Mount Pleasant, and Crawfordsville.
Marion county, one of
the original four districts ot 1843, called Champoeg, had its name changed to
Marion by an act of the legislature of September 3, 1849, in honor of General
Francis Marion. Champoeg, or C'hampooick, district comprised all the Oregon
territory on the east side of the Willamette, north of line drawn due east from
the mouth of Pudding or Anchiyoke River to the Rocky Mountains. Or. Archives,
26. Its souther: i limit was fixed when liinn county was created, and the
eastern boundary when the county of Wasco was established in 1854. Its northern
line, was readjusted in January 1856, according to the natural boundary of
Pudding River and Butte Creek, which adjustment gives it an irregular wedge
snaps. It contains about 1,200 square miles, of which 200.000 acres an under
improvement. Its farms rnd 1 Hidings are valued at nearly eight million
dollars, its live-stock eight hundred thousand, and its annual farm products at
more than a million and t> half. The assessed valuation of real and personal
property is four million dollars, of all taxable property over six millions.
Tbe population is between fourteen and fifteen thousand. Salem, the county seat
and the capital of the Htate, was founded in 1841 by the Methodist Mission, and
its history has been given at length. It was named by David Leslie, after
Salem, Mass., in preference to Chemeketa, the native name, "w hich should
liavo been retained. It was incorporated January 29, 1858, and has a population
of about 5,000. The Willamette university, the state-house, county court-house,
penitentiary, churches, and other public, and private buildings, situated
within large squares bordered by avenues of unusual width and surrounded by
trees, make an impression upon the observer favorable to the founders, ‘ who
builded better than they knew.’ Salem has also a fine water-power, and mills
and factories, and is in every sense the second city in the state. Gervais,
named after Joseph Gervais of French Prairie, incorporated in 1874, is a modern
town built up by the railroad. Butteville, which takes its name from a round
mountain in the vicinity—butte, the French term for isolated elevations, has
been adopted into the nomenclature of Oregon, where it appears in Spencer
butte, Beaty butte, Pueblo butte, etc.—i? an old French town on the Willamette
at the north end of French prairie, but not so old as Champoeg in its vicinity1.
They both date back to the first settlement of the Willamette Valley, and
neither have more than from four to six hundred in their precincts. Jefferson,
the seat of Jefferson Institute, was founded early in the history of the
county, although not, incorporated until 1870. It is situated on the north
hank of the Santiam
River, ten miles from its continence with the Willamette, ana has tine flouring
mi'ls. The population is small. Silverton is another of the early farming
settlements, which takes its name from Silver creek a branch of Padding River,
on which it is situated, and both from the supposed discovery of silver mines
at the head of this and other streams in Marion county, about 1857. It was not
incorporated until 1871. A.urora was founded by a community of Germans, under
the leadership of William Keil, in 1855. The colony was an olishoot of Bethel
colony in Missouri, also founded by Keil in 1835. On the death of Keil, about
1879, the community system was broken up. Three hundred if these colonists own
10,000 aeros of land at Aurora. Moss1 Pictures Or. City, MS., 82;
JJcadi/s Hist. Or., MS., 78; S. P. Post, July 28, 1881. Other towns and
post-offices in the county are llabbard, named after Thomas J. Hubbard, who
came to Oregon with Wyeth and settled in the Willamette Valley, Sublimity,
Mohar.ia, Fairfield, Aumsvide, Turner, Whiteaker, Stayton, Woodbum, Bellpasie,
Stipp, Brooks, Saint Paul, and Daly’s Mill.
Multnomah county,
which has taken a local Indian name, was organized December 23, 1854, out of
Washington and Clackamas counties. Its boundaries were finally changed October
24, 1S64. It is about fifty miles long by ten in width, aud comprises a small
proportion of agricultural land, being mountainous and heavily timbered. Less
thru 27,000 acres are under improvement, the value of farms, including
buildings and fences, being §2,283,- 0)0, of live-stock less than ^200,OCu, and
of farm produce not quite $400,000. The gross value of all property in the
county i3 over nineteen millions, and the valuation of taxable property about
fourteen millions. The population is 2G,0i)0. The capital invested in
manufactures is nearly two millions, and the value of productions approaches
three millions. Portland, founded in 1845 by A. L. Lovejoy and F. W.
Pettygrove, and named after Portland, Maine, by the latter, is the county seat
of Multnomah, and the principal commercial city of Oregon. It was first
incorporated in January 1851, u! which time its dimensions were two miles in
length, along the river, and extending one mile west from it. Portland
Oregoi.ian, April 15, 1871. The city government was organized April 15, 1S51.
There is no copy of the incorporation act of 1851 in my library, but the act
is mentioned by its title in the Oregon Sla'esman for March 28, 1851, and the
date ia also given iu an article by Judge Deady in the Overland Monthly, i. 37
The first mayor chosen was Hugh 1). O’Bryant. The ground being thickly covered
with a fir forest, the re was a long battle with this impediment to
improvement, and for twenty years a portion of the town site was disfigured
with the blackened shafts Oi immense trees denuded of their branches by fire.
The population increased slowly, by a healthy growth, stimulated occasionally
by military operations and mining excitements. Iu 1850 shipping began to aifive
from S. F. for la.nber and farm products, and Couch & Co. despatched the
first brig to China—the Emma Preston. On the 4th of December < f that year
the first Portland newspaper, the Weekly Oregonian, was started by Thomas J.
Dryer. In March 1851 the steamship Columbia began running regularly between S.
F. and Portland, with the monthly mails The Columbia, after running on this
line for ten years, was burned in the China seas. In 1853 the first b.ick
building was erected by William S. Ladd. In 1805 there were four churehes, one
public school, one academy, four printing-offices, four Bteam saw mills, a
steam flouring mill, and about forty dry-goods and grocery stores, the casl
value of the real and personal property of the town being not much short of two
and a halt millions.
In 1S56 the city
government took the volunteer fire-companies in charge and purchased an engine.
Pioneer Engine Company No. 1 of Portland, the first organized fire-company in
Oregon, was formed iu May 1851. Its foreman was Thomas J. Dryer of the
Oregonian, assistant foreman D. C. Coleman, secretary J. B. Meer, treasurer
William Seton Ogden. Among the memliera were 8ome of Portland’s most honored
citizens, but they had no engine. Vigilance Iiouk and Ladder Company No. 1 was
the next organization, in
July 1853; foreman J.
B. Smith, assistant foreman H. W. Davis, secretary Charles A. Poore, treasurer
S. J. McCormick In August of the same year Willamette Engine Company No. 1 was
organized, anil secured a small engine owned by G. W. Vaughn The company was
officered by foreman N. Ilam, assistant foreman David Monastes, second
assistant A. Stiong, secretaiy A. M. Berry, treasurer Charles E. Williams. It
was admitted to the department in July 18.34, and furnished with an engine
woiked by hand, provided by the city council in 1856, since replaced by a steam
apparatus. Multnomah Engine Company No. 2 was admitted to the department in
November 1856, using Vaughn’s “mall engine for a year, when they were supplied
with a Hunneman engine, the money being raised by subscription. Its first
officers were James A. Smith president, B. L. Norden secretary, W\ J. Van
Schuyver treasurer, William Cummings foreman. These three companies composed
the fire department of l’ortlaud dow n to June 18.39, when Columbia Engine Company
No. 3 was organized. In October 1862 Protection Engine Company No.
4 was added; and in 1873 Tiger Engine
Company No. ,3. . Acompanyof exempt firemen also exists, having a fund from
which benefits are drawn for the relief of firemen disabled in the discharge of
their duty. Portland has suffered several heavy losses by fire, the greatest
being in August 1873, when 250 houses were burned, worth $ 1,000,000. This
conflagration followed close upon a previous one in December 1872, destrojing
property worth $250,000. The Portland are departmentin 1879 numbered 375
members, composed of respectable mechanics, tradesmen, merchants, and
professional men. Each of the fix companies had a handsome brick engine-house
and hall. A dozen alarm-sta- tion~ were connected by telegraph with the great
bell in a tower seventy feet in height. In 1881 steps were taken to secure a
paid fire department, which was established soon after. Water-works for
supplying the town with water for domestic purposes were begun in
this year by Stephen Coffin and Robert Penland, under a city ordinance
permitting pipes to be put down in tho Btreets. The right was sold to Henry D.
Green in 1860. In 18G8 there were eight miles of mains laid, and two reservoirs
constructed. The price of water at this date was §2.50 a month, for the use of
an ordinary family. A charter was granted to Green to manufacture gas for
illuminating Portland, by the legislature of 1858-9, the manufactory being
completed about the spring oi 1860. Laws Or., 1858-9, 55; Or: Argus, Sept. 24,
1859; Oretjonian, Jan '.II, 1860. Price of gas in 1868, $6 per 1,000 feet.
The first theatre
erected in Oregon was built by C. P. Stewart at Portland in 185S. It w as 100
feet long by 36 wide, and seated 600 persons. It opened November 23d with a
good company, but was never permanently occupied. Or. Statesman, Nov. 30, 185S.
In 1864 theatricals were again attempted, the Keene company and Julia Deane
Hayne playing here for a rihort season. In 1868 a theatre was opened, called the
Newmarket, and used for any musical or theatrical performance; but down to 1884
no special theatre building was erected, or theatrical representations kept
going for mot e than a few weeks in the year. Portland, besides lacking the
population, was domestic and home- loving in its habits, and also somewhat
religious in the middle classes, preferring to build churches rather than
theatres. The population at this time was but 1,750, there being but 927 voters
in Multnomah county. In 1860 the population had increased to nearly 3,000; in
1862 to a little over 4,000; in 1864 to 5,819, and in 1877 to 6,717. In 1870
the census returns gave 8,300. Si.ice that time the increase has been little
more marked, the census of 1880 giving the population at 17,600, to which the
five years following idded at least 5,000. Tho original limits were increased,
by the addition of Couch’s claim on the north and Caruthers’ claim on tho
south, to about three square miles, must of which is laid out, with graded,
planked, or paved streets. One line of street-cars, put in operation in 1868,
traversed First Street, parallel with the river-front, and one, incorporated in
1881, ran back to and on Eleventh Street. The general style of domestic
architecture had improved rapidly with the increase of wealth and population,
and Portland business houses became, costly and elegant. The gross cash value
of property in Portland iu ISuS was about
ten millions, and in
1884 wa= not far from eighteen millions. Deady, in Overland Monthly, i. 3S;
Iteid’s Prog res* of Portland, 23. The principal public building in Portland in
18G8 was the county court-house on Fourth S^eet, which rost about $100,000,
built of brick and stone in 1866. The United States erected the post-office and
custom-house building on Fi."th Street, of Bellingham Bay freestone, in
1869-70, at a cost, with the furniture, of iJ4.'>0,-
000. The methodist charcli on Taylor Street wa»
finished in 1869—the first brick church in the city—costing $40,000. The
Masonic Hall and Odd Fellows’ Temple were erected about this time, and the
market and theatre on First Street. From this period the improvement in
architecture, both domestic and for business purposes, was rapid, and the
laying-out and paving or planking of streets proceeded at the rate of several
miles annually. A million dollars was expended in enlarging the gas and water
works between 1S68 and 1878. A mile and a quarter of substantial wharves were
added to the city front, end a number of private residences, costing from
$20,000 to $30,000, were erected. Since 1877 these fine houses have multiplied,
that of United States Senator Dolpli and ex-United States Attorney
-generalilliams being of great elegance, though built of wood. The squares in
Portland being small, several of the rich men took whole blocks to themselves,
which, being laid out in lawns, greatly beautified the appearance of the town.
Among the prominent
business men of Portland, who have not been hith erto named, I may mention
Donald Macleay, who was born in Scotland in 1834, and when a young man went to
Canada, where he engaged in business at Richmond, in the province of Quebec.
Fron There hi came to Portland in 1806, going into a wholesale
grocery trade with William Corbitt of San Francisco, »nii carrying on an
importing and exporting business. In 1869 his brother, Kenneth Macleay, was
admitted to the fine, which does a large export trade, and lias correspondents
in all the great commercial cities. This firm made the first direct shipment of
salmon to Lherpool, and is interested at present in salmon-canning on the
Columbia. It has exported wheat since 1869-70, and more recently flour also,
being tho first firm to engage in the regular shipment of wheat and flour to
London and Liverpool. In 1872-4 it purchased several ships, which were placed
in the trado with China, Australia, and the Sandwii * Islands. Onu of these,
the Mattie Macleay, was named after a daughter of D. Macleay. Since his
adventin Portland, Macleay has been identified with all enterprises tending to
develop tho country. He is one of the directors of the Cal. i: Or. 11. R., and
has been vice-president; and his been vice-president of the N. W. Trading Co.
of Alaska, in which lie is a stockholder, a director in the Southern Or.
Development Co.; local president of the Or, & Wash. Mortgage Savings Bank
of Scotland, which brought much foreign capital to the country; and trustee of
tho Dundee Trust Invest meat Co. of Scotland, representing a large amount of
capital in Oregon and Washington. For several terms he has been president of
the board of trade, and at the same time has not been excused from the
presidency of tho Arlington Club, or the British Benevolent and St Andrews
societies. Few men havi discharged so many and onerous official duties.
Richard B. Knapp was
bom in Ohio in 1839, where he resided until 1S58, when he went to Wisconsin,
from which state ho came to Oregon the follow ing year In I860 his brother, J.
B. Knapp, together with M. S. Burrell, founded the house of Knapp &
Burrell, dealers in hardware and agricultural implements, to which he was
admitted in 1862, and from which ms brother retired in 1870. This house was
the. first to engage in the trade in agricultural machinery, for a long time
the only one, and i-> still the most important in the north-west. It has
done much to develop the farming interest of eastirn Oregon and Washington,
arid recently of British Columbia.
Although Portland is
112 miles from the Bea, and twelve above the june- ti a of th< Willamette w
ith the Columbia, it was made a port of entry for the district of the
Willamette. In 184S, when the territory was established, congress declared a
collection district, with a port of entry at Astoria, the president to name two
ports of delivery in the territory, one to be on Puget
Pound. Nisqually and
Portland were made ports of delivery by proclamation January 10, 1850, and
surveyors of customs appointed at $1,000 per year. About the time when there
had begun to be some use for the offico it was discontinued, 1861, and foreign
goods were landed at Portland iu charge of an officer from Astori?. But in July
1861 ai act was approved again making Portland a port of delivery, U. 8. Acts,
1863-4, 353, in answei to numerous petitions for a port of entry, a great deal
of circumlocution being required to deliver goods to the importer, whether in
foreign or American bottoms. Deady, in S. F. Bulletin, July 0, 1804. The
legislature of 1864, by resolution, still insisted on having a po»-t oi
ent>-y at Portland; and again, by resolution, in I860 declared the necessity
of a bonded warehouse, suggesting that the government erect a building for the
storage of goods in bond, and for the use of the federal courts and
post-office. (Such an appropriation 'was made in 1868, and the bonded warehouse
erected is 1869-70. in which .atter year Portland was the port of entry of
Willamette collection district. Cong. Globe, 1869-70, ap. 664-."). Later
steam-vessels for Portland entered at Astoria (Oregon dis trict) and cleared
from there to Portland (Willamette district). Outward bound they cleared at
Portland, entering and clearing again at Astoria, some sailing vessels doing
the same. The harbor is safe though small, the channel requiring the constant
use oi a dredger. Pilotage to Portland and insurance were high, drawbacks which
it was believed would be overcome by the application to river improvements of a
hoped-for congressional appropriation. A comparison of the exports and imports
of the two districts are thus gi\en in Faninh’s Commercial and Financial Review
for 1877, 20-4. Foreign exports cleared from Portland to the value of
$3,090,387; from Astoria, $2,451,357. Foreign imports entered at Portland,
$401,248; entered at Astoria, $27,544. The number of coastwise vessels entered
at Portland in this year was 177, with an aggregate tonnage of 188,984. The
clearances coastwise were 114r with a <vnnage of 125,190. The
number of foreign vessels entering was 37, with a total tonnage of 12,139. Most
if not all, of these vessels loaded with wheat and salmon for English porfc.
About an equal
l, amber of American vessels for foreign
ports loaded with wheat and fish. The wheat was taken or at Portland and the
salmon at Astoria. \t the close ot 1878 the wholesale trade of three firms
alone exceeded nine million dollars. Eight ocean steamers, sixty river
steamers, three railroads, and a hundred foreign vessels were employed n the
commerce of the state which centred at Portland, together with that of eastern
Washington and Idaho. The year’s exporta from the city amounted to $13,983,650.
The value of real estate sales in the city were nearly a million and a half,
with a population of less than eigl teen thousand.
There were in 1878
twenty schools, public and private, sixteen churches, thirty-five lodges or
secret organizations; fifteen newspaper publications, three pubuc and p, lvate
hospitals, a public library, a gymnasium, atheatre, market, a id four public
school buildings. I have spoken fully of the Portland schools m another place.
Of societies and orders for benevolent and other purposes, Portland in
particular and all the chief towns in general have a large number. Of different
Masonic lodges, there are the Multnomah Council of Kadosh, 30th Degree, No. 1;
Ainsworth Chapter of Rose Croix, 18th degree, No. 1; Oregon Lodge of Perfection,
14th degree. No. 1; Oregon Commandery No. 1. Grand Chapter,- Portland Royal
Arch Chapter, No. 3; Grand Lodge; Willamette Lodge No. 2, Harmony Lodge No. 12;
Portland Lodge No. 55; Masoni* Board of Relief; 'Washington Lodge No. 46, East
Porrland. The Masons have a line building on Third Street The Grand Lodge of
Odd f ellows meets annually at Portland in the Odd Fellows’ Temple, a handsome
edifice on First Street. Ellison Encampment No 1, Samaritan Lodge No. 2,
Ilassalo Lodge No. 15, Minerva Lodge No. 19, Orient Lodge No. 17. all have
their home in Portland. The Improved Order of Red Men have three tribes,
Multnomah No. 3, Oneonta No. 4, Willamette No. 6. The Great Council meets where
it is appointed. The Good Templars have three lodges, Multnomah No. 12,
Nonpareil No. 86, Portland Lodge No. 102, and a Grand Lodge of Deputies.
The Knights of
Pythias have two lodges, Excelsior No. 1 and Mystic No. 2. The First Hebrew
Benevolent Association of Portland and Independent Order of B’nai B’rith
represent tho benevolence of the Jewish citizens; the Hibernian Benevolent
Association and United Irishmen’s Benevolent Association, the Irish population;
St Andrews Society, tbe Scotch; the Scandinavian Society, the north of Europe
people; the British Benevolent Society, the English residents; the German
Benevolent Society, the immigrants from Germany—each for the relief of its own
sick and destitute.
St Vincent de Paul
Society relieves the needy of the catholic church. The Ladies’ Relief Society
sustains a home or temporary shelter for destitute women aud children; the
ladies of the protestant Episcopal church support the orphanage and Good
Samaritan Hospital; and a General Relief Society gives assistance to whoever is
found otherwise unprovided for. Of military organizations, there were the City
Rifles, Washington Guard, and Emmet Guard. Of miscellaneous organiza cions,
there, were the Grand Army of the Republic* the Multnomah County Medical
Society, the Ladies’ Guild of the Episcopal Church, German-American Rifle
Club, Portland Turn V erein. Father Matthew Society, Olympic Club, Oregon Bible
Society, Workingmen’s Club, Young Men’s Catholic Association, Alpha Literary
Society, and Uthean Lit- e.rary Society.
Between 1878 and 1882
two public schools were added, a mariner5 home, a new presbyterian
church, a pavilion for the exhibition of the industrial arts and state
products, beside many semi-public buildings and private edifices. Nearly throe
million dollars were expanded in 18S2 in the erection of residence and business
houses; and about four millions in 1883 upon city improvements of every kind.
The .\ holf-sale trade of Portland for 18S2 reached forty millions. m<
easint in 1S83 to about fifty million*. Much of this business was the result
of railroad construction and the sudden development of eastern Oregon and
Washington, ail the supplies for which were handled at Portland. The opening vi
the Northern Pacific ii the autumn of 18S3 began to tell upon the raihei
phenomenal prosperity of Portland from 1873 to 1883, much of the wholesale
trade of the upper country being transferred to the east. The improvements made
by the Oregon Railwaj an.l Isavigation Company nave, however, been of much
permanent benefit to Portland, one of the most important being the dry-dock,
over i(X) feet long, over 100 feet wide, ami 50 feet deep, for the construction
aud repair of sea-going vessels. It was found after completion that the bottom
rested upon <'uicksand, which necessitated expensive alterations ?"d
repairs. The filling up of low ground and covering it with substantial mat
hine-shops warehouses, car manufactories, and depot buildings added not only to
the appearance but the healthfulness of the environs or tbe city.
The suburbs of
Portland are pleasant, the drives north and south of the city affording
charming glimpses of the silvery Willamette with its woody islands and marginal
groups of graceful oaks. Back of the city, lying on a hillside, with a
magnificent view of the town, the river, and five snowy peaks, is the #rcat park
of the city, long remaining for the most part in a state of nature, and all th«
more interesting for that. A few miles south on the river road was placed the
cemetery, a beautiful situation overlooking the river, with a handsome chapel
and receiving-vault. The ground was purchased ind laid off about 1880. Previous
to this, the burial-ground of Portland had been on the east side of the river,
and inconvenient of access.
East Portland, built
upon the land claim of Janies Stevens, who nettled there in 1844, had in 1884 a
population of about 1,800 It was incorporated in 1870. East Portland was
connected with Portland by a >rteam-ferrj in
1 808. A drawbridge completed the union of
the two towns, which were made practically one. Several additions were made to
Eatt Portland. About the timt of its incorporation, Ben Holladay bought a claim
belonging to Wheeler on the n. >Hh end, and laid it out in lots. McMillan
also laid off his claim north of Holladay. Sullivan and Tibbets laid out a town
called Brooklyn, on the *outh. Albina is a manufacturing town north of
McMillan’a addition, and Hist Ob., Yuli. II.
was founded about
1860 by Edwin Russell, proprietor of the iron-works at that place, who failed,
and left it just in time for other men to make fortunes out of it.
Sellwood, named after
the episcopalian ministers of that name, was laid off in 1882, during the land
speculation consequent upon railroad building. St John, six miles below East
Portland, is an old settlement, W'ith a few manufactories. Troutdalc, six miles
east of Portland, Mount Tabor, Powell Valley, Arthur, Leader, Pleasant Home,
Rooster Rock, and Willamette Slouch are the lesser settlements of Multnomah
county.
Polk county, named
after James K. Polk, was organized as a district December 22, 1845, and comprised
the whole of the territory lying south of Yamhill district and west of a
supposed line drawn from the mouth of Yam bill River to the 42d parallel. Its
southern boundary -w as established in 1847, and its western in 1853, when the
counties of Benton anil Tillamook were created. Its present area is about 650
square miles, of which over 167,000 acres are improved. The valuation put upon
its farms and improvements is over four and a half millions, its live-stock in
1S84 was valued at $600,000, and its farm products at §1,‘2C0,0(>0. Tlie
real and personal property of the county was assessed at a little short of two
millions. Population, 7,000. Pallas, on the La Creole River, was named after
the vice-president. It w as made the county seat in 1850-1, and incorporated in
1874. An act was passed for the relocation of the county oeat in 1876, but
Dallas was again chosen by the popular vote of the county. It is a prettily
located town of 700 inhabitants, with a good water-power, several
manufactories, and a private academy Independence, situated on the AYillamette
River, was incorporated in 1874, has a population of 700, and is a thriving
place. Monmouth, the seat of the Christian college, is a flourishing town of
300 inhabitants in a populous precinct. It was founded by S. S. Whitman, T. H.
Lucas, A. W. Lucas, J.
B. Smith, and Elijah Davidson, for a
university town. It was incorporated in 1850. Buena Vista, on the Willamette,
had a population of two or three hundred. In it was the chief pottery in
Oregon. It was incorporated in
1876. Bethel, I.uckiamute, Eola, founded in 1851 by
William Durand, Grand Rond, Elk Ilorn, Brooks, Lincoln, Lewisville, Ballston,
Crowley, McCoy, Parker, Perrydale, Zena, and Dixie, are the lesser towns and
settlements of Polk county. The culture of hops in this county assumed
consider able importance.
Tillcmook county, the
Indian appellation given to fhe bay and river by Lewis and Clarke, was created
out of Clatsop, Yamhill, and Polk counties, December 15, 1853. It contains
nearly 1,000 square miles. Lumbering and dairying are the chief industries, and
little farming is carried on. The value of improvements of this kind is between
four and five hundred thousand dollars, The valuation of real and personal
property in the county amounts to less than $100,000. The county seat is
Tillamook, at the head of the bay. The whole white population of the county is
less than a thousand, including the towns of Nestockton, Kilcliis, Garabaldi,
and Nehalem. The Siletz Indian reservation is in the southern end of the
county.
Umatilla countj, the
aboriginal name, was organized September 27, 1862, out of that portion of Wasco
county lying between Willow Creek on the west and the summit of the Blue
Mountains on the east, and between the Columbia on the north and the ridge
dividing the John Day country from the great basin south of it. Its boundaries
have since been made more regular, and its present area is 6,500 square miles.
There are over 144,000 acres of improved land in the county, valued, with the buildings
and fences, at over two and a half million dollars, the farm products a little
less than a million, and the live-stock at §1,800,0!)(), The assessed valuation
of real and personal property in the county is $2,004,000. Population in 1884,
10,0(X> Pendleton, the county seat, named after George H. Pendleton, was
founded in 18CS by commissioners appointed for the purpose, and incorporated
October 23, 1880. It is situated on the Umatilla River, in the midst of a
beautiful country, and on the edge of the reservation of the Umatillas, with
whom, as well as
■with the
country about, it enjoys, a good trade. The population is about
1,000. Umatilla City, settled in 1862, was
first called Cain’s landing, then Columbia, and finally incorporated as
Umatilla in 1864. It was the place of transfer for a large amount of
merchandise and travel destined to the Bois6 and Owyhee mines, as well as the
most eastern mining districts of Oregon, aud carried on an active business for
a number of years. It became the county seat in 1S65, by special election. The
establishment of I’endleton in a more central location, and the withdrawal of
trade consequent on the failure of the mines, deprived Umatilla of its
population, which was reduced to 150, and caused the county scat to be removed
to Pendleton. Weston, on Pine Creek, a branch of the Walla Walla River, was
named after Weston, Missouri, and incorporated in 1878. It is purely an
agricultural town, with three or fonr hundred inhabitants, beautifully
situated, and prosperous. Tha minor towns and settlements are Meadowville,
Milton, Heppner, Pilot Rock, Centreville, Midway, Lena, Putter Creek, Agency,
Cayuse, Cold Spring, Echo, Hardmann, Hawthorne, Helix, Moorhouse, Pettysville,
Purdy, and Snipe.
Union county, so
named by unionists m politics, was created October 14, 1SG4, to meet the
requirements of a rapidly accumulating mining population, La Grande, upon the
petition of 500 citizens, being named in the act as the county seat until an
election could be had. It occupies the extreme northeast corner of the state,
touching Washington and Idaho. Its area embraces 5,400 square miles, of which
about 95,000 acres are improved, the farms and buildings being valued atone and
a half millions; the live-stock of the county at §1,029,000, and the farm
products at $432,000. The valuation of real and personal property for the tenth
census was given at considerably over a million and a quarter. The population
was about 7,000. The chief industries are stock-raising, sheep-farming, and
dairying. Union City was founded in the autumn of 1862, by the immigration of
that year, at the east end of Grand Rond Valley, in a rich agricultural region.
It was chosen for the county seat in 1873, fey a vote of the people, and
incorporated in 1878. Its population is eight hundred, and rapidly increasing.
D. S. I’aker and A. II. Reynolds r-f Walla Walla erected a flouring mill at
Union in 1864, the first ir Grand Rond Valley. La Grande was founded in October
of 1861 by Daniel Chaplin, tho first settler in the valley. It took its name
from reminiscence? of the French voyageurs, la grande vallee, a term often
applied to the Grand Rond Valley. The town was made the temporary seat of Union
county by act of the legislature in 1S64, and incorporated in 1S65. A land-office
was established here in 1SG7, for the sale of state lands, Chaplin being
appointed receiver. In 1872 this district was made identical with theU. S. land
district
01 La Grande. La Grande is also the seat of
the Blue Mountain University. The population is COO. Sparta, Oro Dell, Island
City, Cove, and Summerville are tho lesser towns of Grand Rond Valley; and
Lostine, Joseph, and Alder of Wallowa Valley. Elk Flat, Keating, New Bridge,
Pine Valley, Prairie creek, and Slater are the other settlements.
Among the residents
of Union county who have furnished me a dictation is James Quincy Shirley, who
was bom in TIillborough, N. H., in 1829, and educated in New London. He came
to California in 1849, by sea, and mined at Beal’s Bar on American River. He
was in the neighborhood of Downieville
2 years, trading in cattle, which he bought
cheap at the old missions, and sold high to the miners. He remained in the
business in different parts of the state until 18G2, when he started with a
pack-train of goods for Idaho, but had everything taken from him by Indians,
near Warner Lake, from 'which point he escaped on foot to Powder River with his
party, aud went to the Florence mines. From Idaho he went to Portland, and by
the aid of a friend secured employment under the government, but left the place
and cut and sold hay in Nevada the following year, getting 825 and $30 per ton
at Aurora. In 1864 lie again purchased cattle, at $2.50 per head, driving them
to Montana, v, hero they sold for $14. Horses for which he paid $14 so it ir
from $30 to $S0. This being a good profit, he repeated the irade the following
year, driving his
stock through Nevada,
and purchasing old Fort Hall, which he resold to the government 3 years
afterward. In 18(59 he settled in Raft River Valley, Idaho, where he had a
horse and cattle rancho. In the autumn he shipped the first cattle ever carried
on the Central Pacific railroad from Humboldt House to Niles, Oal. He continued
in this trade for several years longer, anil in 1883 sold out his stock and land
at Iiaft. River tor §100,000, bought
10,000 sheep and placed them on n range in
Utah. After looking over new and old Mexico fur land, he finally settled in
Union co., Oregon, where ho raises grain, and buys and sells cattle, an example
of what can be done if the man knows how to do it. Uis real property lies in 4
different states and territories, and he has $100,000 in live-stock.
W asco county, named
alter an Indian tribe inhabiting about the dalles of the Columbia, was
organized January 11, 1854, comprising under the act creating it the. whole of
eastern Oregon, these boundaries being reduced from time to time by its
division into other counties Its area is 0,250 square miles, of which about
80,000 acres are improved, valued at $1,700,000. The products of farms were
valued at a little less than half a million for 1879, v hile the live-stock of
the county was assessed at not quite two millions. The gross valuation of all
property in 1 S31-2 was set down at about four and a half millions, and of
taxable property $3,220,000. The population of the county at the tenth census
was not much over 11,000. Wasco county possesses a great diversity of soil,
climate, and topography . There is a large extent of excellent wheat land, and
an equal or greater amc’int of superior grating land. More sheep and horses
were raised in Wasco thun in any other county, while only Baker exceeded it in
the number of horned cattle. The Dailes is the county seat of Wasco Its name
was first given it by the Hudson's Bay Company, whose French servants used i
nearly obsolete word of their language—dalle, trough or gutter—to describe the
channel of the Columbia at this place. By common usage it became the permanent
appellative for th" town which grew up there, which for a time attempted
to add ‘ city ’ tu Dalles, but relinquished it, since which time ‘ The Dalles ’
only is used. To the dalles, which rendered a portage necessary, the town owes
its location. It was founded uy the mothodist missionaries Lee and Perkins, in
March 183S, abandoned in 1S47, taken possession ot by the U. S. military
authorities, partially abandoned in 1853, and settled upon as a donation claim
in that year by Winsor D. Bigelow. Daring the mining rush of 1858
05 it became a place of importance, which
position it has continued to hold, although for many ye ars under a cloud as to
titles, as related in another place. It war incorporated January 26, 1857. It
was once contemplated establishing branch mint at The Dalles tor the coinage of
the products of the mines of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana. Such a
bill was passed by congress, and approved July 4, 1804. An edifice of stone was
partially erected for this purpose, but before its completion the opening of
the Central Pacific railroad rendered a mint in Oregon superfluous, and the
building was devoted to other use's. Down to 1882 The Dalles was the transfer
point for passengers and freight moving up and down the river, but on the
completion of the Oregon Railway ara Navigation Company s line from various
parts of the upper country to Portland, a large portion of the traffic wiiich
formerly centred here was removed. Yet, geographically, The Dalles remains a
natural centre of trade and transportation, which, on the completion of the
locks now being constructed at the Cascades, must confirm it as the commercial
city of eastern Oregon. The Dalles has several times suffered from extensiv e
conflagrations. The last great fire, in 1879, destroyed a ;nillion dollars’
worth of property. A land-office, for the elistrict of The Dalles was
established here in 1875, The lesser towns and settlements in Wasco county are
Cascade Locks. Hood River, Celilo, Spanish Hollow, Bake Oven, Lang’s Landing,
Tyghe Valley, Des Chutes, Mount Hood, Warm Spring Agency, Antelope, m l Scott.
There are a number of other post-offices in Wasco county as it was previous to
the division into Crook and Wasco in 1882, which I have not put down Lere
because it is doubtful to which county they belong.
They are
Alkali, Blalock, Cluk, Cross Hollows, Cross Keys, Crown Rock, Dnfur,
Fleetville, Fossil, Grade, Hay Creek, Kingsley. Lone Bock, Lone Valley,
Mitchell, Nansene, Olex, Rockville, Yillard, and Waldron. ,
Samuel E. Brooks,
from whom I have a dictation, and who is a native of Ohio, came to Oregon
overland via Platte and Snake rivers, in 1850, in company with C. II. Haines,
Samuel Ritchie, Washington Ritchie, S. B. Roberts, il. H. William*, his father
Linn Brooks, his mother E. Brooks, his brothers H. S. and H. J. Brooks. Samuel
settled at The Dalles, and married Annie Pentland, daughter of Robert Pentland,
in 1872. He is among the prominent men f Wasco county.
Washington county was
established under the name of Twality district, the first of the four original
political divisions of Oregon, on the 5th of July 1843, and comprised at that
time all of the territory west of Willamette and north of Yamhill rivers,
extending to the Pacific ocean on the west, and aa far north as the northern
boundary line of the United States, then not determined. Its limits have
several times been altered by the creation of other counties, and its name was
changed from Twality to Washington September
i, 1849. Its area is G82 square miles,
G2,000 acres of which is improved land, valued with the improvements at about
three and a half million dollars. The live-stock of this county is all upon
farms, and is assessed at a little less than four hundred thousand. The farm
products of 1879 were valued at over §700,000. The state returns for 18S1-2
make the gross valuation < f all property £>3,717,000, and the total of
taxable property over two and a half millions. The population is between seven
and eight thousand. A considerable portion of the northern part of Washington
county is heavily timbered and mountainous, but its plains are famed for their
productiveness, and the face of the country is beautifully diversified.
Hillsboro, founded by David Hill, one of the executive committee of Oregon in
1813, is the county seat. It was incorporated in 1870. The population is about
five hundred. Forest Grove, tho seat of Pacific University, has tiOO
inhabitants. It was founded by Harvey Clark in 1849, and incorporated in 1872.
The U. S. Indian school, founded in 1879, is located at Forest Grove. The
location of the university town at the edge of the foot-hill* of the Coast
Range, in the midst of natural groves of oak-trees, gives an academic air to
the place, and certain propriety to the name, which will be lo3t sight of in
the future should not the forest beauties of ths place be preserved. The lesser
towns are Cornelius, Gaston, Dilley, dale’s Creek, Cedar Mill, Bethany,
Beaverton, Glencoe, Greenville, Ingles, Laurel, Middleton, Mountain Dale,
Scholl’s Ferry, Tualatin, and W’est Union.
Hariey McDonald, born
in Foster, R. I., in 1825; came to Cal. in 1819 by sea, and to Oregon the
following year, locating at Portland. His occupation was that of architect and
draughtsman. He built the steamer floomr, one of the first on the upper
Willamette, in 1851; the first theatre in San Francisco; the first wharf aud
first church in Portland; tho first railroad station at Salem; and is engaged
by the government to erect scbool-houses on the Indian reservations. lie
married, in 1848, Betsy M. Sansom, and has 8 children, one son being a banker.
He resides at Forest Grove.
Yamhill county was
first organized as one of the first four districts, July 5, 1843, and embraced
all of the Oregon territory south of Yamhill River, and west of a supposed
north aud south line extending from the mouth of the Yamhill to the 42d parallel.
Its boundaries were subsequently altered and abridged until it contained a
little more than 750 square miles. The amount of improved land is 119,000
acres, valued, with the improvements, at §5,518,- OiJO The value of live-stock
is over half a million, and the yearly product of the farms is about a million
and a halt. The valuation of real and personal estate is in excess of two and a
half millions, and the population is 8,000. This county is famed for its
wheat-producing capacity, as well as for its many beau- ful features.
Lafayette, once county scat, is situated on the Yamhill River, which is
navigable to this point. It was founded by Joel Perkins about 1851, and named
by him after Lafayette, Indiana. Perkins was murdered, while returning from California
in July 1856, by John Malone, who hanged himself
iu jail after
confessing the act. Or. Statesman, Aug. 12, 1836; Deady’s Hint. Or., MS., 78.
It nas chosen for the seat of the county in August 1858. Its court-house,
erected iu 1859 at a cost of §14,000, was the pride of the county at that time,
but its age is now against it, and it does not do credit to so rich a county.
The population of Lafayette is G0O. The town was incorporated in 1878.
McMinnville, founded by William T. Newby in 1854, was named after his native
town iu Tennessee. It is the seat of the baptist college, is on the lino of the
Oregon Central railroad, and has a population of 800. Its incorporation was in
1872. Dayton, founded by Joel Palmer on land purchased of Andrew Smith, and
named after Dayton, Ohio, is a pretty town, on the Yamhill Hirer, of 300
inhabitants, and the initial point of the Dayton, Sheridan, and Grand Rond
narrow-gauge railroad. It is a shipping point for the wheat grown in the
county, which is here transferred from the railroads to steamboats, and carried
down the Yamhill and Willamette Rivers to Portland or Astoria. Dayton has a
grain elevator and mills. It was incorporated m 880. Sheridan, at the present
western terminus of the narrow -gauge railroad, is a picturesque town of less
than 200 inhabitants, named after General P. Sheridan, who as a lieutenant was
stationed at Fort Yamhill, near here. It was settled in 1847 by Absolem B.
Faulconer, and incorporated in 18S0. Amity, founded in 1850, is another pretty
village, in a fine agricultural region, incorporated in 1880. The minor
settlements are Bellevue, Carlton, Ekins, Newburg, North Yamhill, West
Chehalem, and Wiilamina.
There w as a
proposition before the legislature of 1882 to create one or more counties out of
Umatilla. By a comparison of the wealth of the several counties of Oregon, it
is found that the amount per capita is largest in Multnomah, which is a
commercial county. The agricultural counties of the Willamette Valley rank,
Linn first, Yamhill second, j_,ane third, and Marion fourth, Clackamas ranking
least. The coast and Columbia-River counties fall below the interior ones. In
the southern part of western Oregon there is also much less wealth than in the
WiUanaitte Valley, Douglas county, however, leading Jackson. In eastern
Oregon, Umatilla leads the other counties iu per capita wealth, Grant, Union,
Wasco, Lake, and Baker following iu the order named. This may be different
since the cutting-off of Crook county, which took much of the best portion of
W'asco. The comparative amount of wheat raised in 1880 was greatest in Marion
county, which raised 1,000,000 bushels, Yamhill, Umatilla, Linn, and Polk
following with nearly 1,000,000 each. Clackamas county raised less than 500
bushels. But Clackamas produced $80,000 worth of fruit, being the second fruit
county, Linn leading the state. Lake raised almost none, Curry, Clatsop, and
Tillamook very little, and all the other counties from 81,000 to SCT.OOO worth,
all but tnree, Baker, Grant, and Columbia, producing over $10,000 worth, and
nine of them from §30, -
000 to §57,000 worth. The gross value of the
fruit crop was over §5S1,000. From this general and com] arative review of the
counties and towns of the state, as taken from the assessors’ statistics, to
which a large amount in values may safely be added, the condition of the
population at large may be gathered, especially as refers to agriculture.
Manufactures are considered under a separate head.
MANUFACTURES.
The earliest
manufactured product of Oregon was lumber. From the building of the first mills
for commercial purposes, in 1844, to 1885, this has continued to be a grand
staple of the country. At the last date mentioned there were over 228 saw-mills
in the state, costing over a million and a half of dollars, and producing
annually lumber valued at over two millions. It i difficult to give even
apppoximately the percentage of acres of timbered land that would produce
lumber. Both sides of the Coast Range, the west side of the Cascade Range, the
highlands of the Columbia, and the north end of the Willamette, as well as the
bottom-lands along that river for sixty miles, are heavily timbered; while the
east side of the Cascades, the west ,-ide of the Blue Mountains, and the flanks
of the cross ranges between the Willamette,
Umpqua, and Rogue
River valleys are scarcely less densely covered -w ith forest. See Review Board
of Trade, 1877, 33; Overland Monthly, xiii. 247-9; Rept Com. Ayric., 1875,
330-1; Jlosely’s Or., 30; Or. Legis. Docs, 187(5, doc.
11., 15.
The merchantable
woods of Oregon are yellow fir, cedar, pine, spruce, cottonwood, hemlock, oak,
maple, ash, alder, arbutus, and myrtle. Fir is the staple used ill
ship-building, house-building, fencing, furniture, and fuel. Cedar is used for
finishing, and withstands moisture. Hemlock is used in tanning. Oak is utilized
for farming implements and wagons; cottonwood for staves; ash, maple, and
myrtle for furniture. Veneering from the knots of Oregon maple received a
diploma from the centennial exposition of 1876, for its beauty, fineness of
grain, toughness of fibre, and susceptibility to polish. Nash’s Or., 128.
Combined with myrtle, which is also beautifully marked and susceptible of a
high polish, but of a dark color, tho result is one of great elegance in
cabinet-work. A few vessels built at Coos Bay have been finished inside with
these woods, presenting a remarkably pleasing effect. Half of all the wood use
1 m the manufacture of furniture in San Francisco is exported from Oregon. As
early as 1862 a set of furniture made of Oregon maple was sold in San Francisco
for $800. Or. Statesman, May 12, 1802. Tin furniture trade of the state reached
$750,000 annually, two thirds of which was for home-made articles. Tlie Oregon
Manufacturing Company of Portland in 1875 began to make first-class fashionable
furniture from native woods, a building being erected by J. A. Strobridge on
the corner of First and Yamhill streets, at a cost of $75,000, for the
company’s use. Portland West Short, Aug. 1875; Hillsboro Wash. Independent,
Dec. 2, 1875. The finest cabinet articles were made in Portland. Other smaller
factories were scattered throughout the state, but Portland furnished a large
proportion of the furniture sold by country merchants. According to a prominent
Pacific coast statistician, John S. Hittell, Resources, 5S4-5, there were
150,000,000 feet of lumber sawed in Oregon in 1880-1. The greater part of this
was cut at the mills oil the Columbia, and the southern coast, several of which
turn out 75,000 feet per day. The mill at St Helen cut from 40,000 to 75,000 in
24 hours. At Coos 15ay and Port Orford there were mills that produce
21.000.000 to 37,000,000 feet annually. (Jilfry’s
Or. Resources, MS., 45; S. S. Mann, in Historical Correspondence, MS. The
Coquille mills saw 12,000,000 feet for San Francisco market annually. In
eastern Oregon the Bine Mountains furnished the principal part of the lumber
made. The Tiiielsen flume, for carrying lumber from the mountains, is the
largest, carrying 50.000 feet of lumber and 300 cords of fire-wood daily from
the mills to llie town of Milton, near the Oregon line. It was the property of
the Oregon Improvement Company, and, including its branch, was thirty mile3
long. The Little White Salmon flume, built by the Oregon Railway and Navigation
Company to bring lumber to The Dalles, was ten miles in length. Uittell’s
Resources, 584-5.
At St Johns, near the
mouth of tho Willamette, was the location of the Oregon Barrel Company, where
barrels, pails, fruit-packing boxes, and cases for holding packages of canned
salmon were manufactured; 0. B. Severance founder. The products of this factory
were worth about $15,000 annually. There was a similar factory at Oregon City
in 18G3, and there was, in 1884, a large box factory at Portland, owned by John
Harlowe & Co. "Wood was used for fuel throughout Oregon, except in a
few public aud private houses, where coal was preferred. It was abundant and
cheap everywhere west of the Cascade Mountains, the highest prices obtaining in
Portland, wdiere iir wood brought six dollars per cord, and oak eight. Most of
the river steamers used wood for making steam as a matter of economy.
Ship-building, which
depends upon the quality of timber produced by the country, is carried on to a
considerable extent, the principal ship-yard being at Coos Bay. The oldest yard
on the bay is at North Bend, ■where the brig Arayo
was built by A. M. aud R. W. Simpson in 1856, since whioh time twenty-two other
vessels have been launched from this yard, with tonnage
aggregating 12,500.
They were launched in the following order: brigs Arago and Blanco, 1856-{i;
schooners Mendocino aud Florence E. Wulton, 1859-60; brig Advance, 1861;
schooners Enterprise, Isabella, Hannah Louise, and Ju- venta, 1863-5;
barkentines Occident and Melancthcm, 1866-7; schooncr Bunk- alatio/i, 1S6S;
barken line Web/oot, 1869; schooners Botama and Oregonian, 1871-2; barkentine
Portland, 1873; ship Western Shore, 1S74; barkentine Tam O’Shanter, 1875;
barkentines North Bend and Klikitat, and schooners Trustee, James A. Oarjield,
and one unnamed, 1876-81. The ship Western Shore was tho largest and strongest
ship ever built on the Pacific coast, and the second in number, the Wildwood,
built at Port "Madison in 1871-2, being the lirst. The Western Shore was
designed by A. M. Simpson, aud built by John Kruse. The joiner-work was done by
Frank Gibson, the polishing of the wood-work by Frederick Mark, and the
painting by Peter Gibson. She was 3,00© tons burden, and her spars the finest
ever seen in Liverpool. K. W. Simpson designed the rigging and canvas. The
cabin was finished with myrtle wood, relieved by door-posts of Sandwich Island
tamanaina handsome manner; but tho Tam O’Shanter was finished still more
handsomely by the same German workman, F. Markc The first voyage of the Western
t'hore was to San Francisco, thence to Liverpool, loaded with 1.940 tons of
wheat, commanded by 'Wesley McAllep. She beat the favorite San Francisco ship
Three Brothers 8 days, and the British King, a fast stiler, 14 days—a triumph
for her builders. She cost .*30,000, less than such a ship could be built for
at Bath, Maine. Thos B. Merry, in Portland West Shore, May 1876 and Feb. 1882;
S. F. Bulletin, Xov. 2(i, 1S76.
From the sbip-yard of
II. II. Luse, at Empire City, Coos Bay, eight vessels W’ere launched between
1861 and 1881, with an aggregate burden of 909 tons. The class of vessels built
at Empire City was smaller than the North Bend vessels, several being small
steamers for use on tho bay. They were the schooners Rebecca, Kate Piper, and
Cashman, brig Robert Emmett, and utearn- tug A Ipha, and the steamers
Satellite, Coos, and Bertha. Thc Alpha was the iirst vessel built at this
place, aud the only one before 18C9. Portland We t Shore, Feb. 1882, 20. At
Marshfield, Coos Bay, E. B. Dean & Co. have a ship-yard. Here were built
twenty vessels between 1866 and 1881, of an aggregate capacity of 9,070 tons,
and at other points on the bayand river. The first vessel 1.ai 11 at Marshfield
was the steam tug Escort. Then fallowed the schooners SlagJunmd, Louisa,
Morrison, Ivanhot, Annie Stauffer, Panamd, Sunshine, Frithioff, Laura May,
Jennie Stella, C. II. Merchant, Santa Rosa., George 0. Perkins, J. G. North,
Dakota, and one unknown, the barkentine Amelia, the steamers Messenger and
Weup, aud the tug Escort No. 2. Tho steamer Juno was built in Coos River, and
also a schooner, name unknown, at Aaronville. Merry makes mention of the North
Bend tug Fearless, which is not down in tho list.
The reputation of
Coos Bay vessels for durability and safety is good, few uf them having been
lost. The Florence Walton was wrecked on tho coast between Coos Bay and Rogue
River. The Bvnkalation, while discharging a cargo of lime at cape Blanco for
the light-house, was set on fire by the sea washing down the hatchway, and
entirely destroyed. Tlio Sunshine was wrecked off Cape Disappointment bj
capsizing in a sudden squall, from her masu being too tall ana the hoops too
small to allow tho sails to be lowered quickly. Portland West Shore, June 1S76,
6. Several of them have been in the Columbia River trade ever since they were
completed.
Ship-building in a
small way has been carried on in the Umpqua River ever since 1856. Two
schooners, the Palestine and Umpqua, were buiit about a mile and a half below
Scottsburg, by Clark and Baker, in 1S55-6, for the San Francisco trade. Or.
Statesman, May 6, 1856. In 1857 the steamer Satellite was built to run on the
rher. In I860 John Kruse, Bauer, aud Maury built the schooner Man/ Cleveland,
at Lower Scottsburg, for the C..li fnrnia trade. Id., May 13, 1861. Kruse also
built the schooners Pacific and W. F. Brown in 1864-5; Hopkins’ Ship-building
Pacific Coast; Davidson's Coast. Pilot, 139. A few vessels have been built in
Tillamook Bay, of light
dra ught aud tonnage.
Ever since the Star of Oregon was launched from Oak Island in the Willamette in
1841, ship-building has been carried on in a desultory fashion along on the
Columbia and Willamette, no record of which has bet n kept. An examination of
the U. S. Commerce and Navigation Statistics from 1850 to 1850 shows that no
figures are ghen for more than half the years, consequently the information
gained is comparatively worthless. Ill the years given, 1850, 1857, 1865,
lbGS-1877, there were 109 vessels of all classes, from a barge to a brig, built
in Oregon, 31 of which were sailing vessels. According to the same authority,
there were 00 steam-vessels in Uregon waters in 1874; but these returns are
evidently imperfect.
The cost of
ship-buildirg as compared with Bath, Maine, is in favor of Oregon ship-yirck,
as shippers have been at some pains in the last ten or fifteen years* to
demonstrate, as well as to show that American wooden ships must soon displace
English iron vessels, and American shipping, which has been permitted to decline,
be restored. The report of the Pacific Social Science Association on the
Restoration of American Shipping in the Foreign Trade, by a committee
consisting of C. T. Hopkins, A. S. Hallidie, I. E. Thayer, A. Crawford, and C.
A. Washburn, is an instructive pamphlet of some 30 pages, showing the causes of
decline and the means of restoring the American shipping interest. In 1875-G,
$1,513,508 was paid away in Oregon to foreign ship-owners for grain charters to
Europe, which money should have been saved to the state and reimested in
ship-liuilding. Board of Tr. de Rept,
1870, 10. I have quoted the opinions of competent
writers in the history of Puget Sound ship-building, and will only refer here
to the following pamphlets. Furrish’s Reviews of the Commercial, Financial,
and Industrial Interests of Oregon, 1877, 31-2; Gilfnfs Resources Or., MS.,
45-50; Review of Portland Board of Trade, 1877; and Ilophi ts’ Ship-building,
1S07. In view of tlie requirements cf commerce in the future, the Oregon
Railway and Navigation Company have provided a magnificent dry-dock at Albina,
opposite Portland, which was completed about 18S3.
Flour takes the
second place, in point of time if not of value, in the list of Oregon
manufactures. Since the time when wheat was currency in Oregon, it has playeil
an important part ia the finances of the country. Taking a comparatively
recent view of its importance, the fact that the wheat crop increased from
2,340,003 bushels in 1870 to 7,480,000 in 1880, establishes its relative value
to any and all other products A very large proportion of the wheat raised in
Oregon was exported in bulk, but there was also a large export of manufactured
llour. The first to export a full cargo of wheat direct to Europe was Joseph
Watt, w ho sent one to Liverpool by the Sallie Brown iu 1S6S. !*■ cost Watt
$4,000 to make tlie experiment. The English millers, unacquainted with
th:,'plump Willamette grain, condemned it as swollen, but bought it at a
reduced price, and ground it up with English wheat to give whiteness to the
liour, sines which time they have understood its value. Grover’s Pub. Life in
Or., MS., 00* Wait, in Camp-Jire Orations, MS., 1-2. Another cargo went the
same year in the Helen A ngier. The year previous to Watt’s shipment a cargo of
wheat and flour was sent direct to Australia by the bark Whistler. As early ua
1801 H. E. Hayes and O. B. Hawley of Yamhill had 10,000 bushels ground up at
the Liua City Mills (swept away in the flood of the following w inter) for
shipment to Liverpool, takinB it to S. F. to put it on board a
clipper ship. Or. Argus, Jan. 12, 186i In 180S-9, 30,305 bushels of wheat and
200 barrels of flour, worth §36,447, were shipjied direct to Europe. The trade
increased rapidly, and in 1874 there were 74,715 bushels of wheat and 28,811
barrels of flour Bent to foreign ports, worth $1,026,302. S. F. Bulletin, Jan.
20, 1875.
The number of
flouring and grist mills in the state was over a hundred, in which more than a
million and a quarter of capital A'as invested, producing annually three and a
half millions’ worth of flour. Some of the most famous mills were the
following: Standard Mills at Milwaukee, completed i i 1860 byEddy, Kellogg, and Bradbury, which could make 250
barrels daily. The Oregon City Mills, owned by J. D. Miller, capable of tui
ning out 300 barrels!
daily. This mill was
originally erected in 186G to make paper, but converted in 1868 into a
flouring-inill. The Imperial Mill at Oregon City, first owned by Savier and
Burnside, was capable of grinding 500 barrels daily. The Salem Flouring Mills,
owned by a company organized in 1870, with a capital of $30,000 since increased
to $200,000, and which had A. Bush, the former eduor of the Or. Statesman, and
later a banker iu Salem, for president, manufactured 15,000 to 16,000 barrels
of flour monthly. Their flour took the lead iu the markets of Europe. The
Jefferson City Mills, owned by Corbitt and Macleay of Portland, ground 10,000
barrels monthly. J. H. Foster’s mill at Albany had a capacity of 300 barrels
daily. UitteWs Resources, 555-8.
In Lie great flood of
1861.-2 the Island mill at Oregon City, built by the methodist company, and
John McLonghlin’s mill were both carried away. McLoughlin’s mill was in charge
of Daniel Harvey, who married Mrs Rae, the doctor’s daughter. Harvey was born
in the parish of Shefford, county Essex, England, in 1804, He died at Portland,
Dec. 5, 1868. Portland Advocate, Dec. 19, 1868.
Salmon, by the
process of canning, becomes a kind of manufactured goods, and was one of the
three great staples of the state. The salmon of the Columbia were introduced
to the markets of Honolulu, Valparaiso, and London, in a measure, by the
Hudson’s Bay Company, before any citizen of the United States had entered into
the business of salmon-fishing in Oregon. Robert’s Recollections, MS., 20;
Wilkes* 1Var. U. S. Ex. Exped., iv. 309-70; II. Com. Rept, 31, i. 57, 27th
cong. 3d sess.; Van Tramp's Adventures, 145-6. The fii'st attempts to compete
with this company were made by Wyeth and the methodist missionaries, which was
successful only in securing enough for home consumption, the Indians being the
fishermen, and the company able to pay more for the fish than the missionaries.
The first merchants at Oregon City tra’ded a few barrels to the Honolulu
merchants for unrefined sugar and molasses. Henry Roder went to Oregon City in
1852, with the design of estab* lishing a fishery at the falls of the
Willamette, but changed his mind aud went to Bellingham Bay to erect a saw-mi
11. About 1857 John West began putting up salt salmon in barrels, at Westport,
on the Lower Columbia. In
1859 Strong, Baldwin & Co. established a
similar business at the mouth of Rogue River. Or. Statesman, Oct. 25, 1859. But
nothing like a modern fishery was established on the Columbia until 1866, when
William Hume, George Hume, and A. S. Hapgood erected the first fish-preserving
factory at Eagle Cliff, on the north bank of the river, in Wahkiakum county,
Washington. In 1870 there were seventeen similar establishments on the river,
and in I£80 there were thirty-five. The average eost of these fisheries, with
their apparatus for canning salmon, and of the boats and nets used in catching
fish, was in the neighborhood of forty thousand dollars each, making a sum
total invested in the Columbia River fisheries of nearly a million and a half.
The number of persons employed in the fishing season, which lasted about four
months, was six thousand, the greater number of whom were foreign. The boatmen
ere usually Scandinavians, and the men employed in the canneries principally
Chinese. A few women were hired to put on labels, at which they were very
expert. The mechanics were usually Americans. The following shows the increase
of the salmon catch for ten years, by the number of eases put up: loG9, 20,769;
1870,29,736; 1871,34,805; 1S72, 43,C9G; 1873,102,733; 1874, 291,021; 1875,
231,500; 1876, 438,730; 1877, 395,288; 1878, 449,917; 1879, 438,004. New Tacoma
N. P. Coast, June 15, 1880. The production varied with different years, the
salmon in some years appearing to avoid the Columbia and all the principal
fisliing-grounds. There was a falling-off in 1879, for the whole Pacific coast,
amounting to nearly 100,000 cases from the catch of the previous year. After
the fishing season was over some of the canneries put up beef and mutton, to
utilize their facilities and round out the year’s business.
The export of canned
salmon did not commence until 1871, when 30,000 cases were exported, which
realized $150,000. In 1875, 333,000 eases were sold abroad, which realized
§1,650,000, and the following year 479,000 cases,
bringing oyer two and
a half millions of dollars, which is about the maximum of the trade, a few
thousand more packages being sold in 1878, and considerably less in 1879.
Review of board of trade, 1879, in Portland Standard, Feb. 4, 1879. The
production of 1881 w as 550,000 cases of 48 pounds each, bringing five dollars
a case.
The partial failure
of several years alarmed capitalists and legislators; and in April 1875 the
Oregon and Washington Fish Propagating Company, with a capital of $30,000, was
incorporated. The officers of this company were John Adair, Jr, president, J.
W. Cook vice-president, J. G. Megler secretary, Henry Failing treasurer, with
J. Adair, J. G. Megler, John West, C. M. Lewis, and J. W. Cook directors.
Livingston Stone of Charlestown, Massachusetts, was chosen to conduct the
experiment. A location for a hatching establishment was selected at the
junction of Clear creek with the Clackamas River, a few miles from Oregon City,
where the necessary buildings were erected and a million eggs put to hatch, of
which seventy-five per cent became fish and were placed in the river to follow
their ordinary habits of migration and return. In this manner the salmon
product was rendered secure. In March 18S1, 2,150,000 fish were turned out of
the hatcliing-house in a healthy condition. Olympia Courier, April 22, 1S81;
Portland West Shore, August, 1878; Portland Oregonian, May 26, 1877.
Besides the Columbia
River fisheries, there were others on the Umpqua, Coquille, and Rogue rivers,
where salmon are put up in barrels. The Coquille fishery put up 37,000 barrels
in 1881. S. FChronicle,:, Aug. 13, 1881. Immense quantities of salmon-trout of
excellent flavor have been found in the Umpqua, Klamath, Link, and other
southern streams. In the Klamath, at the ford on the Linkville road, they have
been seen in shoals so dense that horses refused to pass over them. In Lost
River, in Lake county, the sucker fisli abounded in the same shoals during
April and May. Sturgeon, tom cod, flounder, and other edible fish were
plentiful along the coast. Since 1802, oysters in considerable quantities have
been shipped from Tillamook Bay; and other shell-fish, namely, crabs, shrimps,
and mussels, were abundant, and marketable. Or. Statesman, Nov. 3, 18(52; Or.
Legisl. Docs, 1870, ii. 15; Small'* Or. G2-5.
Laws have been
enacted for the preservation of both salmon and oysters. These acts regulate
the size of the meshes, which are 8J inches long, to permit the young salmon to
escape through them; and prohibit fishing from Saturday evening to Sunday
evening of every week in the season, for the protection of a.l salmon; and
forbid the use of the dredge where the water is loss than twenty-four feet in
depth at low tide on oyster-beds, or the waste of young oysters. Or. Laws,
1870, 7. With regard to the preservation and propagation of ral- mon, it has
been recently discovered that tlie spawn throw n into the Coquille from the
fisheries is not wasted, but hatches in that stream, and that therefore that
river is a natural piseicultural ground. Coquille City Herald, in S. F.
Bulletin, Nov.15, 1883. The same does not appear to be true of the northern
rivers. Another difference is in the time of entering the rivers, which is
April in the Columbia, and August in the Umpqua and Coquille.
The manufacture of
Oregon wool into goods was neglected until April 1856, when a joint-stock
association was formed at Salem for the purpose of erecting a woollen-mill.
Joseph Watt was the prime mover. William H. Rcctor was superintendent of
construction, and went cast to purchase machinery. George II. Williams was
president of the company, Alfred Stanton vice-president, Joseph G. Wilson
secretary, and J. D. Boon treasurer. Watt, Rector, Joseph Holman, L. F. Grover,
Daniel Waldo, and E. M. Barnum were directors. Brown's Salem Dir., 1871. Watt
& Barber had a carding- machine in Folk county in 1856, and there appears
to have been another in Linn county, which was destroyed by fire in 18G2. The
company purchased the right of wray to bring the water of the
Santiam River to Salem, building a canal and taking it across Ohemeketa Creek,
making it one of the best water- powers on the Pacific coast. Its completion in
December was celebrated by the firing of cannon. The incorporation of the
company as a manufacturing
and water company
followed, and in the fall of 1857 two seta of woollen machinery were put ill
motion. Tiiegoods manufactured, blankets, flannels, and eassimeres, were
exhibited at the first state fair of California, in 185S, being the first cloth
made on the Pacific coast of the United States by modern machinery. In 1860
the capacity of the mill was doubled, the company prospered, and in 1863 built
a large flouring mill to utilize its water-power. The canal which brought the
Santiasi into Salem was less than a mile iu length and had a fall of 40 feet.
The water was exhaustless, and there was laid the foundations of unlimited
facilities for manufactures at Salem.
The building of the
Willamette wooilen-mill at Salem was a great incentive to wool-growing. The
amount of wool produced in Oregon in 1SU0 ■was
220,000 pounds, not as much as the Salem mill
required afcer it was enlarged, which was 400.000. But '.n 1870 the yyool crop
of the state was 1,500,000, and in 1S80 over eight million of pounds were
exported. Board of Trade Review, 1877, IS; Pauijic North-west, 4. The Salem
mill burned to the ground in May 1876, but in the mean time a number of others
had been erected. In
1860 W. J. Linnville ami others petitioned the
senate for a charter for a woollen manufacturing company, which was refused, on
the ground that the constitution of the state forbade creating corporations by
special laws except for municipal purposes. Or. Jour. Senate, 1S60, 63, 73. In
1864a woollcn-mill was erected atKllendale, which was running in 1866, and
‘turning out flannels by thj thousand yards,’ but which has since been
suspended. Or. Statesman, May 7, 1866; JJeadfs Scrap-Book, 149. The Oregon City
W'oolien Mill was projected as early as 1862, although not built until 1864-.).
The incorporation papers were filed Dec. 31, ll>62, in the office of the
secretary of state. The incorporators were A. L. Lovejoy, L. D. C. Latourette,
Arthur Warner, W. W. Lujk, William Whitlock, I'. Barclay, Daniel Harvey, G. H.
Atkinson, J. L. Barlow, John D. Dement, W. C. Dement, D. P. Thompson, William
Barlow, W» C Johnson, and A. II. Steele. Capital stock, §60,000. Or. Artjus,
Jan. 31, 1862. Five lots were purchased of Harvey for $12,000, and water-power
guaranteed. The building was of bi'ick and stone, 188 by 52 feet, an .a tw.>
stories high. Joel Palmer was elected president of the company. It was d
signed, as we are told, to concentrate capi'al at Oregon City. Buck'3
Enterprises, Mi, 6-8. Buck relates how when they had built the mill the
directois could go no fuither, having no money to buy the wool to start with,
until he succeeded in borrow iug it from the bankef British Columbia. A few men
bought up all the stock, and some of the original holders realized nothing,
among whom was Buck, whose place among the projectors of enterprises is
conspicuous if not remunerative. The enterprise was successful from the B^irc.
Tho mill began by making flannels, but soon manufactured all kinds of woollen
goods. It was destroyed by fire iu 1S68, and rebuilt in the following year. In
point of capacity and means of every sort, the Oregon City null was the first
in the state. Its annual consumption of wool was not much short of a million
pounds, and the value of the goods manufactured from forty to forty-livo
thousand dollars a month. A wholesale clothing manufactory in connection with
the mill employs from fifty to sixty cutters and tailors in working up tweeds
and eassimeres into goods for the market. This branch of the business was
represented in S. F. by a firm which manufactures Oregon Citj cloihs into goods
to the value of §400,000 annually. The mill employed 150 operatives, to whom it
paid §90,000 a year in wages. MUleU'i Resources, 445 -6. A fire iu February
1881 destroyed a portion of the mill, which sustained a loss of §20,000. The
wool-growers of Wasco county at one time contemplated titling up the abandoned
mint building at The Dalles for a woollen factory, but later, with Portland
capitalists, making arrangements to erect a large mill at thu fall of Dos
Chutes River.
Another woollen-mill
was established at Brownsville in 1875, with four sets ot machinery, which
could manufacture tweeds, doeskins, eassimeres, satinets, flannels, and
blankets. Its sales were about §150,000 annually, on a paid-up capital of
§36,000. Linn county had a hosiery factory also. At Albany, also, there was a
hosiery-mull, called The Pioneer, owned by A. L.
Stinson. It had the
only knitting-machines in the state, and did its own earning and spinning. A
woollen-mill at Ashland Manufactured goods to the value o£ from forty to fifty
thousand dollars annually, and was the property of two or three men. Its goods
were in great demand, being of excellent quality.
The woollen
manufactures of the Pacific coast excel in general excellence any in the United
States, which is due to the superior quality of the wool used. The blankets
made at rhe Oregon mills, for fineness, softness, and beauty of finish, are
unequalled except by those made in California from the same kind of wool. The
total amount invested in these manufactures iu 1885 was about half a million;
§400,000 worth of material was used, and t>840,0!)0 worth of fabric
manufactured annually.
The lirst
iron-founding done in Oregon was about 185S. lJavis & Mo- nastes of
Portland, and the Willamette Iron-Works of Oregon City, were the pioneers in
this industry. At the latter were built, in 1S59, the engines and machinery for
the first two steam saw-mills iu the eastern portion of Washington and Oregon
These two mills were for Ruble <i Co. at Walla Walia and Noble & Co. at
The Dalles. According to Ilittell. boiler making was begun in Portland as early
as 1S52. Resources, 6.">8. A. Rossi, F. Bartels, R. Hurley, and 1).
Smith were tlie owners of the Willamette Iron Foundry. Or. Argun, July 3, 1868.
The Salem iron-works were erected in LSG0, aud turned out a variety of
machinery, engines, and castings. They were owned by B. F. Drake, who came to
California in 1851, and after mining foi a snort time settled at Oregon City,
w’berc ne remained until he built his foundery at Salem. His foreman. John
Holman, had charge of the works for fifteen years, and employed 12 men.
Ilittell’s Resources, 063-4. John Nation, a well-known iron-worker, was at
first associated with Drake In 1862 this foundery built a portable ■ ngineof
tight liorse-power, to bo used on farms a* the motive power of
thrashing-machines, the first of its kind in Oregon. Since that period
founderies have been planted in different parts of the state as required by
local business, Portland and The Dalles being the chief centres for the trade
on account of the demands of steamboat and railroad trahic.
The presence of iron
ore in many parts of Oregon lias beet1 frequently remarked upon It
is known to exist in the counties of Columbia, Tillamook, Marion, ('lackainas,
and in the southern counties of Jackson and Coos. Its presence in connection
with tire clay is considered one of the best proofs of the value of the
coal-fields of Oregon, the juxtaposition of coal, iron, aud fireclay being the
same here as in the coal bearing regions ot other parts of the world. The most
important or beat known of the iron beds of the state are in the vicinity of
Oswego, a small town on the Willamette, six miles south of Portland, and
extending to tlie Chelialem valley, fifteen miles from that city.
Equally rich beds of
the ore are found near St Helen, and from the outcroppings between these two
points the deposit seems to curv.; around to the west of Portland, and to
extend for twenty-five miles, with the richest beds at either end. At St Helen
the ore has never been worked, except in a black smith-shop, where it has been
converted into horse-shoes. Several varieties of iron ore exist in the state,
including the chromites of Josephine county.
The Oswego iron was
tested in 1862, and fouud to be excellent. Or. Statesman, Jan. 19 and Feb. 9,
1803; Or. Argus, Jan. 24, 1803. It yields altout fifty per cent of pure metal;
and it is estimated that there are sixty thousand tons in the immediate
vicinity of this place, w'hile less than three miles away is another extensive
deposit, from twelve to fifteen feet in depth A company was formed at Portland
February 24, 1805, under the name of tiie Oregon Iron Company, to manufacture
iron from the ore at Oswego, which proceeded to erect works at this place,
Sucker Creek, the outlet of a email lake, furnishing thi water-power.
President, W. S. Ladd, vice-president, II. C. Leonard; capital stock, $600,000,
divided among 20 stockholders, most of whom resided in Oregon, the remainder in
S. F. The incorpoiators wern Louis McLane, Charles Dimon, W. S. Ladd, Henry
Failing, A. M. Starr, H. D. Green, and
H. C. Leonard, The
stack was modelled after the Darn urn stack at Lima Rock, Connecticut, and was
put up by G. D. Wilbur of that state. Its foundations were laid on the
bed-rock at a depth of 16 feet, and it was constructed of solid, dry
stone-work, covering a space of thirty-six square feet The stack itself was
built of hewn stone, obtained on the ground; was thirty-four feet square at the
base, thirty-two feet high, and twenty-six feet square at the top. On top of
the stack was a chimney, built of brick, forty feet high, anil containing the
oven for heating the air for the blast. The diameter of the top of the lower
pyramid in which the smelting takes place was ten feet. The blow-house was
built on the ground near the stack. The machinery for driving the air was
propelled by water. The blast was furnished by two blowing cylinders of woo 1,
five feet in diameter and six feet stroke. Char- cual was used for fuel. The
capacity of the works was designed to be ten tons in twenty-four hours. The ore
to be tested was the variety known as brown hematite, and it was found to yield
from forty-six to seventy per cent of pure iron. The timber for making charcoal
was in the immediate vicinity, and every circumstance seemed to promise
success. The works reached completion in June 1867, having cost §12(5,000. The
first run was made on the 24th of August, six tons of good metal being
produced, which, on being sent to the S. F. founderies, was pronounced a
superior article. By the iirst of October the Oregon Iron Co. had made 223 tons
of pig-iron, costing to make twenty-nine dollars per ton, exclusive of interest
on capital and taxes. The experiment, for experiment it was, proving that iron
could be produced more cheaply in Oregon than in other parts of the U. S.,
though not so cheaply by half as in England, was satisfactory to those who had
no capital in tli6 enterprise, if not to those who had. The cost was
distributed as follows:
106
bushels of charcoal, costing at the furnace 8 cents....................... §13 2S
88 pounds
lime, costing at furnace 4 cents 3 5'2
4,970
pounds of ore, costing at the furnace $2.50 a ton................ 5 50
Labor
reducing ore, per ton. ... 6 67
Browne’s
Resources, 219-22; Or. City Enterprise, June 8, 18G7; Clackamas County
Resources, 1. J. Ross Browne, in his very readable work, the Resources of the
Pacific States and Territories, 220-1, published at S. F. in 1809, gives the
relative cost of producing iron in England and the United States. An
establishment, he says, capable of making 10,000 tons annually in this country
would cost altogether, with the capital to carrj it on, $2,000,000, while in
England the tame establishment, with the means to carry it on, would cost
§800,000. At the same time the interest on the American capital would exceed
that on the English capital by $120,000. In the U. S. a fair average cost of
producing pig-iron was not less than $35 per ton, while in England and Wales it
was §14, to which should be added the difference caused by the greater rate of
interest in the U. S. See also Langley’s Trade Pac., i. 9-10; Portland
Oregonian, July 28, 1S66.
Owing to an error in
building the stack, which limited the production of metal to eight tons per
diem, the works were closed in 1869, after turning out 2,100 tons. Some of the
iron manufactured was made up into stoves in Portland, and some of it in the
construction of Ladd & Tilton's bank. It sold readily in S. F. at the
highest market price, where, owing to being rather soft, it was mixed with
Scotch pig. In 1874 the works were reopened, and ran for two years, producing
5,000 tons. In 1S77 they were sold to the Oswego Iron Company, ander whose
management it was thought the production could be made to reach 500 tons a
month. The sales for 1SS1 exceeded $160,000.
One serious
disadvantage in smelting iion in Oregon was the lack of lime rock in the
vicinity of the iron beds, and the cost of lime obtained formerly from San Juan
Island or from Santa Cruz in California, and recently from New Tacoma.
Limestone has often been reported discovered in various parts of the state, but
no lime-quarriea of any extent have yet been opened with kilns
for burning Kme for
market; and the (rant was greatly felt iu housebuilding, as well a a in
manufactures. The only mineral of this character which has been worked in
Oregon, or rather in Washington (for the works were on the north bank of the
Columbia, though the rocks were found on both sides of the river), is a native
cemsnt, or gypsum, obtained from the bowlders in the neighborhood of Astoria.
It was probably the same rock so often pronounced limestone by the discoverers
in different parts of the state. As early as 1S50 some military officers at
Astoria burned some of the rock, and pronounced it limestone. A year or two
later a kiln of it was burned anil shipped to Portland, to bo sold for lime.
But the barge on which the barrels were loaded was sunk iu the river with the
cargo, which remained under water until 1834, when the barge being raised, it
was found the barrels had gone to pieces, but their contents were solid rock.
On these facts coming to the notice of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company,
the officers contracted with Joseph Jeffers of Fortland to furnish ^00 barrels
in a given time for the foundations of their ■warehouse
in Portland. Mr Jeffers proceeded to build a kiln and bum therock on the
premises of John Adair, at upper Astoria, without consulting the owner. When the
tirst kiln had turned out 100 barrels of cement the work was interfered with
by Mr Adair and others, who claimed an interest in the proiita a:5 owners of
the rocks and grour d. A company was then formed, which tilled the contract
with the navigation company, and had 100 barrels more to sell The masons found
on slaking it that it contained lumps which remained hard, and gave them
annoyance in the use. The plan was then conceived of grinding the cement to
make it uniform in consistency, anil works were erected for this purpose on the
north side of the Columbia, by J. B. Knapp, at a place which received the name
of the manufacturer. Tb is article became known in the market as Oregon cement.
Of quarrying stone, few varieties have been discovered iu Oregon. This is
greatly due to the overflow of basalt, which has capped and concealed the other
formations. On Milton Creek, near St Helen, was found a bed of sandstone, which
was quarried for the Portland market; and sandstone is reported at various
localities, but before the Milton creek discovery stone was brought from
Bel'ingham Bay in Washington to build the custom-house and post-office a t
Portland; anil the custom-house at Astoria was built of rock taken out of the
surrounding hills.
In Marion county, and
in other parts of the state, as well as in Clarke county, Washington, near
Lewis River, a yellowish and a bluish gray marl is found, which when tirst
quarried is easily cut into any shape, but on exposure to the air, hardens aud
forms stone suitable for many purposes, though always rather friable. Mantels,
door-sills, ovens, and many other things are cut out of this stone and sold to
the farmers in the Willamette Valley, who use it in place of brick in building
chimneys. Black marble has been found on the north side of the Columbia, in the
Lewis River highlands. A beautiful and very hard white marble has been quarried
in Jackson county, w here it became an article of commerce, limited to that
portion at the state. No other common minerals have been applied to the uses
of mankind, with the exception of salt. In 1S61 the manufacture of salt from
brine obtained from wells dug at the foot of a high range of hills six miles
south-east of Oakland, in Douglas county, was attempted, and was so far
successful that about 1,000 pounds were obtained daily from the evaporation of
two furnaces. The projectors of this enterprise were Dillard, Ward, and Moore.
The works were run for a period, and then closed.
On the farm of Kuoeh
Meeker, about the north line of Multnomah county, was a salt-spring, similar to
those iu Douglas county, and situated similarly, -at the foot of a range of
high, timbered mountains. Meeker deepened the well about twenty-seven feet, and
made a little salt by boiling, as an experiment. In this well, at the depth
mentioned, the workmen came upon the charred wood of a camp-fire, the sticks
arranged, without doubt, by the hands of men. The salt appeared good, but had a
bitter taste. In 1807 Henry C. Victor leased the salt-spring and land
adjoining, with a view to establishing the manufacture of salt. Works were
erected, which made about two tons per
Jay for several
months, but tho returns not being satisfactory, they were closed, and the
manufacture was never resumed. The salt made at these works granulated in about
the fineness used in salting butter, for which purpose, and for curing moats,
it was superior to any in rhe market, being absolutely pure, as was proved by
chemical tests. A sample of it was taken to the l’aris exposition by Make, one
of the California commissioners. Henry C. Victor was born Oct. 11, 1828, in
Pennsylvania, His parents removed to Sandusky, Ohio, in his boyhood, and he was
educated at an acadomj in Norn alk. He studied naval engineering, and entered
the service of the U. S. about the time Perry's expedition was fitting for
Japan, and sailed in the San Jarinto. Ho was iu Chinese waters at the time of
the opium war with the English, and distinguished himself at the taking of the
Barriere forts, becoming a favorite with Sir John Powering, with whom he
afterward corresponded. After three years iu Asiatic ports, he returned to the
U. S. and was ~uOn after sent to the coast of Africa. The locality and the time
suggested controversies on the slavery question and slave-trade. Victor was in
opposition to some of the officers from the southern states, and in a
controversy in which a southerner was very insulting, gave his superior officer
a blow. For this offense he was suspended, and sent home. Shortly after being
restored to service came the war for the union, and he was assigned to duty in
the blockading squadron before Charleston. In February 1863 he brought the
splendid prize, Princess Royal, to Philadelphia; shortly after which he was
ordered to the Pacific. While cruisbig along the Mexican coast, fever pro?
trated a large portion of the crew, Victor amimg The rest, who, having had the
dangerous African fever, was unfitted by it for duty, and resigned. While at
Manzanillo he made a survey of the lake extending from this port toward the
city of Colima, which becomes dry at some seasons and breeds pestilence, with a
view to cutting a 'anal to tho sea and letting in tho salt water. Selim E.
Woodworth of S. F. joined with him ami several others iu forming a company for
this work. An agent M as employed to visit the city of Mexico, and get the
consent of the government to the scheme. Permission was obtained, but the
vessel being soon after brought to S. F. with a disabled crew, and Victor's
resignation following, put an end to the canal scheme, so far as its projectors
were concerned. The year following, 1804, Victor went to Oregon and engaged in
several enterprises, chiefly concerning coal and salt. Like many others, they
were premature. Mr Victor perished ■with the foundering
of the steamer Pacific, iu November 1875, in company with about 300 others. His
wife was Frances Fuller, whose writings arc quoted in my work.
Paper, of a coarse
quality, was first made at Oregon City in 1867, but tho building erected proved
to be not adapted to the business, and was sold for a flouring mill after
running one year. Buck's J'Jxlrryri**f*f MS., 4-5. The
originator of the enterprise, W. W. Buck, then built another mill, with capital
furnished by the publisher of the Oregonian, aud was successful, manufacturing
printing and wrapping paper, which was all consumed in and about Portland.
Nash's Or., 225; Adams’ Or., 31; HitteU’s Besources, 636.
The production of
turpentine was commenced at Portland in 1863, by T. A. Wood The factory was
destroyed by fire in 1864, after which this article was wholly imported,
although the fir timber of Oregon afforded immense quantities of the raw
material, many old trees having deposits an inch or more in thickness extending
for twenty feet between layers of growth. But the high price of labor on the
Pacific coast at the period mentioned w as adv erse to its manufacture, and tho
close of the civil war, allowing North Carolina, to resume trade with the other
states, brought down the price below the cost of pi-jduction in Oregon.
Pottery began to be
manufactured at Buena Vista about 1865, from clay found at that place. For
several years thi business languished, the proprietor, A. N. Smith, being
unable to introduce his goods into general use. Subsequently, however, the
Buena Vista works employed over fifty men, and furnished all descriptions of
stoneware, fire-brick, tewer-pipes, and garden pots
equal to the best.
Resources Or. and Wash., 1881, 70-1. Soap, for all purposes, was long imported
into Oregon, the first factory being established iu Portland in 1862, by W. B.
Mead. Or. An/us, June 7, 1802. In 1 8;,o R. Irving commenced the manufacture of
this article, and being joined by G. A. Webb, the Oregon Standard Soap Company
was formed, which turned out fifteen varieties of soap, and wad the second
manufactory of this kind on the Pacific coast. Review Board of Trade, 1877, 12;
Hittell's Resources, 719. Vinegar w ha
made for market at Portland aud Butteville, to the amount of four hundred
thousand gallons annually.
Fruit-drying was carried
on at Oregon City and other points to a consider able extent, but no reliable
figures an to be found concerning tins industry, which is divided ap among
individual fruit-raisers. Patented movable dryers were used, which could be set
up in any orchard. Plums, prunes, pears, and apples were tho fruits commonly
dried, and their excellence was unsurpassed. the fruit 1 leing fine, and the
method of preserving leaving the flavor unexhausted, and each separate slice
clean and whole.
A flax-mill was
established at Albany in 1877, which manufactured 5.000 pounds ot linen twines
and threads per month, The flax was grown in Linn county, by tenant, farmers,
who worked on shares for one third of the crop at twelve cents a pound for the
fibre, and the market price for the seed. The mill company, having two thirds
of the crop for rental, only paid for one third of the flax used, which left
them a profit of aboL t $,),000 a year in the factory. The seed produced was
worth $45 an acre. It had long been known that flax was a native product of
Oregon. It « as discovered by experiment that the cultivation of it was favored
by the soil and climate. Linseed oil was first manufactured at Salem. The
company was* incorporated in November 18G6. Their machinery, having a capacity
for crushing 30,000 bushels of seed per annum, was shipped around Cape Horn,
and since 18G7 the Pioneer Oil Mill has been running, it» capacity being
increased to CO,000 bushels. Brown'a Salem Uirec., 1871, 1874; GHfry'% Oi MS.,
86; U. S. Agric. llept, 1872, 451 To\v for upholstering was made at this
establishment. The. liore of Oregon flax is very fine and strong, with a
peculiar filkimss which makes it equal to the best used in the manufacture of
Irish linens.
The first tannery in
Oregon, other than household ones, was that of Daniel H. Lownsdale, on 'J'anner's
Creek, just back of the original Portland land claim. Here was made the
leather, valued at §5,000, which purchased Petty- grove’s interest in the town.
The manufacture of this article has not been what the natural resources of the
country warranted until recently. Small tanneries existed at several places,
including Portland, Salem, Eugene City, Brownsville, Coquille Uity,
Parkersburg, and Milwaukee Leinen weber & Co. of upper Astoria first connected
the manufacture of leather (viih the making of boots and shoes. The Oregon
Leather Manufacturing Company was incorporated in 1878, A. W. Waters,
president. The company employed convict labor, and turned out 30,000 sides
annually, at a good profit. lJitteli’s Resources, 495. Boots and shoes were
made extensively by several firms. Aikin, who began the manufacture in a small
way at Portland, in 1859, was later associated with Selling & Co., and had
a profitable trade with Idaho and Montana. The Oregon Boot, Shoe, and Leather
Manufacturing Company ot Portland is the successor to Hibbard & Brazee who
begun nianu facturing in 1873, and projected the new company in 1881, which
employed fifty workmen. The factory of B. Leinenweber & Co. at Astoria cost
$40,000, employed 35 workmen, and manufactured $78,000 worth of goods annually.
Gloves of the coarser sort were made at two places in Portland, and one place
in Eugene City. Saddle and harness making was carried on in every town of any
importance, but only to supply the local demand. Wagons and carriages wert-
also manufactured to a limited extent. Brooms and brushes were made at
Portland. Malt liquors were produced at thirty-four different breweries in the
state, to the amount of 24,000 barrels per annum. Portland early enjoyed a
spice and coffee mill, candy factory, and various othsr minor industries.
Manufactures which
are secondary to trade are slow in development, the Ulbi. Ok., Vol. II, 47
country lacking
population and excess of capital But the requirements for becoming a
manufacturing state are present in abundance in water-power, timber, minerals,
and the means of rapid transportation, and out of the small beginnings here
referred to as proof of what our generation of men have accomplished in the
faco of unusual obstacles, another generation of their descemlants will be able
to evoke grand results.
MINES AND MINING.
I have not yet particularized the. mineral
resources of Oregon, except as to iron mentioned incidentally along with
manufactures. Gold, as a precious metal, has exercised a great imluence in the
progress of the country. It gave the people a currency which emancipated them
frum the thraldom of wheat raising and fur-hunting, by which alone any trade
could be carried on previously. It improved their farms, built milis and
steamboats, chartered ships, and loaded them with goods necessary for their
comfort. It enlarged their mental and social horizon, ami increased their
self-respect. It was California gold which first revolutionized pioneer Oregon.
But there was gold ii Oregon sufficient for her needs, had it been known. James
L). Dana, of Wilkes’ exploring expedition, remarked upon the appearance of
southern Oregon, and its resemblance to other gold-bearing regions, as early as
1841 Ton years later John Evans wn appointed U. S. geologist to institute
researches on the main line of the public land surveys about to be commenced
in Oregon, and was, through the petitions of the Oregon legislature, continued
in the service for several years. Evans was thoroughly identified with the
study of Oregon geology. He was born in Portsmouth, X. H., Feb 14, 1812;
educated at Andover, studied medicine, and married a daughter of Robert Miles
of Charleston, S. C. He was appointed assistant to David Dale Owen to prosecute
some geological survey" in tht west, and soon after completing this work
was sent to Oregon. He died of pneumonia at Washington city, April 20, 1861.
Silliman's Journal, xxxii. 311-18; Or. Statesman, May 20, 1861. But aside from
satisfying the government of the value of its territories in a general way,
these scientific survey-i had little bearing upon the actual development of
mineral resources; Gold deposits were always discovered by accident or the
patient search of the practical miner.
Following the
discovery of the placer mines of Bogue Iliver Valley in 1851 was the. discovery
of the beach mines in 1852, on the southern coast of Oregon. Late in 1853 more
than a thousand men w ere mining south of Coos Bay. Then came other
discoveries, and finally the current of gold-seeking was turned into eastern
Oregon, not altogether ignoring the western slopes of the Cascades, where
miring districts were marked out, prospected, a pocket or two of great richness
found and exhausted, and the district abandoned. These things have been spoken
of as they occurred in the settlement of the courrt-y.
The actual yield of
the mines could not be determined. About Jackson- vill< and on the head
waters of the Illinois River they were very rich in spots. While five dollars a
day only rewarded the majority of miners, it was uot uncommon to find nuggets
on the Illinois weighing forty-six, fifty-eight, or seventy three ounces. Sac.
Union, April 23, July 28, and Sept. 10, 185S; Dana's Great Weti, 281. The
Jacksonville mines also yielded frequent lumps of gold from six to ten ounces
in weight. The introduction of hydraulics in mining about 1857 redoubled the
profits of mining. As much as i?100,000 was taken from a single beach mine a
few miles north of the Coquille Iliver. About the spring ot 1859 quartz mines
were discovered in Jackson county, wl ich y ielded at the croppings and on top
of the vein fcbulous sums, but wLtch soon pinched out or was lost.
About 1857 a
discovery was made, of gold in th< bed of the Kantiain and its branches in
Marion county, but not in quantities to warrant mining, although a limited
extent of ground .w orked the following tw o years paid
from four to six
dollars a day. Or. Statesman, Aug. 11, 1857, Sept. 28, 1858; Or. hyus, Aug. 20,
1839. In I860 reputed silver quartz was found on both the Santiam and Moballa
rivers, and many claims were located. But it was not until 1863 that undoubted
quartz lodes were discovered in the Cascade Mountains on the north fork of the
Santiam. A camp called Quartzville was established at a distance of about fifty
miles from Salem and Albany in the autumn of that year, and in the following
season some of the leads were slightly worked to show their character, and
yielded twenty-one dollars to the ton, a little more than half in silver.
Portland Oregonian, July 29, 1864 The most noted of the yeins 'n the Santiam
district was the White Bull lode, situated on Gold Mountain, where a majority
of the leads were found. It was eight feet wide and very rich The Union company
of Salem removed a bowlder from one of their claims, under which they found
first a bed of gravel and earth several feet in. depth, then bastard granite,
anil beneath that a bluish gray rock with silver in it. Beneath the latter was
a layer of decomposed quart* overlying the true gold-bearing quartz. Out of
this mine some remar kable specimens were taker The hard white rock sparkled w
ith points of gold all over the surface. In some cavities where the quartz was
rotten, or at least disintegrated and yellowed, were what were called eagle’s
nests; namely, skeins of twisted gold fibres of great fineness and beauty
attached to and suspended from the sides of the opening, crossing each other
like straws in a nest, whence the name. This variety of gold, which is known as
thread gold, was also found in the mountains of Douglas county
The Salem company
took out about $20,OIK) worth of these specimens, and then proceeded to put up
a quartz-mill. But the mine was soon exhausted, and the treasure taken out went
to pay the expenses incurred. This outcome of the most famous mine discouraged
the further prosecution of so costly an industry, and the Santiam district was
soon known as a thing of the past. It was the opinion of experts that the gold
was only superficial and that the Hue veins were argentiferous. A company as
late as 1877 was at work on the Little North fork of the Santiam, which heads
up near Mount Jefferson, tunnelling for silver ore At differtnt places ami
times both gold and silver have been found in Marion and Clackamas counties,
but no regular mining lia3 ever been carried on, anil the development of
quartz-mining by an agricultual community is hardly to be expected.
Surveyor-general’s rept, 1868, in Zabris- He, 1046- 7, MS., Se<. Int. Rept,
1857, 321-G, 40th cong 3d sess.; Albany Register, July 28, 1871; Con'allis
Gazette, Sept. 1, 1S76. I have already spoken of the discovery of the mines of
eastern Oregon, and its effect upon the settlement and development of the
country. No absolutely correct account has ever been kept, or could be given,
of the annual product of the Oregon mines, the gold going out of the state in
the bands of tho private persons, and in all directions. In 1864 the yield of
southern and eastern Oregon together was $1,000,000 The estimate for 1867 was
§2,000,000; for 1869, $1,200.000; for 1S87-8, over $1,280,000; and for 1881,
$1,140,000 Review Board of Trade,
1877, 34; Riert’i Progress of Portland, 42; Pacific
North-west, 32-3; Ilittell’» Resources, 290. The annual yield of silver htis
been put down at $150,000, this metal being produced from the quartz veins of
Granr and Baker counties, the only counties where quartz-mining may be said to
have been earned on successfully.
The Virtue mine near
Baker City deserves special mention as the first quartz mine developed in
eastern Oregon, or the first successful quartz operation in the state It was
discovered in 1863 by two men on their way to Boisi5, who carried a bit of the
rock to that place and left it ai the office of Mr lioekfellow, who at once saw
the value of the quartz, and paid one of the men to ret< m and point out the
place where it had been found. Upon tracing up other fragments of the quartz,
the ledge from w hich they came was discovered and Kockfellow’s name given to
it. Walla Walla Statesman, Sept. 5, 1863; Idaho Silver City Avalanche,Nov. 11,
1876; Portland Oregonian, Sept. 16 and Oct. 7, 1863. The Pioneer mine and two
other lodes were dis. covered at the same time. An arastra was at once put up,
and the llock
fellow mine tested.
The first specimens assayed by Tracy and Ring of Portland showed $1,300 in
gold and $20 in silver to the ton. Id,, May 17, 1864. In the spring uf 1864
Roekfellow took J. S. Ruckel of the O. S. N. Co. into partnership, and two
arastras were put at work on the ore from this mine. \ little village sprang up
near by, of minors and artisans, dependent upon the employment afforded by it.
In July §1,250 was obtained out of 1,500 pounds of rock. The gold was of
unusual fineness, and worth $519.50 per ounci. //., July 21, 1804. A tunnel was
run into the hill, intended to tap the several ledges at a depth uf ."00
to 500 feet, and a mill was erected on Powder River, seven miles from tho mine,
on the travelled road to Boise. It had a capacity uf 20 stamps, but ran only 12.
It began crushing in October, and shut down in November, the trial being
entirely satisfactory. In May 1865 it started up again, crushing rock, the
poorest of which yielded §30 to §40 to the ton, and the best $10,000. Up to
this time about §75,000 had been expended on the mine and mill. A large but
unknown quantity of gold was taken out ol the mine. Roekfellow & Ruckel
sold out, and about 1871-2 a company, of which Hill Beachy was one and James W.
Virtue another, owned and worked the mine It took the name of the Virtue Gold
Mining Company. In the mean time Baker City grew up in the immediate vicinity
of the mill, where Virtue followed assaying and banking, dependent largely upon
the mine, and which became the county seat. In 1872 the new company erected a
steam mill v, lth 20 stamps, and other buildings, and employed a much larger
force, extending tunnels and shafts. In 1876 a shaft was down 600 feet,
connecting with the various levels, and the vein had been worked along the line
of the lead 1,200 feet. The quartz is of a milky whiteness, hard, but not
difficult to crush. It yields from §20 to §25 per ton, with a cost of §5 for
mining and milling. All the expenses of improvements have been paid out of the
proceeds of the mine, which is making money for its owners. A foundery was established
at Baker City in connection with the mine, which besides keeping it in repair
has plenty of custom-work
The Emmet mine, 500
feet above the Virtue, had its rock crushed in the Virtue mill, and yielded
§22.50 per ton. Baker City Bed Ilock Democrat, Feb. 14, 1872; Silver City
Avalanche, Jan. 8 and Nov. 11, 1S76.
Among the many veins
of gold-bearing quartz discovered simultaneously in the early part of i860,
that found by the Hicks brothers returned thirty ounces of gold to a common
mortarful of the rock. On the 13th of January George Ish discovered a vein in
an isolated butie lying twelve miles from Jacksonville, in a bend of Rogue
River, which yielded on the first tests twelv e dollars to every pound of rock.
Two bowlders taken from the surface, weigh ing forty and sixty pounds
respectively, contained one pound of gold to every five pounds of rock. No part
of the rock near the surface contained less than ten dollars to the pound, and
from a portion of the quartz fifteen dollars to the pound was" obtained.
The first four hundred pounds container 401 ounces of gold. From a piece
weighing four pounds, twelve and a half ounce* of gold were obtained; 300
pounds of roek produced 60 pounds of amalgam. John E. Ross, who had a claim on
this butte c alled Gold Hill, realized an average of $10 to the pound of ruvk.
One piece weighing 14 pounds gave up 36 ounces of gold. Sac. Union, Feb. 16 and
27, I860; Northern Yreha Journal, Feb. 9, 1860; Siskiyou, County Affairs, MS.,
24. The rock in the Isti vein was very hard and white, with finc
veins of gold coursing turough it, tilling and wedging every crevice. It
appeared to be a mine of almost solid gold. Thomas Cavanaugh, one of the
owners, refused §80,
000 for a fifth interest. Ish and his partners
went east to purrhase machinery to crush the quartz. In the mean t ime the
casing rock vv as being crushed in
a.n
arai’tra, and yielded §700 a week, while the miners were taking out quartz
preparatory to setting up the steam mill which had been purchased. Whan less
than 600 tons of quartz had been mined it was found that the vein was detached,
and to thi- day the main body of the ore has not been found, Tub expenses
incurred ruined the company, and Gold Hill was at.indoned after $130,000 had
been taken out and expended. Surveyor-gcneral’s rep I, m
ZabrisKr,
1041. Nor wa.! the Ish mine the onlj instance of rich quartz. When veins began
to lie looked for they were found in all directions. A mine on Jackson Creek
yielded forty ounces of gold in one week, the rock being pounded in a common
mortar. In May a discovery was made on the head of Applegate Creek which
rivalled the Ish mine in richness, producing 97 ounces of gold from 22 pounds
of rock. Ten tons of this quart/, yielded at the rate (if 82,352 to the ton.
Sau. Union, Aug. 30. I860, and Manh 15, 1861; Or. Statesman, March 18, 1861,
Notwithstanding that
a number of these flattering discoveries were made, quartz-mining never was
carried on in Jackson county to any extent, owing to the expense it involved, and
the feeling of insecurity engendered by the experiments of 18G0. In I860 the
Occidental Quartz Mill Company was organized, and ii mill with an engine of
‘24 horse-power was placed on the Davenport lead on Jackson Creek. Arastras
were generally used, by which means much of the gold and all of the silver was
lost. Within the last dozen years several mills have been introduced in
different parts of southern Oregon. The placers have been worked continuously,
first by Americans and af terwards by Chinamen, who, under certain taxes and
restrictions, have been permitted to uccupy mining ground in all the gold
districts of Oregon, although the constitution of the state forbids any of
that race not residing in Oregon at the time of its adoption to hold real estate
or work a mining claim therein. The first law enacted on this subject w as in
December 1800, when it was declared that thereafter ‘ no Chinumai? shall mine
gold in this State un less licensed to do so as provided,1 etc. The
tax was $2 per month, to be paid every three months in advance, and to be
collected by the county clerk of each county where gold was mined on certain
days of certain months. Any Chinaman found mining without a, license wan liable
to have any property belonging to him sold at an hour’s notice to satisfy the
law. Ten per cent of this tax went into the state treasury. If Chinamen engaged
111 any kind of trade, even among themselves, they were liable to pay $.30 per
month, to l>e collected in the same manner as their mining licenses. Or.
Lawn, 1869, 49- {52. The law was several times amended, but never to the
advantage of the Chinese, who were made to contribute to the revenues of the
state in a liberal manner.
The product of the
mines of Jackson county from 1851 to 1866 has been estimated at a million
dollars annually, which, from the evidence, is not an over-estimate. Hines’
Or., 2S8; Oilfry's Or., MS., 51-3.
The first to engage
in deep gravel-mining was a company of English capitalists, who built a ditch
five miles long in Josephine county, 011 Galice Creek, in 1875, and found it
pay. A California company next made a ditch for bringing water to the Althouse
creek mines in the same county. The third and longer ditch constructed was in
Jackson county, and belonged to D. P. Thompson, A. P. Ankeny & Co., of
Portland, and is considered the best mining property in the state. It
conducted the water a distance of twenty-three miles to the Sterling mines in
the neighborhood of Jacksonville. Another ditch, built m 1878, eleven miles
long, was owned by KUptel, llannah & Co., Jacksonville, and by Bellinger,
Thayer, Hawthorne, and Kelly of Portland. It brought water from two small lakes
in the Siskiyou Mountains to Applegate Creek, and cost $30,000. Ashland
Tidings, Sept. 27, 1878. The results were entirety satisfactory. A company was
formed by W. R. Willis, r*t Rosebnrg, in 1878, with a capital of half « million
for carrying on hydraulic mining on the west bank of Applegate Creek. They
purchased the water rights and improvements of all the small miners, e d took
thi water out of the creek above them for their purposes. J. C. Tulman of
Ashland in the same year brought water from the mountains to the Cow Creek
mines. The Chinamen of Rogue River Valley also expended $25,000, about this
time, in a ditch to bring water to their mining ground, and with good results.
Duncan's Southern Or.,’MS., 10. Thus, instead of the wild excitement of a few
years in which luck entered largely into the miner’s estimate of his coming
fortune, there grew up a permanent mining industry iu Jackson county, requiring
the
investment of capital
and making sure returns. In a less degree the same may be said of Douglass
county, and also of Coos when the hydraulic process is applied to the old
sea-beaches about four miles from the ocean, which are rich and extensn e.
It was nut until 1S6G
that silver ledges received any attention in southern Oregon. The first
location was made one mile west of Willow Springs, in Rogue River Valley, on
the crest of a range of hills running parallel wich the Oregon and California
road. This was called the Silver Mountain ledge, was eight feet in width at the
croppings, and was one of three in the same vicinity. Jacksonville Reporter,
Jan. 13, 1800; Jacksonville Jleveille, Jan. 11, 1866; Portland Oregonian, Jan.
27, 1866. In the following year silver quartz was discovered in the mountains
east of Roseburg, Som< of the mines located by incorporated companies in
Douglas county W ere the Monte Rico, Gray Eagle, Excelsior, and Last Chance,
these ledges being also gold-bearing. This group of mines received the name of
the Bohemia district. E. W. Gale and P. Peters were among the first discoverers
of quartz in Douglas county, liosebi'nj Ensign, Sept. 14 and 21, 1867; Salem
Willamette Farmer, July i), 1870. Un Steamboat Creek, a branch of the Umpqua,
James Johnson, a California miner, discovered a gold mine in quartz which
assayed from §500 to $1,000 to the ton. Owing to its distance from the
settlements and the difficulty of making a trail, it was neglected. The Monte
Rico silver mine, in the Bohemia dis- tiict, yielded nearly two hundred dollars
per ton of pure silver. Iu 1868 the Seymour City and Oakland mines were
located, all being i iranches of the same great vein. John A. Veatch describes
the Bohemia district as pertaining as much to Lane as Douglas county, and lying
on both sides of the ridge sepa- r .ting the waters of the. Umpqua and
Willamette. He called it a gold bearing district, with a little silver in
connection with lead and antimony. Specimens of copper were also found in the
district. Id., Julj 12, 1809. John M. Foley, in the Botebunj Ensign of August
29, 1S68, describes the Bohemia district as resembling in its general features
the silver-bearing districts of Nevada and Idaho. There is no doubt that gold
and silver will at. some period of the future be reckoned among the chief
resources of Douglas county, but the rough and densely timbered mountains in
which lie the quartz vein,- present obstacles so serious, that until the
population is much increased, and until it is less easy to create wealth in
other pursuits, the mineral riches of this part of the country will remain
undeveloped.
The other metals
which have been mined, experimental!} at least, in southern Oregon, are copper
anil cinnabar. Copper was discovered in Josephine county on the Illinois River
in 1850, near where a vein called Fall Creek w as opened and w orked in 1863.
The first indications of a true vein of copper ore were found in 1859, by a
miner named Hawes, on a hill two miles west of Waldo, in the immediate vicinity
of the famous Queen of Bronze mine, and led to the discovery of the latter. The
Queen of Bronze w as purchased by De Hierry of San Rafael, California, who
expended considerable money in attempts to reduce the ore, which he w as unable
to do pi ofitably. The Fall Creel, mine was also a failure financially. Its
owners—Crandall, 'Moore, Jordan, Chiles, and others—made a trail through the
mountains to the coast near the mouth of Cheteoe River, a distance of forty
miles, where there was an anchorage, superior to that of Crescent City, from
which to ship their ore, but the expenditure was a loss in this mine, as well
as in the Queen of Bronze, the ore became too tough with pure metal to be mined
by any means known to the ow ners.
The first knowledge
of cinnabai in the country was in 1800, when R. S. Jewett of Jackson county, on
showing a red rock in his mineral collection to s. traveller, was told that it
was cinnabai. The Indians from whom he had obtained it could not be induced to
reveal the locality, so that it was not until fifteen years later that a
deposit of the ore was found in Douglas county, six miles east of Oakland. The:
reason given for concealing the location of the cinnabar mine was that the
Indians had, by accident, and by burning a large fire on the rock, salivated
themselves and their horses, alter which they had
a
superstitious fear of it. Hogue River John, on seeing Jewett throw a piece of
the rock upon the tire, left his house, and could not be induced to return.
Portland West Shore, Nov. 1878, 73. The owners erected a furnace capable of
retorting six hundred pounds per day to test the mine, and obtained an average
of forty dollars’ worth of quicksilver from this amount of ore. The mine was
then purchased by the New Idria company, which put up two furnaces, capable of
retorting three tons daily. The assay of the ore yielded from sixty to eighty
pounds of pure quicksilver per ton. Fuel being plenty and cheap made this a
profitable yield. The mine was owned entirely in Oregon. The officers were A.
L. Todd president, A. C. Todd secretary, J. P. Grill treasurer, J. W. Jackson
superintendent, T. S. Rodabaugh agent. Gill, Rodabaugh, and Jackson composed
the board of directors. The cost of opening up the Nonpareil mine was $40,000.
Roseburg Plaiudealer, Sept. 20, 1879. Partial discoveries of tin have been made
in Douglas county, but no mine has yet been found. Among the known mineral
productions of the southern counties are marble, salt, limestone, platina, borax,
and coal. The latter mineral was discovered about the same time near the
Columbia and at Coos Bay. ^ (
The first coal
discoveries at Coos Bay were made in 1853 near Empire City aud North Bend. The
first to be worked was the Marple and Foley mine, about one mile from the bay,
which was opened in 1854. It was tried on the steamer Crescent City in May of
that year, and also in S. F., and pronounced good. S. F. Alta, May G, 12, 1854.
The first cargo taken out was carried in wagons to the bay, and transferred to
flat-boats, which conveyed it to Empire, where it was placed on board the
Ckansey for S. F. The vessel was lost on the bar in going out, but soon after
another cargo was shipped, which reached its destination, where it was sold at
a good profit. This mine was abandoned on further exploration, the next opened
being at Newport and Eastport, in 1858. James Aiken discovered these veins. The
Eastport mine was opened by Northrup and Symonds, and the Newport mine by
Rogers and Flannagan. The early operations in coal at Coos Bay were expensive,
owing to the crudities of the means employed. The Eastport mine was sold in
1868 to Charles and John Pershbaker, and subsequently to another company.
According to the S. F. Times of March 6, 1809, the purchasing company were J.
L. Pool, Howard, Levi Stevens, I. W. Raymond, J. S. Dean, Oliver ELlridge,
Claus Spreckels, and W. H. Sharp. Rogers sold his interest in the Newport mine
to S. S. Mann. These two mines have been steadily worked for sixteen years, and
are now in a better condition than ever before. Several others have been
opened, with varying success, the Southport mine, opened in 1S75, being the
ouiy successful rival to Newport and Eastport.
The coal-fields at
Coos Bay appear to extend from near the bay to a distance of five miles or
more inland, through a range of hills cropping out in gulches or ravines
running toward the bay, and on the opposite side of the ridge. The strata lie
in horizontal planes, having in some places a slight inclination, but
generally level, and have a thickness of from eight to ten feet. They are
easily reached by from three to five miles of road, which brings them to
navigable water. The same body of coal underlies the spurs of the Coast Range
for hundreds of miles. It has been discovered in almost every county on the
west side of the Willamette, and along the coast at Port Orford, Yaquina and
Tillamook bays, on the Nchalem River, and in the highlands of the Columbia. A
large body of it exists within from one to seven miles of the river in Columbia
county. Discoveries of coal have also been made in eastern Oregon, near Canon
City, and on Snake River, three miles from Farewell bend. Roseburg Independent,
Nov. 1, 1879; Oregon Facts, 15-16; Corvallis Gazette, April 13, 1867; Portland
West Shore, Feb. 1876, and Jan. and March 1877; S. F. Mining and Scientific
Press, Dec. 14, 1872; Gale's Resources of Coos Countif, 45-56; Browne's
Resources, 237; Resources of Southern Or.. 10-12.
With regard to the
quality of the coals in Oregon, they were at first classed by geologists with
the brown lignites. ‘This name,’says the Astorian of Aug, 29, 1879, ‘ is an
unfortunate one, as it is now proved that the coals called
lignites are not
formed of wood to any greater extent than are the coals of the carboniferous
period. It gives the impression of an inferior coal, which in the m?in is a
mistaken idea, for coals of every quality, and iit for all uses, can l>e
found in the so-called lignites of the Pacific coast. ’ An analysis of Ooos Kay
coal, made in 1877, gave, water 9.87, sulphur 3.73, ash 10.80, coke 50.00, volatile
gases 20.40. S. Call, June 23, 1S67. Ajiother analysis by Evans gave carbon in
coke- (50.30, volatile gases 23.50, moisture 9.00, ash 4.70; specific gravity
1.384. Or. .statesman, Aug. 18, 1857. It varieJ m appearance and
character in different localities. At Coos Bay it is described as a clean,
black coal, of lustrous chonchoidal fracture, free from iron pyrites, with no
trace of sulphur, burning without any disagreeable odor and comparatively little
ash. It cakes somewhat in burning and gives off considerable gas. This description
applies equally well to the- coal on the Columbia River, where it is has
b.en
tested, and to the mines on Puget Sound. In certain localities it is harder and
heavier, and the same mine in different veins may contain two or more
varieties. Later scientists speak of them as brown coals, and admit that they
are of more remote origin, and have been subjected to greater heat and pressure
than the lignites, but say that they occupy (in intermediate position between
them and the true coals. XJ. S. 11. Ex. Doc., x. 206, 42d cong. 2d sess.. It
would be more intelligent to admit that nature may produce a true coal
different from those in England, Pennsylvania, or Anstrali.i,
The cost of producing
coals at Coos Bay ia one dollar a ton, and fifteen cents for transportation to
deep water. Transportation to S. F. is two dollars a ton in the companies’ own
steamers of seven and eight hundred tons. In 1856 it was §13 per ton, and coal $40.
The price varies with the market. Relatively, Coos Bay coal holds its own with
the others in market. The prices for 1S73 were as follows: Sidney, $17; Naniamo
(Y. I.), $16; Bellingham Bay, $15; Seattle, $16; Rocky Mountain, $16; Coos Bay,
$15; Monte Diablo (Cal.), $12. S. F. Bulletin, Jan. 14, 1873. Prices have been
lowered several dollars by competition with Puget Sound mines. The value of the
coals exported from Coos Bay in 1876-7 was $317,475; in 1877-8 it was $218,410;
and in 1878-9 it wus $150,255. This falling-off was owing to competition with
other coals, foreign aud domestic, and tho ruling of lower prices for fuel.
Still, as the cost of Coos Bay coals laid down in S. F is ltssa than four
dollars, there is a good margin of profit.
IMPORTS AND EXPORTS,
I will now give-a few statistics
concerning imports and exports In 1857 Oregon hail 60,000 inhabitants, and
shipped 60,000 barrels of flour, 3,000,000 pound* of bacon and pork, 250,000
pounds of butter, 25,000 bushels of apples, $40,00u worth of chickens and eggs,
S200.000 worth of lumber, $75,- 0;;0 worth of fruit-trees, $20,000 worth of
garden-stuff, and 52,000 head of cattle, the total value of which was
$3,200,000. The foreign trade, if any, was very small. In 1S61 the trade with
California amounted to less than two n.illions, which can only be accounted for
by the greater home consumption caused by mining immigration, and the lessened
production consequent upon mining excitement. This year the imports from
foreign countries amounted only to $1,300, and the exports to about $77,000.
During the next decade the imports had reached about $700,000, and the exports
over $800,000. In 1881 the imports were a little more than $859,000, and the
direct exports $9,828,905, exclusive of the salmon export, which amounted to
$2,750,000, and the coastwise trade, which was something over six millions,
making an aggregate of more than eighteen and a half millions for 1881. or an
iacrease of almost a million annually for the twenty years following 1860.
Erid’s Proprem of Portland, 42; 1Jitteti’s Resources Pacific North-west, 57- 8;
Smallei/s Hist. N. P. R. It., 374. The increase, however, was gradual until
1874, when the exports suddenly jumped from less than $700,000 to nearly a
million and a half, after which they advanced rapidly, nearly doubling in 1881
the value of 1880.
The imports to Oregon
have consisted of liquors, glass, railway iron, tin, an>l a few minor
articles which come from England; coal comes from Australia as ballast of
wheat vessels; general merchandise from China; rice, sugar, and molasses from
the Hawaiian Islands; and wool, ore, and hides from British Columbia. The
exports from Oregon consist of wheat, oats, flour, lumber, coal, wool, salmon,
canned meats, gold, silver, iron, live-stock, hops, potatoes, hides, frait,
green and dried, and to some extent the products of the dairy. A comparative
statement of the principal exports is given for tue year ending August. 1878,
in Reid's Pror/reux of Portland, a pamphlet published in 1879 by the secretary
of the Portland board of trade.
1*77 K. 187C-7,
Salmon to
S. F., in cases, value $980,956
$1,750,350
Wheat, flour, oats,
hops, potatoes, lumber, hides, pickled salmon, treasure, and all domestic products
from the Columbia to S. F., except wool
and coal 3,705,687 2,332,0fH)
Wool
exports via. San Francisco
998,305 750,000
Coal from
Coos Bay 218,410 317,175
Lumber
from Coos Bay and the coast . .. .
151,234 173,367
Total to
San Francisco $6,124,492................... 85,329,192
Wheat and flour
direct to the United Kingdom,
value 4,872,027 *,552,000
Canned
salmon direct to Great Britain, value................... 1,326,056 737,830
Beef and
mutton, canned and uncanned, valui.. 133,895 365,733 Wheat, flour, and other products to the
Sandwich
Islands
and elsewhere, value 637,636................ 386,600
Gold and
silver from Oregon mines, value ................... 1,2S0,S67 1,200,0G0
Cattle to
the eastern states, etc ........... 270,000
$14,644,973
$11,571,355
Increase
in one j ear .. . 3 073,618
The number of vessels
clearing at the custom-house of Portland and Astoria for 18S0 was 141,
aggregating 213,143 tons measurement; 93 of these vessels were in the coastwise
trade, the remaining 48, measuring 40,600 tons, were employed in the foreign
trade. Iu 1881 the clearances for foreign ports from Portland alone were 140,
measuring 130,000 tons, and the clearances for domestic ports, including
steamships, were not less than 100, making an increase in the number of
sea-going vessels of ninety-nine.
Recent
Developments in Rulways— Progress op Portland—Architecture and
Organizations—East Portland--Iron Works—Value of Property—Mining -
Congressional Appropriations—New Counties —Salmon Fisheries--Lumber—Political
Affairs—Public Lands— Legislature—Election.
Taking a later
general view of progress, I find that the multiplication cf railroad
enterprises had become in 1887-8 a striking feature of Oregon’s ,unfolding. In
this sudden development, the Northern Pacific had taken the initiative, causing
the construction of the lines of the Oregon Kailway and Navigation Company, the
formation of the Oregon and Transcontinental and other companies, and finally
the control for a time of tlie Northern Pacific by the Oregon interest.1
That these operations miscarried to some extent was the natural sequence of
overstrained effort. Tlie city of Portland, and to a considerable extent, the
state, suffered by the neglect of the Northern Pacific Terminal Company to
construct a
11 have already referred to the O. R. &
N. co.'s origin and management in 1879-83, but reference to the methods employed
by Villard will not be out of place here. He gained an introduction to Oregon
through being the financial agent of the German bond-holders of the Or. and
Cal, R. R., and a year afterward was made president of this road and the Oregon
Steamship co., of which Holladay had been president, through the action of the
bondholders in dispossessing Holladay in 1875. In 1872 a controlling interest
in the Oregon Steam Navigation co., on the Columbia river, had been sold to the
Northern Pacific R. R. co., and was largely hypothecated for loans, or on the
failure of Jay Cooke & Co., divided among the creditors as assets. This
stock was gathered up in 1879 wherever it could be obtained, at a price much
below its real value.
(746)
bridge
over the Willamette river, and erect dep6t buildings oti the west side.2
These drawbacks to the perfection of railroad service were removed, so far as a
bridge is concerned, iu June 1888, when the Oregon Railway and Navigation
Company completed one, which was followed soon after by the erection of the
present union dep6t.
In the
meantime two important changes took place in the railway system of the state.
Negotiations had been for three years pending for the purchase of the bankrupt
Oregon and California railroad, which were renewed in January 1887. The terms
of the proposed agreement were, in effect, that the first mortgage bond-holders8
should be paid at the rate of 110 for their new forty-years’ gold five percent
bonds, guaranteed principal and interest, by the Southern Pacific Railroad
Company of California, together with four pounds in cash for each old bond; the
new bonds to be issued at the rate of $30,000 per mile, and secured by a, new
mortgage, equivalent in point of lien and priority to the first mortgage, and
bearing interest from July 1, 188G. Preferred stockholders would receive one
share of Central Pacific, together with four shillings sterling for each
preferred share, and common stockholders one share of Central Pacific and three
shillings for every four common shares. The transfer actually took place on the
first of May, 1887, and the road was completed to a junction at the town of
Ashland on the 17th of December of that year. This sale gave the California
system the control of the trunk line to the Columbia river, and gave
encouragement to the long contemplated design of its managers to extend branch
lines eastward into Idaho and beyond. The Southern Pacific Company also
purchased the Oregon railway
■‘The
obstructing influence in the bridge matter wm
the X. I’, co., whose consent was obtained only after the return to power of
Villa rd.
3 Suits of foreclosure had been entered in
the IT. S. circuit court at Portland, Deady, judge, which were dismissed June
4, 1S8S, on petition of the S. P. co.
in 1887,
which had been sold iu 1880 to William Reid of Portland.
At the
same time the Union Pacific, having modified its views since the period when
it was offered an interest in the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company,
desired to secure a perpetual lease of this property. To this proposition the
Oregon people were largely friendly, because it would change the status of the
road from a merely local line to a link in a through line to Omaha, the other
link being the Oregon Short Line railroad, a Wyoming corporation, but controlled
by the Union Pacific. The lease was signed January 1, 1887, and was made to the
Oregon Short Line, the rental being guaranteed by the T'nion Pacific at five
per centum of the earnings of the demised premises.4
Seeing in
this arrangement a future railroad war in which the Northern Pacific and Union
Pacific would be, if not equal, at least coincident sufferers, Villard, who had
regained his standing in the company by coming to its relief with funds to
construct the costly Cascades division, desired to make the lease a joint one,
by which means tlie threatened competition should be avoided. But competition
was not undesirable to the people, who had more cause to fear pooling.
Besides, it was but natural that the Northern should wish to occupy all the
country north of Snake river with its own feeders, and to confine the Oregon
road to the country south of it. But the wheat region of eastern Washington,
and the rich mineral region of northern Idaho, were the fields into which
Oregon wished to extend its business. These points being brought forward in the
discussion of the
4 It was necessary to pass a special act
giving authority to the O. R. & N. to make the lease. The legislature after
much argument passed it; it wa3 not signed by Gov. Pennoyer, but became a law
without his signature. According to the corporation laws of Oregon, the lease
of any railway to a parallel or competing line is prohibited. But a good deal
of the opposition to the lease came from the Oregon Pacific, or Yaquina, R. R.,
which desired ai much territory as it could by any means secure in eastern
Oregon, and feared so strong a competitor as the U. P, R, R,
propesed
joint lease, it was endeavored to smooth the way to an agreement by conceding
to the Oregon line the carrying trade arising over a portion of the Northern
feeders.5
The
agreement gave the right and power, after July 1, 1888, for ninety-nine years,
to the Oregon Short Line and Northern Pacific companies jointly to manage,
operate, and control the Oregon Ilailroad and Navigation Company’s railroad; to
fix rates of transportation, to dispose of the revenues equally between them,
and to pay equally the rental agreed upon in the original lease. It being
apparent to the enemies of this arrangement that the majority of the directors
of the Oregon company would be persuaded to sign the lease, a temporary
injunction was applied for in the state circuit court by Van B. De Lash mutt,
mayor of Portland, which injunction was granted March 1888, upon the ground of
violation of Oregon law. It was subsequently dissolved, and the lease went into
effect in July of that year. None of the parties to the agreement pretended
that it would stand a legal test, but knew that it was liable to be abrogated
at any time when circumstances should make it repugnant to either o? the joint
lessees.6
The Oregon
Pacific, a name given to the Corvallis and Yaquina Bay railroad, subsequent to
the inception, was completed to Albany in 1886, where a bridge over the
Willamette was formally opened on the Gth of January, 1887.7 It was,
aud still is, making Its
5 That is on the existing or future
feeders of the N. P. between Pend d’Oreille lake and Snake river, and option
was allowed to use either route to tide-water—via Portland or Tacoma; but
unless specially consigned otherwise, this traffic should take the Oregon
route.
6 It is not clear to me what was Villard s
motive for wishing to join in the U. P. *s lease. The motive of that company,
which the Central Pacific had kept out of California, in desiring to come to
the Pacific coast is easy to comprehend. The O. R. & N. erred, in my
judgment, in yielding the control of the best railroad property on the
northwest coast to a company with the standing of the U. r, The Southern
Pacific will show its hand in competition soon or late, and will build more
feeders than the U. P., while the N. P., on the other side, will make the most
of its reserved rights, thus narrowing down the territory of the leased road.
7 The first freight train, to enter Albany
was on Jan. 13, 1887.
wav eastward
from that town, through a pass at the liead waters of the Santiam river. From
the summit, which is 4,377 feet above sea level, the descent was easy and from
l)es Chutes river the route laid out passed through a forming country equal in
productiveness to the famous wheat-growing basin of the Columbia ;.n
Washington, taking in the Harney and Malheur valleys, running through a pass in
the mountains to Snake river and thence to Boise, there to connect with
eastern roads. The road at Yaquina connects with the Oregon Development
Company’s line of steamers to San Francisco. The last spike was driven January
28, 1887, on a railroad from Pendleton in eastern Oregon to the Walla Walla,
and other extensions of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company’s lines
speedily followed.
The
Portland and Willamette valley railroad is an extension of the narrow guage
system of the western counties before described. It was carried into Portland
along the west bank of the Willamette, in the autumn of 1887, and affords easy
and rapid transit to the suburban residences within a few miles of the city by
frequent local as well as through trains.8
Portland
improved rapidly between 1880 and 1888. It left off its plain pioneer ways, or
all that was left of them, and projected various public and private
embellishments to the city. It erected two theatres, and a pavilion in which
were held industrial exhibitions. A beautiful medical college was a triumph of
architecture. The school board, inspired by the donation of §G0,O00 to the
school fund by Mr Henry Villard, indulged in the extravagance of the most
elegant and costly higli-school building on the Pacific, coast, and several new
churches were erected. Citizens vied with each other in adopting tasteful
designs
s Twenty
passenger train- arrived and departed daily, exclusive of suburban trains. Six
lines had their terminus there. Over 30 freight trains arrived and departed—a
great change from the times of 1883.
for their
residences; parks and streets were improved ; street-car lines added to the
convenience of locomotion; business blocks arose that rivalled in stability
those of older commercial cities; and wharves extended farther and farther
along the river front.
In May
1887 articles of incorporation were filed by a number of' real estate brokers,
who formed a Real Estate Exchange. The object9 of the corporation,
as expressed, was laudable, and the> number promised success, and the
erection of a handsome Exchange building. The mi'itary companies built
themselves an armory 011 an imposing design, and the Young Men’s Christian
Association followed with a structure of great merit, while a building known by
the name of the Portland Library, and destined to be occupied
* The incorporators
-were Ellis G. Hughes, W. F. Creitz, T. Patterson, J, P. 0. Lownsdale, L. M.
Parrish, and L. D. Brown. The avowed object of the Real Estate Exchange is to
secure a responsible medium of exchange of equal benefit to buyer ami seller,
to equalize commissions, to foster the growth of the state, encourage
manufactures, and invite capital and immigration. The list of stock-holders is
as follows: L. F. Grover, Ellis G. Hughes, A W. Oliver, Eugene I). White, E. J.
Haight, Frank E. Hart, J ohn Kieman, Geo. Marshall, A. B. Manley, Robert Bell,
J. W. Cook, Philo Hr Ibrook, M. B. Rsnkin, H. C. Smithson, A. E. Borthwick, L.
M. Cox, Geo. Woodward, John Angel, H. D. Graden, J. P. Buchanan, Fred. K.
Arnold, E. W. Cornell, L. M. Parrish, Geo. E. AVatkins, H. B. Oatman, R. B.
Curry, J. L. Atkinson, I). W. Wakefield, A. W. Lambert, W. F. Crietz, T. Patterson,
W. A. Daly, 1. A. Laly, J. Fred. C’larke, Geo. Knight, Geo. P. Lent, A. J.
Young, Van B. I)e Lasnmutt, B. F. Clayton, J. I’, 0. Lownsdale, P W. Gillette,
David Goodsell, II. D. Chapman, Ward S. Stevens, J. W. Ogil- bee, C. M. Wiberg,
S. B. Itiggen, R. H. Thompson, Geo. L. Story, Wm M. Killingworth, W. K. Smith,
S. M. Barr, E. E. Lang, L. I). Brown, James E. Davis, Ed. Croft, Benj. I.
Cohen, J. W. Kern, J. G. Warner, E. M. Sargent, Sherman I). Brown, W. L.
Wallace, E. Oldendorff, John M. Cress, Mert E. Dimmic.{ I). H. Stearns, W. G.
Telfer, Edward G. Harvey, L. L. Hawkins, D. P. Thompson, Frank Dekvrni, Dudley
Evans, E. I). McKee, James Steel, T. A. Davis, A. H. Johnson, John McCracken,
Donald Macleay, Ed. S. Kearney, C. A. Dolph, J. N Dolph, Henry Failing, N. L.
Pittoek, R. it. Demeal, A. L. Maxwell, Preston C. Smith, C. J. McDougal, James
K. Kelly, John H. Mitchell, W. A. Jones, C. W. Roby, Wm P. Lord, A. N.
Hamilton, J. A. Strowbriitge, John Gates—95 members. Two are U. S. senators,
two ex U. S. senators, 12 are. capitalists and bankers, one judge of the sup.
ct, one mayor of Portland, one postmaster of Portland, 2 newspaper men, one a
major J- the U. S. army, 4 attorneys at-law, 8 merchants, one manager of Wells,
Fargo cSr Co. ’s express, one R. R. agent, and the remainder brokers and real
estate dealers, 40 of whom are the holders of seats in the exchange. Rooms have
been taken for the present at the corner of Stark and Second sts. The admission
fee was at first ffiO, but was soon increased to SI00. No more than 100 seats
will be sold, and the quarterly dues are fixed at $lo.
by that
institution, was built by subscriptions obtained chiefly by-its first
president, Judge Deady. An immense hotel, costing nearly a million dllars, and
an art glass manufactory were added in 1888.
East
Portland shared in the prosperity of the greater city, and having a larger
extent of level land for town-site purposes, offered better facilities for
building cheap homes for the working classes. The Portland Reduction works was
located there, and opened in the spring of 1887, for smelting ores from the
mines of Oregon and Idaho. Street cars were introduced here in 1888, connecting
with West Portland by means of a track laid on a bridge over the Willamette at
Morrison street, and with Albina by another bridge across the ravine which
separates them. The extensive warehouses and other improvements of the
Northern Pacific railroad were at Albina, which thus became the actual
terminus of that road, and of all the transcontinental roads coming to
Portland. A railroad across the plains northeast of East Portland carried
passengers to the Columbia, opposite Vancouver, and brought that charming
locality into close neighborhood to Portland.
At Oswego,
a few miles south of Portland, the Oregon Iron Company’s works, which in 1883
were closed on account of the low price of iron, and the incapacity of the
furnaces to be profitably operated, were reopened in 1888 by the Iron and Steel
Works Company,11 employing over three hundred men. The
w Albia*,
as I have otherwheres shown, wax founded by Edward Russell, but the property
was sold in 1S79 to J, B. Montgomery before the X. P.R.R. co. selected the site
for its terminal works. This gave *t importance, as the machine shops of the
Terminal co., X. P., the 0 R. & X.. and the 0. & C. cos were located
there, to which are now added those of the S. P. R. R., making in all quite a
village of substantial brick buildings with roof* of slate in the railroad
yards. Montgomery dock has an area of 200x500 feet, ind has had as much as
000,000 bushels of wheat stored in it at one time. In 1887 42,010 tons were
shipped through it. The Columbia River Lumber and Manufacturing co. keeps an
extensive lumber yard at Albina. The owners are .T B. Montgomery and Wm M.
Colwell. All these large enter 'irises, together with the iron works, employ
many laborers,%who lind pleasant homes in Albina.
■ S. (4.
Reed, Wm M. Ladd, F. C. Smith, C. E. Smith, .r. F. Watson, the Or.
Transcontinental co., and some eastern capitalists constituted the company
water
power at Oregon City, which ever since 1841 had been a source of discord, and
had constituted at times ail injurious monopoly, had finally come into the
hands of a syndicate of Portland and Oregon City men, who designed to make the
latter place what nature intended it to be—the great manufacturing
O O
centre of
the state. 1
The
estimated value of property in Multnomah county at the close of 1887 was
$27,123,780, and the value of transfers for that year about $0,000,000. The
immigation to the state numbered nearly fifty thousand, and the importation of
cash was estimated at $19,221,000. All parts of the state partook of the new
growth. Salem had received the splendid state asylum for the insane, and the
schools for the blind and the deaf and dumb, a manufactory of agricultural
machinery, and other substantial improvements, besides a woman’s college, and
a public school building in East Salem costing $40,000.
The
county-seat of Yamhill county had been removed to the flourishing town of
McMinnv ille. Corvallis, Albany, Eugene, and the towns in southern Oregon, of
which Ashland was in the lead, all throve excellently.
12 The 0. R. & N. co. held formerly all
but a few shares of the Willamette Transportation and Locks co.’s stock, which
latter company owned the locks, canal, basin, and warehouse on the east side of
the falls, with all the water-power of the falls, and the land adjoining on
both sides. An Oregon City co. owned 750 shares of the land on the west side,
including that not owned by the W. T. & L. co. The new organization owns
all of the land, property, stocks, and water-power, purchasing the 0. R. &
N. co.’s shares and all its interest. It proposes to give the necessary land on
the west side free, with water-power for 10 years rent free, to any persons who
will build and operate manufactures. It is also proposed to construct a
suspension toll-bridge across the Willamette, provided the proper authorities
do not build a free bridge, as they may do. The O. R. & N. would not sell
any part of its holding without selling all, therefore the new company were
forced to purchase the locks, which gave them additional facilities for the use
of the water-power. The state has, however, by law the right and option to buy
the locks on the 1st of January, 1893, at their then value, and it is feared
that this may delay the use of the power until this option is disposed of by
legislation. The land and power were pooled on equal terms without reference
to value, and the locks were estimated at $400,000. This is paid by a mortgage
on the whole property running 12 years, bearing interest for 5 years at 4 per
cent, and for the next 7 years at 5 per cent. The pres’t of the co, is E. L.
Eastham of Oregon City,
Hist.
Or., Vol.
n. 4S
Mining
also had a strong revival in the southern and eastern counties, while new
discoveries and rediscoveries were made in the Cascade range in Marion and
Clackamas counties. No mining furore is likely ever to take place again in this
state, if anywhere in the northwest. Placers such as drew thousands to Hogue
river in 1851, and to John Day river in 1862, will probably never again be
discovered. The hydraulic gravel mines of Jackson and Josephine counties have
proved valuable properties, and a few quartz mines on the eastern border of the
state have returned good profits. The reduction works at Eatst Portland were
erected to reduce the ores of the Cceurd’ Alene silver district chiefly.13
Much Oregon capital had become interested in Cotjur d’ Alene, and also in the
recently discovered mines of Salmon river in eastern Washington, which were
found upon the Chief Moses’reservation, which is in the Okanagan country of the
npper Columbia, once hastily prospected by miners in the Colville mining
excitement, but only known to contain quartz mines since 1887 The total gold
prodnct of Oregon iu 1887 was over half a million, and of silver about $25,000.
Although
there is no lack of building stone in Oregon, if county statistics may be
believed,14 the
13 The Cceur d* Alene furnishes
galena-silver ores. The Sierra Nevada mine, yielding ore consisting of galena
and carbonates, is said to average $94.79 in lead and silver. A block of galena
weighing 760 pounds assayed 69 per cent lead, and $110 in silver per ton. Some
of the specimens are of rare beauty, the silver being in the form of wire
intermingled with crystals of carbonate, arranged upon a back ground of a dark
metallic oxide, and appearing like jewels in a velvet lined case. Some of the
prominent mines are the Bunker Hill, Sullivan, the Tyler, the Ore-or-no*go, and
the Tiger.
14 The mineral resources of the several
counties are: Baker: gold in quartz and placers, silver in lodes, copper, coal,
nickel ore, cinnabar, building stone, limestone and marble. Benton: coal,
building stone, gold in beach sand, iron. Clackamas: iron ore and ochres, gold
in quartz, copper, galena, coal, building stone. Clatsop: coal, potter’s clay,
iron ore, jet. Columbia: iron ore, coal, manganese ore, salt springs. Coos: coal,
gold in beach sand, streams, anti quartz, platinum, iridosmine, brick clay,
chrome iron, magnetic sands. Crook: gold in placers, Curry: iron ore, gold in
river beds and beach sands, platinum, iridosmine, chrome iron, borate of lime,
building stone, silver and gold (doubtful). Douglas: gold in lodes and
placers, nickel ores, quicksilver, copper, native and in ore, coal, salt
springs, chrome iron, platinum, iridosmine, natural cement, building stone.
Gilliam: coal. Grant: gold in lodes and placers, silver in lodes, coal, iron,
Jackson*, gold
fact
remains that but one quarry is known to produce good building material, and
that one is at East Portland, from which was taken the stone used in erecting
the lighthouse at Tillamook. The difficulty of obtaining suitable material for
the jetty being constructed at the mouth of the Columbia has delayed the work,
and occasioned loss to contractors. As much as $20,000 was expended in
exploring for good rock for this purpose in vain, a limited supply being found
at one place only on the river. Yet there is known to be an abundance of good
stone in the mountains of Lewis and Clarke river, near the mouth of tlie
Columbia; but a railroad of fifteen miles is required to bring it to the coast,
and $150,000 will have to be expended out of the appropriation for the work of
improving the mouth of the Columbia.
The plan
of this work is to construct a low-tide jetty from near Fort Stevens, four and
a half miles in a slightly convex course to a point three miles south of Cape
Disappointment. It is intended both as a protection to Port Stevens, and as the
means of securing deep water in tke channel. The cost is computed at
$3,710,000, and of this only $287,500 had been appropriated in 1887. The work
was begun under the appropriation act of July 5, 1884. So far as it lias
progressed its effect on the entrance to the river has proven satisfactory. The
lack of depth in the channel, which it is the intention to keep at thirty feet,
prevents American vessels with deep bottoms from entering the river, while the
liglit-draught British iron-bottomed vessels secure the trade.
in lodes and placers,
quicksilver, iron, graphite, mineral waters, coal, lime* stone, infusorial
earth, building stone. Josephine; gold in lodes and placers, copper ores,
limestone and marble. Klamath; mineral waters. Lake: mineral waters. Lane: gold
in quartz and placers, zinc ores. Linn: gold in quartz and placers, copper,
galena, zinc blende. Malheur: nitrate beds, alkaline salts. Marion; gold and
silver in quartz, limestone, bog iron ore. Morrow:—. Mutlnomah: iron ore,
building stone. Polk: building stone, salt springs, limestone, mineral waters,
iron pyrites. Tillamook: gold in beach sands, coal, rock salt, iron pyrites,
building stone. Umatilla: gold in lodes and placers, coal, iron. Union: gold in
lodes and placers, silver in lodes, hersite, ochre. Wallowa: gold in lodes,
silver, copper, building stones. Wasco: mineral waters. Yamhill: mineral
springs, iron pyrites. Id., Jan,
2, 1888. This in part only.
The state
of Oregon is much indebted to the efforts of United States Senator ,T. N. Dolph
for the government aid granted iu improving the Columbia, as well as some
lesser waterways. The drainage area of the Columbia is estimated by him to be
greater than the aggregate area of all New England, the middle states, and
Maryland and Virginia; and the far larger portion lies east of the Cascade
range, which has no other water-level pass from the northern boundary of
Washington to the southern line of Oregon. This pass is monopolized by the
Oregon Railway and Navigation Company’s track on the south side, and by a
railway portage of the same corporation on the north side. The government has
undertaken to facilitate free navigation by constructing locks at the upper
Cascades and improving the rapids, but the work is costly and proceeds with the
proverbial tardiness of government undertakings, where appropriations are held
out year after year with apparent reluctance, while the treasury is overflowing
with its surplus. Tiie work has been going on for eight or ten years, during
which time only about half the §2,205,000 required has been appropriated. The
river and harbor line passed by congress in 1888, and warmly advocated by the
Oregon senators, was shaped by them to carry forward these important
improvements. Another improvement advocated by Dolph is a local railway at the
Dalles, which will cost $1,373,000. Besides this, the rapids of the Columbia
above the mouth of Snake river will require to overcome them, the expenditure of
$3,005,000; that is, the sum of $5,440,500 will, it is believed, open to
competition a distance of 750 miles. This will have the effect to cheapen
freights, which now are entirely in the hands of the railroad combination,
except on the lower Columbia. There can be no doubt that these improvements
will be made at no very distant day, when the Columbia will be a continuous
waterway reaching 1,000 miles into the interior of the continent. The Oregon
delegation
in Washington was very persistent at this period in claiming appropriations for
public works." Senator Mitchell obtained $80,000 for the erection of a
first-class lighthouse near the mouth of the Umpqua river ; $15,000 for a site
and wharf at Astoria for the use of the lighthouse department, and asked for
money to construct the revetment of tbe Willamette at Corvallis.
The coast
counties developed very gradually^ although they received a part of the
immigration, and were finally prosperous. Scottsburg projected a railway which,
if it can be extended to Coos bay, should be a good investment. At Sinslaw a
settlement was made,16 with three fish-canning establishments, and a
saw-mill. There beinc a good entrance to the river,
O o '
the bottom
lands rich, the w^ater excellent, and the climate healthful, this section
offered attractions to settlers, and a railroad might be made to connect with
one from Scottsburg.
Yaquina,
from the opening given it by the Oregon Pacific, and a line of steamers to San
Francisco, made considerable growth, assumed pretensions of a fashionable
resort, and planned to erect a large hotel a few miles south of the bay, where
hunting, fishing, and beach driving were guaranteed the tourist. Little change
had been effected in the more northern coast counties.
In eastern
Oregon two new counties were organized —Morrow county, named after Governor
Morrow, with the county seat at Heppuer, and formed out of the south-west
portion of Umatilla; and Wallowa
15Dolph has
been at some pains to prepare a bill for expending $126,000,
000 in coast defences, according to the
recommendation of a commission appointed to report upon the subject. It
appropriates §27,000,000 for the defence of San Francisco harbor; $2,519,000
for the defence of the mouth of the Columbia; and $504,000 to the harbor of San
Diego.
16George M.
Miller, of Eugene, is the founder of Florence, although David Morse Jr, of
Empire City, made an ‘ addition ’ to the town. Lots are worth from $25 to $50
and $100. The Florence Canning co. employs 80 men with 40 boats, besides 45
Chinese. The Lone Star Packing co. employ 32 men, 16 boats, and 35 Chinese. The
Elmore Packing co. employs^SO men, 40 boats, and 65 Chinese. The three
establishments put up 1,700 cases daily.
county,
formed out of a portion of Union, with the county seat at Joseph.17
Railroads were being' rapidly constructed from all directions toward the main
lines to carry out the crops, wool, and stock of this division of the state.
The wool clip of 1887, which was shipped to Portland, was 12,534,485 pounds,
the greater portion of which was from eastern Oregon. The movement at Portland
of wheat and flour for 1887 equalled the bulk of the wheat production of Oregon
and eastern Washington combined.18 Lumping the receipts of
Willamette valley and eastern Oregon and Washington wheat, there were received
at Portland 3,927,458 centals, against 5,531,995 received in 1886; and 302,299
barrels of flour against 354,277 for the latter year. Of this amount, 553,920
centals of wheat, and 105,786 barrels of Hour, were from the Willamette valley.
A fleet of 73 vessels, registering 93,320 tons, was loaded with grain at Oregon
wharves.
There has
been a steady decline in salmon canning on the Columbia since 1883, falling
from 630,000 cases to 400,000 in 1887. This may reasonably be attributed to the
over-fishing practised for several years consecutively. Nature does not provide
against such greed, and it is doubtful if art can do it. The government, either
state or general, should assume control of this industry by licensing a certain
number of canneries, of given capacity, for a limited period, and improving the
hatcheries. Otherwise there is a prospect that the salmon, like the buffalo,
may become extinct.
Although
Oregon built the first saw-mills on the Pacific coast, and enjoyed for a few
years the monopoly of the lumber trade with California and the Ha-
17 The name of Joseph is given in
remembrance of the Nez Perce chief of that name, who formerly made his home in
thin valley, anil young Joseph, his sou, who led his band in the war of 1877.
The first commissioners of Wallowa co. were James McMastertou and J. A. Runhed.
The first commissioners of Morrow were William Douglas and A. Rood.
18 A portion of the wheat crop of Washington
was carried to Tacoma via the Cascade branch in 1887.
waiian
islands, since the establishment of the immense lumbering and milling
properties on Puget sound, chiefly controlled by capital in San Francisco, it
has been difficult to market Oregon lumber, except on sufferance from the great
lumber firms. In 1885, however, the experiment was made of sending cargoes of
lumber to the eastern states direct by rail, which has resulted in a trade of
constantly increasing importance, having grown from 1,000,000 feet to 10,000,
000 feet monthly. The market is found everywhere
along the line from Salt Lake to Chicago. The lease to the Union Pacific of the
Oregon Railway and Navigation Company’s lines will facilitate this traffic.
This trade belongs at present solely to Oregon, and is independent of the
100,000,000 feet exported annually to Pacific coast markets.1’
19 In many ways the improvement in local
institutions might be noted. A fruit grower’s association was formed, Dr J. R.
Cardwell, president, which held its first annual meeting January 5, 1S87. On
the 11th of the same month the Portland Produce Exchange was organized. The
state board of immigration transferred its office to the Portland board of
trade in Sept. 1887. A Gatling battery was added to the military organizations
of Portland. On April 7, 1886, the Native Sons of Oregon organized. On the 17th
of August, 1SS7, the corner stone of the new Agricultural college was laid at
Corvallis. The state has done nothing to withdraw the Agricultural college from
the influences of sectarianism. The Southern Methodist State Agricultural
college, as a local newspaper calls it, will not rise to the standing which
the people have a right to demand for it until it becomes, as congress
intended, a part of the state university. A free kindergarten system was
inaugurated in Portland; and a Woman’s Exchange opened, which gave cheap homes
to homeless women, with assistance in finding employment. The Teachers’
National convention of 1888 at San Francisco showed the work of the Portland
schools to be very nearly equal to the best in the United States, and superior
to many of the eastern cities. Albany, since the inception of the Oregon
Pacific R. R., has gained several new business institutions. The railroad
round-house and shops were located there. Among its manufactories were
extensive flouring mills, furniture factories, wire works, iron foundries, and
a fruit packing establishment. An opera house was erected by a joint stock
company, and a public school building costing $20,000. The aggregate cost of
new buildings in 1887 was $160,000, with a population of 3,500. The electric
light system has been introduced. The water power furnished by the Albany and
Santiam Water, ditch, or canal company, with a capacity of 20,000 running feet
per minute, invites industries of every kind depending upon geared machinery.
Roseburg in Douglas
county took a fresh impetus from the completion of the Oregon and California R.
R. The county of Douglas, with a population of 11,000 and a large area,
shipped in the year ending August, 1887, 209 tons of wool, 5,073 tons of wheat,
436 tons of oats and other grains, 288 tons of flour, 8 tons of green fruit, 61
tons of dried fruit. This being done with no other outlet than via Portland,
was an indication of what might be looked for on the opening of the country
south of Roseburg.
The
administration of Governor Moody was a fair and careful one, marked by no
original abuses, although it failed to correct, as it was hoped it would have
done, the swainp-laad policy, by which the state had been robbed of a handsome
dower. The legislature of 1878 had endeavored to correct the evil growing out
of the legislation of 1870, but Governor Thayer had so construed the new law as
to render it of no effect in amending the abuses complained of ;J0
and Governor Moody had not interfered with the existing practices of the
swamp-land board. Here, then, was a real point of attack upon a past administration,
when a democratic governor was elected in 1886.21 Governor Sylvester
Pennoyer was quite willing, and also quite right to make it, and doubtless
enjoyed the electrifying effect of his message to congress, in which he
presented a list of swamp-land certificates aggregating 5(54,9G9 acres, on
which $142,846 had been unlawfully paid, and suggested that while settlers
should be protected in possession of a legal amount legally purchased, the
money, which under a “ misapprehension ” had come into the treasury from other
persons, should be returned to them; and “the state domain parcelled out, as
was the intent and letter of the law, to actual settlers in small quantities.”
Further, the new board of school - land commissioners 23 prepared a
bill, which embodied
201 have
already given an account of the manner in which the law of 1S70 was passed, and
with what motive. The legislature of 1878 had enacted that ail applications
for the purchase of these lands from the state which had not been regularly
made, or being regularly made the 20 per cent required by law had not been paid
before Jan. 17, 1879, should be void and of no effect. But it appeared that the
board, consisting of the governor, secretary and treasurer, had issued deeds
and certificates to lands which had not been formally approved to the state by
the secretary of the interior, and to which, consequently, it had no show of
title. It had issued deeds and certificates for amounts in excess of 320
acres—all that by law could be sold to one purchaser—selling unsurveyed and
unmapped lands in bodies as large as 50,000, 60,000, or 133,000 acres, and
otherwise encouraging land-grabbing.
21 The secretary
of state under Gov. Moody was R. P. Earhart; and the treasurer Edward Hirsch.
They constituted with the governor the board
land commissioners.
92 The new
board consisted of Governor Pennoyer, secretary of state, George W. McBride,
and Edward Hirsch, who had been treasurer through
the views
of the governor, and presented it to the legislature with a recommendation that
it,or something very like it, should be enacted into a law. It declared void
all certificates of sale made in defiance of the law of 1878, but provided that
actual settlers on 320 acres or less should be allowed to perfect title without
reclaiming the laud, upon payment of the remaining 80 per cent before January
1, 1879. Upon the surrender of void certificates the amount paid thereon should
be refunded ; and a special tax of one mill on a dollar of all taxable property
in the state should be levied, and the proceeds applied to the payment of
outstanding warrants made payable by the act. Suit should be brought to set
aside any deed issued by the board upon fraudulent representation. The reclamation
requirement of the law of 1870 was dispensed with, and any legal applicant who
had complied with the provisions of that act, including the 20 per cent of the
purchase price, prior to January 1879, should be entitled to a deed to not more
than 640 acres, if paid for before 1889. All swamp and overflowed lands
reverting to the state under the provisions of the act should be sold as
provided by the act of 1878; but oidy to actual settlers, and not exceeding 320
acres to one person Any settler who had purchased from the holder of a void
certificate should be entitled to receive the amount of money paid by him to
the original holder, which should be deducted from the amount repaid on the
surrender of the illegal certificate. Such an example of justice had not surprised
the people of Oregon since the days of its founders. According to the report of
the board for 1887 the school fund will save nearly, if not quite, a million
dollars by the rescue of these lands from fraudulent claimants,
several previous
terms. McBride was a republican and had been speaker of the house in 1885. He
was the younger son of James McBride the pioneer, and brother of James McBride
of Ww., John R. McBride of Utah, and Thomn? McBride, attorney of the 4th
judicial district of Or. An upright and talented young man.
The
legislature of 1887 proposed these amendments to the people, to be voted upon
at a special election: First, a prohibitory liquor law ; second, to allow the
legislature to fix the salaries of state officers; third, to change the time of
holding the general elections from Jane to November. All foiled of adoption. J.
H. Mitchell was again chosen United States senator.
The free
trade issue in 1888 caused the state to return a large republican majority,2’
and again gave to that party the choice of a United States senator to succeed
Dolph. Herman was elected congressman for a third term. The financial condition
of the state was excellent, the total bonded debt being less than $2,000, and
outstanding warrants not exceeding 054,000.
Thus was
built up, within the memory of living men, a state complete in all its parts,
where, when they entered the wilderness, the savage and the fur- hunter alone
disturbed the awful solitudes. Whom the savage then spared, king death
remembered, beckoning more and more frequently as time went on to the busy
toilers, who in silence crossed over Jordan in answer to the undeniable
command, and rested from their labors.34
I
The democrats elected
only 25 nut of the 90 members of tlie legislature. The republican majority wai
about 7,000.
241 tind in
the archives of the Pioneer association for 1887 mention of the death of the
following persons, most of whose names are recorded in the immigrant lists of
the tirst vol. of my Hint try of Oregon: Capt. William 8haw (immigrant of 1844)
died at Howell prairie, 20th January, 1887. Capt. Charles Holman (arrived 1852)
died at Portland 3d July, 1886; Prof. L. J. Powell (1847) died at Seattle 17th
August, 1887; David Powell (1847) died near East Portland 8tn April, 1887;
Peter Scholl (1847) died near Hillsboro’ in November, 1872; Mrs Lucinda
Spencer, (1847) daughter of Thomas aud Martha Cox, died 30th of March, 18S8;
Mrs Sarah Fairbanks King, (1852) who was Mrs George Olds when she came to
Oregon, died 19th January, 18S7; Solomon Howard Smith, of the Wyeth party of
1832, died on Clatsop plains ill 1874, at the age of 65 years; he was born
December 26, 1809 at Lebanon, N. H.j Alvin T. Smith (1S40) died in 1S87 at
Forest Grove; he wai one of the independent missionaries, and was born in
P.ranford, Conn., Nov. 17, 1802, his first wife being Abigail Raymond, who died
in 1855f when he returned to Conn., and married Miss Jane Averill of
Branford, who survived him; Mrs Mary E. Frazer, nee Evan3, born in Newburyport,
Mass., Dec. L'i. 1816, who married Thomas Erazer, and came to Oregon in
1S53, died in Portland 21st April, 1884.
In 1886 there died of
Oregon’s pioneers the following: Jan. 21st, Mrs Clara B. D uni way Stearns,
born in Oregon, wife of D. H. Stearns, and only
It is a
pleasure to the historian, who, by closely following the stream of events, has
identified himself with the characters in his work, to observe with what
unfailing justice time makes all things even. At the annual meeting of the
Oregon Pioneer association at Portland, in 1887, Matthew P. Deady, acting as
speaker for the city, presented to the association a life-size portrait of John
McLoughlin, which was afterward hung in the state capitol, “ where,” said the
speaker, “ you may look at it and show it to your children, and they to their
chileren, and say : ‘ This
daughter of Mrs
Abigail Scott Duniway, at Portland; George F. Treban Jan.. 21*t at Portland;
Mrs M. J. Saylor Jan 24th at McMinnville; Simeon Alber (1853) at McMinnville
Jan. 24; Frank Hedges at Oregon city Feb. 22d; Samuel A. Moreland at Portland
March 19th; W. McMillan at East Portland April 26th; Mrs J. A. Cornwall (1846)
at Eugene May 2d; Elijah Williams at East Portland May 16th; James Johns,
founder of the town of St Johns, May 28th; Gen. John E. Ross at East Portland
June 14th; W. W. Buck (1844) at Oregon city June 19; Mrs James M. Stott at East
Portland June 26th; Mrs Susan A. Tartar in Polk co. June 28th; Mrs Sarah Van-
denyn in Lane co. June 28th; Captain Seth Pope in Columbia co. July 23d; Mrs
Mary Stevens Ellsworth (1852) at Cove, in Union co., July 24th; Rev.
E. R. Geary at Eugene city Sej>t. 2d; W.
H. Bennett (1845) at Rockford, W. T., Sept. 12th; Robert E. Pittock at
Canonsburg, Pa.. Sept 16th; Samuel M. Smith at Portland Oct. 25th; L. J. C.
Duncan, Jackson co. Nov. 7th; Whiting G. West (1846) Nov. 8th; James Thompson
at Salem Nov. 8th; Prof. Newell at Philometh college, Nov. 10th; Mrs Mary Olney
Brown, at Olympia Nov. 17th; A. Walts at Portland Dec. 17th; Jacob Hoover
(1844) at his home near Hillsboro’, Dec. 19th.
In 1887: Ex.-Gov.
Addison C. Gibbs died in London, Eng., early in Jan.; his funeral occurred July
9th at Portland; Mrs D. M. Moss of Oregon city a pioneer of 1843, d. Jan. 23d;
George W. Elmer, Portland, Jan. 26th; Mrs W. T. Newby (1844), Jan. 28th; Mrs A.
N. King (1845), 'an. 30th; James Brown (1843), Feb. 8th, at Woodburn; H. M.
Humphrey (1852), near Portland, Feb. 3d; Mrs Ellen Daley, at East Portland,
Feb. 3d; Mrs Col W. L. White (1850), at Portland, Feb. 20th; Mrs William Mason
of Monmouth, and Mrs Wallace of Linn co., Feb. 21st; John G. Baker at
McMinnville, March 4th; Judge William Strong (1849), at Portland, April 16th;
Mrs James B. Stephens (1844), at East Portland, April 27th; Benjamin Strang, at
Astoria, May 7th; N. D. Gilliam (1844), at Mount Tabor, May 15th; M. Tidd, in
Yamhill co., May 22d; Levi Knott, at Denver, Col., May 29th; E. Norton and J.
Schenerer, Portland, June 7th; Mrs Frances 0. Adams (1845), wife of W. L.
Adams, June 23d; Robert Pentland, at Scio, June 5th; Dr Cabannis, of Modoc war
fame, at Astoria, July 22d; Dr R. B. Wilson, at Portland, August 6th; Prof. L.
J. Powell, long a teacher in Or., at Seattle, Aug. 17th; Rev. E. R. Geary,
Sept. 2, 1886; Mrs J. H. Wilbur, at Walla AValla, Oct. 2d; Mrs Joseph Imbire,
at The Dalles, Oct. 23d; Rev. J. H. Wilbur, at Walla Walla, Oct. 28th.
On the 10th of Feb.,
1888, Dr W. H. Watkins, at Portland; on the 23d of April died Hon. Jesse
Applegate. Both these men were members of the convention which formed tne state
constitution. Thus the makers pass away, but their work remains. Rev, William
Roberts died July 2, 1888, at Dayton,
764
is the old
doctor; the good doctor; Dr John Mc- Loughlin.’ ” And this sentiment was
applauded by the very men who had given the “good old doctor’ many a
heart-aclie along in the forties. “ But,” concluded Judge Deady, “ the
political strife and religious bigotry which cast a cloud over his latter days
have passed away, and his memory and figure have risen from the mist and smoke
of controversy, and he stands out to-day in bold relief, as the first man in
the history of this country— the pioneer of pioneers ! ”
I cannot close this volume without brief
biographies of the following men:
Henry Winslow
Corbett, a native of Westborough, Massachusetts, where he was born on the 18th
of February, 1S27, is of English descent, his ancestry being traced back to
the days of William the Conqueror, when the name of Roger Corbett is found among
the list of those who won fame and possessions as a military leader. The
youngest of eight children, after receiving a public school and academy
education, he began life in the dry goods business in New York city, proceeding
thence in 1851 to Portland, where he was extremely successful in his ventures,
being now the oldest merchant in Portland, and perhaps in Oregon. He is,
moreover, largely interested in banking, being connected with the First
National bank almost from its inception, and now its vice-president. He was
also appointed president of the board of trade, of the boys’ and girls’ aid
society, and other charitable associations, and of a company organized to
complete a grand hotel, to be second only in size to the Palace hotel in San
Francisco. On the formation of the republican party in Oregon, Corbett became
one of its leaders. He was chosen delegate to the Chicago convention of 1860,
and in 1866 was elected to the United States senate, where he won repnte by his
practical knowledge of financial affairs, his able arguments on the resumption
of sf^ecie payments, and the funding of the national debt, and his resolute
opposition to all measures that savored of bad faith or repudiation. As a
statesman he is noted for his boldness, eloquence, and integrity of purpose; as
a business man for his ability and enterprise; and as a citizen for his many
deeds of charity. In 1853 he was married to Miss Caroline E. Jagger, who died
twelve years later, leaving two sons, of whom only the elder, Henry J. Corbett,
survives. The latter has already made his mark in life, following in the
footsteps of his father, to whom he will prove a most worthy successor.
William S. Ladd was a
native of Vermont, born October 10, 1826, educated in New Hampshire, working
on the farm winters. He came to Oregon in 1851, and engaged in the mercantile
business, later becoming a banker. He accummulated a large fortune, and has
ever been one of Oregon’s foremost men. His benefactions have been many and
liberal, one tenth of his income being devoted to charity. He has assisted both
in the city of Portland, where he resides, and throughout the whole north-west,
in building churches and schools. He endowed a chair of practical theology in
San Francisco in 1886 with $50,000. He has given several scholarships to the
Willamette university, and assisted many young men to start in business, In
1854 he married Caroline A. Elliott of New Hampshire, who bore him seven
children, five of whom were living in 1888, William M., Charles E., Helen K.,
Caroline A., and John W. Ladd. The eldest son, William M. Ladd, is in every
respect the worthy son of his father.
C, H. Lewis was born December 22, 1826, at
Cranbury, New Jersey, where he attended school, working sometimes on a farm. In
1846 he entered
a store in New York
city, where he became proficient in mercantile affairs, and in 1851 came to
Portland, where he engaged in business, the house of Allen and Lems rising into
foremost prominence. Mrs Lewis, the daughter of John H. Couch, is the mother of
eleven children, all born in Portland. Mr Lewis attends closely to his
business, and no man in the community stands in higher esteem.
Henry Failing was
born in New York on the 17th of January, 1834. After a good grammar-school
education, he entered a mercantile house, where he acquired proficiency in
first-class business routine. Arriving in Oregon in 1851, he engaged in
business, first in connection with his father, Josiah Failing, and later with
H. W. Corbett. The firm rose to prominence, being the largest hardware dealers
in the north-west. Failing and Corbett in 1869 took control of the First
National Bank, the former being made president. Mr Failing has always been a
prominent citizen, a friend of education, and three times mayor. In 1858 he
married Emily P. Corbett, sister of Senator Corbett. Twelve years later Mrs
Failing died of consumption, leaving three charming daughters. Mr Failing is a
citizen of whom Oregon may well be proud.
Worthy of mention
among the lawyers and statesmen of Oregon is Joseph Simon, of the well known
Portland law firm of Dolph, Bellinger, Mallory, and Simon. A German by birth,
and of Jewish parentage, he came to Portland when six years of age, and at
thirteen had completed his education, so far, at least, as his school-days were
concerned. After assisting his father for several years in the management of
his store, he studied law, and in 1872 was admitted to practice, soon winning
his way by dint of ability and hard work to the foremost rank in his
profession. In 1878 he was appointed secretary of the republican state central
committee, of which in 18S0, and again in 1884 and 1886, he was appointed
chairman, and in the two first years, and also in 1888, was elected to the
state senate. While a member of that body he introduced and succeeded in
passing many useful measures, among them being a bill authorizing a paid fire
department, a mechanics’ lien law, a registration law, and one placing the
control of the police system in the hands of a board of commissioners.
Royal K. Warren was
born in Steuben co., N. Y., in 1840, and educated in that state, coming to
Oregon in 1863. He entered upon teaching as aprofes- sion in Clatsop co.,
whence he removed to Portland in 1865, teaching in the Harrison st grammar
school until 1871, when he was called to the presidency of the Albany college,
which position he retained nine years. He then returned to Portland, where he
was principal of the North school for one year, from which he was removed to
the high school.
J. W. Brazee, born in
Schoharie co., N. Y., in 1827, was educated for a civil engineer and
draughtsman, and also learned the trades of carpentry and masonry. Thus
equipped, he came to Cal. in 1850 in a sailing vessel. He worked at his trades,
and among other buildings, erected the episcopal church on Powell street. He
also engaged in mining and other industries, and removed to Or. in 1858. Here
his engineering knowledge was called into use, and he located the trail between
Fort Vancouver, W. T., and Fort Simcoe, east of the Cascades, notwithstanding
that McClellan had reported that a pack-trail between these points was
impracticable. The work was accomplished in 30 days at a cost of $4,000, and
the trail immediately used for transporting government freight between these
posts. His next work was that of constructing a railroad portage around the
cascades of the Columbia on the Oregon side for J. S. Ruckle, the first
railroad built in Oregon, and completed in 1862, when the locomotive pony was
put upon the track, and run by Theo. A. Gofie. The steamboats Idaho and Carrie
Ladd were built by him in 1859 and 1860; and in 1862 took charge of the
construction of the railroad portage on the Washington side, being also placed
in charge of the Dalles and Celilo railroad the following year; these roads
remaining under his superintendence until 1879, when the O. S. N. company
transferred them to Villard. He located the O. C, R. R. (west
side) for £0 miles,
iu 183S; located and surveyed the Locks at Oregon City, anil estimated the cost
of construction more nearly than any one else. In March 1S81 he organized the
Oregon Boot, Shoe, and Leather company, which received the gold medal for
superior 'work at the Portland Mechanics’ fair; and was one of the organizers
and directors of the Portland Savings Bank of which he was for several years
vice-president. Mr Brazee resided in Skamania co., Washington, during all these
busy years, and represented his district in the territorial legislature from
1804 to 1875, being at the same time school superintendent.
John Wilson, born iu
Ireland in 1826, came to Oregon from California in the winter of 1849 on the
bark Arm Smith, George H. Flanders, master. His first work iu thin state was in
a saw-mill at the now abandoned site of Milton on Scappoose bay, near St Helen,
where he earned §4 per day and board. He remained here until the spring of
1851, when, not being well, he went to the Tualatin plains for a sea-son, where
he recovered and returned to Milton, living there and at St Helen until 1853,
when he settled hi Portland in the employ of ThosH. Dwyer of the Oregonian as
book-keeper and collector. A year later lie entered the employ of Allen and
Lewis, wholesale merchants, where he had an experience worth relating. He had
been suffering much from ague and fever for two years. The first day’s work
with Allen and Lewis was very severe for a sick man, handling heavy freight,
which was being unloaded from a ship, coffee-bags weighing 250 lbs., etc.; but
the copious perspiration which resulted from his exertions carried off the ague,
which never afterward returned. In 1856 he purchased a general merchandise
business on Front street, and took partners. In 1858 the firm erected the first
store (a brick one) on First street. After several changes, he was finally
established, 1870, alone in a store erected by himself on Third street, between
Morrison and Washington. In 1872 lie built two more stores on that street,
moving into one of them, where he remained until 1S78. In 1881) he was elected
school director of distXo.l., which position he still fills. Hi3 policy in
school matters has been liberal and elevating, After retiring from business he
began to indulge a taste for literature and books, making himself the owner of
a large collection of valuable and rare publications.
Martin Strong Burrell
was born in Sheffield, Ohio, in 1834, where he resided until 1856, when he
came to Cal. in .search of health, wintering in the Santa Cruz mountains. In
March 1857 he joined Knapp & Co., agricultural implement dealers, becoming
associated with them in business, and remaining in Portland to the time of his
death, which occurred about 1883. His wife was Rosa Frazier, a native of Mass.
Mr Burrell was au excellent citizen, and the family an exemplary one.
A
Abbott, G. H.,
Indians massacred by,
1854, ii. 330; Ind. war, 1856, ii.
405; Ind. agent, 18G0, ii. 4GG, 4778.
Abemetliy, 0-.,
trustee ,>f Or. Institute, 1842, i. 202; petition to cong.
i. 207-11; resolution of, 1842, i. 297; gov.
of Or., 1845, i. 471-2; messages of, 1845, i. 488, 528-31, 536-8; 1847, i.
669-70; 1849, ii. GO; letter to McLoughlin, i. 491; intercourse with Howison,
1846, i. 5S6- 7; reelected, 1S47, i. 612; character,
i. 612-13; proclamation of, 1847, l. 680;
correspond, with Douglas, i. 681-2; with Ogden, i. 687-8; ad- ministr., i.
782-3.
Abiyua creek, battle
of, 1848, i. 7479.
Accolti, Father M.,
arrival in Or. 1814, i. 325; in charge of mission,
i. 327; correspond, with Lee, 1S48,
i. 743-4; biog., i. 744.
Adair, J., collector,
1848, i. 777; ii. )0t.
Adams, E., biog., i.
634.
Adams, S. C., mention
of, ii. 684. Adams, T mention of, i. 169-70;
oratory of, 226-7.
Adams, W. L., biog.,
etc., of, ii. 170;
collector, 1861, ii.
458.
Adams, Point,
reservation at, 1849,
ii. 86; fortified, 1861-2, ii. 511.
Agricultui'al college, establd, etc.,
1868, ii. 600-1.
Aiken, J., mention
of, i:. 743.
Aikm, H. L., biog., i. 634.
Ainsworth, J. C.,
master of Multnomah lodge, 1848, ii. 31; steamboat- ing. 4S0-1; biog. 487
Alabama, petition from, 1843, i. 382. Albany, condition, etc., of, 1848, ii.
5-6, 716; hosiery-mill at, ii. 732-3; flax-mill, ii. 737.
Albany academy,
mention of, ii. 682. Albany collegiate institute, ii. 682. Albina,
improvements, etc., at, ii. 752. ‘Albion,’ ship, case of the, 1849-50, ii.
104 6, 1 l(i- Aloom,
Capt. M. P., the Ind. war, 1855, ii. 386-8.
Alden, Capt., the
Rogue river war, 1853-4, ii. 313-16.
Alderman, A.,
altercation with McLoughlin, 1844, i. 4.59-60.
Allen, B. S., Ind.. commissioner, 1891, ii. 208.
Allen, .T-, mention of . 509.
Allen, S., mention
of, i. 633.
Allen, congressman,
resolutions of, 1844, i. 385-6.
Allis, S., mention
of, i. 104-5. Allphin, W., biog., i. 635.
Alton, meeting at.
1843, i. 3S2. Alvord, Gen., correspond, with wool, ii. 344; expcd. ordered by,
1862, ii. 493; requisit. of, 1864, ii. 497. Alzate, A., name of Oregon, i.
23-4. ‘Amazon,’ brig, voyage of, 1851, ii. 258.
Ambrose, G. II., Ind.
agent, 1854, ii.
300, 371-2.
‘America,’ H. M. S.,
visit of, 1S45, i. 497-9.
American board
(missionary), operations, etc., of, i. 101—5, 127, 343-4; ii. 293.
American Far company,
dissolution of, i. 241.
American river,
Oregon miners at,
1849, ii. 46.
Americans at Fort
Vancouver, i. 435; provis. govt establ’d by, 1S43- -9,
i. 293 314, 470-507, 526 -41 600- 23;
ii. 58-63.
Americana, party,
descript, of, ii.
357-8. _
Anderson, A. C.,
biog., etc., of, i. 31’. Anderson, E. C., ministrj of, ii. (583. Anderson, Dr,
mention of, i. 178. _
Andrews, Major G. P.,
exped. of,
1860, ii. 467.
Angell, M., biog.,
etc., of, ii. 243. ‘Anita,’ U. S. transport, visit of, 1848, i. 745; 1649, ii.
84.
Ankeny, A. I’. &
Co., mention of, ii.
741.
Antelope valley, Ind.
raid on, 1804, ii. 501
Applegate, C.,
iourney to Or., etc., 1843, i. 393, 408, 413; settles in Umpqua i alley, 1849,
i. 569. Applegate, E., death of, 1843, i. 408. Applegate, E. L., ability, etc.,
of, ii. 431; commissioner of immigr., 1873, ii. 595.
Applegate, I. IX,
commissary, etc., 1870, ii. 563, 566- 9, 572-7. Applegate, J., journey to Or.,
etc.,
1843, i. 393, 396, 407-8, 412; manuscript of, i.
406, 410 11; accident to, i. 410-11; surveying engineer,
1844, i. 410; comments of, i. 444, 462-3; legislator, 1845, i. 473; 1S49, ii. 59- 62;
measures, etc., of, i. 473503, 533; exped. of, 1846, i. 544-59;
1847, i. 679; 1850, ii. 178-80; settles at Yoncalla,
1849, i. 568-9; the Cayuse outbreak, i. 670-3; Ind. agent, 1870, ii. 564; peace
cor:' , 1873, ii. 596, 601-3; candidate tor sen., 1876, ii. 673; death of, ii.
763.
Applegate, L.,
journey to Or., etc., 1843, j 393,
408, 413; exped. of, 1846, i. 544-59; 1861, ii. 489-90; settles at Ashland,
1849, i. 569-70. Applegate, O. C., the Modoc war, 1864-73, ii. 577- 8, 583,
586, 589-91. Applegate creek, Ind. fights at, 1856, ii 388-9.
‘Argus,’newspaper,
establ’d 1855, ii.
356; attitude of, ii.
357-9. Armstrong, P., mention of, i. 247. Ash Hollow, massacre at, i. 136.
Ashburton, Lord, treaty of, 1842, i.
380 1.
A shill, P., biog.,
i. 468.
Ashland, L. Applegate
settles at, 1846, i. 569-70; woollen mill at, n. 733.
Assumption, mission
founded, i. 327; Astoria, missionaries at, 1840, i. 185; mail to, 1847, i. 614;
condition of,
1848, ii. 6, 11; Hill’s command at,
1849, ii. 6!) 70; Hathaway at, 1850, ii. 88;
inaccessibility of, ii. 189; hist, of, ii. 708, 720. _
Atchison,
congressman, billa introd. by, 1844, i. 334-8.
Athey, mention of, i.
413-14; ‘ Workshops’ MS., 41 i.
Atkinson, Rev. G. H.
arrrval in Or., 1848, ii. 33; biog., i1 33; college establ’d by, ii.
33-5; missionary labors, etc., of, ii. 679-80.
Atkinson, O. L.,
mention of, ii. 356,
Atwell, 11. W.,
petition of, 1873, ii.
634.
Atwell, R. H.,
mention of, ii. 600.
Aubrey, T. N., biog. i. 627.
Augur, Capt., the
Lnd. war, 1856, ii. 401, 407-9.
Aurora, founding,
etc., of, 1855, ii. 717.
Avery, J. C.. member
of legisl., 1849, ii. 59; biog., ii. 143-4.
Avery, T. W., biog.,
i. 752,
B
Babcock, Dr I. L.,
missionary labors, etc., of, i. 177, 190, 198-202, 21821; supreme judge,
1841-3, i. 294.
Bache, A. I).,
survey, etc., of. 1850, ii. 190, 248.
Backus, Lieut, the
Ind. war, I860, ii. 516-17.
Bacon, J. M., biog,,
etc., of, i 509.
Bagby, Senator, the
Or. bill, 1848, L 764-5.
Bailey, C., mention
of, ii. 381.
Bailey, II., killed
by Indians, 1855, ii. 381.
Bailey, Capt. J., the
Indian war, 1855, ii. 381-2, 387.
Bailey, W. .f.,
arrival m Or., 1835, i. 96; chairman of comm., i. 294; provis. govt 1844, i.
427-30; candidate for gov. 1845, i. 471-2; member of convention, 1846, i.
693-4; of legisl., 1849, ii. 59.
Baillie, Capt. T.,
mention of, i. 447; letter to McLoughlin, 1845, i. 497; at Vancouver, 1846, i.
57(S.
Baker city, hist, of,
ii. 706: mines near, ii. 739^40.
Baker city academy,
mention of, ii. 687.
Baker, Col, the Ind.
war, 1866, ii. 519, 523.
Baker county,
organized, etc., 1862, ii. 485; hist, of, ii. 706.
Baker, E. D.. biog.,
etc., of, ii. 450; senator, 1860, ii. 453-4; death of,
1861, ii. 457.
Baker, J., mention of
i. 570.
Baker, Mrs, biog. i
570.
Hall, J., biog., i.
75.
Ballenden. J..
mention of, ii. 277.
Bangs, Dr, mention
of, i. 178. Baptists, operations of the, i . 683 4. Barber & Tliorpe,
mention of, li. 338. Barclay, Dr F., biog., 39 -40.
Barker, W. S.,
mention of, i 633. Barkwell, M. C., sec. of constit.
convention, 1857, ii.
423.
Barlow, J., biog. of,
i. 527.
Barlow, S. K.,
mention of, i. 509; journey to Or., 1845, i. 517-21; road charter, etc., of, i.
532. Barnaby, J., member of convention, 1S46, i. 003.
Barnes, G. A., biog.,
i. 752.
Barnes, ‘Oregon &
California,’ MS., ii. 115.
Barnum, E. H.,
adjutant-gen., 1854, ii. 325; the Ind. war, 1855, ii. 3847; nominee for gov.,
1857, ii. 430. Barry, Capt., exped. of, 18G4, ii. 4'J9 500.
Bartlett, Lieut W.,
survey, etc., of, 1850, ii. 190-2.
Baum, .T., biog., i.
629.
Baylies, congressman,
member of comm., 1821. i. 351; 1823, i. 300; speeches of, i. 353-8.
Beagle, journey to
Or., 1843, i. 407. Beale, Lieut W. K., the Rogue river war, 1853-4, u. 313.
Beall, T. E., biog.,
ii. 712 13.
Bean, J. R., biog., i. 527-8.
Beaver, Rev. H , at
Eort Vancouver, 1836-8, i. 50-3.
Beaver, Mrs J., at
Eort Vancouver, 1830-8, i. 50-2.
Beaver, ship,
seizure, etc., of the, 1850, ii. 107-8.
‘ Beaver, ’ steamer,
arrival on the Columbia, i. 123.
Beers, A., character,
etc., of, i. 155, 101- 2; trustee of Or. institute, 1841,
i. 202; member of comm., 1842, i. 304-5,
312.
Beeson, J., writings,
etc., of, ii. 404. Beirne, Lieut-col, tlie Inti, war, 1S615,
ii. 525.
Belcher, Sir E.,
exped., etc., of, i. 232-3.
Belden, G. H.,
survey, etc., of, ii. G90-S.
Belknap, Mrs <1.,
biog., i. 753.
Bell, G. W., auditor,
181G, i. 600. Bellinger, J. H., biog., i. 628. Bennett, Capt. C.,
mention of, i. 578. Bent fort, descript, of, i. 227-8; Whitman at, 1843, i.
343.
Benton county,
establ’d, etc., 1847, ii. 10; Iiist. of, ii. 706- 7.
Benton, Rev. S.,
mention of, i. 174.
Benton, T. H.,
resolution, etc., of, in sen., 1823, i. 3G3-5, 370; the boun dary quest., 1846,
i. 590, 596; letter to Shively, 1S47, i. G16-17; memorial presented by, i.
756; the Or. bill, 1848, i. 761-3, 769 70.
Bernard, Capt. R. F.,
tho Ind. war, 1866, ii. 523-5; tlie Modoc war, 1864-73, ii. 581-96, 616.
Bernia, F., member of
convention, 1846, i. G93.
Berrien, Senator, the
Or. bill, 1848, i. 763-4.
Berry, W., biog., i.
530; tlie Caynae war, i. 671, 703.
Bethel academy,
mention of, ii. 686.
Bewley, I. W., biog., i. 634.
Bewley, Miss,
sickness of, i. 058; abduction of, 1847, i. G63.
Biddle, Col, reconnaisance, etc., of, 1873, ii. 605.
Bigelow, D. R.,
commissioner, 1850, ii. 150.
Bigelow, W. D.,
mention of, ii. 292; settles at The Dalles, 1853, ii. 724.
Billique, P.,
constable, 1841, i. 294.
Birnie, J., mention
of, i. 100.
Bishop, W. R.,
mention of, ii. 683.
Bissonette, meeting
with White’s ex- ped., 1842, i. 258-9.
Bitter Root river,
mission on the, 1811, i. 324.
Black Rock, name, i.
550-1.
Black, S., mention
of, i. 36.
Blain, W., chaplain
of legisL, 1849, ii. GO; public printer, 1849, ii. 79.
Blair, Mrs E. B.,
biog. of, i. 628.
Blair, T. O., biog.
of, ii. 715.
Blair, with Farnham’s
exped., 1839,
i. 227-9.
Blakeley, Capt., the
Ind. war, 1856,
ii. 403.
Blanchet, Rev F. X.,
in charge of Or. mission, 1838, i. 316-25; ‘Historical Sketches, ’ i. 320;
archbishop,
1843, i. 326; vicariate of, i. 327.
Blanchet, A. M. A.,
bishop of Walla Walla, 1847, i. 327, G54; theCayuse outbreak, 1847, i. 691- 7.
Bledsoe, Capt. R.,
the Ind. war, 1856, ii. 405.
Blue Cloak, chief,
castigation of, l. 330 1.
Blue mountains,
emigrants cross, 1843, i 402.
Blunt, Lieut S. F.,
commissioner, 1848, ii. 248.
Boddy. W., murder of,
1872, ii. 57&
Boggs, Ex-gov., gold
discov. disclosed by, 1848, ii. 43.
Or. II. 4j
770
Bogus, H., with
Applegate’s cxped.,
1840, i. 551 2.
Bohemia district,
mines in the, ii.
742.
Boise, Fort, mention
of, i. 14; Farn- ham’s exped. at, 1839, i. 229; emigrants at, 1843, i. 401;
road projected to, i. 531-2; ii. 436, 476; abandoned, 185G, ii. 112; massacre
near, ii. 343; milit. post at, ii, 476, 494-6; Gen. Ralleck at, I860, ii. 526.
Boise, R. P., mention
of, i. 151 2; commissioner, 1S50, ii. 150; dist attorney, 1851, ii. 168; dist
judge, 1857, ii. 431; assoc, judge, 185S, ii. 442; decision of, 1863, ii. 642.
Bolduc, Rev. J. B.
Z., mention of, i. 322; head of college, 1844, i. 325-6.
Bonneville. Lieut-col, command of, ii. 245; requisitions on, etc.,
1853^4, ii. 313, 343.
Bonser, S., biog., i.
637
Bonte, L. la, biog.
of, i 74, 78.
Boon, J. D., terr.
treasurer, 1851, ii. 168; 1S57, ii. 431; biog., ii. 168.
Boone, A., biog., i.
570-1; member of legisl-., 1846, i. 604-43.
Boone. J. L., career
of, ii. 457.
Boonville, raid on,
1866, ii. 522.
Booth, Gov., the
Modoc war, 1864-73, ii. 582, 588.
Boston Charley, the
Modoc war, ii. 603 -10; kills Thomas, 1S73, ii. 612; surrender of, ii. 629;
execution of, ii. 636.
Boulder creek, Ind.
fight at, 1866, ii.
522.
Bourne, J., biog., i.
784—5.
Boutelle, Lieut, the
Modoc war. 186473, ii 574-5.
Bowen, Lieut, the
Ind. war, 1S66, ii.
514.
Boyle, Lieut W. H.,
the Modoc war, ii. 5S2; attempted murder of, 1873, ii. 612-13.
Bozartli, Mrs A. M.
L., biog., 1. 635.
Bozartli, O. W., biog., i. 527.
Brattain, T. S.,
biog., ii. 715.
Brazee, J. Wl, biog.
of, ii. 765-6.
Breckenridge, in
cong., 1822, i. 358-9.
Breeding, W. P.,
biog., i. 571.
Breese, Senator, bill
introd. by, 1848,
i. 771.
Bremer, Van, the
Modoc war, 186473, ii. 57S-86.
Brewer, H. B.,
land-claim of, 1848, ii. 6.
Brewer, II. D.,
mention of, i. 177, 190, 221, 275.
Briceland, Lieut I.
N., mention of, ii. 24S.
Bridger, Capt.,
mention of, i. 108.
Bridger, meeting with
White’s exped. 1S42, i. 259-60.
Bridger, Fort,
emigrant,-< at, 1846, i. 556.
Bridges, J. C.,
constable, 1842, i. 304.
Brigade, annual,
arrival of, i 46.
Briggs, A., biog. of,
i. 630.
Bright, Senator, the
Or. bill, 1848, i. 761-2.
Bristow, E., biog.,
i. 569.
Bristow, W. W„ biog.,
i. 752.
Bromley, I. W. R.,
mention of, i. 777.
Brooks, S. E., biog.,
ii. 725.
Brooks, Q. A., biog.,
i. 786.
Brotherton, Mrs,
bravery of, ii. 576.
Brouillet, J. B A.,
vicar-gen. of Walla Walla, i. 327—S; arrival in Or. 1847, i. 654—6; the Whitman
massacre, i. 661-5; ‘Authentic Accounts,’ i. 667.
Brown, II. L., biog.,
i. 570.
Brown, J. H.,
Autobiography, MS., i 640.
Brown, O., biog., i.
422; with White’s exped. 1845, i. 481.
Brown, S., mention
of, i. 74-5.
Brown, Mrs T. M.,
arrival in Or. 1846, ii. 32; biog., ii. 32; charity of, ii. 33-4.
Brownfield, I). F.,
representative, 1S50, ii. 161.
Brownsville,
incorporated, etc., 1874, ii. 716.
Bruce, J., mention
of, ii. 316.
Bruce, Major, the
Ind. wars, 1S55-6, ii. 381-3, 386-9, 400.
Bruneau river,
Marshall's exped. to the, 1866, u. 520; camp on, ii. 522.
Brunt, G. J. Van,
commissioner,
1848, ii. 248.
Brush, adventure of,
1851, ii. 199.
Bryant, W. C., name
given by, to Or,,
i. 21-2.
Bryant, W. P.,
chief-justice, 1848, i. 777; dist of, 1849, ii. 70; measures, etc., ii. 80:
neglect of duty, ii. 101—
2, 155; bribery of, ii. 122. .
Buchanan, Col, the
Ind. war, 1856, ii. 389, 396, 404-7; at Crescent City, ii. 401.
Buchanan,
Secretary, the N. W. Boundary treaty, 1846, i. 594; correspond. 011 Or.
matters, 1847, i. 616; with II. B. Co., ii. 109; declines purchase of H. B.
Co’s property, 1848, i. 774-5. '
Buck, H.,
sergeant-at-arms, 1850, ii. 143.
Buck, W. W., biog.,
etc., of, i. 509; commissioner, 1849, ii. 79; prest of council, 1850,ii. 142;
business ventures of, ii. 732, 736.
Budd Inlet,
settlement on, 1844, i. 464.
Buell, E., biog., i.
627-8.
Buford, J., mention
of, ii. 371.
Bun ton, Capt. E.,
mention of, i. 449, Buoy, Capt., the Ind. war, 1856, ii.
390.
Burch, B. F., biog.,
i, 544.
Burgess, Capt. J. C.,
the Modoc war, 1864-73, ii. 626.
Burkhardt, L. C.,
biog., i. 635. Burnett, G-. W., biog., i. 571. Burnett, P. H., journey to Or.,
etc.,
1843, i. 393-6, 403-7, 416; journal of, i. 406, 412;
provis. govt, etc.,
1844, i. 427-32, 437; supreme judge, 1845, i. 496,
535; assoc, judge, 1845-8, i. 777; liquor law of,
i. 536; oration of, 1845, i. 583.
Burns, H.,
magistrate, 1842, i. 304; rights granted to, 1844, i. 440; member of
convention, 1846, i. 693; mail contract, ii. 30.
Burnt River Canon,
emigrants on, 1843, i. 401.
Burrell, M. S., ii.
719; biog., ii. 766. Burris, AV., judge, 1845, i. 496. Burton, Capt. G. H., the
Modoc war, 1864-73, ii. 582, 588-91, 616. Burton, J. J., mention of, i. 527.
Bush, A., clerk of assembly, 1850, ii. 143; terr. and state printer, ii. 143,
168, 431.
Busli, G-. W.,
mention of, i. 464. Butler, Senator, the Oregon bill, 1848,
i. 769.
Butte Creek, Indians
massacred at,
1855, ii. 372.
Butteville, location
of, ii. 6; name, etc., ii. 716.
Cabaniss, T. T., mention
of, 613, 629.
‘Cadboro,’ schooner,
seizure, etc., of, 1850, ii. 107.
Cady, Lieut-col A.,
in command of Or. dist., 1861, ii. 490.
CafFrey, J. S.,
ministry of, ii. 681.
‘ Calapooya, sloop,
built 1845, ii. 27. Calapooyas, threatened outbreak of,
1843, i. 275; reservations, etc., for,
ii. 210-11: treaty with, 1851, ii. 211,
Caldwell, S. A.,
biog., i. 785. California, migration to, 1843, i. 393, 400; 1844, i. 465; 1845,
i. 510-11; 1846, i. 552-7; effect of golddiscov.,
1848-9,
ii. 42-65; specific contract law, 1863, ii. 642-3; trade with, ii. 744-5.
* California, * steamer, at Astoria,
1850, ii. 188.
Calhoun, Secretary,
negotiations of,
1844, i. 3S6-7; the Or. bill, 1848, i. 764, 769.
Camaspelo,
Chief, interview with Blanehet, etc., 1847, i. 691; speech of, i. 720. *
Campbell, H., mention
of, i. 222. Campbell, J., biog., i. 570.
Campbell, J. C.,
quarrel with Holder- ness, 1845, i. 492.
Campbell, J. G,,
member of Or. Exchange Co., 1849, ii. 54.
Campbell, R., mention
of, i. 75. Campbell, T. F., mention of, ii. 687. Campbellites, sect, ii. 686.
Campo, C.,
magistrate, 1842, i. 304. Canadians in Or. 1834, i. 15-17, 64, 315; withdraw
from provis. govt,
1841, i. 295-9; missionaries among,
i. 317-22; join Amer. party, i. 471; raise
Amer. flag, 1847, i. 610.
Canby, Gen. E. R. S.,
supersedes Crook, 1870, ii. 561; the Modoc war, 1864-73, ii. 566-609; conference
with Modocs, ii. 609-11; murder of, 1873, ii. 612; honors paid to, ii. 613-14;
biog., 614.
Canby, Fort, name,
ii. 511.
Canemab, destroyed by
flood, 1862,
ii. 483. ^
Canemalt, location,
etc., of, ii. 6. Canfield, W. I)., biog., i. 662; escape
from Indians, 1847,
i. 663-5. Cannon, W., biog., i. 74.
Cafion city,
founding, etc., of, 1862, ii. 712.
Cape Horn, emigrants
at, 1843, i. 411. Caplinger, witli Palmer’s expedition,
1845, i. 521.
Caravan, chief
trader’s descrip, of, i.
47. '
Cardwell, I>r J.
R., mention of, ii. 759. Cardwell, J. A., biog., etc., of, ii. 184. Cardwell,
Mrs J. A., biog., ii. 713.
* Carolina,1 steamer,
first trip of, 1850,
ii. 188.
Carpenter, Dr W. M.,
mention of, i. 671.
Carson, X C., biog.,
i. 784,
Cartee, L. F.,
speaker, 1854, ii. 349. Carter, D., mention of, i. 177, 242.
Caruthers, Mrs E.,
land claim of, ii. | 288. _
Caruthers, F., land
claim of, ii. 288.
Carver, J., works of,
i. 17-21; map of, i. 20; name of Oregon, i. 24-5.
Cascade Falls,
proposed reservation at, 1846, i. G02.
Cascade mountains,
emigrants cross, 1843. i. 409-12; 1846, l. 503.
Case, S., peace
commissioner, 1873, ii. 596.
Casey, Col C.,
command of, ii. 201, 235; exped. of, 1851, ii. 235-7.
Caster, Lieut, the
Rogue river war, 1853-4, ii. 320.
Catholics, missions
in Or., 1838, i. 315-29, 340-8, 640-2, 653-7; opposition to protestants, i.
328—48, 640
2, 653-6, 697-9, 743-4; church, etc.,
buildings, ii. 678-9.
Cavanaugh, T.,
mention of, ii. 740.
Cayuses, missionaries
among, i. Ill, 115-18, 316-17, 327-48; outrages, etc., of, i. 268, 274-7,
333-5, 344 7, 402-3, 644-66; conference with,
1843, i. 277--S0; agric. among, i. 338; the Whitman
massacre, 1847,
i. 644-GG; captives rescued from, i. 686 9G;
war with, 1848, i. 700-45; trial and execution of, 1850, ii. 929; Dart's visit
to, etc., lS51,ii. 214; treaty, etc., ■with, 1855, ii.
303-G.
Chadwick, S. F.,
biog., etc., of, ii. 182; gov., 1877, ii. 673-4.
Chamberlain, Mrs 0.
W., biog., i. 63G.
Chambers, Rowland,
pion. ’45, i. 525; biog., 528.
Champoeg, situation,
i. 73; school, 1835, 8G; public meeting at, 262-3; excitement at, 283;
conventions at,
1842, 1845, 303, 471; church dedicated, 319; ii.
678; flood at, ii. 483.
Champooick, district
boundary, i. 310.
Chapin, Lieut E. S.,
in Modoc war,
ii. 616.
Chaplin, Daniel,
author of peace commis., ii. 595; of assembly, 1S64-5, 665.
Chapman, I. B., at
indignation meeting, u. 162.
Chapman, . W., pinn.
’47, i. 625; arrest of, ii. 158-9; survey or-gen., 295; lieut of vols, 386; of
assembly, 1S58-9, 1868, 434, 668; biog., 705.
Chase, Mr & Mrs,
in Snake liver massacre, ii. 472.
Chase, Albert, in
Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Chase, Daniel in
Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Chemakane, mission
described, i. 33940.
Chemeketa mission,
site, i. 191-2; work at, i. 192; investigation at, 221; dissolved, 221-2.
Chemeketa plains,
agriculture, 1840, 191-3; mills, 192; school, 193, 201.
‘ Chenemas, ’ ship,
on Columbia, i.
189, 199, 221, 245, 424, 466-7.
Chenoweth, V. A., of
assembly, 1852, 18G6, ii. 296, 666; of Or. Cent. R. R. co., 698, 699.
Chiles, Jos. B.,
leader Cal. party,
1843, i. 393, 400.
China trade, i. 371;
ii. 258.
Chinese mining,
attack on, ii. 521; acts relating to, 664 -5.
Chinooks, the,
difficulties with, ii. 93.
Christian Advocate
and Journal, calls for missionaries, i. 171.
Christmas
celebration, i. 577-8.
Cincinnati R. R. Co.,
charter granted, ii. 696.
Civil code submitted
and accepted, ii. 003-4.
Clackamas county, boundary,
i. 539; hist, of, ii. 707
Clackamas R.R. Co.,
charter granted, ii. 096.
Clackamas, the,
treaty with, ii. 217.
Claiborne, Bvt Capt.
T., of mounted rifles, ii. 81; defends Inds, 90.
Claim-jumping,
indignation meeting,
i. 010 11.
Clark, Mrs Anna,
biog., i. 627.
Clark, Miss C. A.,
missionary, i. 177; at Nisqually, 1S8.
Clark, Miss Grace,
adventures of, ii. 210.
Clark, Harvey, Or.
Institute, i. 202; missionary, 244; chaplain, 480; sermon, July 4th, 584;
philanthropist, ii. 32-3; teacher, 678.
Clark, I. N., attack
on Inds, ii. 534.
Clarke, I., exped.
of, ii. 305.
Clarke, Gen. X. S.,
in corn’d of department, ii. 400.
Clarke, Sami A.,
author of peace commis., ii. 595; works of, 092; director Or. Cent. R. R., 099.
Clatsop county, map
of, i. 186; boundary, 539; hist, of, ii. 708.
Clatsop district
estab., i. 435.
Clatsop mission, work
at, i. 185-8; sold, 221.
Clatsop plains,
agriculture, 1840, 1858; cattle introduced, 187.
Clatsops, massacre
crew, i. 41; character, 1S8.
Clemens, John, killed
on the ‘ Gazelle, ’ ii. 340.
Clergy, position of,
i. 301; disabilities of, 1842, 305.
Clerk, H. B. Co.,
fort duties, i. S.
Cluggage, James,
county com’r, ii. 299; in Ind. exped., 315.
Clyman, James, biog.
and bibliog., i.
451.
Coad, Henrietta
Gilliam, biog., i. 469.
Coal discovered, ii.
332; first shipments, 333.
Coal-fields, hist,
of, ii. 743.
Coats, John, pion.
’46, i. 568; biog.,
570.
Cochran, R. II., of
assembly, 1857-66, ii. 417, 432, 452, 666; senator, 186870, 668, 671.
Coekstock, Indian,
quarrel with Winslow, serious results, i. 282.
Coe, David I., trial
of, ii. 156.
Coe, Nathaniel, postal agent, ii. 1GG; biog., 189.
Cceur d’Alene mines, ores, etc., ii. 754.
Cojur d’Alenes, miss,
work among, i. 625; attack troops, ii 461
Coffey, Nebuzarden, pion. '47, i. 625; biog., 632.
Coffin, Stephen,
pion. '47, i. 625; del. to eon., i:. 418; built steamer, 705.
Coinage, private, ii.
54; inllux of foreign, coin, 55.
Coke, Hy. I., visit
of, ii. 175.
Colburn, A. C.,
killed by Inds, ii. 315.
Collins, Luther,
pion. ’47, i. 625; biog., 631.
Collins, Capt.,
explores Yaquina bay, ii. 203; exped. of, 520.
Collins, Smith, pion.
’46, i. 568; biog.,
569.
Collins, Mrs Smith,
biog., i. 569.
‘ Colonel Wright, ’
steamer, ii. 480.
Colonization, Or., i.
154-83.
Colorado, military
post established, i. 376.
‘ Columbia, ’ bark, i. 215; ii. 48.
‘Columbia,’ steamer,
ii. 188; hist, of, 255.
Columbia county,
hist, of, ii. 709.
Columbia, Mary,
firstchild born, i, 529.
Columbia river,
named, i. 24; fishery established, 245; disputed boundary, 316; value of trade
to, 354; military posts on, 361; dangers on, 558, 559, 608; dangerous entrance,
ii. 23-6; first steamers on, 255-6, improvement of, 755-6.
Columbia river co.
founded, i. 59.
Colver, David, pion.
’45, i. 525; biog.,
571.
Colville valley,
mission founded, i. 327. Colwell, Joseph F., murder of, ii. 546. Comegys,
Jacob, pion. ’47, i. 625;
biog., 633.
Commerce, English vs
American, i. 366-7; imports and exports, ii. 7445.
Committees, 1844,
names, capabilities,
i. 431.
Condit, Alva, Presb.
elder, ii. 680. Condon, T. J, missionary, ii. 680. Conger, S. F-, murder of,
ii. 477. Congregational church, hist, of, ii. 679, 680.
Congress, settlers
petition, i. 16S, 172, 176, 206-9, 231, 233, 245; Or. question, 349-390;
Linn's 2d bill, 372; memorial to, ii. 436-8, 481-3; 1st delegate from Or., 113;
instructions to delegate, 299-300; appropriations by, 326-7; 7o6-7.
‘ Congress, ’ U. S.
frigate, i. 583. Congressional appropriations, waste of, 1S54-5, ii. 350-2.
Conklin, David,
murder of, ii. 527. Conner, John, of anti-slavery party,
ii. 359. '
Conner, Sergt, fight with Inds, ii.
423, 424.
Connolly, Nelly,
marries Douglas, i. 52.
Conser, Jacob, of
assembly, 1851-2,
1856-7,
ii. 72, 296, 417; university trustee, 299; school trustee, 685; director Or.
Cent. It. 699. Conser, Mrs Jacob, biog., i. 752. Constitutional convention, act
to hold, i. 441 2; acts of, ii. 423-6. Convention, meeting, i. 603; resolutions
adopted, i. 604.
Converse, Lt O. I.,
corn’d at Fort Walla Walla, i . 532.
Cook, A., with
Farnham’s exped., 227, 237.
Cook, I. D., in Ind.
exped., ii. 240. Cook, John G., claim of, ii. 321. Cooke, map, i. 23.
Cooke, Mrs Belle W.,
works of, ii. 692.
Cooke, E. N.,
nominated state treasurer, ii. 637; of W. V. R. R. Co., 697; director Or.
Cent. R. R., 699.
Coon, W. L., of
anti-slavery party, ii. 359.
Cooper, Chandler,
biog., i. 627.
Coos bay, Lt
Stanton’s exped. at, u.
202; settlement at,
1853, 331-4; hist of coal fields, 743.
Coos county, created,
ii. 254: hist, of, 709.
Coppinger, Rvt Lt-col
I. I., coin’d Camp Three Forks, ii. 532.
Conquilles, the,
attitude of, ii. 234; light with, 235-8; trouble with,
391.
Corbett, H. W., U. S.
senator, biog., ii. 639, 667, 764; library director, 694; of W. \T.
R. R. Co., 697; of Or. Cent. R. R., 698; of Or. R. R. & N. Co., 704.
Cornelius, Benjamin,
biog., i. 528.
Cornelius, Florentine
Wilkes, biog.,
i. 531.
Cornelius, Sami,
missionary, ii. 683.
Cornelius, T. R.,
pion. ’45, i. 525; of council, 1856-9, ii. 417, 429, 432, 434; senator,
1860-70, 452, 665, 666, 668, 671; col of Or. vols, 491; resigns, 493; director
Or. Cent. R. R., 699.
Cornwall, I. A.,
pion. ’46, i. 568; biog., 570; Presb. minister, 682.
Cornwall, P. B.,
bearer of Masonic charter, ii. 31.
Corvallis county,
hist, of, ii. 707.
Couch, I. H., on
Columbia, i. 221, 245, 466; White’s interference with, 281; mem. P. L. L. C.,
296-7; director Or. Printing Assoc., 536; treasurer, 606, 612.
Counties, hist, of,
ii. 706-726; min* eral resources of, 754-5.
Cow creek, Ind.
depredations, ii. 381.
Cow creek Inds, land
purchased from, ii. 319.
Cowan, Robert, biog.,
i. 633.
‘Cowlitz/ bark,
250-1.
Cowlitz valley, i.
Ind. troubles in, ii.
67, 68.
Cox, Jesse, of court
convention, ii. 423.
Cox, Joseph, pion.
’47, i. 625; biog., 630; of court convention, ii. 423.
Cox, T. H., pion.
’47, i. 625; biog., 630; of Or. Cent. R. R., ii. 698.
Coyle, R. S., of
const, convention, ii. 423.
Craft, Charles,
biog., i. 527.
Craig, I.
T., of anti-slavery party, ii. 359. ’
Craig, Wm, at Lapwai,
i. 649; leaves Clearwater, 697; agent to Nez Perces, 721.
Crain, J. H., biog.,
i. 629.
Cramton, Lt Arthur,
in Modoc war, killed, 616, 520; biog., 624.
Cravigan, Rich.,
murder of, ii. 576.
Cravigan, W., murder
of, ii, 576.
Crawford, David,
explores Puget Sound, i. 463-4.
Crawford, John Davis,
biog., i. 631.
Crawford, Medoram,
pion. ’42, i. 76, 256; biog. and bibliog., 265; mem. P. L. L. C., 297; of
legislature, ii. 59, 452; signs memorial, 127; collector, 670.
Crawford, Peter W.,
biog. and bibliog., i. 646-7.
Creighton, N. M.,
supports Gov. Lane, ii. 93.
Cresson, Capt., in Modoc
war, ii. 622.
Crocker, N., death,
i. 199-200, 256.
Crockett, John, com.
of Island co., ii. 299.
Crook county, hist,
of, ii. 710.
Crook, Geo., Lt-col,
relieves Marshall, ii. 531; actions of, 532-45.
Crooks, I. M., in
Ind. exped., ii. 313.
Crosby, Capt. N.,
piloting, ii. 26; mill sold to, 50.
Crouch, W. H.,
wounded, ii. 383.
Crow, James, murder
of, ii. 477.
Cullen, John W.,
lieut of Or. vols., ii. 510; acts of, 512.
Cully, I. W., elected
to senate 1858, ii. 432.
Culver, C. P.,
editor, i. 575.
Culver, Sami, favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255; Ind. agent, 312; anti-slavery party, 359; signs
petition, 376.
Cunuiugham, Joseph,
biog., i. 527.
Curly-headed doctor,
in Modoc war, ii. 575, 576, 599; surrenders, 627.
Currency and prices,
13-15; ii. 796-8.
Curry county,
established, ii. 415; hist, of, 710.
Curry, Geo. B., of
Or. vols, ii. 491; exped. of, 496, 499; in corn’d of Columbia dist, 515;
retires, 517.
Curry, Geo. L.,
editor, i. 57-5; loan commis’r, 671, 672; of legislature, ii. 58, 59, 158;
acting sec., 69; post master, 187; apptd gov., character, 348; biog., 349;
proclamation, 384; calls out vols, 399; message, 435; nomination, 444.
Curry, Thomas, biog.
of, ii. 713.
Curtis, E. I., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255.
Crump, James T.,
biog., i. 571.
4 Cyclops, ’ ship, wrecked, ii. 300.
D
Daily Advertiser,
newspaper, ii. 448,
Daily News,
newspaper, ii. 448.
Daily Times,
newspaper, ii. 449.
Dallas founded, ii.
251.
Daly, John, killed on
the ‘Gazelle,’ ii. 340.
Daniels, W, B., del.
to convention,
1857, ii. 418.
Darragh, John, apptd
to raise Ind. co, ii. 531.
Darrough, I., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255.
Dart, Anson, supertd
of Ind. affairs, ii. 200; offl. actions of, 213-18.
Dart, Geo., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255.
Davenport, T. I., in
explor exped., ii. 197.
Davidson, Geo.,
survey exped., ii. 248-9.
Davidson, James,
biog., i. 629.
Davidson, James,
biog., i. 632.
Davidson, Thomas L.,
biog., i. 624,
Davis, Byron N., Ind.
agent, ii. 469.
Davis, Henry W.,
biog., i. 628.
Davis, Col Jefferson
C., succeeds Canby, ii. 624; action in Modoc war, 624-31.
Davis, John W., Apptd
Gov. 1853, biog., ii. 322; acts of, 323, 324; resigns 1854, character, 3-48-9.
Davis, Leander L.,
biog., i. 636.
Davis, Samuel, biog., i. 570.
Dawson, V. W., pion. ’43, i. 394; Cal. emigrant, 400; arrest, 445.
Dayton, founded, ii.
251.
Deady, M. P., on sup.
court, i. 151-2; supports Gov. Lane, ii. 93; of Assembly, 143; biog., 144;
revises laws, 150; Atty, 158; of council 1851-2, * 161, 296; trustee of Or.
Academy, 167; Associate Judge, 307-S; at constitutional convent, 423; elected
U. S. Judge, 442; U. S. dist Judge, 669; University director, 690; of Or.
medical college, 691; mention of, 747, 763-4.
Dean, N. C., farm of,
ii. 184.
Deception Pass on
Puget Sound, i. 464.
De Cuis, A. P., of
Coos Bay Co., ii. 332.
Deer Lake, name, i.
72.
Delaney, Daniel,
biog., i. 422.
Delano Sec., actions
in Modoc affair, ii. 597, 602; hanged in effigy, 613.
Delore, Antonio,
exploring party, i. 532.
* Demares Cove, ’ ship, ii. 333.
Demers, Father, asst
to Blanehet, i. 316; founds Willamette miss., 318-
319; vicar gen., 326;
journey to Europe, 327; chaplain, 480. Democratic Herald, newspaper, ii.
448.
Democratic party,
organized 3852, ii.
172; rupture in,447;
defeat, 1888,762. Democratic Statesman, policy of, ii.
420-2, 448.
Detnry, John,
nominated for Gov., ii. 430.
Denoille, Sergt,
murder of, ii. 547. Dent, Capt. F. T., coin’d at Hoskins, ii. 488.
De Puis, W., cattle exped., i. 42.
Des Chutes river,
mode of crossing, L
514.
De Smet, Pierre,
Jesuit priest, labors of, i. 322-6; physique, 323; biblog., 327; hostility of,
340.
De Vos Peter, R. C.
priest, 1843, i. 325; St. Ignatius Miss., 327; with hunting party, 396;
discovers pass,
398.
‘ Diana, ’ brig., i.
154,
Diamond, bark, i.
188; ii. 48. Diamond, John, exped. of, ii. 305. Diamond Spring, named, i. 558.
Dickinson, Obed, missionary, ii. 680. Dilley, murdered by Inds, ii. 223.
Dillon, William H., biog., i. 636. Dimiek, A. R., biog., i. 638. Disappointment
Cape, surveyed, ii.
249; lighthouse at,
511.
Diseases,
disappearance of, ii. 39. Distillery, Young’s, i. 98, 99, 102, 160; descript of
first, 281,
Divorce law, passed,
ii. 299, 300;
clause in
constitution, 438.
Dixon Robt, murder
of, ii. 549. Dobbins, C., injured on the ‘Gazelle,’ ii. M0.
Dodson, Jesse, in
Ind.,exped., ii. 224.
Dogs, excitement
regarding killing, i.
258.
Doherty, A. S., in
explor. exped., ii. 197.
Doke, William,
escapes drowning, i. 408.
* Dolly, ’ schr, ii. 27.
Dolph, I. N., of
Senate, 1866, ii. 666; U. S. senator, biog. 676; of Or. R. R. & N. Co.,
704; mention of, 756; coast defence bill, 757.
Dominus, Capt., in
Columbia, i. 40. Donation Claims, land taken under, ii. 659.
Donation Laws, its
provisions and workings, ii. 260-3; advantages, and disadvantages of, 299.
Donner party, joins immigrants 1846,
i. 556.
Donpierre, David, on
Govt committee,
i. 294.
Dorion, B.,
accompanies White, 15th Nov. 1842, i. 268.
Dorr, Eben M., seizes the ‘Albion,’
ii. 105.
Dougherty, Wm P.,
promotor of masonry, ii. 30; left for Gal., 47; at indignation meeting, 162;
com- mis’r of Pierce Co., 299.
Douglas, county,
organized, ii. 16G;
hist, of, 710.
Douglas, A., killed
by Inds, ii. 315. Douglas, David, in Oregon, i. 17. Douglas, James, appearance,
i. 31: it
F. Vancouver, 48; marriage, 52; receives
missionaries, 135; grants site for miss. 1839, 318; action in clerical affairs,
320; moved to Victoria, 598; commu. massacre to Gov., 670; action in regard to
loan,
672-5;
demands explanation from Abernethy, 681-2.
Dowell, Ben Franklin,
biog., ii. 370. Downing, Miss Susan, arrives Or., i. 15G; at Willamette
Mission, i. 157-9.
Drake, Lt, works of,
ii. 691.
Drake, Lt-col, in
corn’d of Columbia dist, ii. 517.
Drew, C. S., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255; Qt Master of Militia, 325; Adj. of vols, 379; Major,
492; re- connoissance of, 503-5.
Drew, E. P., Ind.
agent, ii. 360; off!
acts of, 392-3.
Drew, I. W., of H. of
Rep. 1851, ii. 15S; in explor. exped., 176; senator 1862-3, G38. _
‘Dryad,’ ship, i. 94.
Dryer, T. I., founded
‘Oregonian,’ ii. 147; of Assembly 1S56-9, 417, 429, 432, 434; of constitutional
convent, 423; comrnis’r to Hawaiian Isis, 458. ‘Due de Lorgunes,’ brig, ii. 48.
Duelling, bill to prohibit, i. 492. Dugan, Rich., favors new ter. scheme, ii.
255; military commis’r, 314.
Du Guerre, Baptiste,
accompanies White, i. 484.
Dunbar, John,
missionary, i. 104, 107. Dunbar, Rice, biog., i. 572.
Dunoan, Geo. Clayton,
biog. of, ii. 715.
Duncan, I. C., biog.,
ii. 184.
Duncan, L. I. C., of
const, convention, ii. 423
Duniway, Mrs A. S.,
works of, ii. 691.
Dunn, John, at Fort
George, l. 38; character, 44.
Dunn, Pat. in Ind.
exped., ii. 313; of assembly 1854-5, 349.
Dunning, U. H., of
anti-slavery party, ii. 359.
Duntz, Capt., on the
Sound, i. 499.
Duskins, rescues
immigrants 1846, i.
564.
Dwight, .it Fort
Hall, i. 30.
Dyar, L. S., Ind.
agent, ii. 568; actions in Ind. War, 569-79; peace eommr, GOG, 610-12.
E
Eades, Clark,
punishment, i. 450.
Eagle, Nez Perce
chief, counsels Mrs Whitman, i. 665-6.
Eales, Capt., on
Oregon coast, i. 84,
Earhart, R. P., sec.
of state, ii. 762.
East Portland, progress
of, ii. 752. ■
Eastham, E. L.,
mention of, ii. 753.
Eaton, Charles H..
biog., i. 421.
‘E. D. Baker,’
steamer, ii. 481.
Edmonds, John,
shooting affair, i. 444-5; left for Cal., ii. 47.
Edmunds, John,
accomp.White,i. 434.
Edmundson, Indian
mission, i. 55.
Education, effort
toward, 1834, i. 315; girls’ school opened, 325; grants of land, 608;
drawbacks, ii. 31.
Educational
institutions, ii. 32.
Edwards, P. L.,
missionary, i 59; character, GO; building miss., 78-90; treas. Willamette
Cattle Co., 141; goes to Cal. for cattle, 142 -150; life, 169; infor. to
emigrants, 292-3.
Edwards, Rich.,
killed by Inds, ii.
312.
Eells, C. C.,
missionary, i. 137-8.
Eells, Myron,
missionary, i. 138.
Eells, Mrs,
missionary, i. 137-8.
Ehrenberg, H., Or.
settler, i. 240; biog. 240-1.
Election, freedom of
vote, i. 307.
Eliot, S. G.,
surveyed R. R. line, ii. 696.
Elizabeth, mining
town, ii. 330.
Elizabethtown, Ky,
petition to Congress, i. 374.
Elkins, Luther, of
assembly 1853-5, ii. 323, 349; of constitutional convention, 423; senator
1858-60, 432, 452; R. R. commisr, G96.
Elhins, W. S., of
assembly 1870, ii. 671.
‘ El Placer,' brig,, ii. 48.
Elliot, Col, Mil.
eommis. to try Modocs, ii. 635.
Elliott, Wm M., claim
of, ii. 321.
Ely, Lt, in Indian
exped., ii. 314. Ellis, Ind. chief, biog., i. 271; cunning of, 2S6-9;
hostility, 330-2. Ellsworth, S., of Or. C. M. R. Co., ii. 652; director Or. C.
R. R., 698, 699.
Emehiser, I., in
immigrant party 1859, ii. 463. _
Emigrants, Whites
party, i. 256-7; life on the plains, 257; character, 392; scarcity of food,
416-17; 1844, 448-9.
Emigration,
inducements offered, i. 374-5; organi7,ation 1843, 393-424; character, 425-7.
‘ Emily Packard, ’
ship wrecked, ii. 301.
Emmons, Lieut; exped.
from Or. to Cal., 249.
Eagle, William,
biog., i. 52S.
English, emig. to
Or., i. 377; fleet, 497.
English, L. N.,
leased penitentiary, biog., ii. 644.
Enos, half breed,
treachery of. ii.
394.
‘ Enterprise, ’
steamer ii. 340. Episcopal church, hist, of, ii. 685-6. Erasmus, Christopher,
murder of, ii. 577. '
Ergnette, W,, cattle
exped., i. 142. Erniatinger, F., character, i. 32-33; attacked by Inds, 136;
Men. P. L. L. C., 297; treasurer, 472, 480, 496. Ettinger, S., favors new ter.
scheme, ii. 255.
Eugene, founders of
city, ii. 251; co’ty seat, 299; university at, 661. Eulinger, Sigrnond, claim
of, ii. 321. Evans, Allan, bravery of, wounded, ii. 378.
Evans, David, claim
of, ii. 321.
Evans, Samuel, murder
of, ii. 489. Evans, I., exped. of, ii. 300.
Everest, Mr ami Mrs,
biog., i. 631. Everman, Hiram, trial of, ii. 156. Everman, Niniwon, explores
Puget Sound, l. 403-4; left for Cal., ii. 47.
Everman, Wm, trial
and execution, ii. 156.
‘ Ewing,’ survey
schr, ii. 190-2. Ewing, F. Y-, travels with Lee, i.
169.
Executive Com., pay,
i. 440; authority, i. 441-2.
Express Co., first in
operation, ii. 339.
Executive, power,
summary, 1842, i.
^ 307-8.
Express, meeting to
provide for sending, i. 552.
Eyre, Miles, drowned,
i. 400-
F
Kackler, Samuel,
biog., i. 631. Facklcr, Rev. St M., biog., i. 629. Fading, Henry, biog. of, ii.
765. Fairchilds, John A., farm of, ii. 578; removes Hot Creeks, 578-80; acts in
Modoc war, 589, 597-607; favors Modocs, 634.
Falls debating soc ,
founding, i. 265.
‘ Falmouth,’ ship,
ii. 139.
‘ Famt, ’ bark, i.
422.
Fanning, Mrs Rebecca,
biog., i. 530. Farley, John F. biog., i. 630.
Farming interest,
rise of, ii. 33S. Farnham, T. I., at Fort Vancouver,
i. 44, 130, 234; exped., 227-34; works of,
230-1; in Willamette val., 231; at Sandwich Is., 234; report on Or., 236.
Farrar, W. H., of
const, convention,
ii. 423.
‘Fawn,’ ship,
wrecked, ii. 300.
Fay, James D., biog.,
i. 571; of assembly, 1862-5, ii. 638, 665; defeated for congress, 669;
senator, 1870, 671.
Fellows, A. M.,
enrolling officer, ii.
399.
Ferree, D. I., in
com’d of Klamaths, ii. 577.
Ferries, rights granted,
i. 440.
Ferry, Chas, of
anti-slavery party, ii.
359.
Feudalism among
fur-traders, i. 46-7. Fickas, John L., death of, ii. 370. Field, M. C., with
Stuart's hunting- party, i. 396.
Fields, Mr, biog., i.
637.
Fields, Calvin,
killed by Inds, ii. 371. Figueroa, gov. of Cal., i. 91, 97. Finances, state of,
1S54-5, ii. 355. Finlayson, I)., at Fort Vancouver, i.
34, 37.
‘Firefly,’ steam-tug,
wrecked, ii. 341. ‘Fi^gard,’ Eng. frigate, i. 499; officers of, 579.
Fisher, Mrs John,
biog., i. 630. Fishery, establish, on Columbia, 1840, 245.
Fiske, I)o, E. R., in
explor. exped., ii. 176.
Fikh, T. L. exped.
agtin»t Inds, ii. 464.
Fitzgerald, Maj.,
pursuit of Inds, ii. 373, 374.
Fitzhugh, Solomon, of
const, convention, ii. 423; senator, 1860-3, 452,
63S.
Fitzhugh's mill,
meeting at, of emig. of 1843, i. 393.
Fitzpatrick, trader,
missionaries with,
i. 107, 127; with White’s party,
259, 260.
Five Crows, Cayuse
chief, i. 279, 280; outrages by, 662-3.
Flanagan, Pat., in
explor. exped., ii. 170; settles on Coos bay, 334.
Flatheads, at St
Louis, i. 54; mission, 65-6; missionaries limong, 137; K. C. influence with,
322-3.
Fleming, John,
printer, biog., i. 575; signs memorial, ii. 127.
Fletcher, F., with
Farnham’s exped.,
227, 237.
Flint, A. C., founds
Winchester, ii.
183.
Floods of 1861-2, ii.
482-5.
Flour, hist, of
manufacture, ii. 729.
Foisy, M. G-., biog.,
i. 407.
Foley, Dr, settler at
Coos bay, ii. 334.
Fontenelle, trader,
missionaries with,
i. 106-8.
‘Forager,’ ship,
seizure of, ii. 107.
Ford family, settlers
aud biog., i. 413.
Ford, Nathaniel,
leader of party, i.450; biog., 469; supreme judge, 496; co’ty treasurer, 612;
of ter. council, 1849, 1S56-9, ii. 71, 417, 429, 434; of H. of Sept., 1851-5,
158, 349; on penitentiary board, 298; senator, 1866
8, 666, 668.
Ford, Nineveh, first
to arrive at Dalles,
i. 408.
Ford, Mrs It. A.,
biog., i. 636.
Ford, Sidney S.,
biog., i. 527.
Fordyce, A. G., n
Ind. exped., ii. 313; claim of, 321.
‘ Forrest, ’ brig,
ii. 48.
Forsyth, J., appoints
U. R. agent, i. 100.
Fort Boise, established,
i. 14; ii. 500; Farnham’s exped. at, i. 229; abandoned, ii. 112; massacre
near, 343; military post, 494.
Fort Canby, erection
of, ii. 511.
Fort Colville,
description, i. 14; missionary at, 1S39, 318-19.
Fort Deposit, named,
i. 521.
Fort George,
description, i. 11; trading post, 29.
Fort Gilliam, named,
i. 703.
Fort Hall,
established, i. 14; missionaries at, ,62; built, 63; Farnham exped. at, 228-9;
immigrants at, 451; abandoned, ii. 112.
Fort Klamath,
constructed, ii. 495; Modoc prisoners at, 634.
Fort Laramie, immigraub supplies, i. 461.
Fo/t Leavenworth,
military pest, i.
Fort Lee, named, i.
703; peace com- sioners at, 706; garrisoned, 737.
Fort Nisqually,
appearance, i. 11.
Fort O’Kanagan,
situation, i. 13; Blanchet at, 310-17; abandoned, ii. .112.
Fort Stevens,
erection of, ii. 511
Fort Umpqua, 1840, i.
194; abandoned, ij. 111.
Fort Vancouver,
description, i. 6-11; life at, 7-1 lj school, 11; agris. at, 8-9, 13-14;
missionaries at, 16, 18, 184; importance of, 26; established, 29; society at,
26-28, 42; physicians at, 34- 35; arrival of brigade, 46; chief trader’s
caravan, 49; Sunday at, 123; Farnham at, 230; mills, 234; Intl. outrages, 268;
mass celebrated, 317; fortified, 446-7; threatened capture, 681-2; military
post, ii. 85, 90; abondoned, 112; iaild claims, 279.
Fort Walla Walla,
description, i. 1213; missionary at, 318; Bishops see, 327; army at, 715;
abandoned, ii. 112.
Fort William, built,
i. 15; abandoned, 98.
Forts, life at, i.
7-8; in Or. 1834, 12.
Foster, Philip, mem. P. L. L. C., i. 297; grievances, 480.
Foster, Capt. S. A.,
act A. A. G. Columbia dep’t, ii. 531.
Fowler, Capt., on
Columbia, i. 188.
Fowler, W. W., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255; Alcalde, 325.
Fowler, William,
encourages emigration 1843, i. 399.
Fox, C. E., founds
town, ii. 252.
Framboise, M. la,
nurses Kelley, i. 90; tiail of, 147.
Francis, Simeon,
paymaster of a’•my, biog., ii. 458.
Franklin, family
outraged, i. 345.
Franklin
Advertiser, newspaper, ii.
438. _
Frazer, Abner,
deposition about Cal.,
i. 552
Freeman, James,
contractor for surveys, ii. 269.
Free Press,
newspaper, suspended, ii.
Fremont, Lieut,
exped., i. 379, 41920.
French Prairie, i.
71-3; convent school at, 325.
French Canadians, as
settlers, i. 1516, 66, 73-4; in Willamette Val., 66, 70-3; character, 235.
French settlers,
feeling toward gov’t 3842. i. 298-9.
Friends of Oregon,
action in regard to Or., i. 254.
Fritz, trouble caused
by, ii. 579-80.
Frost, Rev. J. H.,
missionary, i. 177; at Clatsop miss., 185-8.
Frost, Mrs,
missionary, i. 177; at Clatsop miss., 185-8.
Fruit, market for,
ii. 257-8.
Fry, I. B.. adj in
Hathaway’s force, ii. 70; of O. R. R. N. Co., 704.
Fudge, I. M., killed
on the ‘Gazelle,’ ii. 340.
Fulkerson, I. M., of
H. of Rep., 1852, ii. 296; of council, 1S53-6, 323, 349, 413; college trustee,
684.
Fulkerson, John T.,
biog. of, ii. 714.
Fuller, David, killed
on the ‘Gazelle,’ ii. 340.
Fulton, James, biog.
and bibliog., i. 634; of assembly, ii. 671.
Fur-traders in
Oregon, 1834, i. 6-17; life at forts, 7-8, 42; hospitality, 910; religion,
10-11, 62; Ind. wives of, 27-8; brigade, 46; cravan, 47
G
Gaets, Father,
arrives, 1847, i. 326.
Gage, Joseph, associate justice, i. 450.
Gagnier, at Fort Umpqua, i. 193-5.
Gagnier, Mrs, with
missionaries, i.
195-6.
Gaines, John P.,
app’t’d gov’r, ii. 139; administration and offl acts of, 1850-2, 139-73; biog.,
169; Ind. cominis., off l acts of, 208, 228-32; charges against, 301-2.
Gallagher, Lieut I.
H., corn’d at Fort Lopwai, ii. 531.
Galvin, John, in Ind.
exped., ii. 240.
Gamble, James,
established Port Orford, ii. 193.
Gantt, E. E., capture
of, ii. 548.
Gantt, Capt. John,
conducts emigrants, i. 395, 400.
‘Ganymede,’ ship, i.
38, 84.
Gardapie, Baptiste, rescues immigrants, i. 564.
Gardiner, Charles,
injured on the ‘ Gazelle, * ii. 340.
Gardipie, J. B.,
exploring party, i.
Garrison, A. E.,
biog., i. 572. Garrison, E., Methodist preacher, i.
397; ii. 677.
Garrison, J. M.,
legislator, 1845, i. 472; explor. party, 1846, 532; capt. of co., 703; of
council, 1851-2, ii. 161, 296; Ind. agent, 312.
Garrison, Margaret,
biog., i. 422. Garrison, Margaret Herron, biog., i.
415. ■ - .
Garry, Spokane chief,
character, i. 339-40.
Gary, Rev. Geo., voy.
to Or., i. 39; supersedes Lee, 218, 221; miss, work, 223-4; assists Thornton,
621; supt of miss., ii. 677.
Goskell, A. P., of
Coos Bay Co., ii 332.
Gassett, C. C.,
murder of, ii. 521. Gaston, Joseph, acts in Og. Cent. R.R.
affairs, ii. 696-703;
biog., 703-4. Gay, Geo., escapes from Inds, i. 96-7; with cattle co., 142, 147;
kills Inds, 148; mem. of col govt, 301; left for CaL, ii. 47.
Gay, Rich., drowned,
ii. 396. ‘Gazelle,’ steamer, explosion on, ii. 340.
Gazzoli, Father,
arrives in 1847, i. 326.
Geary, Edw., trustee
of Or. academy, ii. 167; supt Ind. affairs, 461; Presb. minister, 681; school
trustee, 682; of Or. Cent. R. Co., 698.
Geer, Frederick W.,
biog., i. 572* Geer, G., Or. pioneer, illicit liquor traffic, i. 273.
Geer, Joseph Carey,
biog., 1. 637;
maj. of militia, ii.
325.
Geer, Ralph C.,
biog., i. 637; of state house board, ii. 146; nursery of, 257; of H. of Rep.,
1854 5, 349, R. R. commis’r, 696.
Geiger, abandons
Dalles, accompanies White, 1842, i. 268; tour, 342. Geisell, John, killed by
Inds, ii. 395. ‘General Lane,’ ship, ii. 4S, 49. ‘General Warren,’ steamer,
wrecked, ii. 203-4, 341.
George, M. C., elected
to congress, ii. 675.
Gervais, Jos.,
activity in govt formation, i. 300-1; meets R. C. priests, 317; explor. party,
532.
Gervais, Zavier,
exploring party, i. 532.
Gibbs, A. C., revised
Or. laws, ii. 150; att'y, 15$; biog.,' 181-2; of II. of Rep., 1852, 1S60, 296,
452; collector, 309; commis. to settle claims. 321; governor, off’l acts, 509,
637, G38, 644; aspirant for U. S. senate, Cu7, death of, 703.
Gibbs, Geo., deputy
collector at Astoria, ii. 81, 104; biog., 104.
Gibbs, Joan, m Ind.
exped., killed, ii. 313.
Gilbert, Isaac N., biog., i. 4G9. QLllori, Col A. C., assumes corn’d,
ii.
595; acts in Modoc
war, GOG-23. Gillespie, John, killed, ii. 383.
Gilliam co’ty, hist,
of, ii. 711.
Gilliam. Cornelius,
gen. of immigrants,
i. 449; biog., 449, 725; buffalo hunting,
450; bombast, 457, 681-2; ex- plor. party, 531, 507; supt of postal, 614; cnl
com’d’t, G7G; speech to army, 708; death, 725. '
Gilliland, Isaac,
biog., i. 647.
Gilmore, Matthew,
member prov.
govt, 1844, i. 427,
431.
Gilmore, S. M., supports
Gov. Lane,
ii. 93; of H. of llep., 1850, 1S60, 143, 452;-
biog., 143; delegate to convention, 418.
Gilpin, Major, life
in Or., i. 223; with Fremont, 420.
Glasgow, Thos W., at
indignation meeting, ii. 1G2.
Gleason, Sam’l, in
Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Glover, William,
biog., i. 636. Godwin, Charles, wounded, ii. 383. Goff, David, biog., i. 544;
explor. party, 544; leaves for Ft Hall, 5512; guides immigrants, 558.
Goffe, T. A., mention
of, ii. 705.
Gold disc, in Cal.,
ii. 42, 43; disc, of, 1850-2,174-204, searches for,478-80. Gold epoch,
decadence ot, ii. 337-8.
‘ Gold-hunter, ’
steamer, ii. 705. Goldsborough, L. M„ in survey exped., ii. 248.
Goldsby, John,
wounded, ii. 383. Good, D. H., biog., i. 270.
Goodhue, Samuel,
exploring party, 184G, i. 544; biog., 544.
Goodrich, C. L.,
purchases Or. Spectator, 1854, discontinued, i. 575. Goodwyn, Thos Jefferson,
biog. of, ii.
714.
Goodyear, M., with
missionaries, i. 127.
Gordon, John, writes
McLoughlin, i. 497.
Gordon, FTarvey,
nominated state printer, biog., ii. G37.
Government,
provisional, 1843, i. 2S0- 1; organization, 292-314; election of officers, 293;
expenses of, 443; seat proposals, 536.
Governor,
salary, i. 432; power, 476
7. '
Gracie, Lieut Arch.,
at Ind. council, ii. 362.
Graham, David, attacked
by Inds, ii. 523.
Grammar, Xez Perce,
i. 335.
Grande Hondo,
emigrants arrive, i. 401; military reservation, ii. 397.
Grant co’ty, hist,
of, ii. 711.
Grant, Jas, at Fort
Hall, i. 42, 261.
Grasshoppers,
destruction by, ii. 342.
Grave creek, fight
at, ii. 381-3.
Graves, S. C., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255.
Gray, James, del. to
convention, 1857, ii. 418.
Gray, Thomas, death
of, ii. 370.
Gray, W. H., names
Columbia river,
i. 24; missionary, 126; journey to Ft
Vancouver, 120-35; returns east, 13G; attacked by Inds, 130; on the Dalles
miss., 163-4; builds Or. institute, 203; oppose:! White, 2G4; hist. Or.,
301-2; see. of Champoeg, convention, 303; leg. com., 1S42, 304; deserts
Whitman, 340, 343; legislator, 1745, 472, 481, 488; returns to Astoria, 5S4; residence,
588; left for Cal., 1848, ii. 47.
Great Britain, blows
at interests, 1843,
i. 313; occupation Col R., 363; jurisdiction,
366, claim disputed, 3834; treatment of U. S., 597.
Green, Ool, actions
in Modoc war, ii. 573-629.
Green, J.,
ship-bmlding, 247.
Greenback question,
ii. 640-3.
Greenhow, on term
Oregon, i. 24.
Greenwo d, Win,
biog., i. 753; senator, 1862-5, ii. 638, 005.
Greer, 1. B.,
nominated state treasurer, ii. G38.
Gregory k Co.,
express co. of. ii. 339.
Gregory, XVI., Pope,
Or. created to ai. apostolic vicariate, Dec. 1843,
i. 320.
Grey, Capt. Thomas,
comd at S. Juan Island, ii. 432.
Gritfin, Buford B., biog., i. 752.
Griffin, Rev. J. S.,
missionary, i.
238-9,
244; ineligiblo for gov’r, 305; ed first paper, 335.
Griffith, Elisha,
biog. i. 529.
781
Griffith, Elizabeth,
biog., i. S'_’9.
Grim, I. W., biog.,
i. 030; of H. of rep. ii. 72; senator, 1858-65, 432,
452, 638, G65; vice-presdt Pion. Soc., 693.
Grist mills,
location-owners, ii. 25.
Grover, L. F., biog.,
ii. 149; pros- attomey, 298; university trustee, 299; ter. auditor, 30l3; in
Ind. ex- pedt., 313; of H. of rep., 1853-7, 323, 413, 417; of constitutional
convention, 423; elected to congress,
1858, 431; takes seat, 441; character, 444: elected
Gov., 670; U. S. lenator, 673.
Grubb, Sam’l, in
Indian expedt., ii. 313; claim of, 321.
Hacher, Isaac,
settler at Coos hay, ii. 334; of H. of rep., 1864-5, 665.
Hackleman, command*
immigrant co.,
1845, i. 509.
If agar ilino, R. B.,
in Ind. exped., ii. 313.
Haines, I. D., biog.,
ii. 81
Half-breeds, causes
dissatisfaction, i.
651-3.
Hall, E. C„ killed,
ii. 434.
Hall, Lawrence,
biog., i. 528; mem. of leg., 604; on coin’t. to frame memorial, 006; reaches
Walla Walla, 661; of council, 1S50-2; ii.
142, 158, 290.
Hall, Reason B.,
biog., i. 569.
Halleok, (Jen.,
visits Or., ii. 525, 526.
‘ Hamilton,1
ship, i. 154.
Hamilton, Edw., torr.
sec’y, ii. 139.
Hamilton, W., killing
of, ii. 155.
Hamlin, Nathaniel,
biog., i. 752.
Hammond, Brev.-capt.
D. P., in survey expedt., ii. 190.
Hanchett, W. H., of
road co., ii. 652.
Hancock, Samuel,
biog. & bibliog.,
i. 509; left for Cal. ii. 47.
Hanna, I. A., Presb.
minister, ii.
681.
Hannah, Adolph B., of
H. of rep., ISTiS-O, ii. 432-4; U.
S. marshal, 443; in confed. service, 456.
Hannon, George,
biog., i. 529
llarboss,
appropriations for, ii. 300.
Hardin, John R., of
H. of rep., 1852, u. 296; killed by J nils., 313; claim of, 321; alcalde, 325.
Harming, Benj. P, of
H. of rep., 1850-2, 1858, 1S60, ii. 142, 296, 432, 452: biog., 143; defends W. Ken
dall, 150; chief
clerk of house, 163; university trustee, 299; U. S. att’y, 309; U. fc>.
senator, 639.
Harney, Gen., mil.
administration of, ii. 461-8.
Harper, Andrus,
biog., i. 572.
‘ Harpooner,' ship,
ii. 48, 70, 103. Harris, Mrs, fight with Inds., ii. 373, Harris, Geo. W.,
k.lled by Inds, ii. 373.
Harris, Isaac, warns
Fairchild, ii. 579.
Harris, Moses,
assists emigrants, i. 315, 450, 504; with White, 484; explor. party, 1846, 532,
544; biog., 545; leaves Ft Hall, 551-2. Harrison, A. M., in survey expedt, ii.
249.
Harrison, Hugh,
biog., i. 035.
Hart, Thomas, biog,,
i. 530.
Hartness, McDonald,
killed, ii. 403. Hasbrouck. in Modoc war, ii. 024-8. ■Ilassaloe,’
steamer, ii. 480.
Hastings, L. W.,
leader of party, i. 258—67; disagreements with, 258; escapes Ind., 200; goes to
Cal., 266-7; character and bibliog., 267; persuades immigrants to Cal., 552.
Hatch, Peter H., pion. ’43, i. 422; signs memorial, ii. 127; candidate for
legislature, 437.
Hathaway, Brev.-Maj.,
in comd. of artillery, ii. 69.
Hathaway, Felix, at
Willametta Falls, i. 204; ship-building, 247; prov. gov’t meets at house of,
428. Haun, Mr, biog., i. 637.
Hauxhurst, Webley,
cattle expedt.,
i. 142; assaulted, 444; university trustee,
ii. 299.
Hawaiian Islands,
trade, i. 371. Hawkins, Lt, military force of, ii.
68, 69.
Hawkins, Henry,
biog., i. 527. Hawks, Thomas, drowned, ii. 341. Hays, Mrs Rebecca, at Waulatpu,
L 647; n rdered, 600.
Hazard, W., early
settler, ii. 252. Headrieh, Samuel, biog., i. 632. Hearn, F. G., visit of, ii.
175.
Heber, Fred, in Ind. expedt., ii. 313. Hedden, Cyrus, in
explor. expedt., ii. 197.
Hedding, Bishop,
missionary meeting,
i. 59.
Hedding, Eliiah, son
of Peupeuinox- mox, i. 279; murder of, 2S0-7. Hedges, A. F., of legislature,
1849,
ii. 59; of H of rep., 1858-9, 432, 434;
director 0. C. R. 11., 699.
Heinrich, Peter,
death of, ii. 370. Helm, L. S., col of militia, ii. 325. Helm, Wm, Mcth.
preacher, ii. 677. Hembree, A. J., mem. of leg., i. 604; ii. 58, 59; of H. of
rep., 1850-5J ii. 72, 158, 349; supports Gov. Lane, 93; trustee of Or. Academy,
167. Hendershott, James, of H. of rep., 1866, ii. 666; senator, 1868-70, 668,
671.
Hendershott, S., of
court convention, ii. 423.
Henderson, I. H. D.,
candidate for legis., ii. 337; elected to congress, 666; director 0. C. R. R.,
699. Henderson, Rob’t, biog., ii. 144. Hendrick, Sami, killed by Inds, ii. 395.
Hendricks, T. M.,
biog., i. 753. Hennessey, Wm, death of, ii. 370.
‘
Henry,’brig, i. 414, 679-80; ii. 24, 43, 48. ,
Henry, A. G., Ind.
agent, ii. 207; of H. of rep., 1854-5, 349.
Hensaker, T. H.,
mill-owner, ii. 50. Hereford, Capt., of the ‘Gazelle, * ii.340. Herman,
congressman, ii. 762.
Herron, Daniel,
discoverers gold, i. 512.
Hibbler, joins Cal.
exped., i. 679. Hickley, Mrs, at Willamette mission,
i. 157-8.
Hieklin, H. H., of anti-slavery
party,
ii. 359; del. to convention, 418. Hieklin,
John L., biog., i. 753. Hieklin, W. C., of anti-slavery party,
ii. 359.
Higgins, II., judge,
i. 496.
Highlands,
settlement, i. 463.
Hill,
Capt. B. H., at Astoria, ii. 69. Hill, David, leg. com. 1842, i. 304, 312; mem.
prov. govt, 1844, 427, 431; legislator, 473, 481; postmaster, 614; of H. of
rep., 1848-9, ii. 58, 59, 72. "
Hill, Isaac, attack
on Inds, ii. 313. Hill, Ryland D., murder of, ii. 156. Hinckley, Capt, on
Columbia river, i. 154; at Willamette miss., 157-8; marriage, 158.
Hind, E., in
immigrant party, ii. 463. Hinderwell, R. O., Capt., arrest of, ii. 104-7.
Hines, Rev. G.,
missionary, i. 177; among the Umpquas, 193-6; on school com., 201; trustee Or.
institute, 202; life of, 225; opposes White, 264; oration at opening of leg.,
306; Meth. minister, ii. 677.
Hines, H. K.., Meth.
minister, ii. 677.
Hines, Mrs H. K.,
missionary, i. 177;
teacher, ii. 678.
Hinman, Alanson, in
charge of Dalles, i. 644, 667; biog. 607; of H. of rep., 1866, 666; collector,
669. Hinsnaw, Isaac, biog., i. 529.
Hinton, Capt., at
Port Boise, ii. 519. Hirsch, Edward, state treas., ii. 760. Hitchcock, Gen., in
Oregon, ii. 233. Hobart, Lieut Charles, movements of, ii. 514.
Hobson, Richard,
biog., i. 421. Hodges, Capt. H. C., A. G. M. Columbia dep’t, ii. 531.
Hodges, Jesse Monroe,
biog., i. 628-9. Hodgkins, Wm, in Ind. exped,, wounded, ii. 313.
Hoecken, Adrian, R.
C. priest, i. 325; with hunting party, 396; discovers pass, 398.
Hoffman, Mr, at
Waulatpu, i. 648. Holbrook, Amory, att’y in Ind. trial, ii. 96; signs memorial,
127; of H. of rep., 1860, 452; nominated U. S. senator, 639.
Holcomb, Gay C.,
killed by Inds, ii, 395.
Holden, Horace, biog.
and bibliog., i. 467. _
Holden, Mrs Horace,
presents flag to Or. rangers, i. 583.
Holderness, S. M.,
mem. P. L. L. C.,
i. 297; lights duel, 492; sec. of State
1849, ii. 59.
Holgate, John C.,
biog., i. 630. Holladay, Ben, acts in Or. R. R. affairs, ii. 700-4; mention
of, 746. Holland, David, settler at Coos bay,
ii. 334. v
Holland, Francis S., biog., i. 530. Holland, 1. P., in explor. exped., ii,
i97. "
Holman, Dillard, in
Ind. exped., ii. 224.
Holman, John, biog.,
i. 421.
Holman, Jos., with
Farnhams’exped.,
i. 227, 237; of legislature, 308; university
trustee, ii. 299; R. R. com- mis’r, 696.
Holmes, Leander, del
to convention,
ii. 418, 446; nominated state sec., 43L _
Holmes, William,
death, i. 421. Holmes, Wm, sheriff, i. 496; presents liberty-pole, 583; serg’t
at arms of
H., ii.
59, 72, 143; signs memorial, 127; R. R. commis’r, 696
Holt, Thomas, explor.
party, 532;
assists immigrants,
564.
Holton, I). S., of H.
of rep., 1858-9, ii. 432, 434; surgeon gen., 438; senator, 1860-3, 452, 638.
Holy Heart of Mary,
mission founded,
i. 327.
Home, Capt., drowning
of, i. 53. Home, Capt. D., arrives Or. on Beaver, i. 123.
‘Honolulu/ ship, ii.
42.
Hooker, Jim, in Modoc
war, ii. 575-6, 587, 592, 599, 606, 909-12; surrenders, 627; confession, 632.
Hooker, Col Joseph,
completed road, biog., ii. 306; in union army, 456. Hooker, S. C., murder of, ii.
156. Horn, A., death, i. 261.
Horse Creek, military
post, i. 376. Hospital, at F. Vancouver, i. 8; Willamette miss, 162; Chemeketa
plains, 193, 197.
Hot Creek Inds,
attempt removal of,
ii. 578-80.
Houck, I. L., in
immigrant party
1859, ii. 463.
Hoult, E., of court
convention, ii. 423.
Houston, Robert,
biog., i. 635. Hovey, A. G., del to rep. convention, ii. 446; senator, 1862-5,
638, 665. Howard, Cynthia, biog., i. 572. Howard, John, biog., i. 572.
Howard, Zenas, warns
Fairchild, ii. 579.
Howe, Lieut Albion,
in Modoc war, killed, ii. 616-22; biog., 624.
Howe, E. W., killed
by Inds, ii. 395. Howe, Sam’l I>., com. of Island Co., ii. 299.
Howell, John, biog.,
i. 421.
Howell, Jonathan,
biog. of, ii. 714. Howell, Morris, in Ind. exped., ii. 313.
Howison, Neil M.,
commands Shark,
i. 584; examines country, 586-8. Howison’s
Rep’t, comments, i. 585. Hoyt, family outraged i. 645.
Hoyt, Francis S.,
trustee of university, ii. 299; librarian, 615; Meth. preacher, 677.
Hubbard, kills
Thornburg, i. 95. Hubbard, Charles, biog., i. 635. Hubbard, M., established
Port Orford,
ii. 193.
Hubbard, Thos. J.,
leader cattle co.,
i. 179; mem. for col. gov’t, 301; leg. com.,
1842, 304.
Huber, N., clerk of
council, ii. 434.
Hudson Bay Co., Ind.
wives among,
i. 9-10, 26-28; servants of, 15, 70;
treatment of Inds, 36; character of ’officers, 42; law in Or. under, 4850,
235; monopoly in cattle, 140; lease of Russ, ter., 232, 234; charges against,
245; post at S. F., 250-1; attempt to settle Or., 252; attitude to immigrants,
261; Whites transaction with, 276; treatment of immigrants, 409-10; delicate
position, 447; unite writh Americans, 493-6; dissuading Inds., 540;
celebrate Christmas, 578; Whitman’s massacre, 666-8; force sent to Walla
Walla, 673^1; embarrassimg position, 6S1-2; accused of conspiring with Inds,
697-9; decadence of business, ii. 103; sales of, 189-10; forts abandoned, iii;
claims of, 276- SL
Hudson, Miss, murder
of, ii. 377.
Hudspeath, J. M.,
witness, land dispute, i. 206.
Hull, Joseph,
promotor of masonry,
ii. 30.
Humboldt, on term
Oregon, i. 23-4.
Humboldt river,
discovered, i. 32.
Humphries, Capt., on
Columbia, i. 215.
Humpy Jerry, of Capt.
Jack’s band, ii. 577.
Hunsaker, Joseph,
biog., i. 633.
Hunt, Capt. I. C., at
Camp Lyon, ii. 519, 532.
Hunt, J oseph, killed
on the 4 Gazelle, * ii. 340.
Huntington, I. W. P.,
representative
1860, ii. 452; sup’t Ind. affairs, 670.
‘ Huntress,’ ship,
ii. 48.
Hurford, Susanna,
biog., i. 628.
Idles, John, killed
by Inds, ii. 395.
Illutin, Nez Perce,
chief, speech at council, May 1843, i. 279.
Immigants, attempt to
prohibit negro,
i. 287; refuse good drafts, 2S8; Whitman’s
views, 341-2; sufferings, 446 -67; 508-41, 552-67; 623-38;^ii. 174 -5; health
and condition, i. 751; effects on, of gold discovery, ii. 63-5; protection of,
303-4; increase of, in 1859, ii. 465; in 1862-3, 493-5.
Immigration society,
hist, of, ii. 694-5.
Immigration to Cal.,
efforts of Or. people to prevent, i. 552.
Imports, value,
185-23, ii. 25S.
Independent gov’t,
steps towards. L 411-3.
Indiana, petition from,
i. 374-5.
Indian Agent, White’s
endeavor to obtain appointment, salary, i. 254-5.
Indiani, attitude to
H H Co., i. 36; murders by, i. it, 95-7. 136, 148-9, 179, ii. 92-5; demand
missionaries,
i. 54-5; at missions, 81 -3, 86-9; diseases
among, 81-3, 196-201; disturbances by, 95, 162, 2S5-6, 412, 703-6, ii. 66-70,
205-32; 330- ’, 342 -4, 369-96; cause of dissatisfaction, 650; accusation
against Whitman,
652-3;
threatened alliance, 684, 728 -9; execution of, ii. 80, 93-100, 636; treaties
with, 359-68; grand council, 362-7; war* with, 1S55-6, 36996; extermination
of, 397-412; conduct on reservation, 489; Shoshone war, 1866-68, 512 -54;
enlisted to light Inds, 530-1; Modoc war, 1864 -73,556-636; school, hist, of,
690.
Indian school, hist,
of, ii 690.
Indian wives, among H
35 Co., i. 9-10, 26-28, 47; character, 27.
Ingalls, David C.,
biog., i. 529.
Inyard,
John, biog., i. 448; left for Cal., ii. 47. _
Iowa, liquor law
applied in Oregun,
1844. i. 281.
■Iris,’
steamer, ii. 481.
Iriquois, as’
missionaries, i 16.
Iron manufactures,
hist, of, ii. 733-5.
Irwin, D., claim of,
ii. 321; of antislavery party, 359.
‘Isabella’, ship,
wrecked, i. 41.
Isaiachalahis. murder
by, ii. 94; trial and execution, 96-i0o
Ishalhal, brutality
towards Mrs Whitman, i. 600.
Island Milling Co.,
formed, i. 206-7; work, i. 211.
Ison, S., of Senate,
1866-8; ii. 666-8.
Ives, Wm, contractor
for surveys, ii. 269.
Iwality, district
boundary, i. 310.
‘Jackson,’ ship,
wrecked, ii. 300.
Jackson co’tj,
organized, ii. 166; created, 553; hist, of, 712.
Jackson creek, gold
discovered, ii. 186.
Jackson, Capt. James,
Coin’d. atFort Klamath, ii. 563; in Modoc war, 574, 622, 028.
Jackson, Pres.,
interested in colray, i 369.
Jackson, John R.,
biog., i. 463.
Jacksonville, co’ty
seat, ii. 299; Ind. attack of, 312.
Jacob, Nez Perce
chief, i. 665; counsels, Mrs Spaulding, i. 665-6.
Jacobs, 0., candidate
for Legis,, ii. 337; nominated U. S. Senator, 6S9.
Jaggar, I, E.,
perilous adventure of, ii. 484.
J;imes, John D.,
perilous adventure of, ii. 484.
James, Capt. L. L.,
Corn’d at Fort Stevens, ii., 532.
‘James, P. Flint',
steamer, ii. 480.
Jamieson, Archibald,
fate of, ii. 340.
Jamieson, Arthur,
fate of, ii. 310.
‘Janet’, ship, ii.
48.
Japan, trade, i. 371
Jayol, J. F., arrives
in 1867, i. 326.
Jeffers, Joseph,
biog., i. 628,
Jeffries, John T.,
biog., i. 529.
Jenkins, Willis,
biog., i. 468.
Jennings, Capt. J.,
exped. of, ii. 522.
Jennison, Albert B.,
claim of, ii. 321.
Jessup, Thos, S., on
cost Mil. occ., i.
360.
Jesuit
mission, difficulty with priests,
l. 742. '
Jewett, John, biog.,
i. 656.
Jewitt, T. D., claim
of, ii. 32]
‘John Alleyne', schr,
ii. 258.
John Chief, actions
of, attacks troops, ii. 406- 9; surrender of, 410.
John Day mine,
discovery of, ii. 479; suffering at, 484.
Johnson, Miss Elvira,
arrives Or., i. 156; work at mission, i. 160; at Lapwai, 648.
Johnson II., chaplain
of house, ii., 72; school trustee, 78; signs memorial, 127; of anti-slavery
party, 359; promulgates rep. doct’ns, 418.
Johnson, J. W., Pres,
of University, ii. 690.
Johnson, James,
biog., i. 627; school trustee, ii. 685.
Johnson, Neill,
Presb. minister, ii. 682.
Johnson, Wm, views on
gov’t, i. 295; high sheriff. 1843, 297.
Johnson, W. Carey, of
anti-slavery party, ii. 359; promulgates rep. doct’ns, 418; nominated pros,
atty, 637; biog., 637-8; of Senate, 1866, 666.
‘.In Lane’, revenue
cutter, ii. 488.
Jones, John, explor.
party, i. 544; meets immigrants, 562.
Jones, J. K., killed
by Inds ii. 373.
Jones, J. W., in
immigrant party, 1859, ii. 463.
Jordan creek, acta of
Itids on, ii. 501. Jordan, M. M., killed, ii. 501.
J oseph, Chief, acts
at council, ii. 336 -5.
‘Jo5ephine’, brig,
ii. 48; wrecked, 191. Josephine Co’ty, established, ii. 415;
hist, of, 753-4.
Jourdan, with Farnh
am's exped., 227. ‘Joven Guipuzcoana’, bark, ii. 25. Judiciary, ways and means,
1842, i.
304; reorganization,
605.
Judicial diet's,
arranged, ii. 73-4, 164, 254; division of, 297; re-distributed, 308.
Judson L. H.,
missionary, i. 177; trustee Or. Institute, 202; death,
18S0, 225; magistrate, 304; legislature, 307;
mill-race, 440.
‘Juliet’, sehr,
wrecked, ii. 203. Juliopnlis, Red river, i. 315.
Jump Off Joe creek,
fight at, ii. 387.
K
Kaiser, I*. C.,
bibliog., i. 398.
Kaiser, T. D., Sec.
and Capt. Or. rangers, i. 283; leader immigrant arty, 393; biog. and bibliog.,
398; rst to arrive at Dalles, 408; mem. prov. gov’t, 428, 431.
Kalispe '.ms, mission
founded among,
i. 327.
Kamehameha, iii.
treaty with, i. '78. Kamiah, missionaries at, i. 137-8;
mission, 331-2.
Kamiak'n, Chief, acts
at council, ii. 364-5:
Kane, Paul, work, i.
599.
Kasas, execution of,
ii. 80.
‘Kate Heath’, brig,
ii. 180.
Kautz, Lt., at Fort
Orford, ii. 233; in exped., 313; fight with Inds, 374. Kearney, Bvt Maj. of
mounted rifles,
ii. 81; exped. against fnds, 225-32. Kcath,
F., killed by Inds, ii. 315. Keeler, G. W., Representative, 1860,
ii. 452.
R<*ane creek;
named, i. 546.
Keene, Granville,
killed by Inds, 371. Keene, Win, murder by, trial, ii. 156. Keintpoos, see
‘Capt. Jack.’
Kelley, Hall J.,
arrives, i. 17, 89; on tertn Oregon, 22-3; advocates miss, labors, 56;
prominence in settlement, 67-70; plan of city, 69; pur pose, 89; adventures,
89 90; bad report of, 91; relation to H. B. Co., 91 4, 99; leaves Or., 94; on
Or. question, 365; emigration scheme, 367; poverty of, 369.
Or.
II. SO
Kellogg, Orin, biog.,
i. 752.
Kellogg, Orrin,
biog., i. 528.
Kelly, Rev. Clinton,
biog., i. 752.
Kelly, with Famham’s
Or. exped.,
228.
Ki lly, James K ,
commissioner to prepare laws, ii. 150; in explor. exped., 176; biog., 182; of
council, 1853-7, 323, 349, 413, 417; of constitutional convent., 423; U. S.
att’y, 443; senator, 1860-3, 452, 638.
Kelly, John, at Cal.
mines, ii. 185; register of lands, 669.
Kelly, Wm, capt. of
Or. vols, ii. 49J; at Ft Vancouver, 532; in Modoc war, 585-9.
Kelsay, Col, in fight
at the Meadows, ii. 402.
Kelsay, John, of
const, convention, ii. 423.
Kendall, Thos
Simpson, biog., i. 530; of anti-slavery party, ii. 359; del. to convention,
418; school trustee,
682.
Kendall, Wm, murder
by, trial, ii.
155, 156.
Kenny, D. M., favors
new ter. scheme, ii. 255.
Kennedy, Ezekial, destitute, i. 546; biog., 571.
Kennedy, I., in Ind.
exped., ii. 313.
Keplin, Capt., on Or.
coast, i. S4.
Kesner, Chas, in
Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Eester, I., murder
of, ii. 523.
Keyes, Morgan, biog.,
i. 528-9.
Keyes, Robert C.,
deposition about Cal., i. 552.
Kiama-mmpkin. murder
by, ii. 94; trial and execution, 96-11)0.
Kilborne, R. L., with
Farnham’s exped. , i. 227, 237; ship-building, 247.
Kilborne, Wm, on
Columbia, i. 414; treasurer, 606; ii. 63; of Or. Exchange Co., 54; signs
memorial, 127.
Killin, John, biog.,
i. 531.
Kimball, Mr and Mrs,
at Waiilatpu,
i. 647.
Kincaid, R. H.,
author of peace commis., ii. 595.
King, Alex., exped.
of, .. 305.
King, T. Butler,
established Port Orford, ii. 193.
King, W. M., of II.
of Rep.. 1850-1,
1857-8,
ii. 142, 161, 429; biog., 143; notary, 298; port surveyor, 309.
Kingsley, Calvin S.,
trustee of university, ii. 299; Meth. preacher, 677.
Kinney, A., arrival
of, ii. 139.
Kinney, (Tiarles,
actions in ‘Albion ’ affair ii 10.5, 100.
K:.rney, 11. C.,
biog., i. 633; of H. of Rep., ii. 72, 158; trustee of Or. academy, 1G8; of
const, conv, 423.
Kinsey, T. S., biog.,
i. 036.
Kip, Lieut Lawrence,
at Ind. council, ii. 362; works of, 302, 303.
Kirkpatrick, I. M.,
in corn’d at Fort Orford, ii. 193; attacked by Inds, 194; of assembly, 429.
Kistler, Lieut A. C.,
at Camp Watson, ii. 532.
Klamath co’ty, hist,
of, ii. 714.
Klaiuaths, the,
treaty with, ii. 506; advancement of, 562; in Modoc war, 577-89.
Kl'ketats,
missionaries among, i. 181; insolence of, ii. 67.
Kline, Jacob, on
grand jury, ii. 354.
Klnkamas, murder, by,
ii. 94; trial and execution, 96 100.
Knapp, Capt. 0. C.,
Ind. agent, ii. 559; relieved, 503.
Knapp, Rich. B.,
biog. of, ii. 719.
Knaust, Charles,
killed on the 1 Gazelle, ’ ii. 340.
Knighton, H. M.,
biog., i. 576.
Knott, A. I., in
Caruther’s land affair, ii. 288.
Knox, Samuel, in
survey exped., ii. 248.
Kune, Mrs,
missionary, i. 177; at Clatsop miss., 187
Kone, Rev. W. W.,
missionary, i. 177; at Clatsop miss., 1S5 7.
Kyle, Lieut I. G., in Modoc war, ii. 581-4.
L
Ladd, W. S., biog.
of, ii. 764.
Li Dow,
Geo., elected to congress, biog., ii. 075.
Lafayette, founders
of, ii. 251.
Laggett, Jonathan,
biog., i. 528.
Lake co’ty, hist, of,
ii. 715.
Lambert, David, del.
to convention,
1857, ii. 418.
Lambert, G. W., of
anti-slavery party, ii. 359.
Lamerick, John K.,
leader of exped. against Ind., ii. 241; elected, brig.- gen., 389; campaign of,
402-3; in confed. service, 456.
Lancaster, C.,
returns from Camp Columbia, i. 258; leaves for l!al., ii. 47; supreme iudge,
resigns, 63; mfm. of council, 158.
Land, laws relating
to, i. 311, 477-8; ii. 260 95.
Land claims, com.
1842, i. 304; disputes regard;ng, 459-60; confirmation asked, 607.
Land grants,
petitions f»r, i. 367; acreage to male adults, 374.
Lane co’ty,
established, ii. 150; militia of, 380; hist, of, 715.
Lane, Joseph,
governor, off’l actions,
1849-50,
ii. 66-100; resigns, 98; del. to congress, actions, 153-4, 206, 299 -310,
355-8, 419; exped. against Inds, 219- 22, 315-20; lieut-col of militia, 325; of
Coos Bay Co., 332; decrease of popularity, 439; aspires to presidency, 447;
disloyalty of, 455- 6; death, 456.
Lane, L. F., of
assembly, 1M54-5, ii. 665; elected to congress, 670.
Lane, Nathaniel,
biog., ii. 98; claim of, 321; enrolling officer, 390.
Lane, Richard,
jasticeof peace, i. 612; co’ty judge, biog., ii. 69.
Lapwai, miss, built,
i. 136; threatened attack on, 26S; Inds hostile to, 330; description of, 336 7;
abandoned, 341; assistance for, 345.
Laramie, discussion
as to site of military post, i. 376.
La Rocque, George,
biog., i. 636-7
Lashmutt,Van B. de,
mention, ii. 749.
Laughlin, Samuel,
biog., i. 635.
‘Lausanne,’ship, i.
171, 177-8, 182,
184, 197, 237, 254.
Lava beds, Ind. fight
at, ii. 539-45; Modoc war. 583- 027.
Laws under II. B.
Co., i. 47 -50, 235-6; requirements of, 292, 310-11; freedom, 307; compilation
of, ii. 149.
Lawrence, Hy., killed
by Inds, ii. 335.
Lawson, James S., in
survey exped., biog., ii. 249.
Lawyer, Nez Perce
chief, i. 133; shrewdness, 330; actions at council, ii. 364-5.
Leary, Lieut F . in
Modoc w ar, ii. 619.
Le Bas, arrives in 1847, i. 326.
Le Breton, Geo. W.,
with White, 1843,
i. 275; killed, 282-3; clerk, pub. recorder,
294; sec. at Champoeg convention, 303; clerk of court, 304; nomination, 312.
Leclaire, Guillaume, on Umatilla, i. 327-8; deacon, 654.
Lee, Barton, mem. P.
L. L. C., 1 297; justice of peace, 012; left for Cal.,
ii. 47.
Lee, Daniel,
character, i. 56 -8; mio- sionary, 00-5, 73; build-, miss., 78 80; visits
Hawaiian isl., 84; at Willamette miss., 154, 159, 230; at
the Dalles miss.,
163-6, 190, 242; meets Sutter, 165; marries, 182-3; at Clatsop miss., 185;
proselyting, 320; on Whitman, 343.
Lee, E. Trumrell, Presb. minister, ii. 681.
Lee, II. A. (x.,
character, i. 455; legislator, 1S45, 472, 474, 481, 493; editor, 575; com’il
Or. army, 730, 732; supt Ind. affairs, 730-2; resigns, ii.
62.
Lee, Ja.-on,
character, i. 56-8, 61-3, 214, 220 1; miss, trip to Or., 59-65, 73; builds
miss., 79-80; miss, work, 81, 100; relation to Kelley, 94; meets U. S. agent,
102; meets Parker, 113; receives Whitman's party, 135; Willamette cattle co.,
140-3; marries, 159; as a colonizer, 160-8, 184, 190-8, 201-18. 236; me. mnrial
to congress, 168-9, 172-7; goes east, 169-78, 183, 318-20; death of wife, 170; again
marries, 177, 183; censured, 183; supt of missions, 190: ii. 677; among the
Umpquas,
i. 192-6; quarrel with White, 1967; trustee
Or. institute, 201-2; dispute Willamette falls, 203; duplicity Or. city claim,
214-16; opposes Me- Loughlm, 215-18; superseded as supt, 218; death, 220; at
Willamette miss., 230; meets Wilkes, 246; on Or. question, 372.
Lee, Nicholas, biog.,
i. 753; school trustee, ii. 678.
Lee, Wilson, biog., i
571 2.
Leese, J. 1’., in
> F. bay, i. 144; Or. pioneer, 266.
Leggett, Thomas, co.
assessor, i. 612.
Legislature, first
meeting, i. 305; judiciary laws proposed, 306 10; proceedings, 427—i5, 680
-1; ii. 58- 63, 72-9, 141-72, 296 -8, 322-9, 349 54, 413-15, 417-18, 429 30,
436-8, 443
4, 452-4, 475, 637-76; oath, i 473; power,
475-6; act for raising army,, 680- 1; criticism on acts, ii. 54, 55; first
meeting; amendts., 1887, 762.
Leisler, James, claim
of, ii. 321.
Lemon, John, biog.,
i. 527.
Lennox, David, T..
biog., i. 421; school trustee, n. 684.
Leonard, shooting
scrape; ii. 37.
Leonard Sam'l, murder
of, ii. 523.
Leslie, Aurelia,
death, i. 200.
Leslie, Rev. I)., at
Willamette, miss.,
i. 161; on school com , 201; trustee Or.
Institute, 202; names Salem. 222; justice of peace, 236; chairman at public
meeting, 293; attempts
revival, 320;
chaplain of council, ii. 72; university trustee, 299; Meth. preacher, 677.
Leslie, Satira, marriage, death, i. 199 200.
‘L’Etoile du Martin,’brig, i. 326; ii. 48. Lewes, J. L.,
appearance, character,
i. 38.
Lewis, C. H., biog.
of, ii. 764-5. Lewis, co’ty, named, i. 493; created, 538; E. limits defined,
ii. 166. Lewis, II. C., of court convention, ii 423.
Lewis, James,
settler, i. 458.
Lewis, Joe, informs
Indians of conspiracy to poison, i. 652-3.
Lewis, W. B., in
fight with Inds, ii.
377-8; capt. of vols,
379.
Lewiston, founding of
ii. 482. Libraries, hist, of, ii. 694.
Light Houses, ii.
248.
Limerick, L.. del. to
convention 1857,
ii. 418.
Lincoln, Abraham,
offered governorship, declined, ii. 139.
Lindsay, J. J.,
biog., i. 754. Linenberger, David, biog., i. 753. Linn city, named, i. 536;
co'ty seat, ii. 151; flood at, 483; hist, of, ii.
715, 716.
Linn co’ty, hist, of,
ii. 715-16.
Linn, Lew is F.,
presents Or. memor ial, i. 176; bills of, 217- 18, 372-81; on Or. question,
349; occupation Or. ter., 370; biog., 381.
Linnton, tamed, i.
415.
Linnville, Harrison,
leads immigrants,
i. 559; legislator, ii. 58; school fund
commis’r, 299; R. R. commis'r, 696. Lippineott, wounded, l. 561.
Liquor, laws
.’egarding, i. 249. 281, 437, 537-9; efforts to suppress traffic, ii. 37.
Literature, hist, of,
ii. 691-2.
Little, Anthony,
favors new ter.
scheme, ii. 255.
Little-Dalles,
shipwreck at Falls.
1838, i. 316.
Littlejohn, P. B.,
missionary, i. 23940, 244; with White, 268-9; drowning of son, 272; tour,
342; 'Llama, ship, i 143, 144, 201.
Lloyd, John, biog.,
i. 529.
Lloyd, W. W., biog.,
i. 529.
Loan, negotiation, i.
671; correspondence, i. 672-5.
Lean Commissioners,
petition people —amount obtained, difficulty ia obtaining cash, l. 675-6.
Locke, A. N., biog.,
i. 635.
Lockhart, F. G., of
Coos Bay co., ii. 332; of const, convent., 423; of H. of rep., 666, 671.
Locktrig, L., killed
by Inds, ii. 315.
Logan, David, att’y,
ii. 15S; of H. of rep., 349; of const, convent., 423; nominated for congress,
446; defeated, 669.
Long, J. E., sec. of
House, i. 129, 496; biog., 429; director Or. Printing assoc., 536.
Long, Sylvester,
drowned, ii. 396.
‘ Loo-Choo,’ ship,
wrecked, ii. 300.
Looking (ilass Chief,
act at council, ii. 364-5.
Looney, Miss,
presents flag to Or. rangers, i. 583.
Looney, Jesse, leader
immigrants, i. 394; death, 421; legislator, 604-5.
Lop-ears, term for
Oregon settlers, i. 19.
Lord, Corp. C.,
killed, ii. 424.
Loring, \V. W., Brev.
Col, coin’d of mounted rifles, ii. 81.
‘Loriot,’ brig., i
100-1, 140, 142-3,
154.
Lost river, named, i.
548.
‘ Lot Whitcomb, ’
steamer, hist, of, ii. 255.
Loughborough, John,
leaves emigration 1843, i. 397.
Louisiana Co.,
emigration, i. 369.
Louis Philippe, King
of France, grants money to Blanchet, i. 326.
Lovejoy, A. L.,
escapes Sioux, i. 260. overland journey 1842, 343; meets immigration, 398;
biog., 415; mem. prov. gov’t, 428; candidate for gov.,, 471-2; loan commisr,
671-6; elected adj. gen., 680; left for Cal., ii. 47; H. of rep., 58, 71, 349,
417, supreme judge, 63; speaker of House, 72; school trustee, 78; mem. of
council, 161, 296; postal agent, 309; of const, convent., 423; coinmig. gen.,
438; pension agent, 459; director Or. Cent. R. 11., 699; founded Portland, 717
Lovelady, Presley, in
Ind. exped., ii. 224.
Lovelin, Mr, kills
Indian, i. 561.
Lowe, Dan, killed on
the ‘ Gazelle,’ ii. 340.
Luce, H.
H., settler at Coos bay, ii. 331. '
Lucier, E., guard to
missionaries, i. 113; on gov’t com.. 297, 301; meets li. C. priests, 317.
Luckiamute, the,
treaty with, ii, 211.
Luders bay, named, i.
420.
Luelling, Henderson,
biog., i. 637.
Lugenbeel, Maj.,
com’d at Colville, ii. 488.
Lugur, F., leaves emigration 1843, i. 397.
Lumber, trade,i. 353;
ii. 726-9, 75S-9.
Lnpton, I. A., favors
new ter. scheme, li. 255; massacre by, 372; of II. of rep., 1855-6, 414; death,
414.
Lutheran church,
hist, of, 687-8.
Lyman, in explor.
exped., ii. 176.
Lyons, James, in
light at lava beds, killed, ii. 314.
M
Macey, Wm, exped. of,
ii. 305.
Mack, settler, bibliog., i. 423.
Mackenzie, map, i. 22.
Mackie, Peter, 1st
mate of 4 S. Roberts,’ii. 176.
Macleary, Donald,
biog. of, ii. 719.
Macomber, Lt G-eo., A. A. insp. gen. Columbia dept, ii.
531.
Madigan, It John, in
light at lava beds, killed, ii. 552, 544.
‘ Madonna,’ ship, i.
245; ii. 4S.
Magruder, E. B., biog., i. 469.
Magruder Theophilus,
associate judge, i. 450; biog., 469; of Or. Exchange co., ii. 54; sec. of
terr.,
63.
Maguire, Jerry,
biog., ii. 396.
Mahoney, Jeremiah,
murder of, ii.
156.
Mails, facilities
for, ii. 29-30; petitions for, 436.
Mail service, efforts
for in congress, ii. 186- 91; ocean, 302; appropriations for, 328.
‘ Maine, ’ whaler,
wrecked, ii. 24.
Major, Dan G.,
contract of, ii. 649.
‘ Maleck Adhel, ’
ship, ii. 248.
Malheur Mts,
hardships on, 1845, i. 512-14.
Malheur river, gold
discovered, i. 512.
Mallory, Rufus, of H.
of rep., 1862
3, ii. 636; elected to congress, biog., 669.
Mann, S. S., m
explor. exped., ii. 176; wreck master, 299; settler at Coos Bay, 334.
Manson, Donald, at Ft
George, i. 29; life as a fur trader, 10-1
Manufactures, hist
of, ii. 726-38.
Marion co’ty, raises
co., i. 702; hist, of. ii. 716-17.
Marine Gazette,
newspaper, i. 575.
Maps: forts in Or.,
1834, i. 12; Carver’s, 20; Cooke’s, 23; Mackenzie’s 22; Payne’s, 24; Parker’s
travels, 120; Clatsop country, 1S6; Umpqua river, 194; Rogue river and Umpqua
val., ii. 3S0; Idaho camps and forts, 513; E. Or. camps and forts, 510; Modoc
country, 500. Matherman, A., in Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Marks, John, biog.,
i. 627.
Marks, Wm, of
anti-slavery party, ii. 359; del. to convention, 418. Marple, P. B., of Coos
bay co., biog., ii. 331.
Marriages, in 1838,
i. 31S; laws relating to, 309, 430-7; in 1846-8, ii. 38-9.
Marshall, J. W.
discovers gold, ii. 42, 43.
Marshall, Maj. L. H.,
comd. of Ft Boise, ii. 519; exped., 520; defeat of, 521.
Martin, F. B., of H.
of rep., 1852, ii.
296; favors slavery,
422.
Martin, H., mem. for
Cal. govt arrived 1S40, i. 301.
Martin, Hy, exped.
of, ii. 479. Martin, James P., exploring party, i. 532.
Martin, Wm J., pilots
immigrants, i. 400; of H. of rep., 1848-9, 1853-4, ii. 58, 59, 323; col of
militia, 325; pursuit of Inds., 320; maj. of vols, 380.
Martin, William,
unfair treatment, i. 730.
‘Mary,’ steamer, ii.
480.
* Mary Dare, ’ ship, ii. 43; seizure of,
107. "
* Mary Ellen/ brig, ii. 48.
‘Maryland/ ship, i.
180, 244.
* Mary Wilder,’ brig, ii. 48.
Mason, Gen. E. C.,
acts in Modoc
war, ii. 582,
591-019.
Masonic lodges,
charters, ii. 30-31, 415.
Massachusetts,
interested in Or., i. 307.
* Massachusetts,’ ship, ii. 69.
Massey, E. L., biog.,
i. 754; enrolling
officer, ii. 399.
Matheney, Daniel,
leader immigrant party, i. 394; biog., 421.
Matheney, Henry,
biog., i. 421. Matilda, interpreter, ii. 598, 599. Matlock, W. T., of H. of
rep., ii. 72, 143, 158, 290; librarian, 79; del. to convention, 418; receiver
of land- office, 458.
Matthews, F. H.,
district judge, i. 496.
Matthieu, F. X.,
biog. and bibliog.,
i. 259; constable, 304;
presd’t Pion. Soc., ii. 093.
Mattice, F. D., death
of, ii. 370. Mattock, W. S., circuit judge, ii. 03. Mattock, W. T., nominated
U. S.
senator, ii. 039.
Matts, Chas,
ship-building, 247. Matzger, Wm, of const, convention,
ii. 423. ‘
Maupin, Howard,
attack on Inds, ii. 534.
Maury, It. F., lt-col
of Or. vols, ii. 491; sent on exped., 493; nominated U. S. senator, 639.
Maxon, Capt., assumes
command Or.
army, i. 725.
Maxwell, H., at Fort
Vancouver, i. 42.
May, Sam’l E,, sec.
of state, ii. 637;
crime of, 059,
670-71.
‘Mary Dacre,’ship, i.
14, 15, 03-4, 112.
Maynard, Rob’t, crime
and execution of, ii. 156.
McAllister, Indian
mission, i. 55. McArthur, Lt W., in survey exped., ii. 190.
McAuley, Dr, miss,
meeting, f. 59. McBean, W., in charge at Ft Walla Walla, i. 42, 642; assists
those escaping massacre, 601.
McBride, Geo. W.,
sec. of state, ii. 700-1. McBride, James, biog., i. 630-1; left for Cal., ii.
47; supt of schools, 79; supports Gov. Lane, 93; of council, 142; trustee Or.
academy, 167; exped. of, 479.
McBride, John II.,
del. to convention, ii. 418-23; senator, I860-3, 452, 638; nominated for
congress, 037. McFaddon, Jno., joint brickmaker, i.
328. ‘
McCall, I.
M., of anti-slavery party, ii. 359. “
McCarver, M. M.,
incident as leader,
i. 400; biog., 415; mem. prov. govt, 427;
speaker of house, 428,472-473; act regarding organic law, 485—4S9; resigns
speakership, 488; left for Cal., ii. 47; com.-gen. of militia, ii.
325.
McClane, J. B,, biog.
and bibliog., j. 398; descends the ‘Columbia, 407; explor. |>arty, 532;
post-master, ii. 187.
McClelland, S. R-, of
anti-slavery party, ii. 359.
McClosky, John, signs
memorial, CL 127.
McCluchy, Geo.,
killed by Inds, ii. 395.
McClure, I. R., of
anti-slavery party,
ii. 359.
McClure, John, biog.,
i. 266-7; legislator, 473, 481; in charge of Shark house, 588.
'McCormick, Rev. P.
F., biog., i. 634. McCormick, S. I., of const, convention, ii. 423.
McCoy, J no., of
anti-slavery party,
ii. 359.
McCracken, John,
chief clerl: of house, ii. 323; lt-ool of militia, 325; of 0. C. R. R., 698.
McCrary, Richard,
distillery owner,
i. 281.
McCue, Felix,
drowned, ii. 396. McCully, II. F., of anti-slavery party, ii. 359.
McCulloek, Perry,
exped. of, ii. 179. McCullough, Pat, killed by Inds, ii.
395.
McCurdy, I. D., in
Ind. exped., ii. 313.
McCurdy, John, biog.,
ii. 711. McDonald, A., at Ft Hall, i. 42; at Ft Colville, 122; with White’s
party, 261; legislator, 604--606. McDonald, Harley, biog. of, ii, 725.
11 cDougal, guide for immigrants, 1845,
i. 511.
McDowell, Gen.,
requisition for cav airy, ii. 510; app’t'd to com’d of Pa’c dist, 510—11.
McEldery, Dr, in
Green’s exped., ii. 574.
McFadden, O. B.,
associate judge, biog., ii 307, 30.S.
McGee, Michael,
killed on the ‘Gazelle, ’ ii. 340.
Mclntire, A., favors
new ter. scheme,
ii. 255; of H. of Rep., 1854-5, 349. McIntosh,
Archie, exped. of, ii. 537. McKay, murder by Ind. at Pillar
rock, L Col., 1840,
i. 292.
McKay, Donald, in
corn'd of scouts,
ii. 497; acts in Modoc war, 586, 587, 615,
625.
McKay, Nancy,
marriage, i. 159;
death, i. 160.
McKay, Thos, farmer,
i. 15; at Ft Vancouver, 33; character, 33-4; at Ft Hall, 62; with missionaries,
131— 3; explor. party, 532; raises co., 702; pilots co. to Cal., ii. 44. McKay,
W. C., app’t’d to raise Ind. co., ii, 531.
McKean, M. M., of
assembly, 1866.
ii. 666.
McKean, S. T., biog.,
i. 636, of council, ii. 71, 142.
McKin’ay, A., at Ft
Walla Walla, i.
35, 334, 642; address to Nez Perces, 269 -70;
advice to Whitman, 342; gallantry, 345; signs memorial, ii. 127.
McKinney, I., Meth.
preacher, ii. 677.
McKinney, AVilliam,
biog., i. 634; at Dalles, 667.
McLane, David, killed
on the ‘Ga zelle,’ ... 340.
McLeod, D., arrives
Oregon, death, i. 11.
McLeod, John, in Ind.
exped., ii. 240
McLoughlin, John, at
Ft Vancouver,
i. 7-10, 28-9, 52-3; appearance, 29 30;
character, 30, 42-5; authority, 48-50; marriage, 52; receives Lee’s exped.,
63-4; plm of Or settlement, 67; relations towards Young, 91-5, 97-9; policy to
settlers, 97; policy to U. S. agents, 101-3; receives missionaries, 112, 131-5,
154, 184; aids Willamette cattle co., 141; Or. city claim, 203-18, 223-4, 311;
ii. 125-7; charges against, i. 207 -8; meets Farnliam, 230; attitude to miss.
settlers, 233; opposes shipbuilding, 247-8; visits Cal., 251; treat of Red
River settlers, 252; aids White’s party, 264; opposes Inds, 275; advice to
Inds, 277; views on Cockstock’s killing, 2S3-4; position on govt formation,
297; joins R. C. church, 322; store in Or. city, 326-7; treat of immigrants,
410-11, 416, 456-7; canal right, 440; treat by legislature, 443; op^ position
to, 464-5; joins political compact, 493-6; resigns from H. B. B. Co., 505;
financial troubles, 506; citizenship of U. S., 506; retired, 598; claims
trespassed upon, 610; witness at. Ind. trials, ii. 97; injustice to, 125-7;
death of, 130; portrait at Salem, 1887, 763 4.
McLoughlin, John, jr,
death, i. 36-7.236.
McLoughlin, Maria E.,
mirries Rae,
i. 36.
McMahon, Richard,
signs memorial,
ii. 127.
McMinnville college,
origin of, ii. 6S4.
McNamara, Serg’t
John, in Modoc war, ii. 588.
McNamee, Mrs Hannah,
biog., i. 528.
McKxmee, Job. biog,
i. 528.
McNary, Laodicea,
biog., i. 531. McTavish, Dugal, at Ft Vancouver,
i. 42; County Judge, resigns, ii. G2.
Meadows, Joseph,
exped. of, ii. 305. Meacham, Sup’t, official acts of, 552,
558-67;
relieved, 567; come to Modocs, act of, 596-612; wounded, 612; at trial, 635.
Meacham J dim, Ind.
agent, ii. 563;
report of, 565.
Meara, Serg’t, in
tight at lava beds, killed, ii. 542, 544.
Measles, devastating,
i. 648-50, 653. Meek, Joseph L., biog., i. 244; cham- peog convention, 303-4;
sheriff, 304; marshal, 497; mem. of leg., 604; messenger to congress, 676-9,
756; debut at Wash., 757-8; acts Tn Albion affair, ii. 105; col of
militia,
325.
Meek, S. II. L.,
founds Oregon city,
i. 205; meets White’s partj, 258; guide,
512; life threatened, 513-15; petitions for road charter, 532.
Meek, William, biog.,
i. 637.
Meigs, C. R., of court
convention, ii. 423.
Menes, Captain, biog
, i. 326-7. Menestry, rather, anives in 1847, i.
326.
Meng?rini, on term
Oregon, i. 19.
‘ Mercedes, ’ ship,
ii. 48.
Merritt, F. W., in
Ind. expeu., ii. 240.
Merrill, Ashbel,
biog., i. 637.
Merrill, Joseph, biog.,
2. 635-6. Mesplie, T., 1 rives in 1847, i. 326. Metcalfe, R. 11., in Ind,
exped., ii.
316; claim of. 321;
Ind. agent, 360. Methodist church, missionaries, acts of, i. 54r-65, 154 83,184
225; affair* investigated, 219- 21; Wilkes visit miss, 247; missions,
descript., of, 292 -3, 311, 660; Whitman purchases miss, 644; hist, of, ii.
677-8 Military Posts, location, object, i. 374 -6; opinion for establishing
381; established 1848 -50, ii. 83-7. Military reservations, declared, ii.
89-92; U. S. court decision, 91. Grande ronde, 397.
Military roads,
appropriations for, ii.
75, 305- 6, 136.
Military, situation,
ii. 344-7 Militia, law enacted, ii. 324; organized, 3S6
Millar, Mrs, injured
on tho ‘Gazelle,’
ii. S4U-
Millar, Rev. I. P.,
killed on the ‘Gazelle,’ ii. 310.
Miller, C. H., in Ind
exped., ii. 497.
Miller, G. M., founds
Florence, ii. 757.
Miller, H. F.,
conduct in Modoc af fair, ii. 565, 569; death of, 576.
Miller Island, mil.
reser., 1850, ii. 89.
Miller, Joaquin,
works of, ii. 692.
Miller, Jacob W.,
kJled, ii. 3S3.
Miller, John F., of
H. of rep., 1853
4, ii. 323: nominated Gov., 638; com. of
board of agrie., 661; Or Cent. R. R., 699.
Miller, John K.,
killed on the ‘Gazelle. ’
Miller, John S.,
claim of, ii. 321; lieut of vols, 3S6; of H. of rep., 1856-7, 417; school
trustee, 685.
Miller, M:nnie M.,
works of, ii. 692.
Miller, Rich., of
council, 1850, ii. 142; of const, convention, 423.
M'ller, Wm, del. to
convention 1857,
ii. 418.
Miller, Lieut, W. H., in Modoc war,
ii. 589, 616, 622.
Mill Creek, Waiilatpu
mission, i. 337.
Mills, at Ft
Vancouver, i, 9, 234; Chemeketa plains, 192; Willamette falls, 203-8, 211-13,
217, 222.
Mills, Y. I., k:lled
by Inds, ii. 312.
Milton, founders of,
ii. 252, town destroyed.
Milton Creek, mill
on, ii. 50.
‘ Milwaukie,’ schr,
ii. 48.
Milwaukic, founding
of, ii. 251.
Mines, discovery of,
John Daj Powder river, ii. 479; hist, of, 738 44.
Mining, hist, of, ii.
738-44; revival of, products, etc., 754.
Mint, question of,
1849, ii. 52- -3.
Minto, John, biog.
and bibliog., i. 451-2; joins Cal. exped , 679; of H. of rep., 1862-3, 1868,
ii. 638, 668.
Minto, Martha, biog.
and bibliog., i. 451 -2.
Missionaries, labors
of, i. 17, 54, 78138, 154-225, 318-30; agric. under, SO-4, 192-3; women as,
125-3S; ignorance of hygiene, 190; opposed to White,280; treat, of
immigrants,416.
Missionary republic,
failure:, i. 470-1.
Missionary, wives,
outrages upon, i. 662-3. '
Missions, buildings,
i. 78- 80; unhealthiness of, 86; Calapooya, 163; Clatsop, 185; Nisqually, 188;
Dalles," 190; diseases at, 190: land grabbers, 313.
Mission Life
Sketches, bibliographi cal, i. 287.
Mission'!, American
Board of Commissioners for foreign, plans for ■western
work, i. 104.
Missouri, petition
from, i. 375. Mitchell, J. H., sen., 1862-5; ii. 638, 665; U. S. sen., 607,
672; biog., 672; apprcp. for public works, 757. ‘Modeste,’ English man of war,
i. 447, 499, 574, 587, 599; officers of, 576.
Modoc, origin of
name. ii. 555.
Modoc lake,
discovered, i. 547.
Modoc war, 1864-73,
ii. 555-636. Modocs, murders by, ii. 489; treaty, 500; war, 1864-73, 555-636.
Moffat, killed by
Ind., ii. 235.
Mofras, Duflotde,
visits Or., 250. Molallas, Inds, i. 282; treaty with,
ii. 211.
Monmouth
college, hist, of, ii. 687. Monroe, Pres., message Or,
question,
i. 361-2. _
Monroe, E., attack on
Inds, ii. 575. Monteith, Thomas, biog., i. 632; joins Cal. exped. 679.
Monteith, W. I.,
Presb. minister, ii. 6S1.
Monteith, Walter,
biog., i. 632; joins Cal. exped., 679; sch. trustee, ii. 682. Montgomery, J.
Boyce, biog., ii. 705;
purchase of Albina,
etc., 752. Montoure, George, exploring party,
i. 532.
Moody, 7.. F.,
elected gov., biog., ii.
675; administration
of, 760.
Moore, Lieut, in
Modoc war, ii. 588. Moore, Andrew S., biog. of, ii. 713. Moore, E., favors New
ter. scheme,
ii. 255.
Moore, George, biog.,
i. 527.
Moore, Henry, exped.
of, ii. 479. Moore, Jackson, leaves emigration
1843, i. 397.
Moore, James H., m
survey exped.,
ii. 248.
Moore, Robert, with
cattle co., i. 145; biog. 237-8; on gov’t Com., 294, 304; elected J. P., 312;
proposes gov’t seat, 536; purchases Or. Spectator, 575; signs memorial, ii.
127.
Moores, Isaac R.,
mem. II. of rep.,
ii. 413, 638, 665; of cons’t. convention,
423; Or. Cent. R. R., 698-9. Morgan, Wm. H., petition favoring Modocs, ii. 634.
Morris, Capt., arrest
of, ii. 103. Morris, B. Wistar, bishop, ii. 686. Morris, M. B,, in Ind. exped.,
wounded, ii. 313.
Morris, Col. T., in
coin’d at Vancouver, ii. 460.
Morrison, R. AV.,
biog, i. 449; county treasurer, 612; mem. H, of rep.,
1858, ii. 432.
Morrow, Gov., mention
of, ii. 757.
Morrow county
organized, ii. 757.
Morse, David, jr.,
mention of, ii. 757.
Morse, W. B., Meth.
minister, ii. 677.
Morton, S. E., rep.,
1800, ii 452.
Moses, S.P., coll. at
Puget Sound, ii. 108.
Mosher, L. F., favors
New ter scheme,
ii. 255; Senator, 1870, 671
Mosier, Alice Claget,
biog.
Moss’ Pioneer Times,
MS., bibliog.,
i. 265.
Moss, S. W., biog.,
i. 265; mem. P. L. L. C., 297; «;gns memorial, ii. 127; works of, 691.
Mott, C. II., Ind.
eommis’r, ii. 412; joins Confed. service, 456.
‘Mountain Buck,’
steainer, ii. 480.
Mountains, Or., 2-3.
Mount Baker,
eruption, ii. 41.
Mount Hood, ascent
of, 1854, ii. 335.
Mount Jefferson,
iirst ascent of, ii.
335.
Mount St Helen,
eruption, ii. 41.
Mount Spencer, named,
i. 484.
Mounted riflemen,
organization, i. 578'9; bill to raise, 670-1; members, 671; flag presented,
672; actions of, ii. 81-100; desertions from, 88—9; departure, 100.
Mud Springs, named,
i. 550
Mulligan, 0., early
settler, ii. 299.
Multnomah Co’ty,
created, ii. 354; hist, of, 717; value of prop, in, 753,
Munger, A., Or,
missionary, i. 238-9; character, death, 239-40.
Munson, C. G., in
Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Murphy, Pat, in
explur. expedt., ii. 197.
Myers, John, in Snake
river massacre, ii. 471.
Myors, Joseph, in
Snake river massacre, ii. 472.
Myrick, Mrs J., i.
37.
N
‘Nassau,' ship, ii.
202- 3, 300.
Natives, see Indians.
Naylor, T. G., biog.,
i. 422, 571.
Negroes, feelings
against, i. 284; expulsion of, ii. 157-8; acts relatmg to, ii. 665- 6.
Nelson, Thomas,
biog., ii. 155.
‘ Nereid ’ shij), i,
50, 86, 143, 234.
Nesmith, James W.,
pion., ’43, 1. 393, 395; character, 402; judge, 472; left for Cal., ii. 47;
legislator, 58; trustee Or. academy, 167; U. S. marshal, 309; in Intl. expedt.,
313; brig. gen. of militia,325; U S. Senator, actions, 453, 459, 674; K. K.
eommis'r, 696.
Newby, B. F., injured
on the ‘Gazelle,’ ii. 340.
Newcomb, Daniel, of
co’ty convention,
ii. 423; mem. H. of Rep., 423, 434; brig,
gen., 438.
New Dungeness,
light-house at, ii.
248.
Newell, Rob’t, legis.
com., 1842, i. 304; mem. prov. gov’t, 1844, 428, 431; legislator, 472, 474,
604; ii. 58; Or. printing assoc., i. 536; left for Cal., i . 47; Ind. .sub.
agent, 70 -1; representative, 452; leased penitentiary, 644; R. R. commiss’r,
^ 696.
Newmarket,
settlement, i. 464.
‘Newport,’ ship, ii.
333.
Newspapers, started,
1850-1, ii. 147; political actions, 353-9; births at state admission, 448-9;
excluded from mails, 492; number of, 692.
Newton, Mr, murdered,
i. 564.
Nez Perces,
missionaries among, i. Ill, 115- 19; religious rites, 116 IS; threaten Lapwai,
268; council with White, 269-72; Spaulding's influence, 330, 335; grammar
made, 335; cattle, stock, 346; council with com- mis’r, 718-21; ii. 331-6;
treaty with, 366.
Nichols, Serg’t,
attack on, ii. 547.
Nichols, Beniamin, judge,
i. 450.
Nichols, H. B., of
const, convention,
ii. 423; of II. of Rep., 1858-9, 432, 434.
Nightingale, Gideon
R., biog., i. 52S.
Niles, H., on term
Oregon, i. 22; prop. Weekly Register, 378.
Niles’ Weekly
Register, bibliog., i. 378.
Nisqually, mission,
i. 188-90; Inds at, 319; attacked, ii. 67 9; fort near, 70; port of delivery,
107.
Nisqually Pass,
explored, 1S39, ii. 75.
Nobili, Giovanni,
arrives, July 1844, i 325.
Noble, Curtis, set.
at Coos Bay, ii. 334.
Noble, Mrs. Mary A.,
biog., i. 528.
Noland, Rhodes,
killed by Inds, ii. 312.
Northup, Nelson,
biog., ii. 333.
Norcross, A. I.,
mayor of Union and Auburn, ii. 485.
Northern Pac. R. R.,
joint leasoof 0. R. &. N. Co.’s line, ii. 748; injunction against lease,
749.
North Litchfield
Assoc, of Conn. send exped. to Oregon, 238.
Northwest Coast, term
embraced, i. * 1; U. S. territorial rights, 254.
Notice bill, U. S.
cong. passes, i. 589.
Nott, Joseph, trial
of, ii 156.
Nourse, Geo., first
settler in Klamath county, ii. 507.
Nuns, arrival of, i.
325, 326.
Nus, Wm, death of,
ii. 575.
Nutta1!,
at Fort Vancouver, i. 16; expedt. to Or., 60, 85; names Or flora, 86.
Nye, Capt., in
Columbia, i. £01, 422.
Oakland, laid out,
1849, ii. ISO.
Oakley, with
Farnham's expedt., 227 -8. ‘
OatmEn, Harrison,
wounded by Inds,
ii. 371; lieut. of vols., 510; fight with
Inds, 528, 529.
O’Beirne, Capt.,
fight with Indians,
ii. 530.
Oblate, Fathers,
mission to Yakimas,
i. 327-8.
Oblates of Mary
Immaculate, proceed to Or., i. 654.
O'Brien, John,
drowned, ii. 396.
‘ Ocean Bird,’ bark.
ii. 48.
Odd Fellows,
dispensation for establishing, ii. 31.
Odell, W. H.,
surveyor gen., ii. 295.
Odeneal, T. B.,
app’t. supt. Ind. affairs, ii. 567; off’l act in Modoc war, 569-72; app’t.
peace coininist’r, 596.
Ogden, Maj. C. A., in
survey expedt.,
ii. 248.
Ogden, P. S.,
character, i. 32; discovers Humboldt river, 32; com'ds tin Columbia, 59S; at
Walla Walla,
673-4;
rescues captives, 6S5-97.
O’Kelly, Nimrod,
trial of, ii. 156.
Olcott, Egbert, see
Smith Noyes. ,
Olds, W., of const,
convention, ii. 423.
Olinger, A., biog.,
i. 421.
Oliver, L W., killed
by Inds, i.i 395.
Olley, James, death,
i. 200
Olney, Cyrus, trustee
of University,
ii. 299; associate judge, 307; of const,
convention, 423; mem. H. of Rep., 600, 671; subsidy bill of, 697.
Olney, Nathan, Intl.
agent, ii. 360; recruiting ofticer, 497.
Olympia, port of
delivery, ii. 170; co’ty seat, 299.
One-eyed Hose, of
Capt. Jack's hand,
ii. 576.
O’Neil, James, in
cattle expilt., i. 142; converted, 179; mem of col. gov’t,
301, 304; judge, 312, 49(5; R. 11. commis’r, 690.
Ordinance, 1787,
applied to Or., 1843,
i. 313.
Oregon, early extent,
i. 1; geological division, 1-6; natural resources, 40; climate, 4-5; ii. 40-1;
society, 1831, i. 9-10, 15-17; advent of mij- sinnaries, 1G—17; name, 17-25; law
under H. 15. Co., 47-50; Meth. missionaries, 54-65; early settlers, 63—77;
251-2; missionaries, 1834-8, 78-103, 1 St-225; Presb. missionaries, 104-3S;
colonization. 154-83; event . 1839, 226-52; Belcher on, 232 3; Farnh im'srept,
236; Wilkes’ visit, 216-9; U. S. claim to, 349-50; limits, 348-5; message of
executive, 429-30; land law provisions, 443- 5; negro immigration, 137—8;
necessity for better route, 542-3; war feeling, 1 8 46, 573 99; proposition of
British, 580; first flag, 588; boundaries, 591-4, 597-8; progress, 609; disgust
with U. S. gov't, 615-17; ship building, ii. 27; news of Cal. gold discovery,
42; effect of, 51; gold discovery, 1850-2, 174-201; cost of Jnd. war. 320-1;
state admittance, 440 1; seal, 444; during war, 1861
5, 456-8.
Oregon army,
miserable condition, i. 726; objections against, 727.
Oregon and Cal.
mission, organized,
1849, ii. 677.
Oregon and Cal. R.
R'. Co., charter granted, ii. 696; purchase of, 747.
Oregon cavalry, 1st,
hist, of, 1860-3,
ii. 493.
Oregon central
military road co., actions and grants, ii, 651, 653.
Oregon Cent. R. R.,
hist,, ii. 693- 706.
Oregon city,
founding, i. 205, 207, 211-12, 217-18; progress, 265; Mc- Loughlm's claim, 311:
bishop’s see, 327; first brick house, 328; jail.
439, 619; incorporated, 443; legislature at, 473,
ii. 59; seat of gov’t,
i. 536; post-office established, 614,
ii. 29; churches, 36; trial of lad*, 94 6;
population, 1852, 251; flood,
1861, 483; first church, 677; waterpower at. 753.
‘ Oregon Democrat, ’
newspaper, ii. 449.
Oregon's envoys, i.
754-67.
Oregon infantry, 1st,
organized, ii. 509.
Oregon institute,
founded, i. 201-3, 300; moved, 322; catholics offer to purchase, 326; sale,
789-90.
Oregon Pac. R. R.,
construe, of, ii. 749.
Oregon
pioneer assoc, object, officers, bibliog., i. 391. .
Oregon printing
assoc., principles, i. 535-6; work done, ii. 31.
Oregon prov. emig.
soe., organized, purpose, i. 174, 176, 373.
Oregon R'y Co.,
purchased, ii. 747-8.
Oregon R’y & Nav
Co., bridge and depot of, ii. 748; line of, leased, 748; injunction against
lease, 749; extension of lines, 750.
Oregon rangers,
formation, i. 283; serv. of, 2S4-5; flag presented, 583.
Oregon ‘ Spectator,
'newspaper, i. 484, 575; suspended, ii. 43 4.
Oregon ‘Statesman,’
newspaper, ii. 147.
Oregon Steam Nav. Co.,
organization of, ii. 480.
Oregon Temperance
Society, organized, i. 98.
Oregon ‘Whig,’
newspaper, ii. 147.
Organic laws,
amendment of 1845, i.
470- -507.
Osborne, Bennet,
explor. party, i. 544.
Oswego, founded, ii.
251; iron works at, 752.
Otis, Mai., in Modoc war, ii. 567-70,
Overland mail, first
daily, ii. 438.
Overton, Wm, owner of
Port, land claim, i. 791, ii. 281.
Owens, D. D., exped.
of, ii. 300.
Owens, John, explor.
party, i. 544; at Ft Hall, 551-2; rescues immigrants, 564.
Owens, y. P., attack on
Inds, ii. 318.
Owens, Thomas, biog.,
i. 421.
Owhi chief, opposes
treaty, ii. 304.
‘Owyhee,’biog., i.
10.
Owyhee river, battle
of, ii. 520-1.
P
Pacific city, White,
founds 1853, i. 290.
Pacific eo’ty,
established, ii. 150. Pacific Journal, newspaper, u. 448. Pacific ocean,
natural boundary of U. S., i. 358.
Pacific republic,
scheme of, it. 450-1. Pacific university, i 138; ii. 680. Pauli Wood. Elisha,
biog. i. 530-1.
Packwood, Win H«, of
con3t. convention, ii. 423.
Page, Dan D., killed
on the ‘Gazelle,’
ii. 340.
Parge, II. C.,
attacked by Inds, ii.
523.
‘Pallas,’ brig, i.
423—1, 4G7.
Palmer, Capt.,
movements of, ii. 51213.
Palmer, Cornelius,
justice of "peace,
ii. 298.
Palmer, Joel, leaves
for W. S., i. 337; aid tto Welch, 509; road making, 518; biog. and
bibliog., 522; commit. gen., 070; sup’t Ind. affairs, 083; ii. 309; official
action, i. 720;
ii. 359-68, 397-9, 409-11: lett for Cal., ii.
47; of H. of rep., 1802-3, 038; senator, 1804-6, 6G5, GG0; Or. Cent. II. II.,
698.
Palmer, Joes, trustee
of Or. Academy,
ii. 108; founded l)ayton, 251.
Palouses, battle ■with, i.
723-4.
Pambrum, P. C., at
Walla "Walla, i. 35; receives missionaries, 110, 120, influence with Inds,
330, 345; explor. exped., 1839, ii. 75.
Panina chief, makc3
peace, ii. 507-8; fight with, 533; killed, 234.
Paris, J. D.,
fainthearted missionary,
i. 334.
Parker, David,
explores Puget Sound, i 403-4.
Parker, A. C., of
Assembly 1804 -5,
ii. 005.
Parker, Sam’l, of
legislature, ii. 58 - 9, 63; mem. of council, 71-2, 142,158, 103, 434; mem.
pcnit’y board, 298; university trustee, 299.
Parker, Reb. Samuel,
seeks miss, site, i. 104; character, 105-0. at Ft Walla Walla, 110, 120; meets
White, 111, 115; at Ft. Vancouver, 111-14, 123; opinion of natives, 112; meets
Lee, 113, selects Wail- latpu, 117-19; map of travels, 120; at Ft Colville,
122-3; Sandwich Islands, 123-4.
Parker, \\ ik, explor. party, 1846, i. 544; of H.
of rep. 1850, ii. 142; biog., 143.
Parker, Wrn G.,
biog,, i. 544,
Parker, W. W., of
assembly 1R58-9,
ii. 434; dep’ty collector, 458; biog. 458.
Parrish, E. E.,
biog., i. 4C9; dist judge, 496; school trustee, ii. 085.
Parrish, Edward,
death of, ii. 370.
Parrisli, Jesse,
biog., i 754.
Parsons, I, II.,
biog,, ii. 711.
Farri. h, J. L.,
missionary, i. 177; at Clatsop miss., 188; trustee Or. Institute, 202: at
Salem, 225; on gov’t com., 297; Ind. agent,*ii. 213; Sleth. preacher, 677; R.
Ii. com- mb’r, O'JO.
Parrott, Rev. Joseph
E., biog., i. 753; signs memorial, ii. 127; ileth, preacher, 077.
Partlow, James, Pilos
of the ‘ Gazelle,’
ii. 310.
Patten, rescue* immigrants, i. 504.
Patterson, A. W., of
II. of rep., 1854
5, ii. 319; lieut. of vols, 380; enrolling
officer, 390; of O. C. M. Hoad Co., 052; senator, 1870, 071.
Patterson, Joshua,
biog. of, ii. 713.
Patton, Lieut, fight
with Inds, ii, 530.
Patton, Polly Grimes,
biog., i. 027.
Patton, T. Me F.,
att’y, ii. 158; favors new ter. scheme, 255; clerk of council, 417; Or. Cent.
R. R., 699.
Paugli, William,
biog., i. 526-7.
Pawnees, missionaries
among, 105.
Payette, at Ft Boise,
i 229, 239; receives immigrants, 401.
Payne, Aaron, biog.,
i. 630; of II of rep., 1S50, 143; m Ind. exped. 325.
Payne, Claybome,
death, i. 397.
Payne, Dr Henry, in
explor. exped.
ii. 176.
Payne, S., n:ap, i. 24.
Peace
Commissioners, visited by Ya* kimas, i. 707-8. _
‘ Peacock, ’ ship,
wrecked, i. 249.
Pearl, Henry, killed
in Ind. right, ii. 3S3.
Pearne,
Thus H., nominated IT. S. senator, ii. 639; Meth. preacher, 677. .
Peebles, I. C., of H.
of rep., ii. 323; of council 1854-7, 349, 413, 417; of const, convention, 423.
Peel, Win, arrives,
i. 497.
Peers, Henry N., mem.
of le"., i. 604, 606; literary abilities, 000; Works of. li. 091.
Peeree, Capt. C. II.,
corn’d at Ft Steilacoom. ii. 532.
Pend. O’Oreilles, St
Ignatius mission founded, i. 327.
Fendleton,
chairman mil. affairs, i.
378. .
Pengra, B. J.,
burveyor-gen., ii. 295, 458; nominated to congress, 440; of
O. C. M. Road Co., 052; explores route, 705.
Penitentiary, waste
of appropriations,
ii. 3o0, 3o2; constructed, 644, 645.
Pennoyer.Gov. S., mess, to cong., ii. 7(50. Pentland, Robert, injured on the ‘
Gazi-lle, ’ ii. 340.
Peoria, Lee’s
colonizing eCorts in, 220. Pepoon, Lieut Silas, artiunsof, ii. 521. Pepper, X.
P., in explor. exped., i. 197.
Perkins, Mrs. At
Willamette miss.,
i. 161; at Dalles, 104, 181, ISO. Perkins,
Rev. H. K. W., at AY illam-
ette miss., i. 161,
230; at Dalles, 163-6, 179-SI, 2i2.
Perham &, Co.,
Carding machine of,
ii. 338.
Perkins, Joel,
tounded town, ii. 251 Perry, Capt. I)., in Modoc Mar, ii. 581-90, 616-18;
captures Captain Jack, 629 30.
Perry, Frank, killed
hy Inds., ii. 315. Perry, James, murder of, ii. 521. Pettygrove, F. W., fined
for using liquor, i. 282; mem. P. L. I.. C., 397; at Or. city, 417; hiog. and
bibliog., 422-3; judge, 490, left for Cal., ii. 47; founded Portland, 717.
Pettyjohn, L., school trustee, ii. 685. Peupeumoxmnx, visits McLoughlin,
i. 277; trading ventures, 286; adventures
vv ith McKinlay, 345; conduct, 651; revokes friendship, 728; acts at council,
ii. 364.
Phelps, Miss A.,
missionary, i, 177;
marriage, 237.
Phillips, Miss E.,
missionary, i. 177, 187.
Pickett, Chas. E.,
threatened, i. 284; mem. P. L. L. C., 297; bibliog., 434-5; judge, 496, Ind.
agent, Git; unpopularity, 015.
Pickett, I, W.,
killed, ii. 478.
Pierce, E. D.,
expedt. of, ii. 479. Pike, Lt, pursuit of Inds, ii. 545, 546. Pilcher, Major,
Ind, agent, with missionaries, i. 128.
Pilot service, at
mouth of Columbia,
ii. 191.
‘ Pioneer, ’ schr, ii. 48.
Pioneer association,
hist of, ii. (593 4. Pioneer Lyceum and Literary Club,
1844, i. 296-7.
Pioneers, lists of, i.
73- 7; 394,520, 568,
683, 751; list cf deaths, ii. 762-3. riper, Lt, A.,
takes the field, ii. 470. Pit river, Crook on, ii. 538- 9.
Pit river Inds,
murder by,ii. 489. Pitman, Miss A. M., arrives Or., i, 156; at Willamette
mission, l. 157 -9.
Planing mill, built
on Columbia, ii.
50.
Platt, I. C., murder
of, ii. 156.
Platte, discussion as
to site of military post, i. 376.
Poinsett, on military
posts, i. 376. Point, Nicholas, R. C. priest, Flathead mission, i. 324.
Poland,
Capt., death of, ii. 394. Poland, John, killed by Inds, ii. 395. Polk, Pres.,
actions on Or. question,
i. 388, 582-3; on boundary question, 595. ‘
Polk co’tv, created,
l. 538; hist, of,
i., 722.
Pollock, John, death
of, ii. 370. Pomeroy, W., witness, land dispute,
i. 206; signs memorial, ii. 127. Ponjade,
John P., biog., i. 633.
Pony express, founder
of, ii. 438. Popham, Ezekiel, murderous affrav,
n. 37.
Popo-agie, military
post, l. 376. Popular election, vote on constitution,
ii. 427, 428.
Population, 251, 543,
ii. 251, 259.
Port of entry
established, ii. 103, 104. Porter, William, biog., i. 753. Portland, found, of,
i. 791-3; port of delivery, ii. 107; pop. 1852,251; legislation over site,
281-9; hist, of, 717— 22; progress of, 1S80-8, 750-1. Portland library,
organiz. of, ii. 751 2. Port Orford, established, ii. 193; officials at, 1851,
233.
Post route,
establishing, i. 614. Powder River mine, discovery of, ii 479.
Powder River valley,
fertility of, ii.
485.
Powers,
Thomas, road making, 1846,
i. 558. _
Pratt, judge of
second dist, ii. 70;
mention
of, 102, 307, 337, 357. Pratt, O. C., Young’s property, i. 151
152, 780; ii. 103, 157-9, 162-4, 167. Presbyterian
church, hist, of, ii. 68083. .
Presbyterians, advent of, i. 104 38; 1838 47, 315-48: jealousies, 32930; alarm
at R. C. action, 340 1; downfall of, 741.
Preston, Geo. C.,
Ind. sub. agent, it.
70. _
Preston, II. L..
nominated IJ. S. Senator, ii. 639.
Preston, L R.,
surveyor gen., xi. 155. Pretol, arrives in 1847, i. 226. Prettyman, Perry,
biog., i. 627.
Prichett, defended Inds,
ii. 96: acting: gov., 98.
Prigg, Fred, mem. P.
L. L. C., i. 297; judge, 496; terr. sec., 600; death,
ii. 36.
Prim, P. P., pros,
att’y* ii. 336; of const, convention, 423; app’td dist judge, 443, 670.
Prince, Nez Perces,
chief, i. 279. Pringle, Pherne T., biog,, i. 570. Pringle, Yirgil K., biog., i.
570. Printing press, Hall brings, 1839, i.
335-6.
Probate courts, i. 3t
Probst, Robert, murder of, ii. 477. Protective assoc., capital, object, ii.
21-2.
Protestant church,
first erected, ii.
677.
Provencher, J. N.,
bishop of Juliopo- lis, 1S34, i. 315.
Provisions, high
price, i. 259, 451. Pruett, J. H., biog., i. 633.
Public buildings,
acts concerning, ii. 298.
Public lands, first
sale of, ii. 660. Public library, books for, ii. 144. Public roads, acts relating
to, ii. 651
2.
Pudding river, name,
i. 72.
Puebla mts, fight at,
ii. 535.
Puget Sound,
exploration, i. 463^; collector appointed, ii. 108; fortifications, 510.
Puget Sound
Agricultural Co., opposition to, i, 189; attempt at settlement, 252; Cowlitz,
319.
Pugh, J. W., biog.,
i. 572.
Putnam, Charles, road
making, 1846,
i. 558.
Pyle, James M., clerk
of assembly, ii. 434; senator, 1864-6, 665-7; supports R. R. grants, 697
Q
Quallawort, execution
of, ii. 80. Quatley, Chief, iu Lane’s Ind. expdt,
ii. 219-21.
Quebec,
archbishopric, appoints Blan- chet to Or., 1837, i. 30li.
Quesuel, F., settlor, i. 74.
1 Quito, ’ brig, ii. 48.
Radford, Lt R. C. W.,
Indian expdt.,
ii. 320.
Rae, W. G-.. life as
fur-trader, i. 36: in Cal., 251.
Rae, Mrs, marries, i.
37: in Cal..
251. ’
Ragan, W m, attack on
Inds, ii. 534. Railroads, memorial for, i. 590: charters granted, ii. 325-6;
land grant. 668; hist, of, 695-706; progress, 746. Rainer, founder!, ii. 252.
Rainey, J. T., biog.,
i. 570.
Rains, C., killed,
ii. 404.
Ralston, Jeremiah,
biog.,i. 631; University trustee, ii. 299.
Rascal river, name, i. 90.
Ravalli, Antonio,
arrives July 1S44.
i. 325.
Raymond, W. W., at
Clatsop miss.,
i. 177, 1S7; death, 199-20D. Reading, P. B.,
pion., 1843, i. 395. Real estate exchange, list of incorporators, ii. 751.
Ream Lt, in Modoc -w
ar, ii. 593. . Reasoner, I. S., Presb. ruin., ii. 681. Rector, W. H., mem. of
leg., i. 612; left for Cal. ii. 47; supt ot Ind. affairs, 459; R. R. comm’r,
69G.
Red River families,
settle’t in Or., 252. Reed, Geo., killed by Inds, ii. 395. Reed, I. H., of
const, convention, ii. 423.
Reed, Martin, killed
by Inds, ii. 395 Rees, W. H., institutes library, i. 295-7; mem. of leg., 612.
sec. of Pioneer Soc., 693.
Reeves/ S. C., pilot,
i. 326, 589; ii.
24-5; left for Cal.,
47.
Rehart, C. A., biog.
of. ii. 715. Religion, first celebration mass Nov., 25, 1838, Vancouver, i,
317. Religious sects, numbers, denominations, ii. 36.
Reineau, assists
emigrants, 1848, i.
400.
Rendezvous, of fur
traders, i. 130. Republican party, formation of, ii, 416; clubs, 418; platform,
1858, 430; convention 1S59, 445; 1SG2, 637; victory of 1888, 762. Reservation,
on Malheur river, ii.
554; set off, 653.
Revenue, raising of
1845, i. 540; laws,
ii. 104-8.
Reynolds, Frances
Elk, biog., i. 753. Reynolds, R. B. defended Inds, ii. 96.
Rice, Col, k;lled,
ii. 527.
Rice, W. H.,
fainthearted missionary,
i. 334.
Richard, Father,
superior of the oblate orders, i. 328.
Richardson, A., in
Ind. exped., ii. 224.
Richardson, Daniel,
death, i. 398. Richardson, Dan, lieut of vols, ii.
379; killed, 39li.
Richardson, Jesse,
favors nnw ter.
scheme, ii. 255.
Richardson, P., meets
Farnham’s exped., 228.
Richey, Caleb, biog.,
i. 754. Richmond, Rev. J. P., missionary, i.
177; at Misqually
miss., 188-90. Richmond, Mrs, missionary, i. 177. Ricord, John, at Oregon city,
i. 21113; opposes McLoughlin, i. 215-18. Riddle, F. F., interpreter, ii. 599609.
Riddle, Foby,
interpreter, ii. 599
612.
Ridgeway, Mrs
Tabitha, biog., i. 529. Riggs, James B., biog., i. 527.
Riggs, W. C., killed,
ii. 464.
Riley, Capt. Bennett,
chastises Inds.
i. 397.
Riley, Edward,
muriler of, ii. 527. Rinnarson, S. S., mem, of express, i. 552; 1st serg't
ritle co. 671; capt. of vols, ii. 379; promulgates rep. doctrine, 418; Maj. of
Or. vols, 491. Roads, petitions for, i. 531-3; located,
ii. 152; explorations for, 335.
‘ Roanoke, ’ ship,
wrecked, ii. 300. Robb, J. R., attempts to muzzle press, i. 622; left for Cal.,
ii. 47; university trustee, 299.
Robbins, Nathaniel,
of const, convention, ii. 423.
Robe, Robert,
Presbyterian minister,
ii. 681.
Roberts, G. B-, at Ft
Vancouver, i.
38; life, i. 38-9.
Roberts, Mrs G. B.,
arrives Ft Vancouver, 27.
Roberts. W.,
transferred to Cowlitz, 598-9; attempts to muzzle press, 622; -iniversity
trustee, ii. 299; sup’t. of missions, 677.
Robinson, A. A.,
clerk of council, ii. 72.
Robinson, Ed,
stabbing affair, ii. 37. Robertson, Joseph, Presb. minister,
ii. 682.
Robinson, John,
biog., i. 570; of H.
of rep., 1S55-6, ii.
413.
Robin’s Nest,
proposed seat of gov’t,
i. 536
Robinson, Thomas G.,
biog., i. 527. Robinson, Rev. William, biog., i. 627.
Roby, death, 1846, i.
559.
Rock Dave, of Capt.
Jack’s band, ii.
576.
Rockwell, John, in
survey exped., ii,
249.
Roe, C. J., marriage,
i 159; history,
ii. 160.
Rogers, murdered, i.
660
Rogers, Clark,
Alcalde, ii. 325.
Rogers, Cornelius,
missionary, i. 1378; marriage, 199; death, 1843, 199200; explor. exped. 1839;
ii. 75.
Rogers, Capt. John
I., cond. at Cape Hancock ii. 532.
Rogers, John P., left
for Cal. 1848-9,
ii. 47.
Rogers, Mary Jane
Robert, death, i. 469.
Rogue river, name, i.
80; hostility of Inds, 95; u 377; explor. of, 176-8, 197; gold discovered, 186;
battle on, 227.
Rogue River Inds,
Lane's conference with, ii. 220-21; expedts. against,
1850, 222-4; battle with, 1S53-4, 311-21.
Rolfe, Tnllmai , H.,
biog., i. 634.
Roman Catholic,
withdrawal of French, i. 292.
Rose, De, killed by
Inds, ii. 313.
Rose, Aaron, founds
Roseburg, ii. 184; of H. of rep., 1856-7, 417.
Roseborough, in Modoc
war, ii, 603. 607.
Roseburg, founded,
ii. 184.
Ross, J. K., lieut
rifle co., i. 671; resigned, 708; left for Cal., ii. 47; favors new, ter.
scheme, 255; claim of, 321; col of militia, 325, 376; of IL of rep.,
1S55-6,414, 666; mem.of council 1856-7, 117; offers services, 583; Director Or.
Cent. R. R., 699.
Rosseau, Father, on
Umatilla, i. 327
8, 654.
Rosseau, Gen. L. II.,
corn’d of dep’t,
ii. 548.
Round I’rairie,
named, i. 546.
Routes, merits, i.
565-6.
Routes and Cut-offs,
map, i. 543.
Rowe, John Lafayette,
hist, of, ii. 713
Royal, Capt., on Or.
coast, i. 86.
Ruckle, J. S.,
elected senator 1858,
ii. 432; steamboat owner, 480-1; mention of,
765.
Runnels, Jesse, in
Ind. exped., ii, 224.
Russler, Sergeant, in
tight at lava beds, killed, ii. 542 544.
Russell. Edward,
founds Albina, ii. 752.
Russe^, Osborne, mem. prov. gov’t,
i. 427; biog. 428; candidate for Got., 471.
Russians, oppose II.
Bay Co., i. 232; trade of, 574.
Russell, W. H.,
commands Cal. Co.,
1846, i. 556; founded pony express,
ii. 438.
Russia, ukases w. Am.
limits, 1822,
i. 352.
Ruth, I. S., in
survey exped., ii. 190 Rvan, Jeremiah, in explor. exped. ii. '197.
S
‘ Sacramento, ’
1'rig., ii. 48.
Saffarans, Henrj, at
Dalles, i. 667. Sager, Mr and Mrs, death, i. 453-4. St Clair Co., emigrant co.
from, 1843,
i. 393.
St Clair W&vman,
of H. of rep., ii.
143, 349; biog., 143.
St Francis Borgia,
mission founded,
St Francis Regis,
mission lounded, i.
327.
St Helen, founded,
ii. 251.
St Ignatius, mission
founded, i. 327. St Joseph, hoys school, French I’rairic, 1844, i. 325.
St Mary, convent and
girls’ school at French T’rairie, 1844, i. 325.
St Paul, Champoeg
church dedicated to, 1840, i. 319, 328.
St Paul miss, sem’y,
incor., ii. 152.
St Peters, mission
founded, i. 327. Salem, site laid out, i. 222; capital,
ii. 146, 643; legislat. at, 163; const,
convention a*, 423; growth of, 752.
Sales, Mr, at
Waulatpec, i. 648. Sallee, killed by Inds, i. 561. Salmon-canning, decline of,
ii. 758. Salmon river, quartz mines at, ii, 754. Sam, chief, actions in Iud.
troubles,
ii. 239-45.
‘Samuel Roberta,’
schr, ii. 176. Sanborn, Charles, biog , i. 633. Sanders, Allen, dep. about
Cal., i. 552. Sanders, Geo. N., agent at Wash, for H. I!. Co., ii. 108- 9.
Sandford, I. R., in
immigrant party, 1S59, ii. 403.
Sand island,
surveyed, ii. 249. Sandwich islands, trade w-ith, ii. 258. Sail Francisco, H B.
Co. post at, i.
250-7; explor. co.
formedatii. 175. Santiam river, Indians attacked on,
1846, i. 285.
‘ Sarah &
Caroline.’ship, i. 144. Saules, negro, deserts ship. i. 249;
troubles with, 282-4.
Saunders. L.
Woodbury, biog, i. 647. Saunders, S., killed, ii. 378.
Sager, John,
murdered, i. 659.
Savage, Luther,
biog., i. 637.
Savage, Morgan Lewis,
biog., i. 629. Savage, Towner, biog., i. 571. Sawyer, Willoughby, ill light at
lava beds, killed, ii. 544.
Saxton, Joseph
Charles, accompanies White, i. 484.
Scarborough, L,
killed by Inds, &
317.
Scarface, murder by,
ii. 238-9; hanged, 245.
Scarface Charley,
acts in ti^i Modoc war, ii. 572-86; surrenders, 629. Schaeffer, J., in
immigrant party,
1859, ii. 463.
Schira Nicholas,
murder of, ii. 576. Scliira, Mrs, bravery of, ii. 576. Schmoldt, Adolf, killed
by Inds, ii.
396.
Schofield, Nathan, in
explor. expedt.,
ii. 176.
Schofield, Socrates,
in explor. expedt.,
ii 176.
Scholl, Peter, biog., i. 627.
School, at Ft
Vancouver, i. 49, 80; Champoeg, 86; Willamette miss., 160, 162; Chemeketa, J90,
201, 222; Baptists, ii. 648; Methodist, 678; Catholic, 679; Presbyterian,
682-3; Episcopal, 687, Public, hist, of, 688 --9; Indian, 690.
School tund, act
creating, ii. 299. School lands, appropriations for, ii. 660 3.
School law, enactment
of, ii. 77. Sconchin, chief, acts m Modoc war,
ii. 555-612; trial and execution, 635 -6.
Scott, Felix, Ind.
agent, i. 719, escorts immigrants, 750 1; b og., 750; R. R. comis’r, ii. 696.
Scott, llarvey W.,
edited Oregonian,
ii. 147: librarian, 694.
Scott, T B., murder
of, ii. 545.
Scott, John, biog.,
joins Cal. expedt.,
679.
Scott, Capt. L. S.,
movements of, ii.
515.
Scott, Levi, biog.,
i. 544, 572; explor. party, 544, ii. 178; guides immigrants, i. 558; leader of
party, 266; wounded, 624; joins Cal expedt., 679; mem. of council, 1858-5, ii.
296, 323, 349; of const, convention, 423.
Scott, Thos Fielding,
elected bishop, H. 685; death of, 686.
Scottsburg, name, i.
572; flood at, ii. 483.
‘Seagull,’ steamer
wrecked, u. 341,
Seal of .state, ii.
444.
Seaman, Nelson,
killed by Inds, ii. 395.
Sears, Franklin,
biog., i. 409.
Secession, proposed,
1S42, i. 306.
Seletza, Indian
chief, i. 684.
Selitz reservation,
condition of Inds,
ii. 412.
Seroc, Joseph, killed
by Inds, .. 395.
Settlement,
difficulties attending, i. 355 6.
Settlers, privileges
to, i. 257; occupation, 7*0-7; rights of, ii. 285-6.
Saxton, Charles,
bibliog., i. 508- -9.
Seymour, Admiral,
writes McLoughlin. i. 497.
Shacknasty Jim, acts
in Modoc war,
ii. 599, 627; surrenders, 627.
Shagaratte, L., death
of, i. 82.
Shane, J., killed by
Inds, ii. 315.
Shannon, Davis, of
const, convention,
ii. 423.
‘Shark,-U.
S. schr, 584^-5; wrecked, 587-8.
Shark house, variety
of uses, i. 588.
Shastas, The, trouble
with, ii. 238-45,
Shasta valley, gold
discovered, ii.
185.
Shattuck, E. I).,
candidate forlegis.,
ii. 337; promulgates rep. doctrines, 418; of
const, convention, 423; of H. of Rep., 1858-9, 434; library director, 694; Or.
Cent. It. R. Co., 698.
Shaw, A. R. C,,
exploring party, i. 532.
Shaw, Hilyard, early
settler, ii. 299.
Shaw, T. G.,
exploring party, i. 532.
Shaw, Wm, biog., i.
449; explores Puget Sound, 453-4; Capt. of Co., 703; left for Cal., ii. 47; of
H. of Kep., 142.
Shea, C.. attacked by
Inds, ii. 534.
Sheil, Edw., military
cnmdr, ii. 314; of council, 1857-8, 429; elected to congress, 450.
Shelton, Isaac,
attacked by Inds, ii. 373.
Shepard, Mrs, work at
mission, i. 160.
Shephard, Cyrus,
missionary, i. 59; character, 60; at Ft Vancouver, 80; Willamette miss, 158-01;
marriage, 159; death, 1«2,
Shephard, W. F.,
killed, ii. 404.
Sherman, Gen., acts
in Modoc affair,
ii. 602, 605.
Sherry, Ross, biog.,
i. 528.
Sherwood, Lt W. L.,
attempt murder of, ii. 012-3.
Shields, Jas, ot
const convention, ii. 423.
ShilLngbow, Adam,
murder of, ii.
577.
Shipping, arrivals
and departures, ii. 48-9; river and ocean, 340--1; hist, of building, 727-9.
Shirley, James
Quinoy, biog. of, ii. 723.
Shively, John M.,
biog., i. 614; left for Cal., ii. 47.
Shnebley,
I). J., editor and proprietor Or. Spectator. ’
Shroeder, John,
murder of, ii. 577. Shrum, Nicholas, of const, convention, ii. 423.
Shoalwater bay,
examined, ii. 248. Short, Amos M., squatter, trial of, ii.
90; land cla im,
278-9.
Short, H. R. M. B..
surveys Portland,
Short, R. V., of
const, convention, ii. 423.
Shortess, Robt,
petition of, i. 207-11; character, 207; mem. col govt, 301, 304; scheme, 313;
assists immigrants, 410; judge, 496; injured on the Gazelle, ii. 340.
‘ -Shoshone, ’
steamer, ii. 547.
Shoshone war, 1806-8,
ii. 512-54. Shoshones, rl he, outrages by, ii. 2] 6. Shumard, B. F.,
expedt. of, ii. 300. Silcott, John M., claim of, ii. 321.
‘ Silvic de Grasse,
ship, ii. 48; wrkd,49; Simon, Joseph, biog. of, ii. 705. Simmons, Andrew J.,
biog., i. 631. Simmons, Christopher, first child, i. 404.
Simmons, M. F ,
biog., i. 449; explores Puget Sound, 403-4; of H. of Rep.,
ii, 72; at indignation meeting, 102. Simmons,
Saiu’l, biog., i. 530; college
trustee, ii. 680; R.
R. commis r, 696.
Simpson, Anthony, Presb.
minister,
ii. 681.
Simpson, Ben of H. of
Rep., ii. 143, 158, 638; biog., 143; surveyor gen., 295; mem. of council, 323.
Simpson, Sir George,
feud with McLoughlin, i. 37; tries murderer of McLoughlin, jr, 236; visits
Or., 250 -1; settlement policy, 316; letter of, ii. 108.
Simpson, Sam’l L.,
works of, ii. 692. Sims, C., favors new terr. scheme, ii. 255.
Sims, John, murder
of, ii. 489. Sinclair, Col. J. B.. at Fort Boise, ii. 519.
Sinslaw, settlement
at, ii. 759:
Sioux, harass White’s
party, i. 260. Siskiyou co., pet. of citizens, ii. 55S. Skmner, A. A., circuit
judge, i. 603; left for Cal., ii. 47; com. to settle Cay use war debt, 79;
signs memorial, 127; claim of, 184; Ind. com- mis’r, 208; life and public
services, 309-10; dist judge, 670.
Slacum, W. A , report
on miss., i. 88, 101; ’J. S. agent in N. W., 100 -3; treatment by II. Ii. Co.,
101-3; aids settlers, 140-1, 152; opposes H. B. Co., 141-2.