Etienne Lucier
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George Simpson to John Mcloughlin, 1842
George Simpson to John McLoughlin, 1842 By Governor George Simpson Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) Governor George Simpson wrote this short letter to John McLoughlin, chief factor of the company’s Columbia Department, on April 27, 1842, to inform him of the recent murder of his son, John McLoughlin, Jr. “Young John” was chief trader of Fort Stikine, a fur-trading post rented from the Russian American Company on the southeast Alaskan coast. This typescripted version was edited by E. E. Rich and published in 1943 in The Letters of John McLoughlin from Fort Vancouver to the Governor and Committee, Second Series, 1839 – 44 John McLoughlin, Jr. was born on August 18, 1812. For most of his youth, he was raised apart from his father, primarily by his great-uncle, Simon Fraser. Although young John’s first appeal to join the ranks of the HBC was denied (by Simpson himself), his subsequent participation in James Dickson’s failed “Indian Liberating Army” in 1836 gave cause for Simpson to re-evaluate his earlier assessment. Simpson decided to offer young John, along with several other trouble-making “half-breeds” like him, positions in the company rather than have them unemployed and directionless within HBC trading territory. Young John was made chief trader of Fort Stikine during the spring of 1841. He was murdered there in April 1842. Simpson discovered the death of young John while on a tour of the Columbia Department’s coastal operations. Although his letter to McLoughlin was brief, Simpson’s depiction of the murder as “justifiable homicide” enraged the bereaved father. -
Fur Trade & Beaver Ecology
Oregon’s First Resource Industry: The Fur Trade & Beaver Ecology in the Beaver State Grades: Versions for 4-HS Subjects: American History, Oregon History, Economics, Social Studies Suggested Time Allotment: 1-2 Class Periods Background: The first of Oregon’s natural resources to be recognized and extracted by Euro-Americans was fur. In the early decades of the nineteenth century, furs were highly valuable commodities of international trade. Early explorers of the northwest, such as Robert Gray and Lewis and Clark, reported that the region’s many waterways supported an abundant population of sea otter and beaver. When people back east heard about this, they knew that there was the potential of great profits to be made. So, the first permanent Euro-American settlements in Oregon were trading outposts established by large and powerful fur trading companies that were based in London and New York. Initially the traders in Oregon obtained their furs by bartering with Native Americans. As the enormous value of the northwest’s fur resources quickly became apparent to them, corporations such as Hudson’s Bay Company and Pacific Fur Company decided to start employing their own workforce, and professional trappers were brought in from Canada, the American states, and islands of the South Seas. The increasing number of trappers and competition between English and American companies quickly began to deplete the populations of the fur-bearing animals. In fact, by 1824 the Hudson’s Bay Company was pursuing a strategy of intentionally ‘trapping out’ and eliminating beaver from entire sections of the Oregon interior in order to keep rival businesses from moving into those areas. -
A Settlement Model at the Robert Newel Farmstead (35MA41
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Mollie Manion for the Degree of Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology presented on March 14 2006 Title: A Settlement Model at the Robert Newell Farmstead (35MA41). French Prairie. Oregon Abstract approved: -- Signature redacted forprivacy. David R. Brauner This thesis is based on the excavations of the Robert Newell farmstead (35MA41), excavated in 2002 and 2003 by the Oregon State University Department of Anthropology archaeological field school. Robert Newell lived at this farm from 1843- 1854. Major architectural features, including a brick hearth and postholes were discovered at the site. This is the first early historic site excavated with such intact architectural features since the Willamette Mission site found in the 1980s. The data from the excavation also revealed artifacts dating from the 1830s through the mid 1850s. I have hypothesized an occupation prior to 1843, when Robert Newell moved onto the property. Based on this hypothesis, a settlement model has been proposed for the site based on the analysis of the archival and archaeological data. I specificallypropose that John Ball, Nathaniel Wyeth's farm workers and William Johnson occupied the site prior to Robert Newell's arrival in 1843. ©Copyright by Mollie Manion March 14, 2006 All Rights Reserved A Settlement Model at the Robert Newell Farmstead (35MA41), French Prairie, Oregon by Mollie Manion A THESIS submitted to Oregon State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Presented March 14, 2006 Commencement June 2006 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS There are so many people to thank on a project like this both personally and professionally First, I would like to thank my husband, Ross Manion. -
Joseph Delard by Connie Lenzen, CG
Joseph Delard By Connie Lenzen, CG Joseph Delard Introduction Joseph Delard, son of Francois and Catherine (Lavaliee) Delard, was baptized on 30 December 1792 at St. Pierre de Sorel, Canada.1 He died in St. Louis, Oregon, and was buried in the St. Louis Cemetery on 26 August 1869.2 He first married Lisette Souchouabe. She died on 19 February 1841, aged 36 years, and was buried in the St. Paul Cemetery.3 After she died, he married Marie Poirier on 16 January 1843. She was the daughter of Tousaint Poirier and Catherine Clatsop. 4 She died in April 1914 in Portland, Oregon.5 Fur-trading companies Joseph joined the Northwest Fur Company in 1817. The Company, headquartered in Montreal, merged with the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) in 1821, and Joseph went to work for the HBC. From 1821 to 1824, he was stationed in the Columbia District. From 1824 to 1825, he worked as a bowsman. From 1825 to 1827, he worked as a steersman. He then worked on the Thompson River in British Columbia as a steersman.6 It was there that Hudson Bay Company Governor George Simpson called him “an able good Steersman and an active hand with horses.”7 Joseph’s wife and growing family were with him as he travelled the Northwest for the fur company. Pierre, his second child, was born on the trail when Joseph was on an Eastern Oregon trapping expedition. Pierre’s biography in An Illustrated History of Central Oregon provides information on the family’s life. The children learned the Spokane Indian language from Lisette and French from Joseph. -
Astoria Adapted and Directed by Chris Coleman
Astoria Adapted and directed by Chris Coleman Based on the book ASTORIA: John Jacob Astor and Thomas Je erson’s Lost Pacific Empire, A Story of Wealth, Ambition, The Guide and Survival by Peter Stark A Theatergoer’s Resource Education & Community Programs Staff Kelsey Tyler Education & Community Programs Director Peter Stark -Click Here- Clara-Liis Hillier Education & Community Programs Associate Eric Werner Education & Community Programs Coordinator The Astor Expedition Matthew B. Zrebski -Click Here- Resident Teaching Artist Resource Guide Contributors Benjamin Fainstein John Jacob Astor Literary Manager and Dramaturg -Click Here- Mikey Mann Graphic Designer The World of Astoria -Click Here- PCS’s 2016–17 Education & Community Programs are generously supported by: Cast and Creative Team -Click Here- Further Research -Click Here- PCS’s education programs are supported in part by a grant from the Oregon Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts. Michael E. Menashe Mentor Graphics Foundation Herbert A. Templeton Foundation H. W. Irwin and D. C. H. Irwin Foundation Autzen Foundation and other generous donors. TONQUIN PARTY Navy Men Captain Jonathan Thorn 1st Mate Ebenezer Fox Aiken (played by Ben Rosenblatt) (played by Chris Murray) (played by Brandon Contreras) Coles Winton Aymes (played by Jeremy Aggers) (played by Michael Morrow Hammack) (played by Leif Norby) Canadian & Scottish Partners Duncan Macdougall Alexander McKay David Stuart (played by Gavin Hoffman) (played by Christopher Hirsh) (played by F. Tyler Burnet) Agnus Robert Stuart (played by Christopher Salazar) (played by Jeremy Aggers) Others Gabriel Franchere Alexander Ross (played by Ben Newman) (played by Nick Ferrucci) OVERLAND PARTY Leaders Wilson Price Hunt Ramsay Crooks Donald MacKenzie (played by Shawn Fagan) (played by Benjamin Tissell) (played by Jeremy Aggers) Company John Bradbury John Reed John Day (played by F. -
The Disadvantages of Hindsight a Re-Reading Ofthe Early American West
Anne F. Hyde The Disadvantages of Hindsight A Re-Reading ofthe Early American West he image of western expansion denoted by Ceorge Caleb Bing- twenty-first-century hindsight we miss the crucial differences. ham's famous painting, Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers Through Daniel Boone, or a generation later, Meriwether Lewis and William Tthe Cumberland Gap {1851-1852), predisposes us to a misunder- Clark, fully understood this political and social reality. They did not standing of western history. Boone forges through a forbidding land- enter an unknown, unpeopled world; they were eager contestants in scape, as if the region to the west were wild and unknown. This con- a familiar imperial game. The participation ofthe United States as a cept of a blank wilderness, long challenged by scholars but powerfully player would eventually change the rules, but the world of the trans- supported by popular culture and national ideology, allows for a telling Mississippi West in 1800 was anything but a tabula rasa. Consider the of western history that centers on the American nation as discoverer context when Thomas |efferson and his ministers negotiated the Loui- and developer. However appealing to nationalistic egos, the story is siana Purchase in 1803. Fur and Indians, which now have moved into wrong. And, even more deadly for teaching, it is boring and predict- the realm of quaint, were at the center of local, national, and interna- able, since we know who wins. A different reading would uncover not tional concern. The fur trade had dominated the global economy for a wilderness, but a set of linked communities filled with Indian and generations, and war and diplomacy with Indian nations presented the European people imbedded in colonial rivalries, imperial schemes, and gravest challenge (and the largest expenditure ofthe federal budget) to global trading networks. -
Interpretation and Conclusions
"LIKE NUGGETS FROM A GOLD MINEu SEARCHING FOR BRICKS AND THEIR MAKERS IN 'THE OREGON COUNTRY' B~f' Kmtm (1 COfwer~ ;\ th¢...i, ...uhmineJ Ilt SOIl(mla Slale UFU vcr,il y 11'1 partial fulfiUlT'Ietlt of the fCqlJln:mcntfi for the dcgr~ of MASTER OF ARTS tn Copyright 2011 by Kristin O. Converse ii AUTHORlZAnON FOR REPRODUCnON OF MASTER'S THESISIPROJECT 1pM' pernlt"j(m I~ n:pnll.lm.:til.m of Ihi$ rhais in ib endrel)" \Ii' !tbout runt\er uuthorilAtlOO fn.)m me. on the condiHt)Jllhat the per",)f1 Of a,eocy rl;!'(lucMing reproduction the "'OS$. and 1:Jf't)vi~ proper ackruJwkd,rnem nf auth.:If'l'htp. III “LIKE NUGGETS FROM A GOLD MINE” SEARCHING FOR BRICKS AND THEIR MAKERS IN „THE OREGON COUNTRY‟ Thesis by Kristin O. Converse ABSTRACT Purpose of the Study: The history of the Pacific Northwest has favored large, extractive and national industries such as the fur trade, mining, lumbering, fishing and farming over smaller pioneer enterprises. This multi-disciplinary study attempts to address that oversight by focusing on the early brickmakers in „the Oregon Country‟. Using a combination of archaeometry and historical research, this study attempts to make use of a humble and under- appreciated artifact – brick – to flesh out the forgotten details of the emergence of the brick industry, its role in the shifting local economy, as well as its producers and their economic strategies. Procedure: Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis was performed on 89 red, common bricks archaeologically recovered from Fort Vancouver and 113 comparative samples in an attempt to „source‟ the brick. -
THE SIGNERS of the OREGON MEMORIAL of 1838 the Present Year, 1933, Is One of Unrest and Anxiety
THE SIGNERS OF THE OREGON MEMORIAL OF 1838 The present year, 1933, is one of unrest and anxiety. But a period of economic crisis is not a new experience in the history of our nation. The year 1837 marked the beginning of a real panic which, with its after-effects lasted well into 1844. This panic of 1837 created a restless population. Small wonder, then, that an appeal for an American Oregon from a handful of American settlers in a little log mission-house, on the banks of the distant Willamette River, should have cast its spell over the depression-striken residents of the Middle Western and Eastern sections of the United States. The Memorial itself, the events which led to its inception, and the detailed story o~ how it was carried across a vast contin ent by the pioneer Methodist missioinary, Jason Lee, have already been published by the present writer.* An article entitled The Oregon Memorial of 1838" in the Oregon Historical Quarterly for March, 1933, also by the writer, constitutes the first docu mented study of the Memorial. Present-day citizens of the "New Oregon" will continue to have an abiding interest in the life stories of the rugged men who signed this historiq first settlers' petition in the gray dawn of Old Oregon's history. The following article represents the first attempt to present formal biographical sketches of the thirty-six signers of this pioneer document. The signers of the Oregon Memorial of 1838 belonged to three distinct groups who resided in the Upper Willamette Valley and whose American headquarters were the Methodist Mission house. -
Road to Oregon Written by Dr
The Road to Oregon Written by Dr. Jim Tompkins, a prominent local historian and the descendant of Oregon Trail immigrants, The Road to Oregon is a good primer on the history of the Oregon Trail. Unit I. The Pioneers: 1800-1840 Who Explored the Oregon Trail? The emigrants of the 1840s were not the first to travel the Oregon Trail. The colorful history of our country makes heroes out of the explorers, mountain men, soldiers, and scientists who opened up the West. In 1540 the Spanish explorer Coronado ventured as far north as present-day Kansas, but the inland routes across the plains remained the sole domain of Native Americans until 1804, when Lewis and Clark skirted the edges on their epic journey of discovery to the Pacific Northwest and Zeb Pike explored the "Great American Desert," as the Great Plains were then known. The Lewis and Clark Expedition had a direct influence on the economy of the West even before the explorers had returned to St. Louis. Private John Colter left the expedition on the way home in 1806 to take up the fur trade business. For the next 20 years the likes of Manuel Lisa, Auguste and Pierre Choteau, William Ashley, James Bridger, Kit Carson, Tom Fitzgerald, and William Sublette roamed the West. These part romantic adventurers, part self-made entrepreneurs, part hermits were called mountain men. By 1829, Jedediah Smith knew more about the West than any other person alive. The Americans became involved in the fur trade in 1810 when John Jacob Astor, at the insistence of his friend Thomas Jefferson, founded the Pacific Fur Company in New York. -
OREGON the Unique Prize
OREGON The Unique Prize by BURT BROWN BARKER INTRODUCTION "Multiplication is vexation!" children chanted from McGuffey's Reader. Vex- atious too is the number of hoary legends and tales which have grown in the fabled Oregon Country. Now the centennial of Oregon's statehood is upon ushigh time to lay to rest much nonsense and to concentrate instead on some exciting facts and dramatic episodes which gave Oregon a special place in our nation's history. No one is better qualified to guide us along the golden road to greater knowledge and mature understanding than Dr. Burt Brown Barkerauthor, educator, his- torian, past president of our statewide Oregon Historical SocietyI name but a few of many interests and abilities which have given the author a unique reputation far beyond state and regional boundaries. Join our guide on the road to Oregon! Having learned a few of the trails and promontories you will then be ready for the riches that are Oregon history. TJToMs \'AUG hAN Director Oregon Historical Society OREGON-THE UNIQUE PRIZE I. Delayed Discovery of Columbia River came interested in the riches of India, and sent their vessels to the east around the Cape of Good THE FIRST in this series of distinctive events Hope, without making any effort to follow up the in the history of Oregon which sets it apart from exploits of Drake. This condition existed for al- the other states in the Union, is the tardy way it most 200 years. was discovered. At the close of the Seven Years \Var in 1763, It seems incredib1etoday that almost 300 years England again turned her attention to the Pacific. -
Barry Lawrence Ruderman Antique Maps Inc
Barry Lawrence Ruderman Antique Maps Inc. 7407 La Jolla Boulevard www.raremaps.com (858) 551-8500 La Jolla, CA 92037 [email protected] Carte De La Partie Occidentale Des Etats-Unis, Dressee pour servir a l'intelligence des decouvertes des Americains. M.M. Hunt et Stuart, fairts en 1811, 12 et 13 . 1821 (First Map of the Oregon Trail--with 2 volumes of text) Stock#: 46454 Map Maker: Lapie Date: 1821 Place: Paris Color: Hand Colored Condition: VG+ Size: 16 x 10 inches Price: SOLD Description: Rare and highly important map of the Northwest, the first ever appearance of the Oregon Trail on a printed map. The present examples is accompanied by Volumes 10 and 12 of the Nouvelles Annales Des Voyages , which includes 3 lengthy articles on reporting on explorations relating to the Hunt and Stuart expeditions from St. Louis to the Pacific, via the Missouri River and the Columbia River and the return expedition, which led to the discovery of South Pass and the Oregon Trail. Lapie's map was prepared to illustrate Robert Stuart and Wilson Price Hunt's account of the overland expeditions between Astoria and the Missouri River, which resulted in the discovery of the South Pass and the Oregon Trail. In 1810, John Jacob Astor of the American Fur Company, outfitted an expedition (known as the Astor Expedition) under the command of Wilson Price Hunt, to find a possible overland supply route from the east and to explore the fur trapping territory for prospective trading posts. Fearing attack by the Blackfoot Indians, the overland expedition veered south of Lewis and Clark's route into what is now Wyoming and in the process passed across Union Pass and into Jackson Hole, Wyoming. -
Etienne Lucier, a Man of Firsts by Connie Lenzen
Etienne Lucier, a Man of Firsts; Connie Lenzen, CG, 28 September 2014 Etienne Lucier, a Man of Firsts By Connie Lenzen Etienne Lucier, son of Michel Lussier and Victorie (Deline-Edeline) Lussier, was born and baptised on 9 June 1786 in Ste Familie de Boucherville, Canada. He married Josephte Nouite on 23 January 1839 and Marguerite Tschinouk on 10 August 1840; both marriages took place in St. Paul, Oregon. He died 8 March 1853 and was buried 9 March 1853 in St. Paul.1 As a member of the Wilson Price Hunt expedition of 1811–12, he was one of the first North Americans to arrive in Oregon. As one of the twenty endorsers of the 1836 petition to the Bishop of Juliopoles to send a priest “as quick as possible,” he was instrumental in obtaining a Catholic priest to minister to the Oregon settlers.2 In 1829, when he settled into a cabin in what is now Portland, Oregon, he was that city’s first resident.3 As one of the first settlers in French Prairie, he broke sod on one of the richest farmlands in Oregon.4 In 1841 he was a member of the first committee charged with forming a government in Oregon Territory.5 On 2 May 1843, Lucier, along with F. X. Matthieu, provided the deciding votes when the question of establishing an Oregon provisional government was called. With the tally of 52-50, Oregon became part of the United States rather than England.6 Because of his contributions to Oregon’s history, he is one of the 158 names of prominent Oregonians memorialized in the frieze in the Oregon State Capitol.7 The Wilson Price Hunt Expedition and first years in Oregon John Jacob Astor formed the Pacific Fur Company in competition to the Canadian fur trading firms.