Oregon Coast Bibliography by Unknown Bancroft, Hubert Howe
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Oregon Historic Trails Report Book (1998)
i ,' o () (\ ô OnBcox HrsroRrc Tnans Rpponr ô o o o. o o o o (--) -,J arJ-- ö o {" , ã. |¡ t I o t o I I r- L L L L L (- Presented by the Oregon Trails Coordinating Council L , May,I998 U (- Compiled by Karen Bassett, Jim Renner, and Joyce White. Copyright @ 1998 Oregon Trails Coordinating Council Salem, Oregon All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Printed in the United States of America. Oregon Historic Trails Report Table of Contents Executive summary 1 Project history 3 Introduction to Oregon's Historic Trails 7 Oregon's National Historic Trails 11 Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail I3 Oregon National Historic Trail. 27 Applegate National Historic Trail .41 Nez Perce National Historic Trail .63 Oregon's Historic Trails 75 Klamath Trail, 19th Century 17 Jedediah Smith Route, 1828 81 Nathaniel Wyeth Route, t83211834 99 Benjamin Bonneville Route, 1 833/1 834 .. 115 Ewing Young Route, 1834/1837 .. t29 V/hitman Mission Route, 184l-1847 . .. t4t Upper Columbia River Route, 1841-1851 .. 167 John Fremont Route, 1843 .. 183 Meek Cutoff, 1845 .. 199 Cutoff to the Barlow Road, 1848-1884 217 Free Emigrant Road, 1853 225 Santiam Wagon Road, 1865-1939 233 General recommendations . 241 Product development guidelines 243 Acknowledgements 241 Lewis & Clark OREGON National Historic Trail, 1804-1806 I I t . .....¡.. ,r la RivaÌ ï L (t ¡ ...--."f Pðiräldton r,i " 'f Route description I (_-- tt |". -
Agricultural Development in Western Oregon, 1825-1861
Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 1-1-2011 The Pursuit of Commerce: Agricultural Development in Western Oregon, 1825-1861 Cessna R. Smith Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Smith, Cessna R., "The Pursuit of Commerce: Agricultural Development in Western Oregon, 1825-1861" (2011). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 258. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.258 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. The Pursuit of Commerce: Agricultural Development in Western Oregon, 1825-1861 by Cessna R. Smith A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History Thesis Committee: William L. Lang, Chair David A. Horowitz David A. Johnson Barbara A. Brower Portland State University ©2011 ABSTRACT This thesis examines how the pursuit of commercial gain affected the development of agriculture in western Oregon’s Willamette, Umpqua, and Rogue River Valleys. The period of study begins when the British owned Hudson’s Bay Company began to farm land in and around Fort Vancouver in 1825, and ends in 1861—during the time when agrarian settlement was beginning to expand east of the Cascade Mountains. Given that agriculture -
Oregon State University Department of Collection to the Museum in 1982
43714 Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 140 / Thursday, July 21, 2011 / Notices Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Native American human remains were SUMMARY: The Oregon State University Berthold Reservation, North Dakota; Ute removed is the aboriginal land of the Department of Anthropology has Indian Tribe of the Uintah & Ouray Crow Tribe of Montana. completed an inventory of human Reservation, Utah; and Ute Mountain • Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(9), the remains, in consultation with the Tribe of the Ute Mountain Reservation, human remains described above appropriate Indian tribes, and has Colorado New Mexico & Utah represent the physical remains of one determined that there is a cultural (hereinafter referred to as ‘‘The Tribes’’). individual of Native American ancestry. affiliation between the human remains • Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(3)(A), and present-day Indian tribes. History and Description of the Remains the one object described above is Representatives of any Indian tribe that On an unknown date, human remains reasonably believed to have been placed believes itself to be culturally affiliated representing a minimum of one with or near individual human remains with the human remains may contact individual were removed from Maxson at the time of death or later as part of the Oregon State University Department #1, Site No. 20, N.E. of Greeley, Kuner, the death rite or ceremony. of Anthropology. Repatriation of the Weld County, CO, by Asa C. Maxson, an • Pursuant to 43 CFR 10.11(c)(1), the human remains to the Indian tribes avocational archeologist. In February disposition of the human remains and stated below may occur if no additional 2008, the human remains (16 teeth) associated funerary object is to the claimants come forward. -
Click Here to Download the 4Th Grade Curriculum
Copyright © 2014 The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon. All rights reserved. All materials in this curriculum are copyrighted as designated. Any republication, retransmission, reproduction, or sale of all or part of this curriculum is prohibited. Introduction Welcome to the Grand Ronde Tribal History curriculum unit. We are thankful that you are taking the time to learn and teach this curriculum to your class. This unit has truly been a journey. It began as a pilot project in the fall of 2013 that was brought about by the need in Oregon schools for historically accurate and culturally relevant curriculum about Oregon Native Americans and as a response to countless requests from Oregon teachers for classroom- ready materials on Native Americans. The process of creating the curriculum was a Tribal wide effort. It involved the Tribe’s Education Department, Tribal Library, Land and Culture Department, Public Affairs, and other Tribal staff. The project would not have been possible without the support and direction of the Tribal Council. As the creation was taking place the Willamina School District agreed to serve as a partner in the project and allow their fourth grade teachers to pilot it during the 2013-2014 academic year. It was also piloted by one teacher from the Pleasant Hill School District. Once teachers began implementing the curriculum, feedback was received regarding the effectiveness of lesson delivery and revisions were made accordingly. The teachers allowed Tribal staff to visit during the lessons to observe how students responded to the curriculum design and worked after school to brainstorm new strategies for the lessons and provide insight from the classroom teacher perspective. -
Oregon's Civil
STACEY L. SMITH Oregon’s Civil War The Troubled Legacy of Emancipation in the Pacific Northwest WHERE DOES OREGON fit into the history of the U.S. Civil War? This is the question I struggled to answer as project historian for the Oregon Historical Society’s new exhibit — 2 Years, Month: Lincoln’s Legacy. The exhibit, which opened on April 2, 2014, brings together rare documents and artifacts from the Mark Family Collection, the Shapell Manuscript Founda- tion, and the collections of the Oregon Historical Society (OHS). Starting with Lincoln’s enactment of the final Emancipation Proclamation on January , 863, and ending with the U.S. House of Representatives’ approval of the Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery on January 3, 86, the exhibit recreates twenty-five critical months in the lives of Abraham Lincoln and the American nation. From the moment we began crafting the exhibit in the fall of 203, OHS Museum Director Brian J. Carter and I decided to highlight two intertwined themes: Lincoln’s controversial decision to emancipate southern slaves, and the efforts of African Americans (free and enslaved) to achieve freedom, equality, and justice. As we constructed an exhibit focused on the national crisis over slavery and African Americans’ freedom struggle, we also strove to stay true to OHS’s mission to preserve and interpret Oregon’s his- tory. Our challenge was to make Lincoln’s presidency, the abolition of slavery, and African Americans’ quest for citizenship rights relevant to Oregon and, in turn, to explore Oregon’s role in these cataclysmic national processes. This was at first a perplexing task. -
Grain, Flour and Ships – the Wheat Trade in Portland, Oregon
Grain, Flour and Ships The Wheat Trade in Portland, Oregon Postcard Views of the Oregon Grain Industry, c1900 Prepared for Prosper Portland In Partial Fulfillment of the Centennial Mills Removal Project Under Agreement with the Oregon SHPO and the USACE George Kramer, M.S., HP Sr. Historic Preservation Specialist Heritage Research Associates, Inc. Eugene, Oregon April 2019 GRAIN, FLOUR AND SHIPS: THE WHEAT TRADE IN PORTLAND, OREGON By George Kramer Prepared for Prosper Portland 222 NW Fifth Avenue Portland, OR 97209 Heritage Research Associates, Inc. 1997 Garden Avenue Eugene, Oregon 97403 April 2019 HERITAGE RESEARCH ASSOCIATES REPORT NO. 448 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page List of Figures ......................................................................................................................... iv List of Tables ........................................................................................................................... v 1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 1 2. Historic Overview – Grain and Flour in Portland .............................................................. 4 Growing and Harvesting 4 Transporting Grain to Portland ................................................................................... 6 Exporting from Portland ............................................................................................. 8 Flour Mills ................................................................................................................. -
Native American Cultures (PDF)
Unit 5: Life Skills Overview and Resources ...................................................................................................................................... 2 Not So Long Ago ................................................................................................................................................... 7 Encounters With Strangers ................................................................................................................................. 12 Make Yourself Acquainted ................................................................................................................................. 16 Ask Mr./Ms. Manners ........................................................................................................................................ 31 Games, Sports and Amusements ........................................................................................................................ 34 CONTENT KNOWLEDGE STANDARDS BY LESSON ................................................................................................ 43 © 2001 Lewis and Clark Trial Heritage Foundation 6.1 Overview and Resources The North American west was not a vacant place. Meriwether Lewis, William Clark and the Corps of Discovery found not only abundance but also great diversity in the Native American cultures. The people living west of the Mississippi River were neither “flower children” nor “savages.” They were human beings with the same concerns for themselves, their families and their -
25Th Anniversary of Oregon's Statewide Planning Program
DEPARTMENT OF LAND CONSERVATION AND DEVELOPMENT Dear Media Contact: This year marks the 25th anniversary of Oregon's statewide planning program. This anniversary comes at a time when more Oregonians than ever are concerned about protecting our state's livability in the face of rapid growth. There is a high level of public interest in growth management, the environment, public costs of growth, and many other issues our planning program deals with. This "25th anniversary packet" provides information about our planning program and its history. It contains the following: a brochure on the program; a copy of Governor Kitzhaber's proclamation declaring May as Land Use Planning Month; some possibilities for story ideas; a list of activities that have already taken place or are planned over the next few months; a brief history of planning for land uses in Oregon, before the current program; highlights and key dates from the program's 25-year history; an analysis of future challenges; some of the program's major accomplishments; quotations about the planning program from all Oregon governors since Gov. Tom McCall, who requested the original legislation; and 0 a reference to key internet sites on planning. We hope you will find ths information useful. Please let us know if you need additional information or if there are other resources we can supply that will help you. Trish Daniels, DLCD Communications Specialist 503-373-0019 [email protected] 1175 Court Street NE Salem, OR 97310-0590 (503) 373-0050 FAX (503) 362-6705 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR -
Ore Bin / Oregon Geology Magazine / Journal
VOLUME 40, No.4 APRIL 1978 STATE Of OREGON DEPARTMENT OF GEOlOGY AND MINERAL INDUSTRIES The Ore Bin Published Monthly by STATE OF OREGON OEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY ANO MINERAL INOUSTRIES Head Office: 1069 State Office Bldg .• Portland 97201 Telephone: [503) 229-5580 FlELO OFFICES 2033 First Street 521 N.E. "E" Street Baker 97814 Grants Pass 97526 MINED LANO RECLAMATION OIVISION 1129 S.E. Santi am Road Albany 97321 Subscription Rates I year, $3.00; 3 years, $8.00 Available back issues: $.25 at counter, $.35 mailed Second class postage paid at Portland, Oregon GOVERNING BOARO Leeanne MacCo 11 , Portland Robert W. Ooty, Talent John L. Schwabe, Portland STATE GEOLOGIST Donald A. Hull GEOLOGISTS IN CHARGE OF FIELD OFFICES Howard C. Brooks, Baker Len Ramp, Grants Pass EDITOR Beverly F. Vogt Permission to reprint Information contained herein is granted. Credit glven the State of Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries will be appreciated. State of Oregon The ORE BIN Department of Geology Volume 40, No.4 and Mi neral I ndustri es 1069 State Office Bldg. April 1978 Portland Oregon 97201 THE GOLDEN YEARS OF EASTERN OREGON * By Miles F. Potter and Harold McCall *Reprinted by popular request from the June 1968 ORE BIN This pictorial article is an abstract of the authors' book, "Oregon's Golden Years," published by Caxton Publishing Company, Caldwell, Idaho, in 1976. The book is already in its third printing. The article and accompanying pictures remind us of a commonly forgotten fact: The di scovery of go Id in eastern Oregon had a tremen dous impact on the economy and deve lopment of the entire region, and this impact is sti II being felt more than a century later. -
Chinook Resilience Heritage and Cultural Revitalization on the Lower Columbia River JON D
FORTHCOMING FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS 30% off Chinook Resilience Heritage and Cultural Revitalization on the Lower Columbia River JON D. DAEHNKE FOREWORD BY TONY A. JOHNSON NATIVE AMERICAN AND INDIGE- The Chinook Indian Nation-whose ancestors lived along both shores of the NOUS STUDIES; ANTHROPOLOGY; HISTORY / WESTERN HISTORY river’s mouth-continue to reside near traditional lands. Because of its nonrec- lower Columbia River, as well as north and south along the Pacific coast at the 248 pp., 15 illus. ognized status, the Chinook Indian Nation often faces challenges in its efforts to $30.00 paperback, 9780295742267 claim and control cultural heritage and its own history and to assert a right to Indigenous Confluences place on the Columbia River. November 2017 Chinook Resilience is a collaborative ethnography of how the Chinook Indian Na- JON D. DAEHNKE is assistant professor tion, whose land and heritage are under assault, continues to move forward and of anthropology at the University of Cali- remain culturally strong and resilient. Jon Daehnke focuses on Chinook partici- fornia, Santa Cruz. pation in archaeological projects and sites of public history as well as the tribe’s embodied enactment of heritage, one steeped in reciprocity and protocol rather role in the revitalization of canoe culture in the Pacific Northwest. This lived and to pre-order at 30% discount than documentation and preservation of material objects, offers a tribally rele- Call Hopkins Fulfillment Service at vant, forward-looking, and decolonized approach for the cultural resilience and 1-800-537-5487 or order online. survival of the Chinook Indian Nation, even in the face of federal nonrecognition. -
Ore Bin / Oregon Geology Magazine / Journal
Vol. 30, No. 6 June 1968 STATE OF OREGON DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND MINERAL INDUSTIIIES • The Ore Bin • Published Monthly 8y STATE OF OREGON DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND MINERAL INDUSTRIES Head Office: 1069 State Office Bldg., Portland, Oregon - 97201 Telephone: 226 ... 2161, Ext. 488 Field Offices 2033 First Street 521 N. E. liE" Street Bak.. 97814 Grants Pas. 97526 Subscription rote $1 . 00 per year. Available back Issues 10 cents each. • • * • * • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * • • * * * Second class postage paid at Portland, Oregon • * * * • • * • * • * * • * • • * * • • • * * * * * • • • * * • * • * • * * • GOVERNING BOARD Fronk C . McColloch, Chalrmon, Portland Fayette I. tristol, Gronts Poss Harold Bonta, 8ak..- STATE GEOLOGIST Hollis M. Dole GEOLOGISTS IN CHARGE OF FIELD OFFICES Norman S. Wagner. Boker Len Ramp, Grants PaIS P. mi$$ion is granted to reprint infonl'lCl lion c:onfolned h ..ei n. Any credit given the State of Oregon Deportmen t of Geology ond Mi ner(ll Inmnlries for compiling this information wi ll be opprec:loted . State of Oregon The ORE BI N Department of Geology Volume 30, No.6 and Mineral Indcstries 1069 State Offi ce BI dg. June 1968 Portland Oregon 97201 THE GOLDEN YEARS OF EASTERN OREGON By Mi les F. Potter and Harold McCall The following pictorial article on the golden years of eastern Oregon, by Mi les F. Potter and Harold McCall, is an abstract from their man uscript of a forthcoming book they are calling "Golden Pebbles." Potter is a long-time resident of eastern Oregon and an amateur his torian of some of the early gold camps in Grant and Baker Counties. McCall is a photographer in Oregon City with a keen interest in the history of gold mining. -
Four Deaths: the Near Destruction of Western
DAVID G. LEWIS Four Deaths The Near Destruction of Western Oregon Tribes and Native Lifeways, Removal to the Reservation, and Erasure from History THE NOTIONS OF DEATH and genocide within the tribes of western Oregon are convoluted. History partially records our removal and near genocide by colonists, but there is little record of the depth of these events — of the dramatic scale of near destruction of our peoples and their cultural life ways. Since contact with newcomers, death has come to the tribes of western Oregon in a variety of ways — through epidemic sicknesses, followed by attempted genocide, forced marches onto reservations, reduction of land holdings, broken treaty promises, attempts to destroy tribal culture through assimilation, and the termination of federal recognition of sovereign, tribal status. Death, then, has been experienced literally, culturally, legally, and even in scholarship; for well over a century, tribal people were not consulted and were not adequately represented in historical writing. Still, the people have survived, restoring their recognized tribal status and building structures to maintain and regain the people’s health and cultural well-being. This legacy of death and survival is shared by all the tribes of Oregon, though specific details vary, but the story is not well known or understood by the state’s general public. Such historical ignorance is another kind of death — one marked by both myth and silence. An especially persistent myth is the notion that there lived and died a “last” member of a particular tribe or people. The idea began in the late nineteenth century, when social scientists who saw population declines at the reservations feared that the tribes would die off before scholars could collect their data and complete their studies.