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Daniel H. Lownsdale
There were three that were usually termed
the Portland proprietors, and who so far broadened and
deepened the movements of things as to be called with some
propriety the founders of the place-not, however, to the
exclusion of any honors due to the first trio. Of these
proprietors, the first on the scene was D. H. Lownsdale,
whose name is most honorably perpetuated among us in the
person of his son, J. P. O. Lownsdale. He was one of the
representative men of the nation of half a century ago;
intelligent, restless, and strongly patriotic, making the
needs of his country an active motive in determining his
choices. He was sprung from one of the old families of
Kentucky, and at an early age moved with his wife to
Indiana. On this remote frontier he was much distressed by
the loss of his companion by death, and returned home, but
soon went to Georgia, engaging in the mercantile business.
In a few years, owing to failure of health, he traveled
abroad, making a prolonged tour of Europe, and spent thus
the time from 1842 to 1844. Returning to the United States
he found the American public much excited upon the Oregon
question, and with no hesitation decided to come to the
Pacific shore, and help hold it against the aggressions of
the British. Reaching the Columbia in 1845, he looked about
for a location, and found none superior to that of Portland.
He laid his claim as near the river as he was able, taking
the place now owned by A. N. King. This was then a dense
woods, much of the timber being hemlock. The presence of
these trees and the abundance of hides in the territory, led
Mr. Lownsdale to establish, as a means of livelihood, a
tannery, upon the small creek which flowed along the eastern
side of his claim, and which, from the fact of the business
thus established has become known as Tanner's Creek. This
was the first leather making establishment of any importance
on the coast and well nigh made Portland. Lownsdale was
fully impressed with the value of Portland as a
prospectively great city, and sought to gain a holding on
the river front. In 1848 he found the opportunity. Lovejoy
had sold his interest to Stark, and now Pettygrove was
becoming so much shaken by ague as to desire to retreat to
the coast. Lownsdale accordingly bought of the latter his
whole interest, paying therefor $5000 in leather-specie not
then being current in Oregon.
Being now owner of the whole site-afterwards coming to an
agreement with Stark by which the latter had the triangular
strip now included between Stark and A streets, and the
river-Lownsdale set in operation as many plans as he could
devise for the increase of the place. He sold lots at small
prices, or even gave them away, for the sake of
improvements. He saw quite early the need of a partner in
this work and found the right man in Stephen Coffin, then of
Oregon City, to whom he sold a half interest.
Coffin, who became during the troubled times of 1861-62
Brigadier-General of the Oregon Militia by appointment of
Governor Gibbs, was one of those men of noble presence, fine
bearing and generous feelings, for which the early days of
our State were distinguished. He is described as possessing
a most benevolent face and in his later years a crown of
abundant white hair upon his head. He also was a "Down
Easter," having been born at Bangor, Maine, in 1807. While
still young he went to Ohio, and as early as 1847 arrived in
Oregon. The first two years of his life in our State were
spent in hard work at Oregon City so successfully as to
enable him to take advantage of Lownsdale's offer.
In the autumn of the same year the third partner, William W.
Chapman, was admitted to the partnership, making a very
strong triumvirate. Chapman was a Virginian by birth. Early
deprived by death of his father, he was left to make his own
way in the world, with what assistance might, be rendered
him by a kind brother and affectionate mother. He succeeded
in gaining a substantial education and a recognized position
as a lawyer before the Virginia Bar. While still young he
went with his family to Iowa, and soon took the lead among
the lawyers of that region-in a day so early that the
Hawkeye State was still a part of Michigan. He was soon
appointed U. S. District Attorney, and in this office made
so good a record that when Iowa was set off as a separate
Territory he was chosen delegate. At Washington he made his
mark as the defender of Iowa's claim to the strip of
territory on the south border which was also desired and at
length contested for by Missouri; and against heavy odds he
was entirely successful. In the convention to form a
constitution for Iowa upon its admission as a State, he was
very influential and became the father of the measure to
transfer the gift of public lands from public improvements
(roads) to the use of public schools, and to provide for
judges by popular election. Both these were new and untried
measures, but have now been incorporated into the organic
law of the Western and of even some of the Atlantic States.
He was also, either in Congress or out of it, the originator
of other important legislation, such as the pre-emption law
for settlers.
He had come to Oregon in 1847, settling first at Corvallis
and later at Salem. He was also much at Oregon City, and was
making a study of the points most likely to rise to
commercial importance. He was ultimately convinced that as
at Portland transportation by water could most conveniently
reach that by land, this must be the place for a city.
Of the company thus formed, Coffin was the President, and
Chapman, Secretary, and the land was held as an undivided
interest. Schemes for the growth of the place began to be
elaborated, and all three of the men worked with untiring
energy. The section was surveyed and platted. The new
streets running north and south were made eighty feet wide.
The river was examined, and at Swan Island a large log that
was a menace to navigation in the narrow channel was
removed.
It must not be supposed that simple natural advantages can
ever make a city. It is pre-supposed that as much energy and
intelligence are put forth in its interests as in that of
some rival point. It is only by making the human factor
equal to that in other places that the factor of better
natural facilities is ever made preponderating. In the early
days of Portland, the proprietors had to work like heroes
day and night to hold their city up to its advantages. It
had a number of exceedingly strong and pugnacious rivals.
Oregon City was rather easily letting go the race for
commercial supremacy, holding on confidently to its position
as the political capital, but Milwaukie was coming into the
race with great vigor. The proprietor, Lot Whitcomb, was a
man of as much ambition as ever lived in Oregon, and had
staked his last dollar and his whole hope of fortune upon
the supremacy of the city that he had laid off on his claim.
It was for him a serious matter to miss having the greatest
city of the Pacific Coast upon his farm. In 1847 he began
his operations, and in '48 was greatly strengthened by the
arrival at the place of Captain Joseph. Kellogg, who at once
entered into his purpose to build the city. A sawmill was
erected, and soon ships loaded with lumber and produce were
dispatched from her wharf down the Coast to San Francisco.
The avails of some of these trips were so great that a
vessel, the old bark Lausanne, was purchased out of
the profits. The transaction was made at San Francisco, and
the bark happened to have at that time a pair of engines and
all necessary machinery for a steamer, which were included
in the bargain. Coming into possession of this steam engine,
Whitcomb determined to build a river racer to make sure the
advantages of his city. By Christmas day, 1850, his task was
done, and the steamer Lot Whitcomb, amid the
tumultuous rejoicing of the people, slid down the ways into
the Willamette. She was a first-class, commodious boat,
staunch and moderately swift, and at once began making a
trip to Astoria, charging $15 fare, and passing by Portland,
as she steamed to and fro, without so much as giving a
salute.
St. Helens was also a formidable rival. The Pacific Mail
Steam-ship Company, who first made Astoria their stopping
point, soon bought at St. Helens a large land interest and
made this the terminus of their line. By the terms of
existing navigation in the winter of '50-'51, Milwaukie was
the head of river and St. Helens the head of ocean steam
navigation; and Portland was left forlornly in the midst
unprovided for. But before seeing how the proprietors
extricated themselves from this difficulty it would be more
accordant with chronology, and indeed the order of growth,
to see what class of citizens and what improvements were
being added to the city.
During the summer of 1849 the rush to the gold mines became
so general that the city was well nigh depopulated, but
three men remaining within its limits. These were Lownsdale,
Warren and Col. King. This out-going tide was necessarily
calculated to leave Portland high and dry on her alluvium.
But there is never an ebb that is not followed by a flow,
and the autumn of that year, and the winter following, saw
the Portlanders flocking back again. Losses were more than
made up, and the "dust" from California set in motion the
wheels of enterprise in a wonderful way. We are told that
"the year passed out and 1850 was enthroned with brighter
promise. The prices of wheat, flour, lumber, fruit and
vegetables, went up to fabulous figures in San Francisco and
Oregon began to reap a splendid harvest from her fertile
soil. By and by, too, the miners began to return. They were
not much to look at-tanned, tattered, inhabited, maybe, but
under their frowsy gaberdines was a complete mail of money
belts, and they were just as good as gold. Business revived
and enterprise got upon its legs.
Besides Chapman and Coffin, there was a considerable number
of new men who added force and brain to the little
community. Deacon Homan M. Humphrey, who gave name to
Humphrey's Mountain by taking there his claim, settled in
1849. A descendant of an old Eastern family, he had for some
years before coming to Oregon been a pioneer of Iowa, and
incorporated in his character the inflexible virtues of his
ancestry and the added facility and adaptability of mind
gained from Western life. Thomas Carter located his claim a
little later, and one Jones, farther up the canyon, made his
beginning on the land now occupied by the Poor Farm.
Religious societies began to be formed. Rev. George H..
Atkinson, whose name will always be known in Oregon as one
of the most able and self-denying of her missionaries and
pioneers of civilization, had come to Oregon the year before
and located at Oregon City. While attending to his own
field, he was also seeking to establish churches at other
points, and for the work at Portland was urging his society
to provide a pastor. Designated for this field was Rev.
Horace Lyman, together with his wife, who sailed from New
York in November, 1848, on the bark Whitton>, making the
passage around Cape Horn in six months to San Francisco.
From that city they voyaged up to the Columbia Bar on the
Toulon, which was a month ' or more on the water, often
rocking on the idle swells and lying too, in the murk of a
very smoky autumn, waiting for a west wind, and at length
running upon a sand flat once inside the breakers. Up the
rivers to Portland they were accommodated on the prim little
Sarah McFarland, while the brig worked up on the
tides so slowly that the passengers had ample time to go
ashore and hunt bear, or go fowling for geese and ducks. Mr.
Lyman was from Massachusetts, born in 1815 at East Hampton;
an alumnus of William's College, and of Andover Theological
Seminary. Arrived in Portland, he found accommodations for
himself and wife in a building erected to serve as a stable.
The first winter was spent by him in teaching school and in
preaching, and making ready for a church organization and a
church building. He was exceedingly active in religious,
educational, benevolent and temperance enterprises, and soon
became known over the whole State as among the foremost in
these endeavors. He cleared with his own hands the ground
occupied by the First Congregational Church at Second and
Jefferson streets.
Even more widely known was the first Methodist minister,
Father Wilbur, who arrived upon the scene at about the same
time. He was a New Yorker, having been born at Lowville in
that State in 1811. This was out in the wilderness in those
distant days, and as he grew up the boy had the struggle to
make with labor and self-denial. By his Presbyterian parents
he was rigorously brought up; taught that the chief end of
man was not in the trifling pleasures of the world. With
this creed he was not, during his younger days, in full
accord, but bent himself to the acquisition of fortune and
the accomplishment of secular ends. At the age of
twenty-nine, however, but a month after his marriage, he
gave up wholly his worldly aims and offered himself to
preach the Gospel. His services were accepted by the
Methodist Episcopal Church, and he was licensed to exhort.
Having obtained a fair academic education, he was able to
perform satisfactory work, and labored with much zeal and
fidelity in the Black River Conference. In 1846 he was
sought as a missionary to Oregon. He came by way of Cape
Horn, and was accustomed, to perform labors on the vessel
for the sake of relieving the tedium of physical inaction.
Arriving in Oregon, June 27, 1847, he passed by Portland, in
its woods, to Salem, and at that place and Oregon City
remained two years. After this he was appointed to the
Portland circuit. Being a man of great physical force and
power, he not only did the work of pastor, but also
performed much manual labor. His toils at that early day are
well described by Rev. H. K. Hines in the following
language: "Stalwart and strong, the great forest that stood
where the church (Taylor Street) now stands, fell before his
axe. Versatile and resolute, the walls of the old church and
academy rose by his saw and hammer, or grew white and
beautiful under the sweep of his brush. Tireless and
evangelical, Sunday listened with gladness to his earnest
preaching of the Gospel. Poverty was fed at his table.
Weariness rested on his couch. Sickness was cured by his
medicine."
An ambitious man, full of plans and endeavors for the
promotion of religious and humane enterprises, Father Wilbur
was a central figure in the community in which he aged. He
was one of the radical men of the early days.
Another man noted for his urbanity, generosity, and ability
was Hiram. Smith. He came to Oregon first in 1845, as a sort
of scout of civilization, to spy out the new promised land
for the restless millions behind. He was sometimes known 'as
"Red Shirt Smith," to distinguish him from the other Smiths,
who bore such pseudonyms as "Chickamin," "Carving Knife;"
"Three Fingered," or "Blubber Mouth." Such soubriquets as
these were by no means a sign of contempt, but rather a mark
of familiarity and good fellowship, and illustrates how the
early pioneers enlivened their difficult circumstances by
broad humor. In 1849 he dispatched goods by way of Cape
Horn, in the care of his brother Isaac, and a store was
established at Portland in 1850. Himself with a large
company came across the plains in 1851. Captain Smith, as he
was frequently called, was a man of much business
experience, having been a manufacturer of fanning mills in
Ohio, and was wealthy, having acquired a fortune of one
hundred thousand dollars. He used much of his money in
coming to Oregon, and in assisting immigrants. During one
season lie went out toward the Snake River with a supply of
provisions to meet the incoming train of immigrants, but
found so many of them destitute of means, and being unable
to refuse any of them, whether rich or poor, the necessaries
they so greatly needed, he finally gave away the most of his
flour and beef, without money or price. Some of those
benefitted finally paid him; as a man who came into town a
few years later bringing to his store an enormous dressed
hog as principal and interest, and also unburdened himself
of a long meditated apology for having cursed him because he
had not been allowed more. But many never did. To the poor
and unfortunate in the city Hiram Smith was a sort of angel
of deliverance, and made a special point of putting broken
or dispirited men on their feet once more. Since his death
unknown benevolences have come to light, and his gifts
during the Oregon Indian wars, for the relief of, settlers
and wounded soldiers, and his fund placed at service in his
old home in Ohio for the widows of soldiers of the War of
the Rebellion, reflect a world of credit not only upon his
own name, but no less upon Portland.
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