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Proprietors and
Growth
Dr. Ralph Wilcox of New
York, a pioneer of 1845, was the first
physician, and also the first school
teacher. In a little frame building on Front
and Taylor Streets put up by Mr. McNemee he
kept a school of about a dozen scholars. Dr.
Wilcox was for many years prominent before
the public as a citizen of Portland, and
afterwards as clerk of the State legislature
at Salem, and clerk of the United States
court at Portland.
Of others that fill out the dreamy picture
of that distant past before '49, may be
mentioned a family by the name of Warren,
embracing in its circle two beautiful
daughters; the two brothers O'Bryants,
Humphrey and Hugh, the latter becoming
subsequently the first mayor; Anthony
Whittaker; Ennyard; Ross; Cooper; J. L.
Morrison, a jolly Scotchman, who had a
little lumber and flour depot at the foot of
the street now bearing his name, and who had
an intimate friend and parhaps partner in
Jehu Scrudder; both excellent men. There was
a young man, G. W. Bell, clerk for
Pettygrove, who also at one time kept the
first bakery, located on the north side of
Morrison Street, while the blacksmith shop
was on the south side nearer the river.
In 1847, L. B. Hastings arrived with his
family from Illinois-a man of much business
capacity and energy. There was also a
married man, Mr. Tallantyre, who arrived, it
is thought, the year before. These remained
until '51 when they sailed away in a
schooner of their own together with Mr.
Pettygrove, to found Port Townsend, in
Washington.
Col. Wm. King was but little later upon the
scene. The following characterization of
this unusual man is found in an address
before the Oregon Pioneer Association by
Judge R. P. Boise who became familiarly
acquainted with him at the Oregon
Legislature in 1851. He says: "Col. King was
even then advanced to the prime of life. He
was a veteran politician, who had done
service as a legislator and lobbyist before
he came to Oregon, and knew well the various
evolutions of legislative tactics. He was a
ready debater and could use with equal
earnestness sound argument or sophistry, and
could marshal the selfish desires, interests
and prejudices of men with consummate skill,
and like most men who aim at carrying a
point he was not over-scrupulous as to the
means by which it was attained. He 'was a
firm, and faithful friend, and a bitter
enemy. He had faults which caused him much
trouble and suffering-but who has not
faults? He was ever generous and kind, and
possessed a keen and penetrating mind, and
much intelligence, which would make him a
marked man in any community." After Col.
King came to Portland, if there was anything
going on he was sure to have a hand in it,
and perhaps to be very near the bottom of
it.
Captain Nathaniel Crosby was from Cape Cod,
Massachusetts. In early life he went to sea,
rose at length to the position of master and
finally owner of a vessel. He was, next
after Couch, the first to engage in a
regular trade at Portland, and accomplished
as much as any one for the establishment of
our commerce. After leaving Portland, and
not succeeding to his mind in building up a
city at the lower mouth of the Willamette,
he removed to Puget Sound and engaged in
milling at Tumwater, near Olympia. He was
one of the pioneers and most prominent
citizens of Washington Territory.
Benjamin Stark, a name so well known in
Portland and perpetuated in Stark street,
was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, January
26, 1822. He was graduated from Union
School, New London, Connecticut, in 1835.
Here he entered upon a business career,
beginning in a counting house in New York
City, and became a merchant. In 1845 he came
to Oregon as supercargo on the bark
Toulon and engaged in trade. He
afterwards studied law and was admitted to
practice in 1850. He now rapidly rose in
public preferment and was elected a member
of the Territorial House of the Legislature,
and in 1861 was appointed U. S. Senator by
Governor Whiteaker to fill out the unexpired
term of Col. E. D. Baker. He served to
December 1, 1862. He was prominent in
politics as a Democrat, acting as delegate
from Oregon to the National Convention of
the Democratic party at Chicago in 1864, and
in 1868 from Connecticut to the Convention
in New York. He has for many years been a
resident of New London, Connecticut.
From the above enumeration it will be seen
that even in the primitive days Portland had
a considerable community of intelligent and
wideawake people. Being frontiersmen, or at
any rate having acquired the frontier habits
and manners in coming hither, they were
exceptionally, sociable and hospitable. They
kept the evenings lively around their
hearthstones, and had candy pulls and
parties and took pleasure rides in their
canoes on the river. The coming of a ship,
the erection of a new house, or the felling
of the immense trees, formed items of news
and topics of conversation fully as valuable
and interesting as the staple of to-day.
School was kept up, and religious meetings
were by no means neglected. In this latter
regard the Methodists were the advanced
guard ; Rev. J. S. Smith or Father Kelly
coming down from their homes at stated times
to hold worship in the cooper shop, which
was the most commodious building for the
purpose.
How it looked at Portland then was about how
it looks now at any one of the score of
river villages in the woods to be seen on
the lower Columbia. The forest was a little
notched. Grand trees lay almost three
hundred feet long on the ground, and so big
and burly that the settler felt grimly after
his day's labor in chopping one down, that
he had only made matters worse by getting it
in the way. He examined his sore muscles and
blistered hands and wondered where the
strength was to come from to remove the
monster; while his cow lifted up her nose at
the shaggy bark and impending boughs,
finding the path that she had made through
the underbrush at many days' toil once more
hopelessly closed. So much for background.
On the river bank was a small wharf; at the
foot of Salmon street a fishery. On Front
street at the foot of Washington stood
Pettygrove's new store, an ambitious
building, made of hewn logs and covered with
shingles, giving by its peculiar style and
ensemble something of a shock to the
architectural feelings of the new comer. On
the same block stood Pettygrove's house,
also a pretentious structure. The cooper
shop stood on the site of the Skidmore drug
store, and on Second street was a building
which the old timers still speak of with
more respect than they now accord to the
Hotel Portland. This was Capt. Crosby's
story and half residence with dormer
windows; which is the sole dwelling of our
antique grandeur, and now stands on Fourth
street. There was one cabin put up by 0'
Bryant which was covered with a rustic of
split cedar boards, but of the ten or
fifteen others -not named above-the most
were constructed of round logs.
A description by Mr. James Field of the
houses in the village in February, 1847, is
quite explicit; and although to a certain
extent a repetition of the foregoing, may be
inserted here. Approaching the town from the
lower river one noticed about the foot of B
street on the shore, a log hut; sometimes
used by Capt. Couch as a place of storage
for goods, and possibly for occupation for
himself when off ship. Coming further up,
past a stumpy shore, you saw on the
northwest corner of Front and Washington
streets Petty grove's store and house. Near
by was Whittaker's small one-story frame
building. On Alder and Front was situated
Job McNemee's two-story residence, and on
the same block was a house occupied by Thos.
Tallantyre, who had on the river bank in
front an establishment for cutting lumber
with a whip-saw. On the corner of Taylor and
Front streets appeared the double log cabin
of John Waymire, in many respects the most
important structure in the city. Next south,
in the middle of the block, was the house of
Dr. Ralph Wilcox. On the north side of
Taylor, between Front and First, stood a
little cabin 7x9, which for many years led a
sort of uncertain and wandering life, such
as its exceeding smallness made quite
possible. On Main street between First and
Second was, the blacksmith shop of James
Terwilliger and his house stood near. On the
south side of Taylor was the cabin of Mr.
Doane. There were also one or two houses, or
cabins, on the back streets in the gloaming
of the fir trees. This baker's dozen of
separate roofs comprised all Portland
forty-three years ago.
The streets were, of course, little more
than ox paths, and skid-ways among the
stumps; gouged out, tramped, bemired in the
rainy winter weather; and in the dry times
raw and dusty. The city was in those days
only large enough to grow, but the swift
years were on the way to bring it to
metropolitan honors. So much for the people
and houses; now for the ships.
The river front was, comparatively speaking,
lively with crafts during these four or five
years. In 1844 Capt. Couch brought the
Chenamus up to the mouth of the
Willamette, and boated his goods thence to
Oregon City. In 1845 Capt. Nathaniel Crosby
brought the bark Toulon into the
river, unloading her at Portland; and from
that time made regular trips. He put up and
kept a small storehouse at the city front,
but for the most part his goods were boated
up to Oregon City. In the summer of 1847,
there were three large crafts in the river
at Portland; the Toulon, the
Whitton, and the Brig Henry. The
Whitton was from New York, a swift,
trim bark, under command of Roland Ghelston.
When about to sail away from Portland he
took on some cargo of butter, cheese and
other produce, and to load these commodities
upon the vessel slipped her in close to the
steep bank, to which he laid poles from the
deck, and planking these over had a
platform, or temporary wharf. Those seeing
how convenient was the lading of a ship from
the Portland shore, predicted that this
would be the place of shipping. Ghelston
made a second voyage to the Pacific Coast,
arriving in San Francisco in 1849 in time to
sell his cargo of pans and shovels at an
enormous profit. The Henry was under
command of Capt. Kilbourne of Massachusetts.
He took his brig up to a point on the east
side of the river, probably somewhere near U
street, and threatened to build a town there
as a rival to Portland. Thus early had a
spirit of opposition begun to show itself,
and so easy was it to go out like Cain and
build a city.
Other craft are mentioned as entering the
river, as the American bark Parsons,
in `46; and the brig Eveline, under
command of Capt. Goodwin of Newburyport,
Massachusetts, which ascended to the landing
on J. R. Stephens' place, on the east side.
This vessel and her clever captain were of
unusual interest to the Portlanders from the
fact that Mrs. Goodwin was also on board. A
year or two later, it is mentioned that "A
beautiful little vessel that had come up
from San Francisco for a load of lumber to
be used in constructing government barracks
there1 lay in the river. This beautiful
vessel, whose name is forgotten, may be a
symbol of other forgotten splendors and
beauties that perhaps clustered about the
embryo city, in the mellow, slow days before
the gold.
Of those who came in by sea on some of these
crafts and became builders of the city,
Couch stands first; Crosby next. Following,
are Benj. Stark, supercargo on the Toulon;
Richard Hoyt, mate on the Whitton;
and Daniel Lunt, one of the mates on the
Chenamus. Among the marked characters of
this early time William Johnson already
alluded to was perhaps behind none. Col.
Nesmith thus speaks of him: " He was, in
1843, the only settler on the river below
the Falls; an English sailor. He was a fine
specimen of the British tar and had at an
early day abandoned his allegiance to the 1
Probably the U. S. transport Anita, under
command of Midshipman Woodworth. British
Lion, and taken service on the old frigate
Constitution. I have frequently
listened to his narrative of the action
between the old Ironsides and the
Guerriere, on which occasion he served
with the boarding party. He used to exhibit
an ugly scar on his head made in that
memorable action, by a British cutlass, and
attributed his escape from death to the fact
that he had a couple of pieces of hoop iron
crossed in his cap, which arrested the
cutlass and saved his life." Besides such
live specimens of Maryatt's and Cooper's
heroes to afford nights of entertainment,
there were occasional excitements and
stirring scenes. It appears that the place
was some times infested by Indians, who
somehow got hold of "blue ruin," a vile sort
of intoxicating liquor, and made night
hideous with their carousals. As, upon one
occasion, their orgies were becoming
unbearable, and Joseph L. Meek, the Marshal
of the Territory, happened to be coming in
at the time from the country, riding upon a
magnificent white horse that would respond
to the slightest touch of the rein, the
proprietors of the place appealed to him to
rid the town of the savages. Providing
himself with a long stout rawhide rope, he
mounted his horse and charged upon the camp
of the Red Men, laying his strap over their
shoulders to right and left, and soon
dispersed the tribe into the woods, all
terror-stricken at his condign punishment of
drunkenness.
Here, moreover, may be quoted Judge Boise's
description of the place as he found it some
years later: " Then, as now, a place of
supply, and containing an abundance of sugar
and coffee and some whisky, which latter was
often purchased by the hardy pioneer in
moderate quantities just to keep out the wet
in returning home on his long, slow journey,
while he slept by his wagon, often covered
by a cloudy sky and exposed to the Oregon
mist." Stories are told also of Madame
Cooper and her supply of gin on board a
craft off shore.
From the foregoing, the reader may infer
that the primitive days were very rude and
the early population very intemperate. These
incidents, however, are given only as
illustrating a certain phase of life to be
seen at the time. Situated between the very
strict and upright community at Oregon City,
and the very decorous and perfunctory
English society at Vancouver, the renegades
of the two, who did not carry their dignity
or national preference to a high pitch, used
to slip off and together grow hilarious
somewhere between the lines. But the men who
made Portland maintained a high character
even though sometimes under a plain garb of
frontiersmen's buckskin clothing.
Proprietors and Growth
As a resume of the foregoing, and for the
sake of gaining a clear idea of early
movements, the order of acquisition of
property is given herewith. Overton laid the
first claim, divided with. Lovejoy, and sold
his interests to Pettygrove. A few streets
and blocks were laid off; and the beginnings
were made on lots sold at nominal prices, or
given away for the sake of improvements to
be made on them. Couch laid the first claim
to the section north, and Ramsay north of
him. William Johnson lived on the claim
south of the town (Caruthers) and Daniel
Lunt south of him, but sold to Terwilliger.
South of this was Thos." Stephens. On the
southwest,-the heights -the land lay vacant
until claimed in 1850 by Thos. Carter, who
came to Portland some years before, and with
his family was one of the most useful
members of the young society. On the east
side of the river James B. Stephens and
Jacob Wheeler laid claims, covering the
water front. These original places were,
therefore, in 1849, in about their present
shape. But the section upon which the city
was started, the Lovejoy claim, was to pass
into other hands before the city made a
decided growth.
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