Page:History of Oregon volume 1.djvu/127

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76
SETTLEMENT OF OREGON.

and Courtney M. Walker. Thornburg was killed by Hubbard in a quarrel about an Indian woman in 1835. Thornburg being the assailant, Hubbard was allowed to go free. Townsend's Nar., 223–4. Hubbard continued to reside in Oregon, unmolested if not very respectable, settling on a farm two or three miles north of Lafayette. He was active in the affairs of the early American settlement. When the gold discovery in California drew nearly the whole adult male population from Oregon, he built a boat at Oregon City, loaded it with flour, and in it safely sailed to San Francisco, where he sold both cargo and vessel. He also built a saw-mill in the Willamette Valley, and was one of the first to export cattle to California. In 1857 he removed to eastern Oregon, and died at the Umatilla reservation April 24, 1877, aged 78 years. Oregon City Enterprise, May 3, 1877; Portland Standard, May 4, 1877. Richard McCrary, meeting with unpleasant adventures as a trapper among the Blackfoot Indians, abandoned fur-hunting, took a Nez Percé wife, and settled on a farm five miles below the mouth of the Willamette. Hine's Hist. Or., 132–3.

O'Neil settled in Polk County, where he died in September 1874, aged 74 years. Salem Record, Sept. 16, 1874; Salem Willamette Farmer, Sept. 18, 1874. Paul Richardson did not remain in Oregon, having accompanied the Wyeth expedition only as guide. He was a man of note in his way. Born in Vermont about the year 1793, he removed to Pennsylvania, where he married, but unhappily, and abandoned his wife to seek forgetfulness in the wilderness beyond the Missouri, where he became a solitary and fearless explorer. In 1828, according to his own account, he reached the head waters of Fraser River. He crossed the continent a number of times and had countless adventures, which he seldom related. He died in California in 1857, poor and alone, as he had lived. Hayes' Col. Cal. Notes, ii. 292. Besides these few Americans whose antecedents are to some extent known, the names of J. Edmunds and Charles Roe appear in the writings of the Methodist missionaries of that date; they probably belonged to Wyeth's last expedition. These, so far as known, were the only persons in the country in the autumn of 1834 not connected with the Hudson's Bay Company. See, further, Portland Oregonian, March 9 and 16, 1872; May 4, 1872; July 8, 1876; W. H. Rees, in Oregon Statesman, June 20, 1879; Trans. Or. Pioneer Asso., 1875, 56; McLoughlin's Private Papers, MS., passim; Blanchet's Cath. Church in Or., 7–8; S. F. Alta California, April 22, 1853; Portland Herald, March 5, 1872; Salem Statesman, June 20, 1879; S. F. Bulletin, July 25, 1877.

The party accompanying Kelley and Young, on arriving at the Columbia River, consisted of the following persons: John McCarty, Webley John Hauxhurst, Joseph Gale, John Howard, Lawrence Carmichael, Brandywine, Kilborn, and George Winslow (colored). Gray's Hist. Or., 191. This number corresponds with McLoughlin's account, and is probably correct as to names, though Daniel Lee thought there were 'about a dozen,' and gives the name of Elisha Ezekiel, found only in one other place, namely, in U. S. Gov. Doc, 3d Sess., 25th Cong., H. Rept., No. 101. Ezekiel was employed at the mission, which explains the omission from the count at Fort Vancouver. Let Ezekiel have praise for something; he made the first cart-wheel in the Willamette Valley. See Lee and Frost's Ten Years in Or., 129. Joseph Gale was a man