99

Summit Meadow

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Imagine feeding your hungry children and skinny ox teams whottleberries here. Helping you spouse repair your tired wagon for tomorrow's dreaded drop down Laurel Hill. Rain clouds gather around Mount Hood's peak. More storms coming. And they say the road gets even worse...Summit Meadows -- originally called Summit Prairie provided a welcome pause to Oregon Trail pioneers. For days they had endured steep rocky ground, downed trees and constant stream crossings.

An original gathering place for Native American Indians, in 1866 squatter Perry Vickers built the first log cabin here which became another tollgate. By 1905 a large wooden structure known as Summit House, a cedar shake tipi, a barn and corral occupied this clearing. The meadow eventually became a popular camping spot for Willamette Valley recreationalists.

"Drove to the Summit Prairie. Found plenty of grass in the Second Prairie." (now Trillium Lake)
-- Orange Gaylord - 185?

Very little good grass for our cattle tonight, but plenty of sour mountain grass (meadow rushes)."
-- E.W. Conyers -- 1852

"Mount Hood stands just north of our camp, with its lofty, white dome penetrating the ethereal (?) as if it had sworn to remain an eternal barrier to the clouds..."
-- John Tully Kearns
Emigrant of 1853

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Government Camp
Clackamas COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.283553,-121.737227

OTIC TOPIC:
Oregon Trail
(PART OF OREGON TRAIL)
 
Sponsored by: U.S. Forest Service

beaver board text CODED AS:
no WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
-
FALSE MULTICULTURAL INFORMATION

published online:
OCTOBER 11, 2012
100

Sunset Highway

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Oregon National Guard from Salem, Oregon, United States
This highway is reverently dedicated to Oregon’s sons. Members of the 41st division, both living and dead, who wore the Sunset emblem and offered their all in complete devotion to the cause of world peace.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Necanicum
Clatsop COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.90458,-123.76782

OTIC topic:
Military History 

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
no MULTICULTURAL
information

published online:
september 25, 2011
101

The Dalles
to Canyon City Wagon Road

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

The discovery of gold at Canyon Creek on June 8, 1862, brought a rush of people and supplies into the upper John Day basin. Within a year, nearly 10,000 fortune hunters trekked to the gold fields from the nearest access and supply point – The Dalles – over a series of trails that became The Dalles to Canyon City Wagon Road.

Sidebar: The most popular routes to potential fortune went south from The Dalles and crossed the Deschutes River at Sherar’s Bridge or Maupin. Other routes trekked east from The Dalles to cross the lower Deschutes River before turning south. All routes converged in the area of Shaniko and Antelope to form a corridor to Canyon City.

Sidebar:  The Dalles to Canyon City Wagon Road passed through the original town of Antelope—located 1.5 miles northeast of the present-day community. Old Antelope was established in 1863 as a stagecoach stop by Howard Maupin. The town moved to its present location in 1881 when the stage route changed.

Sidebar:  Henry H. Wheeler opened the first stagecoach line between The Dalles and Canyon City in May 1864. Wheeler’s stage line made three round trips per week carrying passengers, the mail, and the Wells Fargo Express. Wheeler became famous in 1866 for surviving an Indian attack—shot through the jaw with a bullet, he escaped on horseback with the Wells Fargo agent.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Antelope
Wasco COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
44.91859,-120.73379

OTIC topic:
Historic Routes

beaver board text CODED AS:
no WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
false MULTICULTURAL information

published online:
SEPTEMBER 25, 2011