70

Marie DoriOn

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Photo: Andrew Parodi (talk).
Madame Marie Dorion plaque
Madame Marie Dorion, a Native American of the Sioux Nation, gained recognition for her endurance and courage in the early American West. As the only woman on the long and difficult Wilson Price Hunt Expedition from Montreal to the wild Oregon Territory, Marie’s strength of character and courage earned her a reputation for bravery.

In 1811, explorer Wilson Hunt hired Pierre Dorion as an interpreter for an expedition seeking an overland route from Missouri to Fort Astoria, Jacob Astor’s fur-trading post on the Oregon Coast. Hunt would then assume command of the fort. Pierre and his wife, Marie, and their two young sons accompanied the expedition to the distant west.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
North Powder
Union COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES
45.064793,-117.88343

OTIC topic:
Settlers

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


published online:
SEPTEMBER 19, 2011
71

thomas mckay

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

‘One of the Oregon Country’s most picturesque fur-traders, Thomas McKay, is buried near Scappoose. He was a daring leader, famous storyteller and could drive a nail with a rifle ball. A Canadian, he arrived with Astorians as a teenage boy; served with North West Company, became a clerk with the Hudson’s Bay Company, established a grist mill at Champoeg.

Alexander McKay, a victim of the Tonquin Massacre was his father and Dr. John McLaughlin was his stepfather. He ranged widely, built Fort Boise, Idaho, guided goldseekers to California. He died on his farm near this point in the winter 1849-1850.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Scappoose
Columbia COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES
45.74372,-122.87682

OTIC topic:
Settlers

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

published online:
september 25, 2011
72

meacham

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

First known as Lee's Encampment, from establishment of a troop camp by Major H.A.G. Lee in 1844, A.B. and Harvey Meacham operated famous "Mountain House" here, which gave the town its present name.

In later years a famous railroad eating house, "The Log Cabin," became nationally known under the supervision of Grandma Munra, a well known pioneer figure.

On July 3, 1923, Meacham was the capitol of the United States when President Warren G. Harding stopped for a day and participated in the exercises commemorating the eightieth anniversary of the covered wagon migration of 1843.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Meacham
Umatilla COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES
45.50877,-118.42197

OTIC topic:
Historic Routes, Historic Towns

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

published online:
september 25, 2011
73

JOSEPH L. MEEK

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

This marks the land claim of Joseph L. Meek, famed and unlettered ‘mountain man,’ who arrived in 1840 after driving from Fort Hall to Walla in the first wagon on that part of the Oregon Trail. He was a founder of the Provisional Government; served as the first sheriff, the first marshal, the first census taker. He carried word of the Whitman Massacre to Washington D.C., where President Polk, whose wife was his cousin, received him. Named marshal under the New Territorial Government, he accompanied Governor Lane to Oregon. His final Indian fighting was as a soldier in the Yakima War, 1855-56. He died here in 1875. A neighbor called him: ‘very popular and as brave as Julius Caesar.’

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Hillsboro
Washington COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES: 45.57897,-122.97052

OTIC TOPIC:
Settlers

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
FALSE MULTICULTURAL
INFORMATION

published online:
september 25, 2011