13

Baker Cabin

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION


Horace Baker emigrated from Illinois along the Oregon Traill in 1846 and married fellow emigrant Jane Hatten in 1852. The Bakers claimed 640 acres and built this cabin by 1856. The Baker Cabin is one of the oldest log structure in the state, and it is the only known log cabin with a cantilever supported loft and exterior stairway built in Oregon during the covered wagon era. The Baker Cabin was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.Horace Baker was an entrepreneur and "jack-of-all-trades." Besides farming, Baker built and installed wooden pumps around the local area and in 1872 he built and operated a slack-cable ferry on the Clackamas River. Rock quarried from this land by Baker during the 1870s was used to built the Willamette Falls Locks near Oregon City, Portland's Pioneer Courthouse, the Portland Hotel, and the Tillamook Lighthouse.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Carver
Clackamas COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.388595,-122.496861

OTIC topic:
oregon trail
(part of the Oregon Trail)
 
SPONSORED BY:
Oregon Travel Coordinating Council

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

date published online:
10/11/2011
14

Baker Valley

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

ERMANENT SETTLERS
In 1861, Henry Griffin, a prospector from California, discovered gold eight miles southwest of the present site of Baker City. Emigration patterns changed immediately, and eastern Oregon became a destination for gold-seekers and settlers. Many earlier emigrants to western Oregon moved back to the fertile valleys they had admired during the initial migration. They soon established farms and stores, and settlers provided hay and produce to travelers bound for the gold mines. During the 1860s large wagon trains loaded with freight were a common site in this valley. “Laid over all day on excellent grass 2 miles west of Powder River. A large empty freight train passed us, going west for a load. 6 to 8 mules a wagon. Two little bells on the top of the hems of every mule. The same one we seen in Boise City one week ago today. Splendid day. The first day I have had a good rest and enjoyed it. No shoeing to do today. Something new.S.B. Eakin, August 5, 1866

“BOO” MOUNTAINS
Oregon Trail emigrants caught their first glimpse of the Blue Mountains from the desolate hills east of the Baker Valley: “they struck us with terror,” wrote Medorem Crawford, emigrant of 1842, “their lofty peaks seemed a resting place for the clouds.” Emigrants found plenty of water and grazing in the Baker Valley, but with snow visible in the Blues, and the road ahead described by Esther Belle McMillan Hanna in 1851, as “very tortuous,” they did not tarry.“... started up a long hill without any timber, as we reached the summit, little sister Rosa was sitting down in front. She jumped up in great glee and said ‘Johnnie I see the Boo Mountains.’ looking toward the north and west the Blue Mountains were in plain view. We could trace the outlines for many miles, and to our unaccustomed visage, they appeared to be covered with a thick growth of small pines. In the state of the atmosphere they appeared to be a beautiful blue.” John Johnson, July 29, 1851

ITINERANT TRADERS
The Baker Valley was known to Oregon Trail Emigrants as the Powder River Valley. Emigrants camped on sloughs along the Powder River and many along with Joel Palmer, emigrant of 1845, found local Indians eager to “barter for cattle.” Although emigrants and Indians continued to barter, and many like George Belshaw in 1853 bought their first “Salmon fish” from the Indians, itinerant traders from the Willamette Valley soon moved in to peddle supplies.“... here are some traders come out from Oregon with provisions to meet the suffering emigrants who have lost nearly all their cattle, and some we know have spent all their money, and other nearly all, and they only ask 35 dollars per hundred for flour and sugar 40 cents per pound, and cheese 75 we expect to get to the Grand round tomorrow, and hope to meet with a more pleasing prospect we have good grass here good water and wood and all well, and have something to eat yet, but nearly out.Sarah Sutton,August 13, 1854

UNIMPROVED ROAD
The Oregon Trail was never a single set of parallel ruts leading from Missouri to the Willamette Valley. In valleys and plains where wagon wheels and oxen hooves churned up tremendous clouds of choking dust, emigrants often traveled abreast, sometimes widening the trail to several miles. Although ferries and toll roads were eventually established at river crossings and difficult hills, the trail remained an unimproved road. Emigrants lacked incentive to engage in road building, especially when they never expected to return over the same route. In this valley, where the trail followed the Powder River, a passing lane would have been helpful.“... we came in contact with a train forward of us that traveled so very slow that we were retarded at least and hour, we passed them and went on at a good job till we overtook another slow train and were hindered an other hour We however reached a stream of running watter at about two o’clock which was very gratifying to us and the poor cattle which have traveled 18 miles without drinking, and the last 8 miles were very dusty and the middle of the day very hot…”Charlotte Stearns Pengra,September 21, 1853

THE LONE TREE
Oregon Trail emigrants entered through the Baker Valley after days of arduous travel through the Burnt River watershed, where James Nesmith, emigrant of 1843, considered “The roads rough and the country rougher still.” Early emigrants crested the south flank of Flagstaff Hill, and with the Blue Mountains looming to the west, the rolling valley below presented a single tree- the Lone Pine.“We at last found the top of the mountain at a distance we could see what we suppose to be the Blue Mountains and they struck us with terror their lofty peaks seemed a resting place for the clouds. Below us was a large plain and at some distance we could discover a tree which we at once recognized as ‘the lone tree’ of which we had before heard. We made all possible speed at 7 ½ o’clock the advance party arrived at the Tree nearly an hour before the cattle. The Tree is a large Pine standing in the midst of an immense plain entirely alone. It resented a truly singular appearance and I believe is respected by every traviler through this Treeless Country.”Medorem Crawford,September 8, 1842

THE VANDAL HANDS OF MAN
The Lone Pine stood in an otherwise treeless Baker Valley. In 1839 Sidney Smith noted, “there is no other pine in Sight and this Rears its head in the prairie like a towering monument.” The Lone Pine was a sentinel to Indians, fur trappers, missionaries, and emigrants until felled in 1843 by what John Fremont called “some inconsiderable emigrant axe.” The Lone Pine, called l’arbre seul by French-Canadian fur trappers, was soon referred to as the Lone Pine Stump.“This noble tree stood in the center of a most lovely valley about ten miles from any other timber. It could be seen at the distance of many miles, rearing its majestic form above the surrounding plain, and constituted a beautiful landmark for the guidance of the traveler. Many teams had passed on before me, and at intervals, as I drove along, I would raise my head and look at that beautiful green pine. At last, on looking up as usual, the tree was gone. I was perplexed for a moment to know whether I was going in the right direction. There was the plain, beaten wagon road before me, and I drove on until I reached the camp just at dark. That brave old pine, which had withstood the storms and snows of centuries, had fallen at last by the vandal hands of man.”Peter Hardeman Burnett,September 27, 1843

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Haines
BAKER COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
44.913748,-117.819078

OTIC topic:
oregon trail
(part of the Oregon Trail) 

SPONSORED BY:
Oregon Travel Coordinating Council

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

published online:
10/10/2012
15

Balloon Bomb

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Formerly The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Bly, Oregon near where six people from this church were killed by a Japanese "balloon bomb".
Photo:
Otebig Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
Very near here, on a warm spring day in 1945, six people- a woman and five children- were killed by a Japanese “balloon bomb,” or Fugo. The party had arrived for a picnic when they discovered the deflated balloon. While they gathered around the strange device, it exploded. These were the only civilian casualties of the war within the continental US.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
BLY
Klamath COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
42.406893,-121.048756

OTIC topic:
World War II

SPONSORED BY:
US Forest Service, Bly Community Action Team, and Klamath County

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

published online:
9/19/2011