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Joel Palmer - Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains to the Mouth of the Columbia River: Made During the Years 1845 and 1846

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Joel Palmer Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains to the Mouth of the Columbia River: Made During the Years 1845 and 1846
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General Joel Palmer (1810 1881) was an American pioneer of the Oregon Territory in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. He was born in Canada, and spent his early years in New York and Pennsylvania before serving as a member of the Indiana House of Representatives.
Palmer traveled to the Oregon Country in 1845. He played a central role in blazing the last leg of the Oregon Trail, the Barlow Road, with Sam Barlow and others. Specifically, Palmer is noted for having climbed high on Mount Hood to observe the surrounding area when the party ran into difficulty. He wrote a popular immigrant guidebook, co-founded Dayton, Oregon, and served as a controversial Indian Affairs administrator. After Oregon became a state, Palmer served in both branches of the Oregon Legislative Assembly. He was selected as Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives for one session in 1862, and in 1870 lost a bid to become Governor of Oregon.
This book published in 1906 has been reformatted for the Kindle and may contain an occasional defect from the original publication or from the reformatting.

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The Project Gutenberg eBook, Early Western Travels 1748-1846, Volume XXX, by Joel Palmer, Edited by Reuben Gold Thwaites

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, youll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.

Title: Early Western Travels 1748-1846, Volume XXX

Palmers Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains, 1845-1846

Author: Joel Palmer

Editor: Reuben Gold Thwaites

Release Date: September 20, 2014 [eBook #46906]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARLY WESTERN TRAVELS 1748-1846, VOLUME XXX***

E-text prepared by Matthias Grammel, Greg Bergquist,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive/American Libraries
(https://archive.org/details/americana)
Note:Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive/American Libraries. See https://archive.org/details/earlywesterntrav30thwa

Early Western Travels

1748-1846


Volume XXX


Early Western Travels

1748-1846

A Series of Annotated Reprints of some of the best
and rarest contemporary volumes of travel, descriptive
of the Aborigines and Social and
Economic Conditions in the Middle
and Far West, during the Period
of Early American Settlement

Edited with Notes, Introductions, Index, etc., by

Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL.D.

Editor of The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents, Original
Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Hennepins
New Discovery, etc.

Volume XXX

Palmers Journal of Travels over the Rocky Mountains,
1845-1846

Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains to the Mouth of the Columbia River Made During the Years 1845 and 1846 - image 1

Cleveland, Ohio
The Arthur H. Clark Company
1906


Copyright 1906, by

THE ARTHUR H. CLARK COMPANY


ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The Lakeside Press
R. R. DONNELLEY & SONS COMPANY
CHICAGO


CONTENTS OF VOLUME XXX
Preface. The Editor
Journal of Travels over the Rocky Mountains, to the Mouth of the Columbia River; Made during the Years 1845 and 1846 : containing minute descriptions of the Valleys of the Willamette, Umpqua, and Clamet; a general description of Oregon Territory; its inhabitants, climate, soil, productions, etc., etc.; a list of Necessary Outfits for Emigrants; and a Table of Distances from Camp to Camp on the Route. Also; A Letter from the Rev. H. H. Spalding, resident Missionary, for the last ten years, among the Nez Perc Tribe of Indians, on the Kooskooskee River; The Organic Laws of Oregon Territory; Tables of about 300 words of the Chinook Jargon, and about 200 Words of the Nez Perc Language; a Description of Mount Hood; Incidents of Travel, &c., &c.
Joel Palmer.
Copyright Notice
Authors Dedication
Publishers Advertisement
Text: Journal, April 16, 1845-July 23, 1846
Necessary Outfits for Emigrants traveling to Oregon
Words used in the Chinook Jargon
Words used in the Nez Perc Language
Table of Distances from Independence, Missouri; and St. Joseph, to Oregon City, in Oregon Territory
Appendix:
Letter of the Rev. H. H. Spalding to Joel Palmer, Oregon Territory, April 7, 1846
Organic Laws of Oregon (with amendments).

ILLUSTRATION TO VOLUME XXX
Facsimile of title-page, Palmers Journal of Travels.

PREFACE TO VOLUME XXX

In the wake of the pathfinders, fur-traders, Indian scouts, missionaries, scientific visitors, and foreign adventurers came the ultimate figure among early Western travellers, the American pioneer settler, the fore-runner of the forces of occupation and civilization. This concluding volume in our series is, therefore, fitly devoted to the record of an actual home-seeker, and founder of new Western communities.

The significant feature of American history has been the transplanting of bodies of colonists from one frontier to a newer frontier. In respect to the Oregon country, our interest therein is enhanced not only by the great distance and the abundant perils of the way, but also by the political result in securing the territory to the United States, and the growth of a prosperous commonwealth in the Far Northwest corner of our broad domain. In several previous volumes of our series we have witnessed the beginnings of Oregon civilization. Two of our travellers, Franchre and Ross, have graphically detailed the Astoria episode, giving us, not without some literary skill, the skeleton of facts which Irvings masterful pen clothed with living flesh and healthful color; in Townsends pages we found an enduring picture of the rgime of the all-powerful Hudsons Bay Company; De Smet, with faithful, indeed loving, touches has portrayed the vanishing aborigines, whose sad story has yet fully to be toldeventually, when the last vestige of their race has gone, we shall come to recognize the tale as the sorriest chapter in our annals; Farnham shrewdly narrates the sharp transition to American occupancy; but Palmer tells us of the triumphant progress of the conquering pioneer, and in his pages the destiny of Oregon as an American state is clearly foreshadowed.

Fifty-four forty, or fight, the belligerent slogan with regard to Oregon, adopted in the presidential campaign of 1844, was after all not so much a notice to the British government that the United States considered the Oregon country her own, beyond recall, as an appeal to the pioneers of the West to secure this vast inheritance by actual occupation. As such it proved a trumpet call to thousands of vigorous American farmers, most of them already possessed of comfortable homes in the growing communities of the Middle West.

I have an uncle, declared one of the pioneers to Dr. John McLoughlin, Hudsons Bay factor on the Pacific coast, who is rich enough to buy out your company and all this territory.

Indeed! replied the doctor, courteously, who is he?

Uncle Sam, gayly responded the emigrant, with huge enjoyment in his well-worn witticism. It was at the supposed behest of this same Uncle Sam that farms were sold, wagons and oxen purchased, outfits prepared, and long caravans of permanent settlers slowly and painfully crossed the vast plains and rugged mountains lying between the comfortable settlements of the Old Northwestthe Middle West of our dayand the new land of promise in the Far Northwest of the Pacific Slope.

The emigration of 1845 exceeded all that had gone before. That of 1843, eight hundred strong, had startled the Indians, and surprised the staid officials of the Hudsons Bay Company. That of 1844 had occupied the fertile valleys from Puget Sound on the north to Calapooia on the south. That of 1845 determined that the territory should be the home of Americans; it doubled the population already on the ground, reinforced the compact form of government, and laid broad and deep the foundations of new American commonwealths.

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