John Day Fossil Beds
Historic Resources Study
|
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Public and private repositories throughout Oregon
and Washington were visited in the preparation of this Historic
Resources Study. Cultural Resource files, Lands Division files, and
regional library holdings at the National Park Service, Columbia
Cascades Support Office, served as a starting point. Library and museum
collections at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument provided a
foundation of invaluable background material.
Also explored were the Bureau of Land Management
(Public Room, Oregon State Office), the Oregon Historical Society
Library, the Lewis & Clark College Libraries, the Oregon State Historic
Preservation Office, the University of Washington Libraries (Special
Collections Division), the Grant County Historical Museum, the City of
Fossil Museum, and the Sherman County Historical Museum. Much material
was made available through the private collection of Stephen Dow
Beckham.
The following sources were consulted and cited in
the preparation of the Historic Resources study. The annotations speak
to the utility of the source, occasionally noting its special strengths
or deficiencies.
Allen, Eleanor ed. 1946 Canvas Caravans: Based on the Journal
of Esther Belle McMillan Hanna, Who With Her Husband, Rev. Joseph A.
Hanna, Brought the Presbyterian Colony to Oregon in 1852. Binfords
& Mort, Portland, OR.
The Hanna diary of 1852 provides an excellent
narrative of travel on the Oregon Trail. It includes impressions and
commentary as well as description.
Alvord, Benjamin 1855 "Concerning the Manners and Customs, the
Superstitions, &c., of the Indians in Oregon." Information
Respecting the History, Condition, and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of
the United States, Vol. 5, pp. 651-657. Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, ed.
Lippincott, Grambo & Co., Philadelphia, PA.
Penned at Fort Dalles by the post commander, this is
one of the earliest ethnographic accounts of Indians of the western
Plateau.
Anderson, William Wright 1848 Diary. MS, Lilly Library,
University of Indiana, Bloomington, IN.
Anderson was barely literate, yet he struggled to
find words to describe his overland travel, life in the Willamette
Valley and Puget Sound, and his sojourn in the California
mines.
Anonymous 1885a [Article on Chinese], Grant County News
(Canyon City, OR), February 19.
The article and the two that follow confirms the
rampant anti-Chinese racism in Grant County in the late nineteenth
century.
1885b [Article on Chinese], Grant County News (Canyon City,
OR), October 15.
1886 [Article on Chinese], Grant County News (Canyon City,
OR.), February 4.
1898 Eastern Oregon Gold Fields: Baker, Grant, Harney, Malheur and
Union Counties. Morning Democrat (Baker City, OR.), May 20
A special edition of the local newspaper, focusing on
mining prospects and businessmen of the surrounding counties.
1899 Report of the Expedition to the John Day Fossil Beds,
University Chronicle 2(3):21 7-224.
This narrative describes the expedition of scientists
from the University of California, Berkeley, to the John Day fossil beds
in 1898.
1902 An Illustrated History of Baker, Grant, Malheur and Harney
Counties... State of Oregon. Western Historical Publishing Company,
[Spokane, WA.].
Written by anonymous local informants, the volume is
one of several 'mug" books with detailed overview histories of counties
produced as a for-profit venture. The book covers the lives of dozens of
people mentioned in no other historical accounts.
1903 Portrait and Biographical Record of the Willamette Valley,
Oregon. Chapman Publishing Company, Chicago, IL.
This is a volume of biographies of pioneer settlers
who paid to be included and who dictated their memoirs.
1967 John Day Fossil Beds: A Study. MS Typescript, National Park
Service, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, OR.
This report of 29 pages was developed at the
beginning of NPS administration of the national monument to summarize
its primary features: natural history, geology, history, archaeology,
and recreation
1975 Cant Ranch Oral History Tapes. Typescript Notes, National Park
Service, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, OR.
The notes were gleaned from interviews with
knowledgeable persons who worked at, were descended from, or knew the
Cant family.
Applegate, Shannon and Terrence O'Donnell, eds. 1994 Talking
on Paper: An Anthology of Oregon Letters and Diaries. Oregon State
University Press, Corvallis, OR.
Volume six in the Oregon Literature Series, this
anthology included translations of letters written by Chinese residing
in the upper John Day region in the latter nineteenth century. Each
selection has an introductory note.
ARCIA (see Bureau of Indian Affairs)
Armstrong, Chester 1965 Oregon State Parks: A History,
1917-1963. Oregon Department of Transportation, Salem, OR.
The volume provides a history of state parks and
background information on the acquisition and development of many parks
with the state system.
Ashton, Vera Officer n.d. A Short Resume of Floyd Lee Officer's
Early Life in the Basin and the Famous Fossil Beds Area. MS typescript,
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, OR.
Vera Ashton provided biographical information about
her father, a homesteader in what became the national
monument.
Bancroft, Hubert Howe 1890 History of California. Vol.
7,1860-1890. The History Company, San Francisco, CA.
This is the last of an ambitious, fully documented
set of volumes providing an overview of California history through the
Spanish, Mexican, and American periods to 1890.
Barlow, Jeffrey G. and Christine A. Richardson 1979 China
Doctor of John Day. Binford and Mort, Portland, OR.
Barlow and Richardson worked with the collections in
Doc Hay's apothecary store and wove in a background history of the
Chinese in Grant County.
1991 Gum San, Land of the Golden Mountain: An Exhibit on Chinese
Life and Labor in the West. The High Desert Museum, Bend, OR.
Prepared as an exhibit catalog, this handsomely
illustrated volume provides background information on Chinese
immigration to the United States and life in the American
West.
Beckham, Stephen Dow 1984a Ethnohistorical Context of Reserved
Indian Fishing Rights: Pacific Northwest Treaties, 1851-1855. Report in
U.S. v. Washington, Civil No. 213 - Phase I, submitted to Oregon
Department of Justice, Salem, OR.
Prof. Beckham analyzed all Pacific Northwest treaties
unratified and ratified--for the enumeration of reserved rights and the
identities of probable user groups. The analysis included both Indians
as well as "citizens of the territory" and "citizens of the United
States."
1984b 'This Place is Romantic and Wild': An Historical Overview of
the Cascades Area, Fort Cascades, and the Cascades Townsite, Washington
Territory. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Portland District,
Portland, OR.
The volume is a history of the early development of
federal government activities and civilian investments at the key
portage of the Columbia River. The focal period is 1805-1896
1997 Coos Bay Wagon Road: Historical Investigations and
Identification of Interpretive Options. Report submitted to Coos Bay BLM
District, U.S. Department of Interior, North Bend, OR.
This is a history of one of five land-grant, military
wagon roads in Oregon and discusses the Coos Bay Wagon Road in the
context of others, including The Dalles- Boise Military Wagon
Road.
1998 History Since 1846. Handbook of North American Indians,
12:149-173. Deward E. Walker, Jr., ed. Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, DC.
Prof. Beckham assessed the last 150 years of U.S. and
Canadian Indian policy across the interior of the Pacific Northwest to
create a major synthesis of applications of programs and their impacts
on the region's tribes.
2000a John Day River, Oregon: An Examination of Navigable Uses and
Navigability Potentials. Report submitted to the Oregon Department of
Justice and to the Oregon Sate Land Board, Salem, OR.
2000b John Day River, Oregon: An Examination of Navigable Uses and
Navigability Potentials. Supplemental report submitted to the Oregon
Department of Justice and to the Oregon State Land Board, Salem, OR.
Expert witness reports with data derived from the
records of the Oregon Utility Commission and title records of Wheeler
County.
Berkhofer, Robert J., Jr. 1988 White Conceptions of Indians.
Handbook of North American Indians, 4:522-547. Wilcomb E.
Washburn, ed. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
Prof. Berkhofer dealt with images of 'nobility" and
"savagery" associated with American Indians and, in particular,
discussed the role of "captivity narratives' in shaping Euro-American
perceptions.
Bestland, Erick A. and Gregory J. Retallack 1994 Geology and
Paleoenvironments of the Painted Hills Unit, John Day Fossil Beds
National Monument, Oregon. Final Report submitted to the National Park
Service, John Day, OR.
This is a monographic report based upon research into
geology and prehistoric environmental conditions in the Painted
Hills.
Bettany, G. T 1876 On the Genus Merycohoerus, Quarterly
Journal of the Geological Society of London, 32:259.
This short article assesses Merycohoerus, a
specimen from the John Day fossil beds.
Bones, Thomas J. 1979 Atlas of Fossil Fruits & Seeds From
North Central Oregon. OMSI Occasional Papers in Natural Science, No.
1, Portland, OR.
The atlas covers fossil fruits and seeds found in
North Central Oregon.
Boyd, Robert 1990 Demographic History. Handbook of North
American Indians, 7:135-148. Wayne Suttles, ed. Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, DC.
Boyd addressed the pathenogenic consequences of the
Euro-American incursion into the Northwest Coast Culture Area. He
discussed waves of population declines.
Brimlow, George F 1938 The Bannock Indian War of 1878.
Caxton Printers, Ltd., Caldwell, ID.
Prof. Brimlow's history covers the causes and course
of the Bannock War of 1878 in southwestern Idaho and southeastern
Oregon.
Brogan, Phil 1972 Letters of the Editor: The Painted Hills and
the Carroll Family, Oregon Historical Quarterly 73(3):
258-268.
Brogan, a newspaper writer in Bend, discussed the
history of the Carroll family which lived in the Bridge Creek area a
century ago.
1977 East of the Cascades. Binford & Mort, Portland,
OR.
A general history of central Oregon, with a focus on
Bend and the Deschutes River country.
Brosnan, Cornelius 1932 Jason Lee: Prophet of the New
Oregon. The Macmillan Company, New York, NY
The biography of Lee saw him as a heroic figure, not
as a failed missionary dismissed from his position in 1843. Lee was
assessed as a harbinger of American civilization.
Buan, Carolyn M. and Richard Lewis, eds. 1991 The First
Oregonians. An Illustrated Collection of Essays on Traditional Lifeways,
Federal-Indian Relations, and the State's Native People Today.
Oregon Council for the Humanities, Portland, OR.
This volume written by several scholars and tribal
representatives provided an excellent overview of culture and history of
Oregon tribes.
Buckingham, Harriet Talcott 1984 Crossing the Plains In 1851.
Covered Wagon Women, Vol. 3:15-52. Kenneth L. Holmes, ed. Arthur
H. Clark Co., Glendale, CA.
Buckingham's diary discussed her 1851 overland trek
to Oregon. The account is sometimes interesting because of the stories
the author recorded.
Bureau of the Census
The decennial census included statistics on dozens of
economic matters. The compendium summarized the findings by subject, by
state, by county. The same is true for all census records
cited.
1872 Ninth Census: The Statistics of the Wealth and Industry of
the United States. Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC.
1880 Tenth Census of the United States, Microcopy T-9, Roll
1081, Grant County, Oregon, National Archives, Washington, DC.
1895 Eleventh Census: Report on the Statistics of Agriculture. Bureau
of the Census, Washington, DC.
1913 Thirteenth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1910.
Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC.
1932 Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930. Bureau of The
Census, Washington, DC.
1952 United States Census of Agriculture, 1950. Counties and
State Economic Office, Washington, DC.
1972 1969 Census of Agriculture: Area Reports. Government
Printing Office, Washington, DC.
1987 Census of Agriculture: Geographic Area Series. U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
Bureau of Indian Affairs (ARCIA)
The Annual Report included both the Commissioner's
overview of Indian affairs and also letters from the Oregon
Superintendent and Indian agents for the year previous. The reports and
letters are an invaluable compendium of primary information. The same is
true for all volumes cited.
1850 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Printed for the Office of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
Washington, DC.
1858 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
William A. Harris, Printer, Washington, DC.
1859 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. George
W. Bowman, Printer, Washington, DC.
1860 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. George
W. Bowman, Printer, Washington, DC.
1863 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
1864 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
1867 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
1874 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
The Master Title Plat is a record of lands which have
left federal ownership and lands remaining in federal jurisdiction or
reacquired. The Historical Index is a chronology of lands leaving
federal ownership and includes precise locations, serial number, type of
action, and date of action. The Control Data Inventory is a set of
aperture cards of the transactions documents for disposition or
reacquisition of federal lands.
n.d.a. Master Title Plat, T12S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.b. Historical Index, T12S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.c. Control Data Inventory, T12S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.d. Master Title Plat, T7S, R19E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.e. Historical Index, T7S, R19E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.f. Control Data Inventory, T7S, R19E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.g. Master Title Plat, T11S R21E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.h. Historical Index, T11S, R21E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.i. Control Data Inventory, T11S, R21E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.j. Master Title Plat, T11S, R20E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.k. Historical Index, T11S, R20E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.l. Control Data Inventory, T11S, R20E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.m. Master Title Plat, T10S, R20E., W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.n. Historical Index, T10S, R20E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.o. Control Data Inventory, T10S, R20E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.p. Master Title Plat, T10S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.q. Historical Index, T10S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.r. Control Data Inventory, T10S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.s. Master Title Plat, T11S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.t. Historical Index, T11S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.u. Control Data Inventory, T11S, R26E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
n.d.v. Master Title Plat, T10S, R21E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.w. Historical Index, T10S, R21E, W.M. BLM Archives, Portland,
OR.
n.d.x. Control Data Inventory, T10S, R21E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
Burtchard, Greg C., Jacquline Y. Cheung, and Eric B. Gleason 1994
Archaeology and the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument,
North-Central Oregon, Part II: 1993 Inventory Data. Report of
International Archaeological Research Institute, Inc., Honolulu, Hawaii,
submitted to National Park Service, Seattle, WA.
This report, based upon both literature search and
ground survey, inventories archaeological resources discovered in the
three units of the National Monument.
Campbell, Arthur H. 1976 The Clarno Era. MS Typescript, John Day
Fossil Beds National Monument, National Park Service, John Day, OR.
This is a rambling, undocumented but generally useful
history of the Clarno family and some of its activities upon settlement
near Clarno, Oregon. It is illustrated with historic
photographs.
1980 John Day River: Drift and Historical Guide. Frank Amato
Publications, Portland, OR.
A mile by mile rafting guide covering the stretch
from Service Creek Bridge to Cottonwood Bridge, this anecdotal history
is well sprinkled with photographs of local landmarks along the
way.
Cant, James, Jr., and Freda Cant 1984 Cant Ranch Oral History
Program, Monograph 7. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument,
National Park Service, John Day, OR.
The document is based upon an oral history taken in
1982 and 1983 from James Cant and Freda (Erikson) Cant about family
history and ranching in the upper John Day region.
Carey, Charles 1922 History of Oregon. Vol. 2. The Pioneer
Historical Publishing Company, Chicago, IL., and Portland, OR.
The second volume of Carey's history is a compilation
of biographies of white male notables who paid to have their life
stories told in this series.
Chaney, R. W. 1924 Quantitative Studies of the Bridge Creek
Flora. American Journal of Science, 5th Series,
8(44):127-144.
Chaney was one of the first to publish on the ancient
botany of the Bridge Creek area.
1927 Geology and Paleontology of the Crooked River Basin. Carnegie
Institution of Washington, D.C., Publication 347, No. 4.
Chaney's study provided an overview of the geology
and paleontology of the Crooked River region of Central
Oregon.
1948 The Ancient Forests of Oregon: Condon Lectures, Oregon
State System of Higher Education, Eugene, OR.
Late in his career, Prof. Chaney shared with students
and faculty of the University of Oregon his assessments of the
prehistoric forests of Central Oregon. The lectures summarized more than
twenty years of studies based on work in Central Oregon.
Clark, Keith and Lowell Tiller 1966 Terrible Trail: the Meek
Cutoff, 1845. The Caxton Printers, Ltd., Caldwell, ID.
This team-written monograph provided an overview of
the ill-fated wagon train which followed Stephen H. L. Meek in 1845 on
his alleged short-cut to the Willamette Valley. The account includes
biographical notes on travelers.
Clark, Robert D. 1989 The Odyssey of Thomas Condon: Irish
Immigrant, Frontier Missionary, Oregon Geologist. Oregon Historical
Society Press, Portland, OR.
Prof. Clark wrote an excellent biography of the
various careers of Thomas Condon, immigrant, missionary, and avid
geologist. The work is fully documented.
Conyers, Enoch W. 1906 Diary of E. W. Conyers, a Pioneer of 1852.
Oregon Pioneer Association Transactions, 33rd Reunion, pp.
423-512.
Based on up Conyers' 1852 diary, this is the expanded
narrative which he wrote late in life. It is filled with detail about
Oregon Trail conditions and emigrant life.
Cope, Edward D. 1884 The Vertebrata of the Tertiary Formations
of the West. 2 vols. United States Geological Survey of the
Territories. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
Cope compiled a massive, handsomely illustrated
report of the paleontological specimens he had collected during various
expeditions in the American West. His findings included a number of
fossils from the upper John Day region.
Corning, Howard McKinley, ed. 1956 Dictionary of Oregon
History. Binfords & Mort, Publishers, Portland, OR
Long out of date but useful, the dictionary included
biographical sketches and brief entries on subjects of Oregon
history.
Cox, Ross 1831 Adventures on the Columbia River Including the
Narrative of a Residence of Six Years on the West Side of the Rocky
Mountains Among Various Tribes of Indians Hereto Unknown, Together With
a Journey Across the American Continent. H. Colburn and R. Bentley,
London.
This primary account was penned by a participant in
the Pacific Fur Company and recounted his adventures in the far West,
including Oregon.
Cross, Osborne 1850 A Report in the Form of a Journal. Senate
Exec. Doc. No. 1, Part 2, 31 Cong., 2 Sess. Government Printing
Office, Washington, DC.
Cross was a commander of the Mounted Riflemen who
crossed the Oregon Trail in 1849 to establish a military presence in
Oregon. His journal was filled with description and illustrated with
plates, probably executed from the drawings of civilians George
Gibbs and William Henry Tappan.
Culp, Edwin D. 1972 Stations West. The Story of the Oregon
Railways. The Caxton Printers, Ltd., Caldwell, ID.
Strong on its use of historic photographs and time
tables, this history of Oregon railroads covers many of the short line
routes which carried passengers.
Dorf, Erling Letter of March 8 to Benjamin F. Ladd. MS, Files,
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day, OR.
Dorf's letter, from Princeton University's Department
of Geological and Geophysical Sciences, responds to an inquiry from the
Monument on the whereabouts of Ralph Chaney's records of work in the
John Day area.
Drury, Clifford Merrill 1936 Henry Harmon Spalding: Pioneer of
Old Oregon. The Caxton Printers, Ltd., Caldwell, ID.
Ambitiously researched, this is the standard,
apologetic biography of Spalding, missionary to the Nez
Perce.
1937 Marcus Whitman, M.D.: Pioneer and Martyr. The Caxton
Printers, Ltd., Caldwell, ID.
The title confirmed the author's slant. Whitman was
the bringer of "civilization" to the Indians. When they murdered
him, he was a martyr. The book failed to see the Indian point of
view about the consequences of Whitman's ministry or assistance to
emigrants.
Due, John F. and Giles French 1979 Rails to the Mid-Columbia
Wheatlands: The Columbia Southern and the Great Southern Railroads and
the Development of Sherman and Wasco Counties, Oregon. University
Press of America, Washington, DC.
The authors wrote a history of short-line railroads
south from the OR & N primary route along the south shore of the
Columbia River.
Eakin, S. B., Jr. 1970 A Short Sketch of a Trip Across the Plains
by S. B. Eakin & Family, 1866. Typescript, Lane County Historical
Society, Eugene, OR.
Eakin's narrative covered his family's emigration
overland to Oregon. It was not a particularly noteworthy
trip.
Elliott, T. C. 1913 Journal of John Work's Snake Country
Expedition of 1830-31, Oregon Historical Quarterly
14:280-314.
Work was among the first Euro-Americans to penetrate
the upper John Day country while in the employ of the Hudson's Bay
Company. His journal was concerned with his travels and
labors.
1914 The Dalles-Celilo Portage: Its History and Influence, Oregon
Historical Quarterly 15(2):133-174
Elliott assessed the significance of the control by
the Plateau Indians of the transit around Celilo Falls and Five Miles
Rapids He saw the portage challenges as significant in the region's
early history
1916 Last Will and Testament of John Day, Oregon Historical
Quarterly 17:373-377.
Elliott assessed the meager historical traces left by
the fur trapper, John Day.
Erigero, Patricia 1995 Notes and Thematic Chronologies. John Day
Fossil Beds Historic Resource Study.
Erigero assembled useful, detailed chronologies by
decade and theme from a wide variety of sources.
Everhart, William C. 1958 Camp Watson, National Survey of
Historic Sites and Buildings. Copy, John Day Fossil Beds National
Monument.
This document contains an early assessment of the
significance of Camp Watson, although the National Park Service surveyor
was unable to verify the location of the site on the ground.
Farragher, John Mack 1979 Women and Men on the Overland
Trail. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.
Prof. Farragher discussed gender roles and
expectations of overland emigrants, both to Oregon as well as to
California.
Fremd, Theodore, Erick Bestland, and Gregory J. Retallack 1994
John Day Basin Paleontology Field Trip Guide and Road Log.
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA.
John Day Fossil Beds paleontologist Fremd and others
prepared this informal, casual guide as an overview for participants in
the Society's annual meeting in Seattle.
Fowler, Catherine S. and Sven Liljeblad 1986 Northern Paiute.
Handbook of North American Indians, 11:435-465. Warren L.
D'Zaevedo, ed. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
The team-written article is an excellent assessment
of traditional lifeways of the Northern Paiute. Like most Handbook
articles, it is light on historical assessment.
Franchere, Gabriel 1819 Relation d'un Voyage a la Cote du
Nord-Ouest de L'Amerique Septentrionale, dans les Annees 1810, 11, 12,
13, et 14. De L'Imprimereie C. B. Pasteur, Montreal.
This is the first edition of the narrative of
Franchere, an employee of the Pacific Fur Company about his labors for
John Jacob Astor in the Oregon country.
1854 Narrative of a Voyage to the Northwest Coast of America in
the Years 1811, 1812, 1813, and 1814; Or, the First American
Settlement on the Pacific. Redfield, New York, NY.
This is the first English edition of the narrative of
Franchere, an employee of the Pacific Fur Company about his labors for
John Jacob Astor in the Oregon country.
Fremont, John Charles 1970 The Expeditions of John Charles
Fremont. Vol. 1, Travels from 1838 to 1844. Donald Jackson and Mary
Lee Spence, eds. University of Illinois Pres, Urbana, IL.
Volume 1 covered Fremont's overland expedition on the
Oregon Trail in 1842 and 1843, including his transit of the Columbia
Plateau and journey south into the Great Basin. This edition, based on
the original of 1845, is usefully edited and introduced.
Fullerton, Mark A. 1881 Plat of Survey, T11S, R20E, W.M. BLM
Archives, Portland, OR.
This is Fullerton's survey plat based upon his
subdivisions in the township in 1881.
Fussner, F. Smith, ed. 1975 Glimpses of Wheeler County's Past:
An Early History of North Central Oregon. Wheeler County Historical
Commission, Portland, OR.
Prof. Fussner pulled together the accounts by local
writers for this Bicentennial history of Wheeler County. It is written
without documentation but by individuals who generally knew the
history.
Gates, Paul W. 1968 History of Public Land Law
Development. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
Prof. Gates wrote a classic in this volume. He
assessed the long, convoluted history of federal land law.
Gaertner, John T. 1992 The North Bank Road: The Spokane,
Portland & Seattle Railroad. Washington State University,
Pullman, WA.
The volume covered the building of the SP & S
Railroad along the north bank of the Columbia and discussed some of its
short-line connections.
General Land Office 1876 State of Oregon [Map]. U.S. Department
of Interior, General Land Office, [Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC.]
The 1876 map showed towns and travel
routes.
Habersham, Robert A. 1878 Oregon Ter., Portland Ogn. J. K.
Gill & Co., Portland, OR.
This map showed sites of military interest in Oregon
through 1878.
Haines, Francis E., Jr. 1971 The Snake Country Expedition of
1830-31: John Work's Field Journal. University of Oklahoma Press,
Norman, OK.
Prof. Haines edited and introduced the diary of John
Work on his expedition into the Snake Country and Central Oregon in
1830-31. Work was an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company.
Hammer, Jacob 1990 This Emigrating Company: The 1844 Oregon
Trail Journal of Jacob Hammer Thomas A. Rumer, ed. Arthur H. Clark
Co., Spokane, WA.
Hammer was one of the few diarists of the Oregon
Trail route to Oregon in 1844 His account, while not especially
literate, provided details of that year's emigration
Hartwig, Paul 1973 Kam Wah Chung Co. Building, National Register
nomination. Copy, National Park Service, Seattle, WA.
This nomination was prepared by assistant park
historian Hartwig out of the Oregon State Historic Preservation
Office.
Hastings, Loren Brown 1926 Diary of Loren B. Hastings: A Pioneer
of 1847. Oregon Pioneer Association Transactions, 51st Reunion,
1923, pp. 12-26.
Hastings vividly expressed his opinions and
observations in his journal of the 1847 emigration He met Whitman at the
Umatilla River and subsequently learned about his murder
Hilty, Ivy E., Jean H. Peters, Eva M. Benson, Margaret A. Edwards and
Lorraine T. Miller 1972 Nutritive Values of Native Foods of Warm
Springs Indians. Oregon State University Extension Service,
Corvallis, OR.
The monograph identifies popular, scientific, and
Indian names of edible foods and assessed their caloric
value.
House of Representatives House Executive Document No. 65,
36 Cong., 1 Sess.
This document contains the report of Captain D. H.
Wallen's road-reconnaissance from The Dalles to the head of Crooked
River.
Humason, O[rlando] 1869 Map of The Dalles Military Road from
Dalles City, on Columbia river, to Fort Boise, on Snake river--330 1/2
Miles. M-934, RG 77, Records of the Chief of Engineers, National
Archives, Washington, DC.
Humason was one of the primary owners of the wagon
road company gaining the lucrative land grant from the state under the
federal grant program. He mapped the route as it was proposed in
1869.
Humphreys, Dollina 1984b Cant Ranch Oral History Program,
Monograph No. 6. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day,
OR.
Dollina (Stewart) Humphreys was interviewed in 1982
and 1983 about life and history in the upper John Day region. She
discussed the Scottish sub-culture and sheep ranching.
Humphreys, Rhys 1984a Cant Ranch Oral History Program,
Monograph 1. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day,
OR.
Rys Humphreys was interviewed in 1982 about sheep
ranching, the Cant family, transportation, and social conditions in the
upper John Day region.
Hunn, Eugene S. 1990 Nch'i-Wana: 'The Big River,' Mid Columbia
Indians and Their Land. University of Washington Press, Seattle,
WA.
Hunn worked with the Selam family of the Yakama
Nation to write this ethnographic assessment of a major tribe living on
the Columbia Plateau. It is especially strong in its assessment of the
seasonal round and traditional technology.
Hunn, Eugene S. and David H. French 1998 Western Columbia River
Sahaptins. Handbook of North American Indians, 12:378-394. Deward
E. Walker, Jr., ed. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
Profs. Hunn and French wrote the ethnographic
overview of the Sahaptins who occupied the lower John Day and other
nearby regions on the Columbia Plateau.
Irving, Washington 1836 Astoria; Or Anecdotes of an Enterprise
Beyond the Rocky Mountains. Carey, Lea & Blanchard,
Philadelphia, PA.
Irving wrote a history based on primary sources about
the labors of the Pacific Fur Company in Oregon 1810-1813. The book has
remained in print for more than 160 years.
1837 The Rocky Mountains, or, Sciences, Incidents, and Adventures
in the Far West Digested from the Journal of Captain B. L. E.
Bonneville. Carey, Lea & Blanchard, Philadelphia, PA.
Irving used the life and adventures of B. L. E.
Bonneville to write a popular account of the Rocky Mountain fur trade.
The book fostered popular interest in Oregon.
Jackson, Kathleen (Bales) 1984 Cant Ranch Oral History
Program, Monograph No. 4. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument,
National Park Service, John Day, OR.
Kathleen (Bales) Jackson grew up on a ranch near
Dayville This interview was made in 1983 and covered ranching, teaching,
and family life in the upper John Day region.
Jackson, W. Turrentine 1952 Wagon Roads West: a Study of
Federal Road Surveys and Construction in the Trans-Mississippi West,
1846-1869. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
Prof. Jackson wrote a definitive history of labors of
the Topographical Engineers in surveying and building wagon roads in the
American West.
Johansen, Dorothy O. 1957 The Role of Land Laws in the Settlement
of Oregon. pp. iii-viii, Genealogical Material in Oregon Donation
Land Claims. Genealogical Forum of Portland, Oregon, Portland,
OR.
This introductory essay assessed the primary federal
land acts which shaped settlement in Oregon. Johansen put special
emphasis on the Donation Land Act of 1850.
Kappler, Charles J., ed. 1904 Indian Laws and Treaties.
Vol. 2, Treaties. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
Kappler compiled in this volume the ratified Indian
treaties of the United States. The entries include date of negotiation,
date of ratification, statute citation, and names of
signatories.
Kelly, Isabel T. 1938 Northern Paiute Tales, The Journal of
American Folk-Lore, 51 (202):304-438.
Kelly collected oral literature of the Northern
Paiute. These tales recounted cultural values and history of the Indians
of south-central and southeastern Oregon.
Kenny, Judith Keyes 1957 The Founding of Camp Watson, Oregon
Historical Quarterly 58:4-16.
Kenny wrote the history of the military post, Camp
Watson, 1864-1869. The Oregon Infantry used this site in its campaigns
against the Northern Paiute.
1963 Early Sheep Ranching in Eastern Oregon, Oregon Historical
Quarterly 64:10 1-122.
Kenny interviewed family members and neighbors to
craft this history of the emergence of sheep ranching on the southern
Columbia Plateau.
Kestler, Frances Roe 1990 The Indian Captivity Narrative: A
Woman's View. Garland Publishing, Inc., New York, NY.
Prof. Kestler assessed through gendered analysis the
role of the captivity narrative in shaping popular perceptions of
American Indians.
Kincaid, John 1872 Plat of Survey, T10S, R20E, W.M. BLM Archives,
Portland, OR.
1873 Plat of Survey, T11S, R21E; W.M. BLM Archives, Portland, OR.
Knowlton, Frank 1902 Flora of the John Day Basin, Oregon. U.S.
Geological Survey Bulletin 204. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC.
Knowlton analyzed specimens from the upper John Day
country and wrote a descriptive account of prehistory flora.
Knuth, Priscilla, ed. 1964 Cavalry in the Indian Country, 1864.
Oregon Historical Quarterly 65:4-118.
Capt. John M. Drake's diary of 1864 is a chronicle of
military frustration in the pursuit of Northern Paiute Indians in
central and southeastern Oregon.
Knuth, Prisicilla 1966 'Picturesque' Frontier: The Army's Fort
Dalles, Oregon Historical Quarterly, 67:293-346.
Based on a rigorous review of manuscript military
sources, this article is a fine history of Fort Dalles, particularly its
architecture.
Landis, Robert L. 1969 Post Offices of Oregon, Washington, and
Idaho, Illustrated. Patrick Press, Portland, OR.
Landis published a summary of post offices by name,
date of establishment, and date of closure. The volume has no analysis
but is illustrated with early postmarks.
Langille, S. A. 1948a John Day Fossil Beds: A State Park of the
Yesterdays. MS Typescript, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John
Day, OR.
State Parks Historian Langille wrote a history to
justify holding acreage in the upper John Day region for its
paleontological significance and utility for state park
development.
1948b The Painted Hills: A Unique State Park of Wheeler County. MS
Typescript, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day, OR.
Langille wrote a history the the Bridge Creek area,
describing its paleontological significance and making recommendations
for its development as a state park.
Lansing, Ronald B. 1993 Juggernaut: The Whitman Massacre
Trial, 1850. Ninth Judicial Circuit Court Historical Society,
Pasadena, CA.
Prof. Lansing, using the original transcript of the
trial of the alleged Cayuse murderers of the Whitmans, has assessed the
trial and its consequences.
Lee, Daniel and John H. Frost 1844 Ten Years in Oregon. J.
Collord, Printer, New York, NY.
This primary account by two members of the Methodist
Mission described Oregon and its resources.
Lempfrit, Honore-Timothee 1984 Honore-Timothee Lempfrit: His
Oregon Trail Journal and Letters from the Pacific Northwest,
1848-1853. Patricia Meyer, ed. Ye Galleon Press, Fairfield, WA.
Father Lempfrit was an articulate observer and
literally a gourmet on the Oregon Trail. His narrative is filled with
fascinating accounts of the 1848 migration.
Lentz, Florence K. 1994 An Inventory and Evaluation of
Historic Properties Associated with Transportation in Washington
State. Eastern Washington University Reports in Archaeology and
History 100-90. Archaeological and Historical Services.
In conjunction with a statewide survey, Lentz
documented the rise and evolution of roadside architecture in the
Pacific Northwest, with a focus on property types applicable throughout
the region.
1998 Cant Ranch Historic District: Amended National Register
Nomination Form. National Park Service, Seattle, WA.
This amended nomination draws from work mounted in
1983, 1986, 1988, and 1996. It makes an exhaustive identification and
assessment of the setting, periods of history, and the existing
structures. It is supported by detailed maps showing spatial
relationships of the features identified.
Lomax, Alfred L. 1941 Pioneer Woolen Mills in Oregon: History
of Wool and the Woolen Textile Industry in Oregon, 1811-1875.
Binfords & Mort, Publishers, Portland, OR.
Prof. Lomax wrote a history of early efforts to
develop the woolens industry in Oregon. This is a business history based
on primary sources.
1950 Oregon Wool-Scouring Plants of the Early 1900s, Oregon
Historical Quarterly 51:43-52.
Prof. Lomax wrote a history of wool-scouring plants,
including the ill-fated first plant at The Dalles, OR.
McArthur, Lewis L. 1974 Oregon Geographic Names. Oregon
Historical Society, Portland, OR.
McArthur compiled histories of place names based upon
interviews, letters, and historical accounts. The volume is organized
alphabetically and is periodically updated.
McClung, C. E. 1906 The University of Kansas Expedition Into the
John Day Region of Oregon. Kansas Academy of Science
Transactions, 20:67-70.
This is McClung's brief narrative about the
paleontological investigations of the crew from the University of Kansas
in the John Day Fossil Beds.
McKelvey, Susan Delano 1991 Botanical Exploration of the
Trans-Mississippi West, 1790-1850. Oregon State University Press,
Corvallis, OR.
Introduced by Prof. Beckham and heralded as a classic
work, McKelvey's study of 1,144 pages is reprinted from the original
edition. The book is a history of labors of botanists throughout the
American West to 1850.
McNeil, William H. 1953 History of Wasco County, Oregon. MS
Typescript, Oregon Historical Society, Portland, OR.
A typescript of nearly 400 single-spaced pages, this
rambling but informative history covers pioneer days in Wasco County. It
has no style, is discursive, but is useful.
Manchester, Steven R. 1994 Fruits and Seeds of the Middle Eocene
Nut Beds Flora, Clarno Formation, Oregon, Palaeontographica
Americana, 58:7-14.
Manchester assessed nut beds flora.
Mark, Stephen R. 1996 Floating in the Stream of Time: An
Administrative History of John Day Fossil Beds National Monument.
Pacific West Field Area--Columbia Cascades Cluster, National Park
Service, 1996.
This ably written and well-researched history covers
the founding and administration of the National Monument.
Mascall, Billy. 1939 Billy Mascall Tells of the Pioneers, John
Day Valley Ranger, March.
This article consists of a short talk given by
Mascall, a second-generation pioneer in the Dayville area, to a meeting
of the Woolgrowers' Auxiliary
Mascall, Lillian Cant and Francis Kocis n.d. Typed interview
transcript,John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, OR.
This short transcript records an informal
conversation at the Mascall Ranch between Lillian Mascall and Kocis,
Chief Ranger at the Monument, sometime between 1978 and 1984.
Menefee, Leah Collins and Lowell Tiller 1978 Cutoff Fever, VI,
Oregon Historical Quarterly, 79:4-50.
Part six of an article that "would not stop," this is
the history of the efforts in 1853 to open the Free Emigrant Route from
Fort Boise to the upper Willamette Valley by way of Central Oregon. It
is well researched but too much of the information is buried in
footnotes.
Merriam J. C., C. Stock and C. L. Moody 1925 The Pliocene
Rattlesnake Formation and the Fauna of Eastern Oregon, with Notes on the
Geology of the Rattlesnake and Mascall Deposits, Carnegie Institution
of Washington, D. C., Publication No. 347, Paper Ill, pp. 43-92.
This monograph assesses faunal collections and
geology of the Rattlesnake and Mascall deposits in the upper John Day
region. Merriam collected in the John Day Fossil Beds starting in 1899.
He then taught at the University of California, Berkeley, CA.
Merriam, Lawrence C., Jr. and David G. Talbot 1992 Oregon's
Highway Park System 1921-1989: An Administrative History Including
Historical Overview and Park Directory. Oregon Parks and Recreation
Department, Salem, OR.
This volume provides a history of state park
development in Oregon, special programs and initiatives taken in the
years 1962-89, a parks directory, and several useful
appendices.
Mosgrove, Jerry L. 1980 The Malheur National Forest: An
Ethnographic History. USDA Forest Service, John Day, OR.
This is primarily a history of the lands within or
immediately adjacent to the Malheur National Forest. It contains little
ethnography. The volume is illustrated.
Moulton, Gary E., ed. 1983- The Journals of the Lewis &
Clark Expedition. 11 vols. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln,
NE.
Prof. Moulton has prepared the latest, definitive
edition of the journals of Lewis & Clark and other members of their
expedition. The project is not completed.
Munnick, Harriet Duncan 1989 Priest's Progress: The Journey of
Francis Norbert Blanchet from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific in Three
Parishes. Binford & Mort, Publishing, Portland, OR.
Munnick at age ninety-two wrote this biography of Fr.
Blanchet who founded the Catholic missions of Oregon and
Washington.
Munnick, Harriet Duncan and Adrian R. Munnick 1989 Catholic
Church Records of the Pacific Northwest: Missions of St. Ann and St.
Rose of the Cayouse, 1847-1888, Walla Walla and Frenchtown, 1859-1872,
Frenchtown, 1872-1888. Binford & Mort, Publishing, Portland,
OR.
Munnick and her son, Adrian, translated into English,
edited, and prepared biographical notes on key figures in the parish
registers of these Columbia Plateau Catholic missions. The volume has
biographical information on Indians, metis, and early
settlers.
Munro, Stella 1984 Cant Ranch Oral History Program, Monograph
No. 2. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, National Park
Service, John Day, OR.
Interviewed in 1982, Munro recounted teaching at Cant
School in 1919, living with the Cant family, marriage, and events of
social and economic affairs in the upper John Day region in the
first half of the twentieth century.
Murray, Eva 1984b Cant Ranch Oral History Program, Monograph
No. 5. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day, OR.
Eva (Officer) Murray was interviewed in 1982 about
her family's history and its role in the development of Grant County.
She described life, ranching, work, and the Cant and Officer families,
in particular.
Murray, John 1984a Cant Ranch Oral History Program, Monograph
No. 3. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day, OR.
Interviewed in 1982 and 1983, John Murray recounted
life near Dayville where he was born in 1904. His oral history assessed
ranching and sheep raising in particular.
National Park Service n.d. John Day Fossil Beds: A Study.
Typescript, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day, OR.
This report first assessed the potential of the
fossil beds for national monument status.
1976 John Day Fossil Beds: Park Resource Maps. National Park Service
John Day Fossil Beds Planning Team, Denver Service Center and
Cooperative Park Studies Unit, Oregon State University, Denver, CO.
This comb-bound volume reproduced topographic maps of
the National Monument units and noted primary trails, quarries, grades,
springs, impoundments, and other features.
Nedry, H. S. 1952 Notes on the Early History of Grant County,
Oregon Historical Quarterly, 53:235-254.
Nedry compiled an historical overview of settlement,
mining, and institutional development in Grant County in the nineteenth
century.
Nielsen, Lawrence E., Doug Newman, and George McCart 1985
Pioneer Roads in Central Oregon. Maverick Publications, Bend,
OR.
The authors provide information on fifteen, major
roads in Central Oregon and include maps and photographs based upon
ground visits to several of the routes.
Oliphant, J. Orin 1968 On the Cattle Ranges of the Oregon
Country. University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA.
Prof. Oliphant worked for nearly forty years to craft
this history of the cattle industry and, most particularly, the "Rise of
Trans-Cascadia," the interior of the Pacific Northwest. The volume is
fully documented and is focussed on the nineteenth century.
Oliver, Herman 1962 Gold and Cattle Country. E. R.
Jackman, ed. Binfords & Mort, Publishers, Portland, OR.
A lifetime resident of Grant County, Herman Oliver
wrote a history of the region, concentrating particularly on his
family's ranching enterprises east of John Day, OR.
Oregon Department of Transportation 1978 Oregon Cemetery Survey.
OR DOT, Salem, OR.
A statewide survey of small town cemeteries and
family plots, now updated and accessible on the Internet.
Oregon Society Daughters of the American Revolution 1959
Oregon Historic Landmarks: Eastern Oregon. Oregon Society
Daughters of the American Revolution, Portland, OR.
This pamphlet identified a dozen historic sites, each
illustrated with a photograph or drawing and each having a short
history.
Oregon State Highway Commission 1922 Fifth Biennial Report of the
State Highway Commission to the Governor, 1921-1922. Salem, OR.
1922 Sixth Biennial Report of the State Highway Commission to the
Governor, 1923-1924. Salem, OR.
These annual reports describe some of the many
highway projects underway across the state in these years.
Oregon State Historic Preservation Office 1999 Grant and Wheeler
Counties National Register by City. Grant and Wheeler Counties Inventory
by City. Salem, OR.
Current listings for the National Register and Oregon
Inventory of Historic Places are indexed by locale.
Palmer, Joel 1847 Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains
to the Mouth of the Columbia River.... J. A. and U. P. James,
Cincinnati, OH.
Palmer came to Oregon in 1845 and traveled widely.
His journal described both the Oregon Trail and conditions in the
region. Subsequent emigrants used it as a guidebook.
Parker, Samuel 1838 Journal of an Exploring Tour Beyond the
Rocky Mountains Under the Direction of the A.B.C.F.M. Performed in the
Years 1835, '36, and '37. J. C. Derby & Company, Auburn, NY.
Parker traveled overland to Oregon and wrote
expansively about the region and its resources. While searching for
mission sites, Parker did much to promote interest in Oregon and its
resources.
Parrish, Edward Evans 1888 Crossing the Plains in 1844. Oregon
Pioneer Association Transactions, 16th Reunion, 1888, pp.
82-122.
The Parrish journal covered emigration from Platte
City, MO., to the Whitman Mission. This article was based on his daily
diary and reminiscences of overland travel.
Perkins, Henry C. 1873 Plat of Survey, T7S, R19E, W M. BLM
Archives, Portland, OR.
Porter, Elizabeth Lee 1990 Iowa to Oregon, 1864. Covered Wagon
Women, Vol. 9:12-34. Kenneth L. Holmes, ed. Arthur H. Clark Co.,
Spokane, WA.
Porter's brief journal covered her overland travel,
death of a child, birth of a child, and arrival in western Oregon in
October, 1864.
Ray, Verne F., et al. 1938 Tribal Distribution in Eastern Oregon
and Adjacent Regions, American Anthropologist, N.S.
40:384-407.
This team-written monograph wrestled with conflicting
information and contentions among anthropologists about tribal
distribution east of the Cascades.
Reinhart, Herman Francis 1962 The Golden Frontier: The
Recollections of Herman Francis Reinhart, 1851-1869. Doyce B. Nunis,
ed. University of Texas Press, Austin, TX.
Reinhart saw much of the American West during
eighteen years of travel and labor. His reminiscences covered conditions
and expectations in the diggings.
Rich, E. E., and A. M. Johnson, eds. 1950 Ogden's Snake
Country Journals, 1824-1826. Hudson's Bay Record Society, London,
England.
Rich and Johnson edited with extensive introduction
and explanatory notes the explorations of Peter Skene Ogden who passed
through the upper John Day country during his labors for the Hudson's
Bay Company in the 1820s.
Root, Riley 1955 Journal of Travels from St. Josephs to Oregon
with Observations of That Country Together With a Description of
California, Its Agricultural Interests, and a Full Description of Its
Gold Mines. Biobooks, Oakland, CA.
Root intended to write a book based on his overland
journey of 1848. He observed both the Oregon Trail as well as conditions
and Indians in Oregon and California. He published his account in
1850.
Ruby, Robert H. and John A. Brown 1986 A Guide to the Indian
Tribes of the Pacific Northwest. University of Oklahoma Press,
Norman, OK.
This is an alphabetical compendium with brief
histories of tribes in the Pacific Northwest. It is a useful, secondary
source.
Sampson, William R. 1968 Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth. The Mountain
Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West.... Vol. 5. LeRoy R. Hafen,
ed. Arthur H. Clark Company, Glendale, CA.
Sampson was one of several contributing biographers
to this ten volume set. He wrote about the labors of Wyeth who trapped
in the Deschutes watershed in the mid 1830s.
Sapir, Edward 1909 Wishram Texts Together with Wasco Tales and
Myths. Publications of the American Ethnological Society, Vol. 2.
E. J. Brill, Publishers and Printers, Leyden, Holland.
Prof. Sapir, a famous linguist, worked with Columbia
Plateau Chinookan informants at the turn of the century. This is a
collection of their oral tales as dictated to Sapir.
Schlick, Mary Dodds 1994 Columbia River Basketry: Gift of the
Ancestors, Gift of the Earth. University of Washington Press,
Seattle, WA.
Elegantly designed and illustrated with color plates,
this volume assesses materials, styles, motifs, and the history of
Plateau basketry.
Schuchert, Charles and Clare Mae LeVene 1940 O. C. Marsh:
Pioneer in Paleontology. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.
These authors wrote a biography of 0. C. Marsh, famed
paleontologist and sometime collector of fossils in the American
West.
Schwantes, Carlos 1989 The Pacific Northwest: an Interpretive
History. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln NB.
Scott, William Berryman 1939 Some Memories of a
Paleontologist. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
Scott, who came to the John Day Fossil Beds in 1889,
recounted his adventures in Oregon and elsewhere in this autobiography.
Scott worked with Sam Snook, a local rancher, and employed Leader Davis
as his guide.
Secord, Jeanne, comp. 1973 Yesterday in Grant County. MS
typescript, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument.
Secord compiled more than seventy stories and first
hand accounts of people and places in Grant County.
Settle, Raymond W., ed. 1940 The March of the Mounted
Riflemen, First United States Military Expedition to Travel the Full
Length of the Oregon Trail from Fort Leavenworth to Fort Vancouver, May
to October, 1849.... Arthur H. Clark Company, Cleveland, OH.
This volume contains the diaries of William Wing
Loring and George Gibbs, a military officer and civilian, who traveled
the Oregon Trail with the Mounted Riflemen in 1849.
Shaver, F. A., Arthur P. Rose, R. F. Steele and A. E. Adams 1905
An Illustrated History of Central Oregon, Embracing Wasco, Sherman,
Gilliam, Wheeler, Crook, Lake, and Klamath Counties, State of
Oregon. Western Historical Publishing Company, Spokane, WA.
These authors wrote overview county histories and
compiled biographical sketches of prominent citizens who paid to be
included in the volume.
Shotwell, J. Arnold n.d. A Report to the National Park Service on
the Significance, History of Investigation, and Salient Paleontological
Features of the Upper John Day Basin, Wheeler and Grant Counties, OR. MS
Typescript N-30-19, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, OR.
Prof. Shotwell, a geologist at the University of
Oregon, wrote a report on the significance and potentials of the John
Day Fossil Beds area for the National Park Service. He provided a
history of scientific investigations and noted that over 200 articles
had been published on specimens from the area.
Sikoryak, Jane and Kim and Norm Steggell 1981 Blue Basin Trail
Cultural Resource Inventory Survey in the Sheep Rock Unit, John Day
Fossil Beds National Monument, Grant County, Oregon. National Park
Service, Seattle, WA.
The report was based upon a field reconnaissance for
cultural resources for a proposed scenic trail in Blue Basin in the
Sheep Rock Unit.
Smith, Elizabeth Dixon 1983 The Diary of Elizabeth Dixon Smith.
Covered Wagon Women, Vol. 1:111-155. Kenneth L. Holmes, ed.
Arthur H. Clark Company, Glendale, CA.
Smith wrote one of the most poignant and compelling
diaries of the Oregon Trail. She recounted her crossing in 1847 and the
sad circumstances which she met at the end of her journey.
Southworth, Jack, ed. n.d. Grant County: in the Beginning.
Oliver Historical Museum, Canyon City, OR.
This is a modest but well-researched little booklet
that brings the reader into the 1940s.
Steber, Rick and Kristi 1984 Frozen in Time, Ruralite,
August.
The Stebers are local feature writers who wrote this
interest article on the Cant house and family.
Stern, Theodore 1993 Chiefs and Traders: Indian Relations at
Fort Nez Perces, 1818-1855. Vol. 1. Oregon State University Press,
Corvallis, OR.
1996 Chiefs and Traders in the Oregon Country: Indian Relations at
Fort Nez Perces, 1818-1855. Vol. 2. Oregon State University Press,
Corvallis, OR.
Prof. Stern worked for decades collecting information
and interviewing members of the Confederated Tribes of Umatilla. In
these two volumes he was concerned with the early history of relations
during the fur trade, especially the operations at Fort Nez Perces
(Walla Walla).
1998 Cayuse, Umatilla and Walla Walla. Handbook of North American
Indians, 12:395-419. Deward E. Walker, Jr., ed. Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, DC.
Prof. Stern wrote the overview article on the
traditional culture of the three primary tribes in the Confederated
Tribes of Umatilla.
Sternberg, Charles H. 1931 The Life of a Fossil Hunter.
Jensen Printing Company, San Diego, CA.
Sternberg began collecting fossils in Central Oregon
in the 1870s. His autobiography confirmed his passion for his life's
calling, an interest he passed to his three sons.
Stinchfield, Janet L. and McLaren E. 1983 The History of
Wheeler County Oregon. Taylor Publishing Company, Dallas, TX.
A massive 250-page compilation of details on the
history of people and places in Wheeler County, a good portion of the
early material is taken directly from the 1905 tome, An Illustrated
History of Central Oregon by Shaver et al.
Strickland, Rennard and Charles F. Wilkinson, eds. 1982 Felix
S. Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law, 1982 Edition. The Michie
Company, Law Publishers, Charlottesville, VA.
Strickland and Wilkinson, specialists in Indian law,
revised and expanded this classic work on federal Indian law.
Strong, Dexter K. 1940 Beef Cattle Industry in Oregon 1890-1938,
Oregon Historical Quarterly, 41: 251-287.
This is an excellent, thoroughly documented treatment
of the critical middle years of the cattle industry and the ways in
which it adapted to changes conditions in eastern Oregon.
Taylor, Terri and Cathy Gilbert 1996 Cultural Landscape
Report: Cant Ranch Historic District, John Day Fossil Beds National
Monument, Oregon. National Park Service, Cultural Resources
Division, Seattle, WA.
Thayer, Thomas 1969 The Geologic Setting of the John Day
Country. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
This booklet presents a short geological history and
road log of the John Day 'Loop."
Thompson, Erwin N. 1969 Shallow Grave at Waiilatpu: The
Sagers' West. Oregon Historical Society, Portland, OR.
Thompson worked with reminiscences and
contemporaneous accounts of the tragedy in 1847 at the Whitman Mission.
This is an illustrated volume providing that history, especially through
the recollections of the Sager sisters who were present.
Toepel, Kathryn Anne et al. Cultural Resource Overview of BLM
Lands in North-Central Oregon. University of Oregon, Department of
Anthropology, Eugene, OR.
Toepel et al. prepared a well-researched overview of
the public domain and its indigenous peoples, important to a complete
understanding of the region.
Toothman, Stephanie 1983 James Cant Ranch Historic District,
National Register Nomination. National Park Service, Seattle, WA.
Toothman wrote the nomination to the National
Register of the Cant Ranch Historic District. The documented narrative
mentioned the structures, particular the Cant house, and spatial
arrangements of the ranch, but did not include features of the cultural
landscape.
Tourism Industry Literature n.d. Journey Through Time: Tour 50
Million Years of Oregon's Past, Points of Interest.
One-page flyer with map and list of sites of interest
on a 286-mile-long loop through northcentral Oregon.
Townsend, John Kirk 1839 Narrative of a Journey Across the
Rocky Mountains to the Columbia River. H. Perkins, Philadelphia,
PA.
Townsend, a naturalist, described his adventures in
crossing the continent in 1834 with Nathaniel Wyeth. His book helped
create interest in Oregon.
Unruh, John D., Jr. 1979 The Plains Across: The Overland
Emigrants and the Trans-Mississippi West, 1840-60. University of
Illinois Press, Urbana, IL.
Prof. Unruh published the finest secondary history of
overland travel in this expansive monograph. He assessed motives,
experiences, Indian relations, and several other subjects. The work is a
classic.
Victor, Frances Fuller 1894 The Early Indian Wars of Oregon
Compiled from the Oregon Archives and Other Original Sources. Frank
C. Baker, State Printer, Salem, OR.
Victor, a contract writer for Hubert H. Bancroft,
compiled extensive primary sources and also wrote an overview of the
mid-nineteenth century Indian wars in Oregon.
Walker, Deward E., Jr., and Roderick Sprague 1998 History Until
1846. Handbook of North American Indians, 12:138-148. Deward E.
Walker, Jr., ed. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
Profs. Walker and Sprague wrote a history of early
relations with Plateau Indians. They concentrated primarily on the
impact of the fur trade and more lightly on missions.
Whistler, David P Letter of March 7 to Benjamin F. Ladd. MS,
Files, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, John Day, OR.
Whistler, Senior Curator at the Los Angeles County
Natural History Museum, responded to an inquiry regarding California
Institute of Technology expeditions in the 1920s and '30s.
Wilkes, Charles 1845 Narrative of the United States Exploring
Expedition During the Years 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842. Vol. 4. Lea
& Blanchard, Philadelphia, PA.
Lt. Charles Wilkes was commander of a multi-year
expedition which, in 1841, visited the Pacific Northwest. One detachment
explored the Columbia River east to Fort Walla Walla and mapped their
route. Wilkes reported expansively on conditions in the
region.
Williams, Glyndwwr, David E. Miller and David H. Miller, eds.
1971 Peter Skene Ogden's Snake Country Journals, 1827-28 and
1828-29. Hudson's Bay Record Society, London, England.
Williams and the Millers prepared a lengthy
introduction, editorial notes, and maps in this presentation of Ogden's
explorations into the John Day watershed for the Hudson's Bay
Company.
Young, Frederick George, ed. 1899 The Correspondence and
Journals of Captain Nathaniel J. Wyeth, 1831-6: A Record of Two
Expeditions for the Occupation of the Oregon Country, with Maps,
Introduction and Index. University [of Oregon] Press, Eugene,
OR.
Prof. Young lightly edited and published the Wyeth
journals and letters about his efforts to establish a fur trading
company in Oregon in the 1830s.
Zieber, John 1921 Diary of John S. Zeiber [Zieber], 1851.
Oregon Pioneer Association Transactions, 48th Reunion, 1920, pp.
301-335.
Zieber's journal of 1851 documented his family's
journey overland to Oregon. The account opened in April in Illinois and
concluded with arrival in the Willamette Valley.
Personal Communications with Staff, John Day Fossil Beds National
Monument
1995 |
Fremd, Theodore J. Museum Curator
(Paleontology). Hammett, James F. Park Manager
Tanski, Henry M. Park Ranger
|
1994 |
Cahill, Kelly E. - Museum Technician
Hammett, James F. Park Manager
|
Miscellaneous Tourism Literature
1970s 1997
City of Fossil Museum, a Glimpse of Wheeler County's Past
Discover More than Just Fossils in Fossil
Eastern Oregon's Grant County
Grant County Historical Museum
A Guide to Oregon Trails in Sherman County Oregon
Historic Sites and Driving Tours, Gilliam County Oregon
John Day Fossil Beds
Journey through Time Oregon Tour Route
Kam Wah Chung & Co. Museum
Sherman County, The Land Between the Rivers
Sherman County Historical Museum
Then and Now, the Oregon Trail in Oregon
Wheeler County
Wheeler County Driving Tours
joda/hrs/hrsb.htm
Last Updated: 25-Apr-2002
|