The 'Willamette Cattle Company' was formed in
1837 by pioneers in the
Willamette Valley of present day
Oregon,
United States. The company was formed with the express purpose of purchasing cattle in California to bring to
Oregon Country. In that Mexican possesion, the group led by Ewing Young procured nearly 750 head of cattle and 40 horses and drove these animals overland north to Oregon Country.
Background
Prior to the activities of the Willamette Cattle Company, virtually all cattle in the region were owned by the
Hudson's Bay Company (HBC).
[1]
In order to perpetuate that lucrative monopoly the HBC only leased
cattle, never selling the animals and all calves born would be owned by the HBC.
[2]
In order to circumvent that monopoly residents of the valley, including some former employees of the HBC, were drawn together by Lieutenant
William A. Slacum.
Slacum had been sent west by President
Andrew Jackson to inquire about the strategic and economic conditions in Oregon.
[3] The lieutenant had arrived via the brig ''
Loriot'' and became aware of the cattle situation amongst the pioneers.
Agreement
A variety of settlers including missionaries such as
Jason Lee on behalf of the
Methodist Mission, former HBC employees, HBC employees, and
American pioneers created a joint-stock company to travel via the ''Loriot'' to California and purchase as many heads of cattle as they could.
The articles of incorporation were signed on January 13, 1837
at Campment du Sable.
[4]
They would then drive the cattle overland north to the Willamette Valley and distribute the cattle proportional to the amount invested into the company by each investor.
The company would pay for all expenses of those journeying to
Mexican held California and pay them $20 per month in wages.
American
Ewing Young was selected as the leader of the company and in charge of going to
California with
Philip Leget Edwards as treasurer.
Execution
On January 22, 1837 the Willamette Cattle Company employees set sail aboard the ''Loriot'' from
Wappatoo Island on the
Willamette River.
The group arrived first in
San Francisco in March, but were told permission for the purchase of any cattle would need to be from the civil governor located in
Santa Barbara.
Young then went overland and received permission to buy cattle, but only from the government. He then returned north and met the group in
Monterrey on May 12, 1837. They then purchased 746 head of cattle at $3 per head that were to be picked up at two locations.
The group also purchased 40 horses at $12 each.
[5] In June the enterprise had procured the cattle and started driving them north to
Oregon Country.
On July 27 the group began traveling through the
Sacramento Valley after a delay due to wet gunpowder that required a small group to return to San Francisco to buy more.
They passed through the valley during the hot summer season and then crossed over the
Siskiyou Mountains of northern California and southern Oregon. On September 14 they crossed the
Shasta River and soon after William Bailey and George Gay shot a “friendly” native boy in what was considered revenge for attacks on previous trips through the area.
This event angered Young and raised tensions in an area that still had sizable populations of Native Americans.
Finally, in October the group returned to the European settlements of the Willamette Valley.
They had arrived with approximately 630 head of cattle left from what was purchased in California.
Some of these animals were lost by natural causes, some were killed by natives, at least one was killed by the group for feed, and others simply wandered off.
The remaining animals were then divided amongst the investors with a value of $8.50 per head, with Young receiving the largest allotment of 135.
Those who participated in the cattle drive were paid at the rate of $1 per day in the form of cattle.
[6]
Participants
Company
Those investing in the Willamette Cattle Company:
★ Complete list: Ewing Young,
Jason Lee,
John McLoughlin,
William Slacum,
[7] Calvin Tibbets,
[8] James O'Neil,
John Turner,
Webley John Hauxhurst,
William J. Bailey,
George Gay,
Lawrence Carmichael,
Pierre De Puis,
Emert Ergnette
Cattle drive
Those participating in the cattle drive from California:
★ Incomplete list:
Young, Edwards, Carmichael, Bailey, Ergnette, Turner, Gay, B. Williams, Tibbets, and De Puis.
References
1. Willamette Cattle Company Agreement, 1837
2. Ewing Young Route
3. Oregon Blue Book
4. Diary of Philip Leget Edwards
5. Pioneer Days of Oregon History. Vol I., , Samuel Asahel, Clarke, Portland, Oregon: J.K. Gill, Co., 1905,
6.
Legacy
The procurement of cattle began to help break the dependence of the settlers on the cattle of the Hudson’s Bay Company. Young’s role made him the wealthiest of the settlers, which would lend a part in the attempt to form a government after his death in 1841 to deal with his heirless estate. However, even with over 600 cattle among the approximately 500 Europeans in the valley, there was still more demand for cattle, and the settlers would come up with a novel enterprise with the Star of Oregon episode in 1840-1843 to get more cattle.[ Men of Champoeg: A Record of the Lives of the Pioneers Who Founded the Oregon Government, , Caroline C., Dobbs, Metropolitan Press, 1932, 136 ]
7. Stars of Oregon, , Dean, Collins, Binford & Mort, 1943, 44
8.
Wallamette Settlement Articles of Agreement, , , , Provisional and Territorial Records,