[AT] another story about the early days of Oregon
Al Walker
alwalker at gvtel.com
Tue Mar 22 21:43:35 PST 2005
Fascinating reading, Walt. Thank you for sharing.
Al in NW MN
DAVIESW739 at aol.com wrote:
>Brother Joe and Sister Mary had quite a fine "turn out", a cart made of the
>front wheels of a wagon. Bill Athey was a cabinet maker and he had built a
>bed for it that was just as fine as one could ask for. He polished it and
>stained it to what he called Venetian red. The dye stuff came from a clay bank up
>the river and was about the color of a new brick.
>
>Brother Joe drove a yoke of Spanish oxen, perfectly matched and as black as
>crows. They had huge horns that interfered unless they kept them interlocked
>or their heads tilted. They were trotting oxen and the big cart swinging
>across the prairie behind them, left a fine cloud of dust in its wake. I was
>pretty proud when I drove to church with them. They usually stopped for me as
>they passed our house. Eleanor Beers was my especial friend. The Beers lived
>next door to Brother Joe's and Eleanor most always went to church with them.
>Eleanor and I always sat on the back seat and held on tightly lest we be josted
>out.
>
>Eleanor was fine company and under cover of the rumble of the big cart, we
>could laugh just as loudly as we pleased, even though Mother happened to be
>along.
>
>One Sunday we were both terribly excited, Eleanor wore her new pink shawl,
>it was the most beautiful shawl that I ever saw, a delicate shell pink silk,
>with deep, deep knotted fringe and raised figures thrown up in wonderful
>patterns, thick and solid next to the edge and less so toward the center. Eleanor
>was very fair and I thought her the loveliest thing I had ever seen.I got
>into the back seat beside Eleanor carefully, lest I sit on the edge of her shawl
>and crush it. She drew the ends well away from me and tucked them around her
>on the other side. We were on our way when something seemed happening to
>Eleanor and Eleanor's shawl, it was almost gone from her. She clung to the
>vanishing corner of it and screamed. A final violent wrench and it was gone.
>Brother Joe stopped the oxen and went back to look in the grass and low bushes, he
>looked everywhere. Eleanor's pink shawl had just completely vanished.
>finally Joe, wise in the ways of carts, thought to look at the hub. Sure enough,
>there was the shawl, wound around and around, but you would never have known
>that it had once been pink, but seeing it, one could readily tell that it would
>never be pink again. Though Mother worked and worked at it, the axle grease
>was ground into every fiber of it. It was such a mess, completely ruined and
>on the first day that she had been allowed to wear it. Our Sunday was
>spoiled. Brother Joe turned back and spent the day at our house.
>
>If Eleanor Beers were alive now and you were to ask her about the greatest
>tragedy of her life, I am sure she would tell you about the pink silk shawl
>with the brocade figures and the deep, knotted fringe around it.
>
>By Charlotte Matheny Kirkwwod
>(the last known surviving member of the 1843 wagon train)
>
>Walt Davies
>Cooper Hollow Farm
>Monmouth, OR 97361
>503 623-0460
>
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