The Villager Jan. 2014 | Page 18

Page 18 January 2014 The Charbonneau Villager Every Town Has a Tale Behind It Looking Back . . . A Series of Historical Vignettes on Charbonneau and the Area MICK SCOTT Whether or not to tell this tale . . . well the decision finally came down to the flip of a coin. Maybe you've heard the story but, perhaps, many have not - especially anyone who might be new to the area. So, here goes. Oregon's major city got its name after Francis W. Pettygrove and Asa L. Lovejoy settled the area in the early 1840s. Pettygrove came from Maine with a stock of merchandise, building a warehouse in Champoeg and opening a store near the riverfront of present-day Portland. Lovejoy was a lawyer and, in 1845, with Pettygrove, laid out a 16-block town site along the Willamette River. But, what to name it? Pettygrove wanted to name the harbor city for his hometown of Portland, Maine. Lovejoy had the same idea in mind - except he wanted to name the town site for his hometown of Boston, Mass. So, standing along the west bank of the Willamette River, they flipped a copper penny to determine the name. Pettygrove won, so the name Boston was out and Portland was in. Twenty miles south of the town that could well have been named Boston, Alphonso Boone, the grandson of legendary frontiersman Daniel Boone, settled in 1846 in what is now Wilsonville. Alphonso and his family were part of the “Great Migration” across the Oregon Trail. They were among the first to complete the final leg of the journey by taking the Scott-Applegate Trail west from Fort Hall in present-day Idaho into what is now southern Oregon, then north up the Willamette Valley. Boone started a ferry service across the Wil- lamette River in 1847. The settlement was called Boones Landing, and the ferry service would be a critical link for travel to and from the fertile Willamette Valley. Al- A 1949 service station map charts Portland phonso then and the Upper Willamette Valley. Boones left for the Ferry Road runs north-south from the ferry California crossing in Wilsonville. Interstate 5, gold fields, initially named the Baldock Freeway for and his son state highway engineer R.H. Baldock, would Jesse took be added to road maps when the Boone Bridge was completed and the new highway over the opened five years later. operation, bolstering munity was named for the the business by blazing a landmark hill that French trail north to Portland and Prairie settlers named south to Salem. It's known La Butte. The Butteville today as Boones Ferry Store, opened in 1863, just Road, a route paralleled celebrated its 150th year of in many places by today's operation. Interstate 5. Jesse's DonaMaj. Gen. Edward Canby tion Land Claim was on never set foot in the town the south side of the river, just east of Wilsonville that near the western border of is his namesake. The town what is now Charbonneau. name was a tribute to the But, the settlement that Civil War hero who was sprang up near the ferry killed in 1873 during the landing lost its name conModoc Indian war in lava nection with descendants fields south of Klamath of Daniel Boone in 1880 Falls. when it was renamed WilBetween Charbonneau sonville for the town's first and Canby is Barlow, postmaster, Charles Wilnamed for William Barson. The name change low. William was the son was proposed by Robert of Samuel Barlow who, V. Short, a local landin 1846, blazed the Barowner, Oregon legislator low Trail across the south and a friend of Wilson. It face of Mt. Hood. Samuel sometimes helps to have a purchased the land that is friend in high places. Barlow in 1850 and later Donald, seven miles sold it to his son. William's away, was the first stop mansion faces 99E today. south of Wilsonville when It was built in 1885 and is the railroad was completed now on the National Regisin 1908. The rail stop was try of Historic Places. named for R.L. Donald, Aurora, five miles south an official of the company of Charbonneau, was that built the railroad. To founded by Dr. William Keil the west is Butteville, a in 1857 and named for his thriving port beginning daughter. Keil and 250 his in the 1850s. The comfollowers came west from www.charbonneaucountryclub.com Missouri and established the communal colony. The Aurora colonists also built a large log building near their Willamette River dock. The house once stood on land that is now part of Charbonneau. Hubbard, farther south, was named for Charles Hubbard, who came to Oregon in 1847. When the railroad was built through that part of the Willamette Valley in 1870, Hubbard donated the land for a station and laid out a town site. Champoeg, a name derived from a Kalapuya word for edible root, is one of the most historic places in the state. In 1833, Champoeg became the site of the first American farm in the Northwest. The town became an important commercial center and a major shipping point for Willamette Valley wheat. And, it was here that meetings in 1843 led to the development of a provisional government in Oregon, eventually leading to statehood. The town was virtually wiped off the map by a flood in December 1861, but the area has been preserved as a state park.