- Jason Lee (missionary)
Infobox clergy
name = Jason Lee
image_size = 130px
caption = Jason Lee
birth_date =June 28 1803
birth_place =Stanstead, Quebec
death_date =March 12 1845
death_place =Stanstead, Quebec
church =Methodist
other_names =
education =
ordained =
writings =
congregations =
offices_held =
title =
spouse = Anna Maria Pittman (d. 1838)
Lucy Thompson
children =
parents =
footnotes =Jason Lee (
June 28 1803 –March 12 1845 ) an American missionary and pioneer, was born on a farm near Stanstead,Quebec . He was the first of theOregon missionaries and helped establish the early foundation of a provisional government in theOregon Country .Early life
Lee attended the village school and by the age of 13 was self-supporting. After a conversion experience, he attended
Wilbraham Academy , graduating in 1830. Between 1830 and 1832 he was minister in the Stanstead area and taught school.Missionary
In 1833 he was chosen to head a mission for the
Flathead Indians . He and his party, including his nephew Daniel, traveled overland with the Wyeth party,Horner, John B. (1921). " [http://books.google.com/books?id=J8IdAAAAMAAJ Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature] "] in response to a visit by four Flatheads to St. Louis and an entreaty to General Clark for someone to bring the "Book of Heaven", prophesied in a vision, to the Flathead people. [ [http://www.nosracines.ca/e/page.aspx?id=259056 "Among the An-Ko-me-nums ; or, Flathead tribes of Indians of the Pacific Coast", pp.13-18] ,Thomas Crosby , W. Briggs, Toronto, 1907] The J.K. Gill Co.: Portland.] arriving inFort Vancouver in 1834. After the site of their first mission was abandoned as unhealthy, the missionaries settled on theWillamette River , northwest of the present site of Salem,Oregon . He found about a dozen Canadian settlers with native wives, who had previously been employed by the Hudson's Bay Company.In early 1837 Lee participated in the
Willamette Cattle Company along with Ewing Young in order to procure cattle for the mission. Lee invested in the venture that was designed to break the cattle monopoly of theHudson's Bay Company in the region. Though Lee was on the ship "Loriot" that took the company to California, Lee did not sail with them. Also in 1836 and then in 1837 he helped to draft a petition for the establishment of a territorial government, and in 1838 he journeyed east to present the petition inWashington, D.C. , stopping at theWhitman Mission nearFort Walla Walla to visit Marcus andNarcissa Whitman .Lee continued to found missions during the 1830s and became increasingly active in the territorial organization of the Oregon settlement, encouraging its ties with the United States. He presided over the preliminary meeting for territorial organization held at Champoeg in 1841, and in 1843 he was instrumental in the formation of a provisional government. He also worked to promote education and formed the plan that resulted in the founding of
Oregon Institute (nowWillamette University ). Problems with the mission including neglect to the education of Native Americans led to his return to headquarters inNew York in 1844.Death and legacy
While he was visiting his sister in Stanstead, his health failed; he died on
March 12 1845 . His remains were reinterred at theLee Mission Cemetery inSalem, Oregon in 1906.The house Lee occupied in 1841 is preserved as part of the
Mission Mill Museum . You can see a picture of it [http://www.oregonlink.com/mission_mill/jasonleehouse/index.html here] .In 1953, the state of Oregon donated a bronze statue of Lee to the
U.S. Capitol 'sNational Statuary Hall Collection .An elementary school in Richland, WA is named after him.
ee also
*
*John McLoughlin
*Henry H. Spalding
*Oregon Mission
*Willamette Cattle Company References
External links
* [http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/lee_j.cfm The Architect of the Capitol: Jason Lee]
* [http://www.endoftheoregontrail.org/road2oregon/sa06JasonLee.html Jason Lee's Mission to Oregon]
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