- Ewing Young
Infobox Person
name= Ewing Young
caption=
birth_date= 1799
birth_place=Tennessee
death_date=February 9 1841
death_place=Oregon
occupation= Trapper
spouse=Ewing Young (
1799 -February 9 1841 ) was an American fur trapper and trader fromTennessee who traveled the westernUnited States before settling in theOregon Country . As a prominent and wealthy citizen there, his death was the impetus for the early formation of government in what became the state ofOregon .cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Ewing Young Route | work = Oregon's Historic Trails | publisher = End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center | date = | url = http://www.endoftheoregontrail.org/oregontrails/ewingyoung.html | format = | doi = | accessdate = 2006-12-21 ] Young would trade along theSanta Fe Trail and intoCalifornia , prior to the region becoming a part of the United States before moving north to theWillamette Valley .Early life
Young was born in Tennessee to a farming family in 1799. In the early 1820s he had moved to
Missouri where he farmed briefly on theMissouri River at Charitan.In Missouri, Young was on the far western edge of the American frontier, not far from the border of Spanish-controlled
Texas ,New Mexico and today'sAmerican Southwest . Under the Spanish colonial system, trade between Americans and the Spanish outpost atSanta Fe, New Mexico was prohibited. However, by 1821, the newRepublic of Mexico had gained its independence from Spain, and a number of American adventurers living in Missouri were eager to test whether trade with the newly-empowered Mexican authorities in Santa Fe would be allowed. After a first small group of Americans returned successfully in December 1821 from a small trading foray, Young eagerly signed up to join a somewhat larger group going to trade in Santa Fe.cite book | last = Holmes| first = Kenneth | title = Ewing Young:master trapper | location = Portland, Oregon | publisher = Binsford & Mort | year = 1967 | pages = pp. 9-10]Early western travels
Young sold the farm he had just bought, and in May 1822, became part of the first overland wagon train to leave Missouri and head for Santa Fe, along what would become known as the
Santa Fe Trail . Holmes, Kenneth (1967) pp. 10-20 ] Young and the others found that they were welcomed by the new Mexican authorities. For the next nine years, Young began traversing the Southwest, dividing his time between Santa Fe and Missouri. In particular, the Spanish (and Mexicans) had not focused on trapping the beaver and other fur-bearing animals of the Southwest (demand was small within the Spanish trading system), however, there was significant demand for these pelts in the American and European markets.Young pioneered trapping the American Southwest, leading many of the first American expeditions into the mountains and watercourses of today's New Mexico,
Colorado ,Utah , andArizona . Young was 18 when he started to explore. Young and his associates would take the newly-caught peltry to Missouri for sale, purchase trade goods there, and return to New Mexico, where the American goods were sold for gold and silver coin. It was during the trapping expedition of 1827-1828, that Young employed a teenagedKit Carson . Holmes, Kenneth (1967) pp 40-41.] Despite tension that developed with Mexican authorities (trying to restrict American activities), Young became a successful trapper and businessman, eventually setting up a trading post in Taos in modern New Mexico in the late 1820s, and taking a Mexican common-law wife, María Josefa Tafoya, the daughter of a prominent Taos family. Holmes, Kenneth (1967) p. 40-43.]California
In the Spring of 1830, Young led the first American trapping expedition to reach the Pacific Coast from New Mexico. Young's journey to California with traveling companions crossed Arizona, the
Colorado River , theMojave Desert and arrived at theSan Gabriel Mission , near today'sLos Angeles, California . After recuperating there, the group visited theSan Fernando Mission , and headed north into California's great Central Valley, again, the first American trapping expedition to do so. Holmes, Kenneth (1967) pp. 46-48.]Once there the group moved north to the
Sacramento River where they encounteredPeter Skene Ogden of theHudson's Bay Company . The two groups jointly trapped the valley before Young’s group moved on toSan Francisco Bay to trade their pelts. After this they went south to Los Angeles and then back to Taos before the year was up. Upon his return to Taos with the proceeds of this expedition, Young became one of the wealthiest Americans in Mexican territory. Holmes, Kenneth (1967) pp. 46-60 ]In the late 1820s and early 1830s, the Mexican authorities were growing worried about American settlers and influence in New Mexico, and began imposing increasingly severe restrictions on trade and trapping. Perhaps in part to avoid these restrictions, Young was baptized a Catholic in 1830 (perhaps he also became a Mexican citizen and formalized his marriage to Maria - however, if he did so, no record of these two events survives). Holmes, Kenneth (1967) pp. 64-65 ]
Over the next few years Young and his group continued traveling to California to trap and trade. Then in 1834 in San Diego Young encountered
Hall J. Kelley , the great promoter of the Oregon Country. Kelley invited Ewing Young to accompany him north to Oregon, but Young at first declined. After re-thinking, Young agreed to travel with Kelley and they set out in July 1834.Oregon Country
Ewing Young, arrived in Oregon in 1834, arriving at
Fort Vancouver on October 17th with Hall J. Kelley from California.cite book | last = Hussey | first = John A. | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Champoeg: Place of Transition, A Disputed History | work = | publisher = Oregon Historical Society | year = 1967 | doi = | id = ] Though a trapper by trade, Young then stayed as a permanent settler in theWillamette Valley . The group received little assistance from Dr.John McLoughlin and the HBC or theMethodist Mission group because the group was accused by the Mexican government of California of stealing 200 horses when they left. The group denied this charge saying some uninvited traveling companions had stolen the horses. Nonetheless, McLoughlin blacklisted Young from doing business with the HBC.cite news|title=Oregon's Trails - Pariah eases into spirited endeavor|last=Terry|first=John|date=October 15, 2006 |work=The Oregonian |pages=Regional News; Pg. B11|accessdate=2008-10-11] Also in Young and Kelley’s party that emigrated to Oregon wasWebley John Hauxhurst , who subsequently built the firstgrist mill in the Willamette Valley. Another trapper,Joseph Gale , who would later be an important figure in Oregon history was also part of the group. [ [http://www.3rd1000.com/history3/era9.htm The American Rocky Mountain Fur Trade] ]Young settled on the west bank of the
Willamette River near the mouth of Chehalem Creek, opposite of Champoeg. His home is believed to be the first house built by European-Americans on that side of the river. In 1836, Young started to build a distillery to produce alcohol. Methodist Mission leader Jason Lee organized the Oregon Temperance Society and along with McLoughlin tried to get Young to stop his efforts. McLoughlin and the HBC prohibited alcohol sales to the Native Americans. Late in the year, U.S. Navy LieutenantWilliam A. Slacum arrived on the ship "Loriot" and helped to dissuade Young from following through on the venture.Slacum was there as an agent of the U.S. President, and also helped to put together a joint venture between all of them to purchase cattle. In January 1837, Young was the leader of the
Willamette Cattle Company that traveled to California with the assistance of Slacum on the "Loriot", and brought back 630 head of cattle along theSiskiyou Trail , as all prior cattle in the valley was owned by the HBC and rented to the settlers. Those accompanying Young on the cattle drive werePhilip Leget Edwards , Calvin Tibbets, John Turner,William J. Bailey , George Gay,Lawrence Carmichael , Pierre De Puis, B. Williams, and Emert Ergnette.cite journal
last =
first =
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Wallamette Settlement Articles of Agreement
journal = Provisional and Territorial Records
volume =
issue =
pages = 406
publisher = Oregon Provisional Government
date = 1-13-1837
url =
doi =
id =
accessdate = ] During the drive Gay and Bailey murdered a native boy in retaliation for an attack several years earlier by the Rogue River Indians, which that attack had been in retaliation for murders that Young’s group had committed on their travel to Oregon in 1834.Legacy
In February 1841 Young died without any known heir and without a will. This created a need for some form of government to deal with his estate, which had many debtors and creditors among the settlers. Doctor
Ira L. Babcock was selected as supreme judge with probate powers after Young's death to deal with Young's estate.cite book
last = Horner
first = John B.
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature
publisher = The J.K. Gill Company:Portland, Oregon
year = 1921
id =
doi = ] The activities that followed his death eventually led to the creation of a provisional government in the Oregon Country. Ewing Young Elementary School inNewberg, Oregon , is named in his honor. [ [http://www.newberg.k12.or.us/ey/ewing-young-history Ewing Young History.] Newberg School District. Retrieved onMarch 24 2008 .]Notes
References
* Carter, Harvey L. "Ewing Young", featured in "Trappers of the Far West", Leroy R. Hafen, editor. 1972, Arthur H. Clark Company, reprint University of Nebraska Press, October 1983. ISBN 0-8032-7218-9
*cite book | last = Holmes| first = Kenneth | title = Ewing Young:master trapper | location = Portland, Oregon | publisher = Binsford & Mort | year = 1967 | id = ISBN 978-0-832300615
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