Knowledge (XXG)

French Settlement, Oregon

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166:. The region was in general duress. Seven mixed Indigenous families resisting relocation nonetheless hid in the Upper Umpqua Valley as "masked exterminators rode out of the mining camps trying to kill every Indian they could find": Dumont, Rondeau (twice over), Rainville, Pariseau, LaChance, and Thomason. They scraped out a living in what a descendant called the "edge of frontier society in Douglas County", around French Settlement. New waves of French Canadians of mixed ancestry with suitable experience were able to settle. Sons and daughters of the original French Prairie settlers under incoming newcomers pressure from the Oregon Trail resupplied the vicinity of French Settlement. Upkeeps obligations on the land claimed were daunting in a vigilante plagued area. New waves of American settlers also followed and some of the mixed ancestry people would end up in Grand Ronde. 102:
on French Settlement limits the early settlers to only those who never married into local Indian tribes (nor to half-breeds natives from earlier occupation during the fur trade period). Earlier land occupants leftover from the fur trade era were deemed squatters to eradicate and certainly not identified. In addition, scholar Jean Barman identified through the Catholic church records a whole slew of sons and daughters of French Prairie earliest pioneers intermarrying and heading to French Settlement vicinity having temporarily acted as a magnet. This although quickly came to an end when hunted down by vigilantes during the 1855 Indian Wars period if not forcefully resettled into Grand Ronde reservation or escaping further into the Pacific Northwest back-country such as around
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1846 and was one of them. Flournoy convinced four other "Frenchmen" to apply for donation land claims and settle with him by 1851 in the desirable location spotted earlier on. David Grenot had first arrived during his youth in eastern French speaking Canada from France. French Canadian Lapointe, Champagne and Archambeau were the others. LaBrie and LaRaut followed a year later after the initial group went back to bring over their own families. Soon joined by the Fenn, the Scott and the Conn, of different ethnicity toward a newly emerging American English speaking
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acted similarly with Walla Walla chief's daughter Lizette. Later arrival Pierre Parizeau from Montreal partnered with the mixed ancestry daughter of a fur trader and similarly settled. Intermingling with local Indigenous people was no longer possible as devastating wars with the Umpqua tribes occurred in the 1850s. The local Indigenous population was decimated and most of what was left forcefully resettled by 1856 in the
131:. French Canadian Jean-Baptiste Gagnier ran the isolated post and had partnered with the Umpqua chief's daughter Angélique. The area became quickly trapped out but Gagnier had built self-reliance cultivating "about 50 acres of land, wheat, corn potatoes and most kinds of vegetables" with the help of the local Siuslaw people. Numerous fur trade engagés had gone by en route to Northern California via the 182:
lively week-end gatherings. A School District operated in the area under the name French Settlement from 1886 to 1930. The original school built in was dismantled in 1921. A French Settler school operated until the early 1960s. A post office briefly operated in 1874 under the name French Settlement. By 1890, French Settlement had much been renamed to Melrose.
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from a French Canadian father and a Saulteaux Indigenous mother. Laverdure had a similar background. By 1854, Dumont was successfully claiming as an "American half-breed Indian born in Green Bay" an 483 acres donation land in the Umpqua with his wife Chewelah Josephte Finlay of similar mix. Laverdure
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and Father Alphonsus Glorieux. People of Catholic faith in and around French Settlement were catered to by a visiting priest. Mass was often performed in the open air, along with makeshift cemetery and schooling. The early French speaking settlers made up for these shortcomings by regularly holding
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history, sometimes referred as a French Canadian or a MĂ©tis settlement. Although relationships have been generally harmonious, intermarrying between the original French speaking core settlers and other European ethnic newcomer groups did not occur until the late 1970s. This rare reference narrative
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Starting summer 1848, most men in Oregon including French Prairie and the Umpqua area left for the California gold rush to generally return worse off with others now heading North into mining. Missouri born French Huguenot Hoy Bernard Flournoy had surveyed the French Settlement area earlier on in
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regained recognition in 1982 on the basis of seven mixed ancestry families hiding for several decades around French Settlement. Many ethnic communities had therefore been competing early on for the most valuable land of Southern Oregon in and around French Settlement.
106:. The Oregon earliest pioneer families at stake were the Rivet, Bellique, Bercier, Despard, Desportes McKay, Dompierre, Gagnon, Gervais, Gingras, Grégoire, Groslouis, Perrault, Picard and Pichette. Only one native group was able to make it through and the 90:. It roughly occupies a stretch of 8 miles by 4 miles of lush fertile well irrigated soil. The first American newcomers gave the location such a generic name based on the ethnicity or language spoken by the original settlers, namely 176:
Nearby Roseburg located across the river was founded in 1851 under the name Deer Creek. The Catholic mission of St. Stephen the Martyr and the parish of Saint-Joseph were established in 1853 and 1867 under Archbishop
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also passed by in 1841. Many noticed a remarkable area to move to someday. By 1846, Gagnier had grown a herd of "46 horses, 64 heads of cattle and 45 hogs".
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Catholic Church records of the Pacific Northwest : Roseburg register and missions (1853-1911), Portland register (1852-1871)
259:. UBC Press. Vancouver 2014. Chapter 9: "Negotiating Changing Times" p. 239 and Chapter 10: "Enabling sons and daughters" p. 282 230: 157:
Amongst earlier fur trade visitors were Alexandre Dumont and Joseph Laverdure. Mixed ancestry Dumont was born in present-day
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Small scale farming was conducted along with raising common farm animal stock. Wheat was grown and milled in nearby
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was the first newcomer to trap the area in the 1830s and trade with various Indigenous groups. A first
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French Settlement is also known as an early mixed ancestry settlement, or at least an attempt, in the
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Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition: During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842
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passed by using the trail to bring horses and mules in 1834, and ran a cattle drive in 1837. The
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including Flournoy, Garden and Coles valleys. It is along the west side of the South
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French Canadians, Furs, and Indigenous Women in the Making of the Pacific Northwest
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http://www.co.douglas.or.us/planning/hrrc/pdfs/3%20CH2%20HISTORIC%20OVERVIEW.pdf
151: 136: 124: 367: 354: 335: 15: 39: 304:"Contact – Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians" 8: 202:Binford & Mort Publishing, Portland 1989 78:South of its fork, a few miles West of  195:. Portland, Binford & Mort Pub, 1967. 235:United States Department of the Interior 127:was built in 1832 close by North on the 212: 193:Umpqua Valley Oregon and its Pioneers 7: 226:Geographic Names Information System 144:United States Exploring Expedition 14: 33:to comply with Knowledge (XXG)'s 392:French-Canadian American history 70:and its neighbouring valleys in 20: 231:United States Geological Survey 1: 418: 397:MĂ©tis in the United States 133:Siskiyou fur brigade Trail 284:. Philadelphia. pp.  179:François Norbert Blanchet 278:Wilkes, Charles (1849). 66:is the original name of 46:may contain suggestions. 31:may need to be rewritten 164:Grand Ronde Reservation 368:43.24750°N 123.45889°W 104:Frenchtown, Washington 373:43.24750; -123.45889 159:Green Bay, Wisconsin 121:Hudson's Bay Company 364: /  237:. November 28, 1980 322:2016-07-28 at the 191:Minter, Harold A. 402:History of Oregon 340:St. Joseph Parish 198:Munnick, Harriet 99:Pacific Northwest 64:French Settlement 61: 60: 35:quality standards 409: 379: 378: 376: 375: 374: 369: 365: 362: 361: 360: 357: 344: 343: 332: 326: 314: 308: 307: 300: 294: 292:Internet Archive 289: 275: 269: 266: 260: 253: 247: 246: 244: 242: 217: 92:French Canadians 56: 53: 47: 24: 16: 417: 416: 412: 411: 410: 408: 407: 406: 382: 381: 372: 370: 366: 363: 358: 355: 353: 351: 350: 348: 347: 334: 333: 329: 324:Wayback Machine 315: 311: 302: 301: 297: 277: 276: 272: 267: 263: 254: 250: 240: 238: 219: 218: 214: 209: 188: 186:Further reading 117: 84:Southern Oregon 68:Melrose, Oregon 57: 51: 48: 38: 25: 12: 11: 5: 415: 413: 405: 404: 399: 394: 384: 383: 346: 345: 327: 309: 295: 270: 261: 248: 211: 210: 208: 205: 204: 203: 196: 187: 184: 141:Charles Wilkes 116: 113: 108:Cow Creek band 72:Douglas County 59: 58: 28: 26: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 414: 403: 400: 398: 395: 393: 390: 389: 387: 380: 377: 341: 337: 336:"Our History" 331: 328: 325: 321: 318: 313: 310: 305: 299: 296: 293: 287: 283: 282: 274: 271: 265: 262: 258: 255:Barman, Jean 252: 249: 236: 232: 228: 227: 222: 216: 213: 206: 201: 197: 194: 190: 189: 185: 183: 180: 174: 172: 167: 165: 160: 155: 153: 147: 145: 142: 138: 134: 130: 126: 122: 114: 112: 109: 105: 100: 95: 93: 89: 85: 81: 77: 73: 69: 65: 55: 45: 41: 36: 32: 29:This article 27: 23: 18: 17: 349: 339: 330: 312: 298: 290:; online at 280: 273: 264: 256: 251: 239:. Retrieved 224: 215: 199: 192: 175: 168: 156: 148: 129:Umpqua River 118: 96: 88:Interstate 5 76:Umpqua River 63: 62: 52:October 2019 49: 40:You can help 30: 371: / 359:123°27′32″W 241:October 23, 152:melting pot 137:Ewing Young 125:Fort Umpqua 386:Categories 356:43°14′51″N 207:References 86:, West of 221:"Melrose" 171:Cleveland 44:talk page 320:Archived 80:Roseburg 115:History 42:. The 288:–228. 243:2011 119:The 286:224 82:in 388:: 338:. 233:, 229:. 223:. 173:. 154:. 135:. 94:. 342:. 306:. 245:. 54:) 50:( 37:.

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Melrose, Oregon
Douglas County
Umpqua River
Roseburg
Southern Oregon
Interstate 5
French Canadians
Pacific Northwest
Frenchtown, Washington
Cow Creek band
Hudson's Bay Company
Fort Umpqua
Umpqua River
Siskiyou fur brigade Trail
Ewing Young
Charles Wilkes
United States Exploring Expedition
melting pot
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Grand Ronde Reservation
Cleveland
François Norbert Blanchet
"Melrose"
Geographic Names Information System
United States Geological Survey
United States Department of the Interior

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