[or-roots] Wheatland Ferry
daviesw739
daviesw739 at aol.com
Thu Feb 25 21:19:59 PST 2010
This is from Aunt Charlotte's book she was Daniel Matheny's youngest daughter. Charlotte grew up at the ferry arriving there in the spring of 1844. In 1850 when the DLC was authorized by congress Daniel Matheny filed for his DLC on the property, 640 acres. I am amazed at all the untrue stories of the early days of Oregon.
My gt.gt grandfather Henry Hewitt who married Elizabeth Matheny (the eldest daughter in 1841 in MO.) told my gt. aunt Bertha that Applegate was the biggest liar that ever walked the face of the earth. The elder Applegate.
Walt
>From her book
When we moved to the Mission Farm at the place that is called Wheatland, we were very comfortable. It was a big hewed log house with good sawed floors and was well finished with cedar lumber that the missionaries had shipped around cape horn. It had two brick fireplaces and plenty of bedrooms. There were barns and granaries, and about forty acres of land had been fenced and cultivated.
The missionaries had built a ferry and we bought it with the place. It became a source of revenue to us after the country had become more thickly populated, but that meant very little to us. for it was not till five or six years later that there was anything in the country to buy. It was not until the gold discovery in California that things became easier for the people in our country. We had a good house, but our troubles were by no means over. we were ragged and we were without house keeping equipment of any kind.
Charlotte Matheny Kirkwood
Into the Eye of the Setting Sun
I hope this helps settles the Ferry dispute but I doubt it.
In a message dated 02/25/10 20:35:49 Pacific Standard Time, barbhg1221 at comcast.net writes:
>From the Oregon Historical Quarterly, Vol. 48, p. 345 [1947 - I believe]:
"A new six car electrically-propelled ferry boat, Daniel Matheny III, went into service at the Wheatland ferry crossing of the Willamette River, on June 11. Daniel Matheny, pioneer of 1843, purchased James O'Neal's (sic) land claim in 1844, and soon thereafter established regular ferry service. Lindsay Applegate assisted him in constructing the first ferry boat, using 'bushel or two of literature he found in the old house' recently abandoned by the Jason Lee missionary workers at Mission Bottom.
On Jan. 1853, the territorial legislature authorized a public road from Salem to Dayton, crossing the river at Matheny's ferry. For more than ninety years the service was privately owned and operated and became a public ferry less than ten years ago."
Note: James O'Neil is my children's 4th great-grandfather.
Barbara Herring
----- Original Message -----
From: "daviesw739" <daviesw739 at aol.com>
To: "or-roots mail list" <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>
Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 5:48:22 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Matheny's Everywhere -- (and Simkins)
YES .YES
It was call Mathena's or Matheny's Ferry before the town of Wheatland existed. Daniel Matheny my 3 gt. grandfather started the town of Wheatland he owned the Ferry many years before buying it from the Methodist Missionaries in 1844.
Walt Davies
In a message dated 02/25/10 16:14:23 Pacific Standard Time, pmml at meritel.net writes:
nO nO nO nO nO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sue Steward" <ssteward at ccountry.net>
To: "or-roots mail list" <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>
Sent: Sunday, February 21, 2010 2:11 PM
Subject: Re: [or-roots] Matheny's Everywhere -- (and Simkins)
> http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jtenlen/ORBios/mcmatheny.txt
>
> We've used the Wheatland Ferry several times, I think it was previously
> called Matheny Ferry.
>
> Sue
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Dan M" <mygenrw2 at gmail.com>
> To: "or-roots mail list" <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>
> Sent: Sunday, February 21, 2010 11:50 AM
> Subject: Re: [or-roots] Matheny's Everywhere -- (and Simkins)
>
>
> Matneny has a list on some server, I used to be on it, I used to be the
> admin for the one on root sweb, Dianna started some one line group for
> them.
> I know they are always showing up around Matney also, I think the name is
> French and we found Matney there as DeMatenyee <sp> close to that off
> hand.
> I see Matheny properties close to Matney properties and some travels in
> same areas, how ever there are more of the pioneer type people in those
> old
> days the Matheny seemed to be to more famously known over the Matney in
> most
> places eg Champoeg.
> Matney like any other names has a lot of milestones but I noticed the
> Matheny seem to be more well known over all eg Walt Davis's Aunts book
> into
> the setting sun. SO far we have not found any one who has recorded any
> Matney/Mattingly pioneer mentions too much. There is a great deal of
> history
> for folks in the era and each name I read about seems to have its own
&g t; history, very much fun reading about all names of the times, I always
> wonder
> how it really was all these people on the wagon train 1843 so to speak.
> Dan M
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Chris & Bill Strickland" <lechevrier at earthlink.net>
> To: "or-roots mail list" <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>
> Sent: Sunday, February 21, 2010 11:11 AM
> Subject: [or-roots] Matheny's Everywhere -- (and Simkins)
>
>
> In this Hiram Simkins business, I find two in Oregon before 1900 -- one
> in the Wheatland area of Yanhill & Polk Counties, with connections to
> numerous of the well-known Champoeg area pioneers, and his uncle, Hiram
> Simpkins, found in the 1880 census in "Jump off Joe" in Josephine
> County, the census taker writing something that could be transcribed as
> "Irian".
>
> Anyway, of the former, less related one , I found the Matheny name
> popping up again, which, since it has been a topic on this list, I
> thought might be of interest to some:
>
>
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