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Ezra Meeker, George H. Himes, and Rolf Granger with other dignitaries at the granary at Fort Nisqually, n.d.
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| Title | Ezra Meeker, George H. Himes, and Rolf Granger with other dignitaries at the granary at Fort Nisqually, n.d. |
| Photographer | Unknown |
| Date | n.d. |
| Notes | Numbered on mount (left to right) 5, 4, 1, 2, 3
Handwritten on verso of image: No. 1. E. Meeker, Seattle, Wn; 2. Geo. H. Himes, Portland, Or; 3. Rolf Granger, Sumner, Wn; 4. [?]; 5. [?]
PH Coll 596.14 |
| Contextual Notes | Ezra Meeker (1830-1928) was an early Washington State pioneer who trekked across the country by way of ox cart on the Oregon Trail. He was born December 29, 1830, in Huntsville, Ohio, to Jacob and Phoebe Meeker. By the time he was ten years old, the family had relocated to Indiana, near Indianapolis. In 1851, Meeker married his childhood sweetheart, Eliza Jane Sumner. Meeker, his wife, and his newborn son left Iowa for Oregon in 1852, arriving in the Puget Sound area the next year. They settled permanently in Puyallup in 1862, where Meeker established a successful hop-raising business. He and his family lived in a tiny cabin for the next 26 years. Eliza Jane planted an ivy vine at one corner of the cabin in 1864, and it flourished, providing shade for the home. It was still there years later when the cabin walls finally rotted away, long after the Meekers had moved into their new home, the Meeker Mansion. The citizens of Puyallup, grateful for Meeker's gift of his land as a park (Pioneer Park), decided to preserve the vine as a part of the town's heritage, and provided a concrete pergola to support the vines. The ivy-covered pergola stands where the Meeker cabin once stood. At 76 years old, Meeker became a national celebrity when he loaded up his ox cart and followed the Oregon Trail to the east. Along the way he gave speeches, encouraging the preservation of the Oregon Trail route. The expedition was such a success that Meeker undertook the journey once again in 1910. Meeker also wrote a book on the trail and convinced President Theodore Roosevelt to set aside money for trail preservation. In later years, he made the trip by automobile, train, and even airplane. Meeker continued to promote the Oregon Trail until his death at age 98.
George H. Himes (1844-1940) was an Oregon pioneer. At the time of this photograph, he was Curator and Assistant Secretary of the Oregon Historical Society and Secretary of the Oregon Pioneer Association
Clarence Bagley (1843-1932) was born in Troy Grove, Illinois, and arrived in Seattle in October 1860 at the age of 17, along with his parents. He became a printer, publisher, and writer, a founder of the Washington State Historical Society, and the region's first and preeminent historian. |
| Subjects (LCTGM) | Pioneers--Washington (State)--Puyallup
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| Subjects (LCSH) | Meeker, Ezra, 1830-1928 Himes, George H., 1844-1940 Granger, Rolf Portraits, Group--Washington (State)--Puyallup
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| Location Depicted | United States--Washington (State)--Puyallup
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| Digital Collection | Portraits Collection
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| Order Number | POR0199
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| Ordering Information | To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction-info Please cite the Order Number when ordering. |
| Negative Number | UW27514 |
| Repository | University of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division |
| Repository Collection | Photographs of Ezra Meeker Collection no. 596 |
| Repository Collection Guide | To view the finding aid for this collection, please see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcoll/findaids/docs/photosgraphics/MeekerEzraPHColl596.xml |
| Object Type | Photograph |
| Digital Reproduction Information | Scanned from a photographic print using a Microtek Scanmaker 9600XL at 100 dpi in JPEG format at compression rate 6 and resized to 768x512 ppi. 2003 |
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