Miss Templeton recalls Pioneer days
Published 2:49 pm Thursday, October 2, 2008
The Annual Pioneer Picnic was held in the new
park last Sunday with about 150 persons in
attendance. Former residents of the Valley came from
Portland, Olympia, Tacoma, Snohomish, Monroe and Seattle.
J.J. Fowler of Portland brought a “loud speaker” which
enabled all to hear the program, which had been
arranged for the occasion by Mrs. Adair. Mrs. Kathryn Galley
sang and Mr. Leyde gave two humorous readings. Music
was furnished by Jeannette Pickering and Gail Trezise.
The historical highlight of the program at the
new park was the address by Miss Bertha Templeton,
who spoke on “The Oregon Trail.” Miss Templeton is
the granddaughter of Ezra Meeker, one of the famous
men who crossed the Plains to Washington in pioneer days.
Miss Templeton stated that pioneer stories,
experiences and incidents, with accounts of constant
stalking by Indians, and of encounters with them furnished
the greater part of the nursery rhymes and bedtime
stories of her childhood.
Drawing upon her memory of these stories, Miss Templeton presented a thrilling picture of the
dangers which beset the pioneer families of the Northwest
and also insight into the limitations and privations those
heroic men, women and children endured.
Oregon Trail Retraced
Ezra Meeker, said Miss Templeton, devoted the
last years of his life to writing of the discovery and
development of the Northwest. In 1905 he equipped a
prairie schooner and ox team and attended the Lewis and
Clark Exposition in Portland. There he was housed in a
huge tree stump — an exhibit of the state of Washington.
In 1906 he left Portland by ox team to retrace the
Oregon Trail and erect monuments along the way.
Later the oxen were stuffed and yoked to the
prairie schooner and the complete outfit was exhibited in
the San Francisco Exposition in 1915. It now stands in
the museum in Pt. Defiance Park at Tacoma as a
monument to the pioneer days of the Great Northwest.
