Amelia E. (Grimes) (born in 1851, Iowa) and Jasper N. Daniels (born 1840, Ohio) and their daughter, Rebecca Catherine, circa 1876. Rebecca was born July 31, 1875, in Oregon. They married November 15, 1871, and lived in Santiam, Linn County, Oregon, in 1880.
Marial "Mamie" R. (Thayer) Grisham, married William M. Grisham on October 16, 1887, Linn County, Oregon. He died January 10, 1888, in Gilliam County. This photograph must have been taken just after their marriage. She was active in the teaching community at Lebanon, Oregon.
Born October 18, 1864, he married Marial "Mamie" Thayer in October 1887. He died several months later, January 10, 1888, in Gilliam County. He had been an active member of the Lebanon, Oregon, community, and served in its fire department.
La Fayette Grover, a delegate to the 1857 Oregon Constitutional Convention, a U. S. Senator, U. S. Representative, and the fourth Governor of Oregon (1870-1877). He lived in Salem, Oregon, for many years, and died suddenly, in Portland, on May 10, 1911.
Elisha Treat Gunn, born about 1833 in Connecticut, pioneer to Oregon in 1849, who for a short time was Compositor and part owner of the Weekly Oregonian newspaper in Portland. In 1853, he moved to Olympia, Washington Territory, where he spent the rest of his life. In 1855, he started at Steilacoom, the "Puget Sound Courier," the first newspaper in Pierce County. He became the publisher of the "Olympia Transcript" in 1868.
Elisha T. Gunn, born 1833 in Connecticut, arrived in Oregon in 1852. He was a printer in Olympia, Washington, for most of his life. In 1872, he was elected Territorial Treasurer.
Rev. Stephen Guthrie, pioneer of 1852 from Illinois. He was the first minister of the Christian Church in the Puget Sound Country, in 1853, and was known as 'Father Guthrie.' He lived in Chambers Prairie.
Lucinda Miller (Ford) Haley, born in 1840 in Missouri, pioneer of 1844 to Oregon. She settled in Polk County and married William Thompson Haley on July 22, 1858. She died in Santa Rosa, California, in 1867.
Major General Henry Wager Halleck, an expert in military studies, known as "Old Brains." He helped in California's admission as a state, and was a lawyer and land developer. He served as General-in-Chief of all Union armies during the Civil War.
Absalom B. Hallock, born in 1822 in New York, was an early (1851) surveyor, carpenter, building contractor, architect, fire fighter, and police officer in Portland, Oregon. His efforts were integral to the growth of early Portland.
Edward Hamilton, born in Culpepper County, Virginia, was Captain of the Volunteers in the Mexican War (1846-1848), Secretary of the Oregon Territory (1850-1853) and a Multnomah County judge for eight years.
Seth R. Hammer, a resident of Salem, Oregon, beginning in the early 1860s. Reputed to be one of the "characters" of the city, he was a dealer in real estate and a civil engineer.
Joseph A. Hanna, pioneer of 1852, and one of the first Presbyterian ministers in Oregon. He settled in Marysville (now Corvallis) and helped to form the first Presbyterian society in Portland, but that dissolved in 1853. He married Esther Belle McMillan.