Перейти на страницу файла на Викискладе

Файл:Ezra Meeker (right) with George H Himes (left) and David Longmire, 1919 (PORTRAITS 189).jpg

Материал из Википедии — свободной энциклопедии
Перейти к навигации Перейти к поиску

Ezra_Meeker_(right)_with_George_H_Himes_(left)_and_David_Longmire,_1919_(PORTRAITS_189).jpg(344 × 600 пкс, размер файла: 35 КБ, MIME-тип: image/jpeg)


Краткое описание

English: Ezra Meeker (right) with George H. Himes (left) and David Longmire, 1919   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Фотограф
НеизвестенUnknown author
Название
English: Ezra Meeker (right) with George H. Himes (left) and David Longmire, 1919
Описание
English:

Handwritten on verso of image: Ezra Meeker, David Longmire (of Wenas), George H. Himes. 7/1919 PH Coll 596.12

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 times of this photograph, he was Curator and Assistant Secretary of the Oregon Historical Society and Secretary of the Oregon Pioneer Association

David Longmire was the son of James and Virinda Longmire. In September or October 1853, the Longmires and their children were members of the first wagon train to succeed in crossing rugged Naches Pass through the Cascade Mountains north of Mount Rainier, near where the borders of present-day Yakima, Kittitas, Pierce, and King Counties meet. The Longmires went on to settle on Yelm Prairie and to play a major role in the exploration and development of Mount Rainier. James Longmire became a sought-after guide to the area, assisting the first known expedition to reach Rainier’s summit, in 1870, and climbing it himself in 1883. That year he also discovered the hot springs at what is now called Longmire along the Nisqually River southwest of Mount Rainier’s summit, which the family developed into a major tourist destination. Longmire’s sons followed in his footsteps as guides and explorers on Mount Rainier, and named many of the features around the mountain.

  • Subjects (LCTGM): Pioneers--Washington (State)--Puyallup
  • Subjects (LCSH): Meeker, Ezra, 1830-1928; Himes, George H., 1844-1940; Longmire, David;
Дата 1919
date QS:P571,+1919-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
institution QS:P195,Q219563
Текущее местонахождение
Инвентарный номер
Источник
Права
(Повторное использование этого файла)
Public domain
Это произведение находится в общественном достоянии (англ. public domain) в США, так как оно было опубликовано до 1 января 1929 года.
Другие версии

May depict the "Examination of Nachess Trail", July 1919, described at Page:Oregon Historical Quarterly vol. 20.pdf/235.

Order Number
InfoField
POR0197

Краткие подписи

Добавьте однострочное описание того, что собой представляет этот файл

Элементы, изображённые на этом файле

изображённый объект

image/jpeg

История файла

Нажмите на дату/время, чтобы посмотреть файл, который был загружен в тот момент.

Дата/времяМиниатюраРазмерыУчастникПримечание
текущий19:42, 5 июля 2020Миниатюра для версии от 19:42, 5 июля 2020344 × 600 (35 КБ)BMacZeroBotAutomatic lossless crop (watermark, horizontal)
19:42, 5 июля 2020Миниатюра для версии от 19:42, 5 июля 2020768 × 630 (39 КБ)BMacZeroBotBatch upload (Commons:Batch uploading/University of Washington Digital Collections)

Нет страниц, использующих этот файл.