Fort Cowlitz or Cowlitz Farm was an agricultural operation by the British Puget Sound Agricultural Company (PSAC), a subsidiary of the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). It was located on the Cowlitz plains, adjacent to the west bank of the Cowlitz River and several miles northeast of modern Toledo, Washington. [1] The farm was begun during spring of 1839, and its produce soon supplied HBC posts in New Caledonia and Columbia Departments. In the RAC-HBC Agreement, the Russian-American Company received at Novo-Arkhangelsk grain and dairy products from the PSAC along with manufactured goods. Fort Cowlitz produced most of the Company wheat quotas, and its fellow PSAC station Fort Nisqually tended most of the sheep and cattle flocks. By the expiration of the agreement in 1850, Cowlitz Farm wasn't able to meet Russian supply demands. [2]
Cowlitz Farm was established during the joint occupation of Oregon Country between the United Kingdom and the United States of America. The border between British North America and the United States was negotiated in 1846, to extend through Oregon Country mostly on the 49th parallel north. Administrative orders were sent from the center of the HBC Columbia Department, located at Fort Vancouver and later Fort Victoria. Agricultural areas established by Fort Cowlitz were increasingly claimed by arriving American immigrants in the 1840s, beginning contentious legal battles. A settlement with the United States for the sale of PSAC property occurred on 10 September 1869, the company to be paid $200,000 in gold coins (equivalent to $4,580,000in 2023}). [3]
Two former HBC employees retired in the lands of the Cowlitz people in 1833, encouraged by their former employers. [4] By the time Catholic missionary François Blanchet visited the farmers five years later, two more French-Canadians had also retired there. Blanchet reached the farmsteads on 16 December 1838 and arranged for 640 acres (260 ha) of mostly prairie to become the site of the St. Francis Xavier Mission. [4]
James Douglas in 1839 ordered farming equipment, heads of cattle and nine employees to the Cowlitz plains, [5] where around 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) of fertile soil existed. [6] John Tod, Chief Trader in the party, found farming "a new experience for me, and agreeable for a time, but devoid of incidents, with any personal bearing." [7] The buildings that composed Fort Cowlitz over time included residencies for employees, a granary with two levels, [8] 2 storehouses, stables and 14 barns. [9] Housing for the presiding officer was made "of hewed logs framed in the French style, clap-boarded on the outside, and lined and papered on the inside; the windows were from the Old Post at Fort George..." [10] The granary had the dimensions of 25 by 20 feet, [9] with three stories and was "framed of large hewed timber and boarded on the outside..." [10]
Employees of the Company labored over 1839 under Chief Trader John Tod to sow almost 300 bushels of wheat, and plow 200 acres (81 ha) of land at the Cowlitz farm. [6] Fort Cowlitz quickly became the main source of grain for the PGAC. [5] The farm's labor was fairly diverse, eventually including French-Canadians, Hawaiians, Nisqualls, Americans and Cowlitzes. Nisqually and Cowlitzes performed labors such as digging wells, along with sowing and reaping the fields. [10] Hawaiians worked on erecting stables, barns and warehouses, besides general labor duties in the farms. [10] Their residency was a separate building. Cowlitz Farm had an estimated 600 acres (240 ha) under cultivation in 1841, [11] producing around 8,000 bushels of wheat and 4,000 bushels of oats, as well as staples of barley, peas, and potatoes. [6] Blanchet complained of the conduct of the 13 farm staff in 1842, claiming them to "not all prove themselves exemplary" and be a poor influence upon natives. [12] "It becomes almost impossible to succeed with the [Cowlitz] natives, when often one sees them dragged into vice by those even who should on the contrary give them only examples of virtue." [12]
Also in 1841 members of the Sinclair Expedition settled there and at Fort Nisqually
Military officials from the United States and the United Kingdom were sent to perform reconnaissance in the Oregon Country in the 1840s. Charles Wilkes of the United States Exploring Expedition in 1841 concluded that Fort Cowlitz had "no sort of defense about it" due to the neighboring Cowlitz and Klickitat bands having "too great" of a commercial dependence on the Company. [11] Mervin Vavasour reported to his superiors in 1845 of the strategic value of Fort Cowlitz: "From the Cowlitz Farm the troops, etc., can descend the river in boats to the Columbia, and proceed to any required position on it by the same means." [13]
PSAC and HBC relations with the Provisional Government of Oregon were normalized in 1845. In 1847 three land claims by PSAC employees claimed 1,920 acres (780 ha) of Cowlitz Farm. [9] During this year over 1,400 of these acres (570 ha) were being cultivated by 19 staff members. [5] The California Gold Rush later contributed to the decline in employee numbers, by 1851 only six remained. [5]
Despite having a night watch, Indigenous peoples occasionally took potatoes from the Company farms. After such a "depredation" by a band of Nisqually, one man received "a good hiding" from Roberts. [10] Harvesting of the potato fields was mostly performed by the wives of Nisqually laborers for the PSAC. [10] Diseases such as measles began to strike Hawaiian and Native employees in 1847. Operations across the farms were left in a standstill, forcing Roberts to hire several Americans to continue making fencing. [10] As the illnesses spread among the neighboring natives during the winter of 1848, Fort Cowlitz provided medical aid and food to the afflicted: "We have to feed & assist all the Indians about us, draw fire wood for them &c. 3 died to day. All hands either ill themselves or attending their sick families." [10]
A former clerk that ran Fort Cowlitz, George Roberts, leased the remaining 160 acres (65 ha) held by the post in 1859, agreeing to maintain the buildings as rent. [2] Roberts became embroiled in legal battles with American settlers who denied the validity of PSAC claims composing its farm. A meeting held in November 1848 by American residents of Lewis County proclaimed that:
"That we view the claims as located by the chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company, or Puget Sound Agricultural Society, for the servants in the employ of said company, as amounting to a nullity, unless said persons for whom said lands were located are out of the employment of said society, or company, and have settled on and continue to occupy the same." [2] [14]
Despite the hostile reception with some neighbors, Roberts continued to lease from the PSAC until 1870. [2]
Manager | Position | Tenure |
---|---|---|
John Tod | Chief Trader | 1839-1840 [7] [8] |
Francis Ermatinger | Chief Trader | 1840-1843 [8] |
Robert Logan | post master | 1843-1848 [8] |
Charles Forrest | post master | 1845-1846 [8] |
George Roberts | clerk | 1846-1851 [2] [8] |
Henry Newsham Peers | clerk | 1851-1853 [5] [8] |
Henry N. Peers | Chief Trader | 1853-1857 [5] [8] |
John McLoughlin, baptized Jean-Baptiste McLoughlin, was a French-Canadian, later American, Chief Factor and Superintendent of the Columbia District of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Vancouver from 1824 to 1845. He was later known as the "Father of Oregon" for his role in assisting the American cause in the Oregon Country. In the late 1840s, his general store in Oregon City was famous as the last stop on the Oregon Trail.
Fort Vancouver was a 19th-century fur trading post built in the winter of 1824–1825. It was the headquarters of the Hudson's Bay Company's Columbia Department, located in the Pacific Northwest. Named for Captain George Vancouver, the fort was located on the northern bank of the Columbia River in present-day Vancouver, Washington. The fort was a major center of the regional fur trading. Every year trade goods and supplies from London arrived either via ships sailing to the Pacific Ocean or overland from Hudson Bay via the York Factory Express. Supplies and trade goods were exchanged with a plethora of Indigenous cultures for fur pelts. Furs from Fort Vancouver were often shipped to the Chinese port of Guangzhou where they were traded for Chinese manufactured goods for sale in the United Kingdom. At its pinnacle, Fort Vancouver watched over 34 outposts, 24 ports, six ships, and 600 employees. Today, a full-scale replica of the fort, with internal buildings, has been constructed and is open to the public as Fort Vancouver National Historic Site.
The term Cowlitz people covers two culturally and linguistically distinct indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest; the Lower Cowlitz or Cowlitz proper, and the Upper Cowlitz / Cowlitz Klickitat or Taitnapam. Lower Cowlitz refers to a southwestern Coast Salish people, which today are enrolled in the federally recognized tribes: Cowlitz Indian Tribe, Quinault Indian Nation, and Confederated Tribes of the Chehalis Reservation. The Upper Cowlitz or Taitnapam, is a Northwest Sahaptin speaking people, part of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation.
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The Puget Sound Agricultural Company (PSAC), with common variations of the name including Puget Sound or Puget's Sound, was a subsidiary joint stock company formed in 1840 by the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). Its stations operated within the Pacific Northwest, in the HBC administrative division of the Columbia Department. The RAC-HBC Agreement was signed in 1839 between the Russian-American Company and the HBC, with the British to now supply the various trade posts of Russian America. It was hoped by the HBC governing committee that independent American merchants, previously a major source of foodstuffs for the RAC, would be shut out of the Russian markets and leave the Maritime fur trade.
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The Provisional Government of Oregon was a popularly elected settler government created in the Oregon Country, in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. Its formation had been advanced at the Champoeg Meetings since February 17, 1841, and it existed from May 2, 1843 until March 3, 1849, and provided a legal system and a common defense amongst the mostly American pioneers settling an area then inhabited by the many Indigenous Nations. Much of the region's geography and many of the Natives were not known by people of European descent until several exploratory tours were authorized at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries. The Organic Laws of Oregon were adopted in 1843 with its preamble stating that settlers only agreed to the laws "until such time as the United States of America extend their jurisdiction over us". According to a message from the government in 1844, the rising settler population was beginning to flourish among the "savages", who were "the chief obstruction to the entrance of civilization" in a land of "ignorance and idolatry".
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Cowlitz Prairie is in Lewis County, Washington, United States. The natural prairie roughly lies along the west side of the Cowlitz River, north of Toledo, east of Interstate 5 in Washington, and South of U.S. Route 12. The Lower Cowlitz tribal group's traditional territory includes Cowlitz Prairie. Early 19th century visitors noticed an area mainly cleared of trees and assessed its dimensions from 4 to 6 miles long, 1 to 2 miles wide, adding up to nearly 6000 acres.
Pierre St. Germain was a Métis interpreter and fur trader, notable for his service in John Franklin's Coppermine expedition. Born c. 1790, possibly to a family of North West Company (NWC) interpreters, he was first employed with the NWC in 1812, before transferring to the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC). He served for several years as an interpreter in Athabasca Country before employment as a guide for the Franklin expedition. The expedition, plagued by supply shortages due to conflicts between the NWC and HBC, was devastated by starvation on the return journey from the Arctic coast, leading to the deaths of the majority of the participants. After twenty years of service in the fur trade, he settled in the Red River Colony at what is now Winnipeg. Ten years later, he and his family participated in James Sinclair's settler expedition to the Columbia District, part of a HBC plan to bolster the nascent Puget Sound Agricultural Company. He remained in the Cowlitz Prairie with his family for the rest of his life, dying at some point in the 1870s.