Old John and the Lewis & Clark Spider Skillet
CHAPTER EVENTS, Zoom PermalinkDate: February 6, 2021
Time: 01:00 PM - 08:49:36 PM
Leading: Glen Kirkpatrick
Phone: 503-829-4292
Email: glen9774@gmail.com
Online Event via: Zoom
Old John was a Klickitat Indian who lived on the lower Columbia River near present day Sandy Oregon. He said when he was a boy the first 'Bostons' on the Columbia River gifted his father with a cast iron three legged skillet, also called a spider skillet. This skillet was donated to the Oregon Historical Society in 1905 by one of Old John’s neighbors, Mrs. Benson, daughter of D.S. Dunbar on the occasion of the one hundredth anniversary of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (Anonymous 1905, OHS Indian John Vertical File). Evidence suggests that this skillet was part of the equipment of the Corps of Discovery.Melissa Darby is an affiliated research faculty in the Anthropology Department at Portland State University. She is principal investigator and sole proprietor of Lower Columbia Research & Archaeology. Darby has worked for over forty years as an archaeologist and historian in the Northwest and is a noted authority on the ethnohistory of the Native people of the lower Columbia River region. Her research on Native American cultures of the area includes important works on settlement patterns, plankhouse architecture, and plant foods used by the indigenous people of the region. She has contributed substantially to our understanding of the Native peoples and the world they inhabited prior to European colonization. Her book Thunder Go North the Hunt for Sir Francis Drake’s Fair & Good Bay was published by the University of Utah Press in 2019 and is about the mysterious and vexed question of where Francis Drake landed the Golden Hind in the summer of 1579.Oregon Chapter Holiday Virtual Gathering
CHAPTER EVENTS PermalinkDec 6th, 3:00PM Pacific
Please join us via Zoom for our annual meeting, featuring Mark Jordan, who will speak on “L&C’s Near Misses”. Following the presentation, Oregon Chapter President Glen Kirkpatrick will preside over our annual meeting.
How Lucky are those Men — and Women? Mr. Jordan will tell stories about near disasters that could have ended the Expedition or significantly compromised its ability to succeed or resulted in the death of its participants. What danger or disaster lurked for the Expedition? Does one of the Captains almost die? More than once? Does their fully loaded keelboat almost disappear? Could they have lost Sacajawea? Grizzly attacks? Fierce savages? What kind of serious accidents did they narrowly avoid? Is it true that only one man died? Learn about these exciting adventures of 31 men, one teenage girl and her infant son.
Mark Jordan has scoured the journals and the literature of the Lewis and Clark Expedition for the last 35 years. He has traveled the explorers’ route in car, on foot and in his canoe. He has written about the expedition and has lectured at the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation meetings both nationally and locally. He has taught the Expedition at the California State University of the East Bay, the University of South Carolina Beaufort, Santa Clara University and the University of California Berkeley for the Osher Life-Long Learning Institute. Mr. Jordan has extensive wilderness experience, having canoed across Canada to Hudson Bay, and on other rivers in Canada and the United States. In 2020, he was awarded the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation Meritorious Achievement Award for bringing the Expedition to a broad public.
[Past Event: Zoom Connection Info Removed]
National Foundation Leadership Briefing
CHAPTER EVENTS PermalinkDate: from 2020-8-27
Time: 01:00 PM - 2:30 PM
Coordinator: Glen Kirkpatrick
Coordinator Contact: 503-829-4292, glen9774@gmail.com
Leader(s): Sarah Cawley, Lou Ritten
This will be a Zoom virtual meeting (details to join below)
Sarah and Lou will present ideas for the future of the National LCTHF and its relationship to local chapters.
Zoom Virtual Presentation of the Confluence Project
Confluence, Zoom PermalinkConfluence at 18: A Look to the Future
Confluence began during the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial as a series of art installations by the celebrated artist Maya Lin. Eighteen years on, five of those projects are complete while one remains to be done. Along the way, Confluence has evolved its role in education as interest in Native American history and cultures have grown. Now in the current pandemic, that work has gone entirely online. Join Confluence Executive Director Colin Fogarty for an update in the mission of this small nonprofit and a look to the future.L&C’s Near Misses
Cancelled PermalinkHow Lucky are those Men – and Women? Mr. Jordan will tell stories about near disasters that could have ended the Expedition or significantly compromised its ability to succeed or resulted in the death of its participants. What danger or disaster lurked for the Expedition? Does one of the Captains almost die? More than once? Does their fully loaded keelboat almost disappear? Could they have lost Sacajawea? Grizzly attacks? Fierce savages? What kind of serious accidents did they narrowly avoid? Is it true that only one man died? Learn about these exciting adventures of 31 men, one teenage girl and her infant son.
Columbia Gorge Sternwheeler Repositioning Cruise-Porltand to Cascade Locks
Cancelled, CHAPTER EVENTS, Cruise PermalinkIf you are one of the persons who signed up for the May 18, 2020 Cruise from Portland to Cascade Locks aboard the Columbia Gorge Sternwheeler, the Cruise has been canceled. Please note the instructions below for calling in to change the status of your reservation.
Call the office on Monday morning from 9-2, we will have folks able to answer the calls. The number is 503/224-3900 or 1-800 /224-3901 Toll Free.
If you can’t call during that time frame contact Nathan directly. His number is (920)737-0020 (cell)
What Lewis & Clark Could See from Pillar Rock
Cancelled, CHAPTER EVENTS, Washington Chapter Event PermalinkPlease join us for a joint meeting of Washington-Oregon Chapters LCTHF.
Mike Reese will present: “What Lewis & Clark Could See from Pillar Rock”, we’ll have a potluck lunch, and a tour of 11/7/1805 campsite.
Sacagawea’s Husband - Toussaint and His Story
Tualatin Heritage Center PermalinkCancelled
Cathlapotle Plankhouse
Center for Columbia River History
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