Thurston, Samuel Royal, 1816-1851
Variant namesBiographical notes:
Blain was a Presbytarian minister and the editor of the newspaper "Oregon Spectator," 1849 Oct. 4 - 1850 Sept. 5.
From the description of Samuel R. Thurston letters to Wilson L. Blain [manuscript], 1850. (Oregon Historical Society Research Library). WorldCat record id: 669500711
Lawyer, member of Congress from Oregon Territory.
From the description of ALS and receipt : Washington, D.C., 1850. (Rosenbach Museum & Library). WorldCat record id: 122617165
Samuel Royal Thurston, first Oregon delegate to Congress, was born April 15, 1816 in Monmouth, Maine. Thurston graduated from Bowdoin College in 1832 and was admitted to the Maine bar in 1844. During 1847, Thurston and his wife Elizabeth (married in 1845) traveled overland to Oregon City, where he began a law office. Shortly after moving to Washington County in 1848, he was elected to the Provisional Legislature and on June 6, 1849 was selected as the first Oregon Territorial Delegate to Congress. The major accomplishment during his term as delegate was the passage of the Oregon donation land law. While returning to Oregon after his first term, he died at sea off Acapulco, Mexico, April 9, 1851. Originally buried in Acapulco, the territorial legislature appropriated $1,500 to reinter Thurston's remains in Oregon soil.
From the guide to the Thurston Family Papers, 1838-1887, (Oregon Historical Society)
Samuel Royal Thurston (1816-1851) was the first Oregon delegate to Congress.
From the guide to the Samuel R. Thurston letter to Eugene F. Skinner, 1849 November 27, (Oregon Historical Society Research Library)
Samuel Royal Thurston, first Oregon delegate to Congress, was born April 15, 1816 in Monmouth, Maine. Thurston graduated from Bowdoin College in 1832 and was admitted to the Maine bar in 1844. During 1847, Thurston and his wife Elizabeth (married in 1845) traveled overland to Oregon City, where he began a law office. Shortly after moving to Washington County, Oregon, in 1848, he was elected to the Provisional Legislature and on June 6, 1849 was selected as the first Oregon Territorial Delegate to Congress. The major accomplishment during his term as delegate was the passage of the Oregon donation land law. While returning to Oregon after his first term, he died at sea off Acapulco, Mexico, April 9, 1851. Originally buried in Acapulco, the territorial legislature appropriated $1,500 to reinter Thurston's remains in Oregon soil.
From the description of Thurston family papers, 1838-1887. (Oregon Historical Society Research Library). WorldCat record id: 744494846
Samuel Royal Thurston (1816-1851) was the first Oregon delegate to Congress.
He was born in Maine and in 1847 he came overland to Oregon City where he opened a law office. He moved to Washington County in 1848 and there he was appointed as the Oregon Territorial delegate to Congress. Among his many accomplishments during career was that he helped pass the donation land law. He died in Mexico on his way back to Oregon.
From the description of Samuel R. Thurston letter to Eugene F. Skinner [[manuscript], 1849 November 27. (Oregon Historical Society Research Library). WorldCat record id: 769652761
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Subjects:
- Political campaigns
- Free African Americans
- Legislators
- Legislators
- Legislators
- Newspapers
- Oregon
- Pioneers
- Pioneers
- Politics and politicians
- Priorities of claims and liens
- Priorities of claims and liens
- Territorial Government
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- United States (as recorded)
- Oregon Territory (as recorded)
- Oregon Territory (as recorded)
- Oregon Territory (as recorded)
- Oregon (as recorded)
- Oregon Territory (as recorded)
- Oregon (as recorded)
- Oregon Territory (as recorded)
- Oregon Territory (as recorded)
- Oregon (as recorded)