John Neilson Barry papers, 1927-1961.

ArchivalResource

John Neilson Barry papers, 1927-1961.

John Neilson Barry was an Episcopal clergyman in Palouse, Washington and Spokane, Washington and in Baker City, Oregon. In 1922 he retired from the ministry and moved to Council Crest in Portland, Oregon, where he and his family built Barry Crest. He devoted the remainder of his life to studying Native Americans and early settlers of the Oregon Country (Idaho, Oregon, and Washington), and sharing this information in lectures, tours, and articles for the Oregon Historical Quarterly. This collection includes general correspondence, 1927-1960; correspondence, notes, and maps regarding the 1843 meeting in Champoeg and the formation of the Oregon provisional Government, 1928-1930; research notes regarding various aspects of Oregon history, circa 1920-1955; family genealogy; correspondence of Maud Mattley, associate of Barry, 1954-1961; clippings; and scrapbooks, 1903-1923 (5 volumes). Many maps of the Oregon Territory are included, such as maps by David Thompson, Donald McKenzie, Alexander Ross, and an 1814 map compiled through the journals of Lewis and Clark. Also included is a microfilm reel (positive) of "Notes on the Struggle for Astoria."

4 cubic feet (4 boxes)

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 6826380

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

Oregon. Provisional Government.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69w7p66 (corporateBody)

Barry, J. Neilson (John Neilson), 1870-1961

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6cj8cxf (person)

Born in Wilmington, N.C., 11/26/1870, son of Major Robert Peabody Barry and Julia Kean Neilson; served as an Episcopal minister in Spokane, Wash., New York City, Washington, D.C., and Baker, Or., from 1895-1913; probation officer with the police court in Spokane, Wash., 1913-1922; moved to Portland, Or., in 1922 and did historical research and writing; died 2/26/1961. From the description of Captain Clark's 1806 map of the Willamette River : made from Indian charcoal and sand maps an...