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Oregon Historic Photograph Collections

Thousands of photographs dating to the mid 1800s
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Re-creation of a Fort Astoria blockhouse in Clatsop County, Oregon, 1960
Re-creation of a Fort Astoria blockhouse in Clatsop County, Oregon, 1960
PHOTO ID8239
TITLERe-creation of a Fort Astoria blockhouse in Clatsop County, Oregon, 1960
COLLECTIONBen Maxwell
DESCRIPTIONPictured is a re-creation of a Fort Astoria blockhouse in Clatsop County in August, 1960. A wooden sign about Fort Astoria hangs from its frame near the blockhouse. The sign reads as follows: "FORT ASTORIA Desiring to dominate the areas explored by Lewis and Clark, John Jacob Astor sent expeditions overland and by sea to seize the mouth of the Columbia. The schooner Tonquin arrived first and work was begun at this site April 12, 1811. 'The foliage was budding. We imagined ourselves in the garden of Eden. Buildings were of boards tightly covered and roofed with cedar bark.' Later palisades were raised against the Indians. Here gathered adventurers from all the vast wilderness. Here, in 1814, lived the Oregon country's first white woman, the English barmaid, Jane Barnes. Here were the true beginnings of our stock raising, farming, and shipbuilding. The property was sold to the North West Company to avoid capture during the War of 1812 and was operated as "Fort George" until its abandonment in 1825 (25 believed to be last two digits-sign has some distortion at that point) when the Hudson's Bay Company moved headquarters to Fort Vancouver. The buildings decayed and modern Astoria rose upon the site." A diagram of Fort George as of 1818 is on file at the Oregon Historical Society and shows it to be a substantial installation, more than 150 by 200 feet, with a stockade and other defenses. A note on the diagram shows that the original Astoria establishment was about 75 by 110 feet, apparently not fortified. In 1930, workmen excavating in Astoria found remains of the stockade, probably the north wall, running from Fifteenth to Sixteenth streets, between Duane and Exchange streets. A plan of the fort has been painted on the sidewalks and pavements in this vicinity. This picture differs from #8238 as it includes a plaque mounted on a large rock that states that this is the "Site of the original settlement of Astoria." The other sign and blockhouse are in the background.
DATE1960,August
SUBJECTSClatsop County; Fort Astoria; Astoria, Oregon; blockhouse (Fort Astoria); sign; replica (structure); Fort George; plaque
PHOTOGRAPHERBen Maxwell
COLLECTORMr. Ben Maxwell
OBJECTb/w photo; negative
DIMENSIONSH 2 1/4 inches W 2 1/4 inches NH 2 1/4 inches NW 2 1/4 inches
PHOTO SOURCESalem Public Library
IMAGE FILENAMEL:\SERIES_K\FCB64A4B.jpg
Date created2003-01-17
Date modified2003-01-17
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