Before the
War
Working: the Oregon economy


Enlarge
Salmon canneries, and the gigantic fish wheels and seines (nets) that fed
them, typified the extractive nature of Oregon's economy.
(OSA, Oregon Trademark Labels, White Star Brand
Salmon - #188, White Star Packing Company, Oregon, 1885)
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The fur trade
The fur trade became the first major
extraction industry of the Oregon Country. Coming on the heels of the
Lewis and
Clark Expedition,
British companies established the first sustained presence
by non-Native Americans in the area dating to the early decades of the
1800s.
In fact, by the 1820s, British concerns about American fur traders moving
into the area led to a plan to eradicate fur bearing
animals in the Oregon Country.
The
British
Hudson's
Bay
Company hoped that by discouraging Americans from coming it would thus
maintain the British dominance of the area. But in the end, fur traders
would
not
establish the sustained American presence in
the
region.
Instead,
it was the lure of souls to save and land to cultivate. Thus, the
arrival of missionaries, coupled with American social and economic factors,
would push the United States and Great Britain to settle the Oregon Question
of
sovereignty
over the region in 1846.
Settling the land
Beginning in the 1840s, the Oregon Trail brought thousands of white
settlers to what they hoped would be a better life. These immigrants,
and the diseases they carried, soon displaced the Native Americans,
who had
lived and died on the land for many centuries. The settlers nurtured
a strong work ethic and a belief that they could improve the land. They
quickly set about draining swamps and clearing trees for farmland. Sawmills
buzzed and flour mills hummed as ever more settlers entered Oregon, drawn
by the generous land grant provisions of the federal Donation Land Act
of 1850.

Enlarge
Farmers cut, thresh, and sack wheat in early 1900s Oregon. (OSA, Accession
88A-057)
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The larger extraction economy Prospectors discovered
gold and other precious minerals in southern and eastern
Oregon in
the 1850s
and 1860s.
In
the coming
decades,
they
were joined by legions of loggers and salmon fishermen. Many worked
on their own or for small local companies. But an increasing number
toiled in mills, mines, and canneries
for
large
corporations, often based in far off cities. New industrial techniques
developed as Oregon's economy came to rely on
extracting natural resources such as timber, minerals, and salmon
for a growing
nation. As a result, Oregonians rode the same boom and bust
cycles that plagued the national economy in the late 1800s.
Of course, farming remained a mainstay of the economy from the earliest
pioneer days. And cattle and sheep ranching expanded as more people
settled in the drier
areas
of
central and eastern
Oregon during the last decades of the 1800s. Portland grew into the
only city of size in the state but smaller cities such as Pendleton,
Astoria, Baker City, and Medford became hubs for the local economies.
Functioning as distribution centers, they furnished local loggers, farmers,
and
others
with supplies and equipment. At the same time, a network of railroads
began to link the Oregon's major communities together.
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