By the passage of the Donation Land Law, and also by
reason of the letter and of the speeches of Thurston in Congress, Dr.
McLoughlin was put in the humiliating position of having to issue a printed
circular letter to get expressions of opinions of others, as to the falsity
of the charges made against him by Thurston, and to support a
memorial to Congress which Dr. McLoughlin afterwards sent to Congress with
all the evidence. But his memorial accomplished nothing. There was, too, the
question that Congress had given away his land claim, which was then
technically the property of Oregon, for an university, and that Congress
could not, with dignity to itself, revoke its gift. And who was Dr.
McLoughlin to Congress? He was away out in Oregon nearly 4,000 miles from
Washington. There were great and serious matters to be considered by
Congress. The Oregon question was settled. What were the wrongs and
misfortunes of one old man to Congress?
In answer to the printed circular issued by Dr.
McLoughlin, after the passage of the Donation Land Law, for the purposes of
his memorial to Congress, he received many commendatory letters. I give
merely excerpts from the letter of that noble old pioneer, Jesse Applegate,
an immigrant of 1843. He wrote: "I have received your letter of inquiries,
and take pleasure in replying to such of them as I personally know to be
true. I came to this country in the fall of 1843, and, from that time
forward, I can safely testify that your conduct has been the most generous
and philanthropic, not only to immigrants from the United States, but to all
requiring your assistance, whether natives or foreigners. I can also say
that you have greatly encouraged and given much assistance in settling and
developing the resources of the country, but I have by no means considered
your motive for doing so political, or that your charitable acts were
intended to advance the interests of any particular nation, but that you
acted in the one case simply from a sense of Christian duty and humanity,
and in the other from a natural desire to be useful in your day and
generation. . . . But as the office of Chief Factor of the Hudson's Bay
Company is in no way connected with politics, the discharge of its duties
imposed no restrictions upon your private sentiments, and unless they led to
a betrayal of your trust, which has never been charged against you, as an
Irishman and a Catholic, you were free to feel and express your partiality
for the free and tolerant institutions of the United States. That you did
entertain such partiality, from my first acquaintance with you, need not
depend upon my assertion, for it is a fact well known, and one you did not
pretend to conceal."
Jesse Applegate then says, in this letter, that he was
present in 1845 when Dr. McLoughlin applied to Judge Peter H. Burnett, the
Chief Justice of the Provisional Government, to take the oath of allegiance
to the United States and to obtain first naturalization papers, but Judge
Burnett declined to grant the request for he believed he did not have any
jurisdiction to do so. Jesse Applegate further said in his letter: "That
'you pulled down houses and turned women and children out of them,' is a
charge not only false, but too absurd to require refutation or notice. I can
myself state from experience, which accords with that of every other
destitute immigrant who applied to you for assistance, either before or
since my arrival in the country, that your conduct was entirely the reverse.
My own company, of more than seventy persons, mostly women and children, who
arrived at Vancouver in the storms of winter, in a condition the most
destitute and miserable, were received by you, not as strangers, or
foreigners, or as some would have it, enemies, but as brethren and fit
subjects of hospitality and Christian charity, and our reception was not
more kind and generous than was extended to every immigrant who sought your
hospitality or assistance. But however unjust the Oregon Land Law has been
towards you, it may be said in excuse for the members of Congress who passed
it, that with the concurring and uncontradicted evidence hi the
Delegate and Chief Justice of Oregon before them, you neither had nor
would become an American citizen, they are not chargeable with
injustice."
The Persecution Continued
The conspirators and their friends did not cease their
persecution of Dr. McLoughlin. They were determined he should not have his
land claim. To protect the reputation of Thurston and the other
conspirators, it was necessary to defeat all actions of the Oregon
Legislative Assembly in favor of Dr. McLoughlin. If that body made any
petitions to Congress or passed any resolutions in favor of Dr. McLoughlin,
it would show that he was entitled to his land claim, the injustice of
section eleven of the Donation Land Law, and that Thurston was guilty of
malicious untruths in his letter to, and his speeches before Congress
relating to Dr. McLoughlin and his land claim. Oregon could not, with
propriety, pretend to act justly to Dr. McLoughlin and still retain his land
claim. I regret to say that the House of Representatives of the Oregon
Legislative Assembly, at its session in 1853-4, not onty refused to help Dr.
McLoughlin, but by its actions did him harm. January 6, 1854, several
petitions were presented to the House asking that Congress be memorialized
in favor of Dr. McLoughlin's right to his land claim, "excepting the
Abernethy Island," but the petitions were immediately laid on the table.
January 28, 1854, Orlando Humason presented to the House the following
resolution: "Whereas, the acts of John McLoughlin in regard to his treatment
of the early settlers of Oregon, have, as we believe, been misrepresented,
therefore - Resolved, that the generous conduct of Dr. John McLoughlin in
assisting the early settlers of Oregon, merits our warmest commendations,
and that as evidence of the high estimation in which his services are held
by his fellow citizens, the thanks of this Assembly be tendered to the said
Dr. John McLoughlin." But by the vote of sixteen to seven, three being
absent, the resolution was indefinitely postponed, which was the legislative
way of defeating it. All honor to the seven who voted in favor of the
resolution. Their names are F. C. Cason, L. F. Cartee, Orlando Humason, B.
B. Jackson, J. W. Moffitt, Chauncey Nye, and L. S. Thompson. |