Stephen Meek (guide)
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Stephen Meek | |
Born | July 4, 1807 Washington County, Virginia |
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Died | January 11, 1886 (aged 78) |
Occupation | Trapper, guide |
Spouse | Elizabeth Schoonover |
Stephen Hall Meek (July 4, 1807 – January 11, 1886) was a fur trapper and guide in the American west, most notably a guide on a large wagon train known as St. Joseph's Company. A native of Virginia, both he and his older brother Joseph Meek would spend their lives as trappers west of the Rocky Mountains.
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[edit] Early years
Stephen Meek was born in Washington County, Virginia, on July 4, 1807.[1] In his autobiography he claims to be a relative of President James K. Polk.[2] He was educated in the local public schools in Virginia before beginning work for William Sublette in 1827.[1] He began working as a laborer for Sublett's Rocky Mountain Fur Company in St. Louis, Missouri. Soon, however, he became a trapper for a variety of companies.
[edit] American West
Meek joined an expedition with Benjamin Bonneville in 1831 as a trapper, while Bonneville was exploring the Great Salt Lake. From 1833 to 1834 he traveled to California with Joesph Walker.[3] Meek moved to Oregon in 1835 and began working at the Hudson's Bay Company's Fort Vancouver for John McLoughlin.[1] This included trips to California with Tom McKay.[1]
In 1841, Meek bought the first lot of the Oregon City, Oregon, townsite from John McLoughlin and helped to survey the land.[3][1] He joined the American mountaineers that year for one year. The following year he served as a guide for a wagon train of pioneers to the Willamette Valley from Fort Laramie, and in 1845 led the ill-fated group that followed him from the Oregon Trail on the Meek Cutoff.[3] That party split from the main party that included Joel Palmer and Sam Barlow at Fort Hall.[1] In May 1845, he married Elizabeth Schoonover at St. Louis, Missouri, with whom he later had one son, George.[1] The Meeks would reside at Linn City, Oregon, until 1848.[1]
[edit] Later years
Meek would later spend time in the mines of the California Gold Rush before settling in Siskiyou County, California.[3] In 1850, he briefly returned to Oregon, before returning to California continuing to mine until 1865.[1] In 1865, Elizabeth died, and he returned to working as a guide and trapper.[1] Stephen Meek died in Etna, California, on January 11, 1886, at the age of 78.[1]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Corning, Howard M. (1989) Dictionary of Oregon History. Binfords & Mort Publishing. p. 164.
- ^ Meek, Stephen (1948). The Autobiography of a Mountain Man. Pasadena, CA: G. Dawson.
- ^ a b c d Palmer, Joel. Palmer's Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains, 1845–1846 (1847), Library of Congress catalog F592 .T54 vol. 30. p. 40.