Copperfield is a former town in Baker County, Oregon, United States, located on the west bank of the Snake River, near a place called The Oxbow.
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According to the historian Lewis McArthur, the town was formed in the late 1890s as "Copper Camp", and was inhabited by prospectors of the local copper ore;[1] However, the Oregon writer Stewart Holbrook asserted that "there was no copper in Copperfield", and that the community "had one purpose; namely, to cater to the uninhibited appetites of more than two thousand men who were engaged on two nearby construction projects."[2]
Copperfield was platted around 1898, along a Northwest Railway Company line that never developed.[3] Soon the locality was known as "Copperfield" and a post office established in 1899.[1] The population grew to 1,000 by 1910 because two tunnels were being dug near The Oxbow by the local railroad company and by the predecessor of the Idaho Power Company.[1] This railroad activity was described as a "brawling railroad construction camp" during this period by Barbara Ruth Bailey.[3]
As Holbrook describes it, "early in 1913 the construction jobs began to peter out. Fewer men were employed. Competition for the remaining trade became stiff. The saloon keepers began feuding."[4] With stories of arson, the town acquired a reputation for being lawless. When the county authorities failed to get control of the situation, Governor Oswald West sent his secretary, Fern Hobbs, with a signed declaration of martial law to clean up the place.[1] A few months after Hobbs' intervention, a fire "of unknown origin destroyed a block or two of the jerry-built structures. No saloon ever reopened."[5]
There were two more fires, and then the post office closed in 1927, essentially turning Copperfield into a ghost town.[1] In 1965, however, the community of Oxbow was founded just south of the site of Copperfield when the Idaho Power Company was building the Oxbow Dam.[1] The former site of Copperfield is now a park run by Idaho Power.[6]
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