Daniel Waldo (Oregon pioneer)

For other people named Daniel Waldo, see Daniel Waldo (disambiguation).
Daniel Waldo
Member of the Provisional Legislature of Oregon
In office
1844–1844
Constituency Champoeg District
Personal details
Born March 22, 1800
Harrison County, Virginia
Died September 6, 1880
Salem, Oregon
Spouse(s) Malinda Lunsford
Children John B. Waldo, William Waldo
Occupation farmer

Daniel Waldo (March 22, 1800 September 6, 1880) was an American legislator in the Provisional Government of Oregon, the namesake for the Waldo Hills near Salem, Oregon, and the father of two prominent Oregon politicians. He was also a member of the Oregon Rangers militia and fought in the Cayuse War.

Early life

Waldo was born in 1800 in Harrison County, Virginia to Jedediah Waldo and Mary Polly Porter.[1] Harrison County would become part of West Virginia during the American Civil War when a portion of Virginia joined the Union as a new state. After turning 19 years of age Waldo migrated to Missouri where he entered the lumber business.[1] Then in 1825 he married Malinda Lunsford and they moved to St. Clair County, Missouri.[1] He descends from a Wiltshire, England family who migrated to Massachusetts in the American colonies in the 17th century.

Oregon

In 1843, the Waldo family traveled the Oregon Trail to Oregon Country.[1] They traveled with their neighbors the Applegates, including Jesse Applegate.[1] Daniel spent most of the trip in a carriage on the journey due to poor health, but the group reach the Willamette Valley in 1843 and settled east of Salem, Oregon in an area now known as the Waldo Hills.[1] The following year Daniel was elected to serve as a legislator in the Provisional Government.[2]

Later life and family

With the Cayuse War in 1848, Daniel fought against the Native Americans in Eastern Oregon.[1] Earlier he had been a member of the Oregon Rangers volunteer militia.[3] His second oldest son William Waldo would later be president of the Oregon State Senate, and another son, John B. Waldo, would serve on the Oregon Supreme Court.[1]

During the 1860s Daniel was involved with promoting the state’s wool industry. Daniel Waldo died in Salem, Oregon on September 10, 1880.[1]

Slavery and family ties

Many publications have speculated that Daniel Waldo brought several slaves to Oregon in 1843, including an African-American woman and her daughter, America.[4] They were some of the earliest black pioneers in Oregon.[4] America Waldo, who married in 1863 and became America Waldo Bogle, was rumored, even in the Bogle family, to be the daughter of Daniel Waldo.[4] More recent research shows that it may be Daniel's brother Joseph Waldo who brought slaves with him to Oregon in 1846, and that he is more likely to be America's father. This is due to the birth year on America's headstone in Walla Walla, Washington, 1844, which was more than a year after Daniel left Missouri.[4] Daniel, however, raised America and "acted as a father figure" to her.[4] Although Daniel Waldo owned slaves in Missouri, it is unclear whether America was a slave while in Oregon.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Corning, Howard M. Dictionary of Oregon History. Binfords & Mort Publishing, 1956.
  2. Oregon Legislative Assembly (3rd Pre-Provisional) 1844 Meetings. Oregon State Archives. Retrieved on January 30, 2008.
  3. Brown, J. Henry (1892). Political History of Oregon: Provisional Government. The Lewis & Dryden Printing Co.: Portland.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Nokes, R. Gregory (2013). Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory. Corvallis: Oregon State University Press. pp. 17–18, 105–106, 190. ISBN 978-0-87071-712-3.
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