![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||
| Rev.
Elkanah and Mary Walker, emigrants of 1838 Pioneer Family of the Month - April 1997
The ABCFM had a policy of preferring married missionaries, and the wives were expected to be able to assist their husbands. Mary Richardson was an educated woman with a doctor's knowledge of medicine and experience as a teacher, making her well qualified for missionary work in foreign lands. When the ABCFM decided to send Elkanah into the field, they authorized his assignment to South Africa to work with Mary Richardson among the Zulu -- if they chose to marry. However, tribal wars in South Africa and the need to reinforce the ABCFM's presence in the Oregon Country changed their plans. On February 14, 1838, Elkanah Walker was ordained to the gospel ministry of the First Congregational Church of Brewer, Maine. On March 5, 1838, Elkanah Walker and Mary Richardson Walker were married and immediately set out for Oregon on horseback. Accompanying them were the Reverend and Mrs. Cushing Eells. The Walkers and Eells would be constant companions for the next ten years and friends for the rest of their lives. They arrived safely at the Whitman Mission at Waiilatpu on August 29, not quite crossing the entire North American continent in a six-month journey from Maine to what is now southeastern Washington. On December 7, 1838, Cyrus Hamlin Walker was born to the couple, the first white child born in Oregon to live to maturity. Five more children would be born to the couple in their years at Tshimakain.
Following the killings at the Whitman Mission on November 27, 1847, the Walkers and Eells stayed on at Tshimakain until the following March, when they traveled to Fort Colville. There, they enjoyed the protection of the Hudson's Bay Company until June, when they were escorted to Oregon City by the Oregon Infantry, the volunteer militia organized to make war on the Cayuse Indians in retaliation for the Whitman Massacre. The Walkers remained in Oregon City for over a year before moving to Forest Grove in October, 1849. Under the Donation Land Act of 1850, they filed a claim on 640 acres in the Forest Grove area. Elkanah and Mary Walker had two more children in Forest Grove and lived there for the rest of their lives.
From 1852 to 1856, Rev. Walker served as pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Forest Grove. With the exception of about 3 1/2 years all told, he then served as pastor or joint pastor of the local Congregationalist church from 1856 to 1875. When the Tualatin Academy became Pacific University in 1866, Walker donated land for the new campus and served as a university trustee until his death eleven years later. Elkanah Walker died at the Forest Grove homestead on November 21, 1877, at the age of 72. He lived long enough to see four of his eight children engaged in missionary work at different times, and one of his sons accepted a missionary post in China in 1872. Mary Richardson Walker died on December 5, 1897, at the age of 86.
Return to Pioneer Family of the Month Menu [Home Page] - [Library Menu] - [End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center] - [Local Historic Sites] |
||||||||||||