REVEALING BRANCHES OF HISTORY ON A PERSONAL LEVEL – GENEALOGY

2000 Census report on ancestry majority by county – trends similar in recent years.

Television is replete with advertisements for Ancestry.com, “Every family has a story” is their moto.  The truth rings through attracting a wide base of customers to its cause, the rediscovery of family.  Ancestry.com is not the only genealogical online player, but they are the elephant in the room with over three million subscribers and access to billions of historical records. Genealogy making history personal.

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LA FAYETTE GROVER AND THE END OF OLD OREGON

TALES FROM RIVER VIEW CEMETERY

La Fayette Grover as a US senator in the late 1870’s – Matthew Brady photograph.

River View Cemetery is one of two historic cemeteries in Portland, Oregon. Lone Fir was the first cemetery, but filling up in the latter 19th Century, River View was established in the hills just – then – outside the growing city. Here, the families of well-to-do Portland buried their loved ones and still do. Walking through the memorials is a history lesson of the city. Street names come to life – through death. The larger monuments tend to overawe the more numerous plainer ones, as if trying to sum up life as the dead thought of their experience. Stories abound here among all of the graves and it is one of the smaller, lesser monuments we move to today – the grave of La Fayette Grover, third governor of Oregon.

There is a small area in Portland where west-to-east streets are named after old Oregon governors.  The sequence follows a series of Union military leaders from the Civil War – Grant, Sherman, Hooker, Meade, Porter (there is a Caruthers Street thrown in for good measure in between the governors, with a good story to boot.).  In the governor section, there is Woods, Gibbs, Whitaker, Curry, Pennoyer, Gaines, Lane, Abernathy and Mood.  Another governor with a short section of streets is Grover Street.

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