Category: Oregon
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Blessed are the Children
Before resuming my dialogue with Randolph’s history, I have updates on two cemetery burials discussed earlier: Mary Hutchinson and Paul Lane. Mary L Hutchinson/McCue When I originally wrote about Mary (Grave Stories, Part 6), I only knew that she had died in March 1869. Recently, though, thumbing through the Catholic Church Register for the Roseburg…
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Pat Dunwoodie Berry Remembers Randolph
How does place figure into your favorite memories? Pat Dunwoodie Berry fondly remembers her childhood in Randolph. Sincere thanks to Pat and her son, Mike, for sharing her memories at this year’s Randolph Club Picnic. Farm Pat lived in the Randolph area when her father owned a dairy farm situated on the north bank of…
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Panning for Gold at Whiskey Run in 2023
While reading about the history of Randolph, I began to wonder about the accuracy of my childhood memories of Whiskey Run Creek. My sister and I would hunt for agates alongside our parents and grandparents, wade in the water, and investigate whatever had washed up on the beach, usually seaweed. I returned to the creek…
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There’s still gold at Randolph . . .
. . . and it glimmered on September 09, 2023. Many thanks to Charlie Ruddell, the “self-proclaimed mayor of Randolph” and owner of the historic Randolph School, for hosting this year’s Randolph Community Club picnic. Club members, former students, and their guests gathered on a sunny afternoon to enjoy a meal, good humor, and storytelling.…
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A Puzzling Name
Historians say that after the discovery of gold at Whiskey Run, “sober citizens” soon began to call the emerging mining camp-town “Randolph.” Why Randolph? The history of Randolph may be likened to a jigsaw puzzle of heroic proportions with many pieces missing. – Verne Bright In 1853, a group of men known as “The Coos…
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It Began at Whiskey Run
To examine the history of Randolph, I’m first sharing a historical account (copied verbatim) that clearly and concisely describes the place Peterson and Powers call “Randolph-the-First.” The map below shows it situated south of Cape Arago on the Pacific Coast. Randolph-the-First: A Historical Account “Gold was discovered at the mouth of Whiskey Run in the…
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So Many Stories, So Many Questions!
Where are the black sand gold mines? Who first discovered the gold? When was Randolph there? Then, there? And, finally, there? As I began to read histories about Randolph, Coos County, Oregon, I soon realized that I was reading about more than one place. It had shifted geographically, in tandem with the economic fortunes of…
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Coquille Tribal History
As I began my genealogical research, it quickly became apparent that I needed learn about the local history of Randolph. Since I moved away from Coos County over forty years ago, it is fortunate that the digital age arrived in the intervening years: it yields a treasure-trove of online resources to help me learn from…
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William Hirst: Headstone Mystery #2
In the previous post, I described my research findings for one of the two headstones that Jim Proehl recently discovered near a Bandon cemetery. This post examines the other headstone with the engraving: William Hirst, Died Oct. 27, 1862, Aged 34 years. Why did the two headstones suddenly appear together? Are they from the same…
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Here a Mary, There a Mary: Headstone Mystery #1
A couple of weeks ago Jim Proehl at the Bandon Historical Society emailed a mystery to me. He wrote, “I walk through the Averill/GAR/Catholic cemetery in Bandon almost every day and was surprised yesterday to discover two new/old headstones that popped up along the road. One of the stones made me think of you.” The…