Copperfield, Oregon

Copperfield is a former town in Baker County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is on the west bank of the Snake River and the north bank of Pine Creek,[2] downstream of a feature of the Snake River known as The Oxbow.[3] Copperfield Park, managed by Idaho Power, occupies the former town site.[4] The Geographic Names Information System also lists Copperfield as a variant name for Oxbow, Oregon.[5]

Copperfield, Oregon
Copperfield, 1907
Copperfield, Oregon
Copperfield, Oregon
Coordinates: 44°58′22″N 116°51′27″W
CountryUnited States
StateOregon
CountyBaker
Elevation
1,722 ft (525 m)
Time zoneUTC−08:00 (Pacific (PST))
  Summer (DST)UTC−07:00 (PDT)
Area code(s)458 and 541
GNIS feature ID for Copperfield Campground1156619[1]
Bridge across Snake River at Copperfield, 1916

Early history

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;[6] 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."[7]

Copperfield was platted around 1898, along a Northwest Railway Company line that never developed.[8] Soon the locality was known as "Copperfield" and a post office established in 1899.[6] 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.[6] This railroad activity was described as a "brawling railroad construction camp" during this period by Barbara Ruth Bailey.[8]

Martial law

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."[9] With stories of arson, the town acquired a reputation for lawlessness. When the county authorities failed to get control of the situation, Governor Oswald West announced he was sending his secretary, Fern Hobbs, with a signed declaration of martial law to clean up the place.[6] The locals, who had been led to believe she was travelling alone, were surprised by state militia who had accompanied Hobbs and enforced martial law on the town after she read the declaration to its inhabitants. 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."[10]

Ghost town

There were two more fires, and then the post office closed in 1927, essentially turning Copperfield into a ghost town.[6] In 1965, however, the community of Oxbow was founded near the site of Copperfield when the Idaho Power Company was building the Oxbow Dam.[6] The former site of Copperfield is now a park run by Idaho Power.[4]

gollark: Qorriez are necessary and important.
gollark: Then you don't have enough qorriez.
gollark: There are no downsides except the many downsides!
gollark: The maximum permitted by the config.
gollark: Anyway, make a bigger reactor.

References

  1. "Copperfield Campground". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. October 1, 1992. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  2. Copperfield Park (OR) (PDF) (Map). Idaho Power. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  3. The Oxbow (Map). ACME Labs. Retrieved November 30, 2016 via ACME mapper.
  4. "Copperfield". Idaho Power. 2016. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  5. "Oxbow". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. May 22, 1986. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  6. McArthur, Lewis A.; Lewis L. McArthur (2003) [1928]. Oregon Geographic Names (Seventh ed.). Portland, Oregon: Oregon Historical Society Press. p. 230. ISBN 0-87595-277-1.
  7. Holbrook, Stewart. "The Affair at Copperfield", reprinted in Wildmen, Wobblies and Whistle Punks (Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 1992), p. 74
  8. Bailey, Barbara Ruth (1982). Main Street: Northeastern Oregon. Oregon Historical Society. p. 52. ISBN 0-87595-073-6.
  9. Holbrook, p. 74
  10. Holbrook, p. 81
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.