George LeBreton
George LeBreton | |
---|---|
Recorder for the Provisional Government of Oregon | |
In office 1841–1844 | |
Preceded by | position created |
Succeeded by | Overton Johnson |
Constituency | Oregon Country |
Personal details | |
Born | 1810 Massachusetts |
Died | March 4, 1844(1844-03-04) (aged 33–34) Oregon |
George W. LeBreton (1810 – March 4, 1844) was a pioneer politician in the Oregon Country and served as the official recorder in the Provisional Government of Oregon. He was born in Massachusetts.[1]
LeBreton traveled to Oregon in 1840 aboard the vessel Maryland of Captain John H. Couch, an early sea merchant in Portland.[2][3] On 18 February 1841, he was elected as the recorder for the Champoeg Meetings and for the probate court that was created.[1] In 1843, when the provisional government was formed, he was again elected as the recorder, the forerunner to the office of Secretary of State.[1]
Death and legacy
LeBreton was a key figure in the Cockstock incident of 4 March 1844. A group of settlers, led by LeBreton tried to capture Cockstock, a Molala man. During the ensuing violence LeBreton was stabbed, shot, and killed by Cockstock.[4] In turn, his attacker was killed by Winslow Armstrong. In the aftermath a militia unit called the Oregon Rangers was formed.[2][4]
See also
References
- ^ a b c Oregon Blue Book: Oregon Secretary of State Agency History, page 11. Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved on April 28, 2021.
- ^ a b Brown, J. Henry (1892). Brown's Political History of Oregon: Provisional Government. Wiley B. Allen.
- ^ Flora, Stephenie. Emigrants to Oregon in 1840. Oregon Pioneers. Retrieved on September 25, 2007.
- ^ a b Horner, John B. (1921). Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature. Corvallis, Oregon: John B. Horner. pp. 125, 153–4, 176. OCLC 2959122. OL 13573540M. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
- v
- t
- e
- American Fur Company
- Columbian exchange
- Executive Committee
- Ferries
- Hudson's Bay Company
- Oregon & California Railroad
- Oregon boundary dispute
- Oregon Country
- Oregon Lyceum
- Oregon missionaries
- Oregon Spectator
- Oregon Territory
- Oregon Trail
- Oregon Treaty
- Organic Laws
- Pacific Fur Company
- Provisional Government
- Albina
- Applegate Trail
- Barlow Road
- Canemah
- Champoeg
- Elliott Cutoff
- Fort Astoria
- Fort Dalles
- Fort Vancouver
- Fort William
- French Prairie
- Linn City
- Meek Cutoff
- Methodist Mission
- Oregon City
- Oregon Institute
- Philip Foster Farm
- Thomas and Ruckle Road
- Tualatin Academy
- Whitman Mission
- Willamette Trading Post
- George Abernethy
- Jesse Applegate
- Ira Babcock
- Sam Barlow
- François Blanchet
- William H. Boring
- Elijah Bristow
- Tabitha Brown
- Matthew Deady
- Abigail Scott Duniway
- Thomas Lamb Eliot
- Philip Foster
- Peter French
- Joseph Gale
- Cornelius Gilliam
- David Hill
- Chief Joseph
- Joseph Kellogg
- H.A.G. Lee
- Jason Lee
- David Thomas Lenox
- Asa Lovejoy
- Morton M. McCarver
- John McLoughlin
- Joseph Meek
- Ezra Meeker
- James D. Miller
- John Minto
- Robert Newell
- Joel Palmer
- Osborne Russell
- Sager orphans
- Levi Scott
- Eliza Hart Spalding
- Henry Spalding
- William Vandevert
- Elijah White
- Marcus Whitman
- Narcissa Whitman
- Geo. H. Williams
- Ewing Young
- Columbia
- Lot Whitcomb
- Canemah
- Colonel Wright
- Gazelle
- Oregon Steam Navigation Company
- Native peoples history
- History to 1806
- Pioneer history
- Modern history
This Oregonian biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e