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Mrs. Esther Short One of the city's founders.
January 18, 1928 - taken from a story by Erwin Rieger,
Columbian staff writer
On a Christmas day more than four score years ago - the twenty-fifth
of December, 1845 - a man, a woman, and eight children, a hardy little
band, stepped ashore from the broad Columbia to find Fort Vancouver a
little trade center in the wilderness, hospitable to the travelers it
was later to fight so determinedly. Thus the Shorts, farmers of Pennsylvania
and Illinois, came to Vancouver.
There is no history to which one can turn to find out what these pioneers
thought of this one spot in a wilderness. But they must have liked it
even then. Maybe the man, bearded and rugged, saw in the untouched forest
a farm, and a home a a peaceful if active end to the trail from Illinois.
Maybe the woman, sturdy and strong and capable, saw a bright home and
a land where her children might hew their way unhampered for lack of enough
room in the world.
They must have wandered about looking, this Amos S. and Esther Short,
and they must have said, "Now there's a likely place. Twouldn't take so
much clearing, and the land is good ..." They must have looked, and they
must have spoken, for they came back.
Not just right away, of course. This was a broad land. they would look
elsewhere. But they came back in 1847, from the place that is now the
town of Linnton, Oregon, and so this city of Vancouver began, unknown
to the pioneers.
Amos and Esther Short, man and wife, took up a homestead - a donation
land claim - in the wilderness near the fort. Its eastern boundary was
one day to become Main street and its northern boundary was even later
to become Twenty-sixth street, but the forest trees that towered along
the future thoroughfares gave no hint of such a future.
That was a contrast with the present day! It is hard to realize, here
in this old city, that the bustling commerce, the old buildings and even
the stately shade trees all hark back to a man and a woman and a homestead
in the forest.
Britain Wanted Land
Then came the cloud. A new yound United States of America and an old wise
British crown were contending for mastery and ownership of the broad land
cleaved by the Columbia. Britain wanted to hold everything down to the
north back of the river. And so the Shorts, Americans and settlers, suddenly
became a menace to the claims of England and a bulwark to the claims of
the United States.
Family Ordered Away
It did not take the British long to decide that the thing to do was to
remove the Shorts. Only Amos and Esther Short and the children (there
were ten now) would not remove. So began the strife that was to last for
years and was to find Esther Short, undaunted, standing her ground alone
and victorious.
The British swooped the first time when the father was not home. They
took the mother and her children, put them in a boat, and took them across
the Columbia to Hayden island - the Yankee side to the river where they
were put ashore and told to stay.
Stay? Not Esther Short. Not Amos Short. They came back. That was in
1848. And the British, swooping again, caught the whole family unprepared.
The family was loaded into a scow and set adrift on the Columbia without
oars. But Amos Short and his wife and children reached land - and they
came back! These Yankees would not back down.
Esther Short Struck
There was always trouble after that. Once a man coming to the cabin door,
struck Esther Short across the face with a heavy club. Thereafter Amos
Short carried his rifle handy, and one day there was a battle.
Again the men of England came down to evict the homesteaders. Short
warned of their coming took the four or five men who were working for
him and who volunteered, and went forthe to meet the British.
He ordered them to keep off his land. They came on. He warned them of
what he would do. They did not heed. Battle followed, and Short shot down
two men, one a Hawaiian and one a white man, who exonerated him in an
affidavit before he died.
Short was in legal battles after that to save his life, and he won.
A territorial judge who acquitted him is reported to have said. "The only
trouble I find with you, Short is that you didn't shoot more of them."
That was the highlight of the struggle for freedom from aggression,
but there were other bright flashes of courage. Once another expedition
came down, finding the mother alone. Strong woman that she was, she came
out alone and slapped the leader, knocking him to the earth, and the man
went away convinced that she was too brave a mother to be evicted.
Husband Drowned
The treacherous Columbia River bar claimed the ship that was bearing Amos
home after he had delivered potatoes to California. Where demand for food
was high with the gold rush on and Amos and Esther were making good money.
He was lost on January 7, 1853, that left Esther alone. And alone she
carried on - building a city, now that Britain's claims had been relinquished.
With her husband lost, Esther Short, then under the terms of an old
law took the eastern half of their land claim, the half that went always
to the widow. The western half went to the children, and so was divided
into ten strips by parallel north-and-south lines.
Settlers were coming, more and more. And Esther Short, renting some
of her land at first, presently saw a better plan. Thus it was in 1855
that the city of Vancouver was platted up to Eighth Street, and that she
gave Esther Short park to the city, and that she gave to the city also
a long strip of waterfront to be the city's perpetually.
Esther Short died on June 28, 1862. She rests in the old city cemetery.
She had been born in Pennsylvania in 1806, and she had mothered ten children
besides losing two more. Curtis, Jersusha, Drusilla, Clark, Samantha,
Maxey, Deloss, Grant, Esther and Emmaline -- these children, with the
spirit of the pioneers strong in their souls, scattered far and wide.
Left to recall her in memory is only the youngest, Emmaline, who came
home to live in a modern hotel on a part of the land in the city that
dates back to a noation land claim and a man and a woman who knew no fear
and who could not be cowed.
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