William R. and Sarah
Jane Anderson
compiled
by Columbian staff in 1989
Hazel Dell's best known
early residents probably were William R. and Sarah Jane Anderson,
who lived on the road running north from Vancouver. Their home
was a stopping place for travelers for many years.
Mrs. Anderson, whose
maiden name was Sarah Jane Sturgis, had crossed the plains in
1847, and Mr. Anderson arrived about two years later. Mrs. Anderson's
father was drowned in the Snake River on the trip west, and the
mother remarried, but her second husband also drowned.
From 1848 to 1850,
Sarah Jane lived with her mother at what is now Vancouver. As
a youngster she talked so much with the local Indians, "I forgot
a considerable portion of my own language for a time," she said.
In 1851, Sarah Jane Sturgis was married to Anderson. They lived
near Linnton for a while, then came to Clark County in the early
1850s.
When they moved to
Hazel Dell, the land was densely timbered. One historian says
the vicinity was "noted for the piling furnished for the Portland
wharves."
Although the Andersons
sold off parts of their claim as the land increased in value,
they still held about 60 acres at the time of Anderson's death
in 1902.
Mrs. Anderson died
in 1912, while still living in what is today the heart of Hazel
Dell.
Eleven of her fourteen
children were reported still living at the time. Among her numerous
grandchildren was Bud Anderson, a noted Vancouver pugilist of
the early 1900s.
Sarah J. Anderson Elementary
School in Hazel Dell is named for Mrs. Anderson.