| carty profile
Carty family
compiled by Columbian staff in 1989
Few families can trace
their Clark County heritage back 154 years as can the Carty clan
of the Ridgefield and Woodland areas.
It was as early as 1835,
although some sources place it a few years later, that James Carty
arrived in Fort Vancouver as a barrelmaker for the Hudson's Bay
Co. A relative of the Jim Carty who was in recent years the county
prosecuting attorney, the pioneer Carty was born in Ireland in 1808
and came to the United States in 1833.
The immigrant signed
on a whaling vessel that was headed for the polar seas, but during
a layover in Honolulu, Carty got ill and stayed behind. When he
recovered, he sailed on a Hudson's Bay Co. trader headed for the
Northwest.
After working in Fort
Vancouver a few years, Carty built a log cabin in what is now the
Ridgefield area to become the first white settler there. He died
in 1873.
In 1859 another James
Carty, a cousin of the original pioneer, came to America from Ireland
and also headed for Ridgefield. He married a widow, Mrs. C.H. Reed,
and after her death married Anna O'Rourke. There was one son, William
E. "Bill" Carty, born of this latter marriage on April
4, 1894.
Bill Carty also was
to spend his entire life in Ridgefield, working as a rancher and
serving 22 years in the state Legislature. A staunch Democrat, bill
Carty's political career began in 1932 when he was first elected
to the House of Representatives. With the exception of two terms,
Carty served continuously until 1960, when he was defeated by 100
votes by Ella Wintler, Vancouver Republican.
The only breaks in Bill
Carty's Olympia service came in 1934, when he was defeated in the
primary election, and in 1952 when he unsuccessfully ran for state
senator.
Bill Carty died in 1962
at age 68, remaining politically active until the end.
Return to Clark
County Ancestors
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