| hathaway profile
The Hathaway family
compiled
by Columbian staff in 1989
The Hathaway name is
best known today for a park and a school, both in Washougal. But
the Hathaways were tied in with numerous other facets of Clark County
history dating back to 1853.
Brothers Marshall R.
Hathaway and Jeremiah S. Hathaway were New York state natives who
crossed the Plains in 1852 with their families. They stayed for
a short time in Portland, then took land in 1853 in the Ridgefield
area.
In a few years, J.S.
Hathaway bought a farm on the north side of the military reservation
at Vancouver, and later moved to a farm three miles west of town
on the Columbia River.
M.R. Hathaway resided
in Vancouver in later years.
He taught school for
many years, was Clark County school superintendent for three terms,
served as a justice for the peace for a long time and was a territorial
legislator.
He died in 1896.
His brother, a farmer
and a probate judge, had died in 1876, and his donation claim was
sold to David Fales.
Among J.S. Hathaway's
numerous children were twins, Alpha B. and Alfred Omega Hathaway.
In 1921 Alfred Hathaway
lost an arm to blood poisoning but continued to work. He is noted
for his donation of Hathaway Park to the town of Washougal.
When a reporter visited
Hathaway in 1925 the property was known as the Hathaway Free Auto
Park.
"The river runs
along one side for a distance of about 600 feet, and the bathing
is fine," the newsman wrote. "The city has built two bathhouses,
two big concrete stoves and fully one half dozen big tables. Running
water is piped to three parts of the park and there are swings for
the kiddies." "It would be hard to find a free city auto
park more pleasantly located and so well provided with things that
please the auto tourist."
Alfred Hathaway also
gave the site for a school in Washougal that still carries the family
name.
When the Hathaway brothers
celebrated their 85th birthdays, they claimed to be the oldest living
twins in Washington State.
Their last birthday
celebration together was in Washougal, when they were 91. At that
time the twins, both widowers, estimated they had 200 direct relations
in Clark County, and many more by marriage.
Return to Clark County Ancestors
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