Jason Lee | |
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Jason Lee
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Born | June 28, 1803 Stanstead, Quebec |
Died | March 12, 1845 Stanstead, Quebec |
(aged 41)
Spouse(s) |
Anna Maria Pittman (d. 1838) Lucy Thompson |
Church | Methodist Episcopal Church |
Title | Superintendent of the Oregon Mission |
Jason Lee (June 28, 1803 – March 12, 1845), a Canadian Methodist Episcopalian missionary and pioneer in the Pacific Northwest. He was born on a farm near Stanstead, Quebec.
After a group of Bitterroot Salish men journeyed to St. Louis requesting Christian missionaries in 1832, Lee and his nephew Daniel Lee volunteered to serve as missionaries for them. Both were appointed as missionaries by the church, given orders to open and maintain a a mission among the Salish. At the time, the Pacific Northwest was "jointly occupied" by the United Kingdom and the United States as agreed to in the Treaty of 1818. The missionaries went overland in 1834 with Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth, an American merchant who previously visited the Columbia River basin to enter the regional fur trade market. The party of priests and fur trappers arrived at Fort Vancouver later that year and were greeted by Chief Factor John McLoughlin. While there, McLoughlin influenced Jason Lee to open the station among the Kalapuya in the Willamette Valley rather than the Bitterroot Salish.
Jason Lee was the first of the Oregon missionaries and instrumental in the American settlement in the Oregon Country.
Jason Lee was the youngest of fourteen siblings. At the age of 13 Lee was self-supporting, converted to Methodism at 23 and later attended the Wilbraham Wesleyan Academy. While studying there, he became friends with Osman Baker and graduated in 1830. Between 1830 and 1832 he was minister in the Stanstead area and taught school. Lee had applied to the London-based Weslyan Missionary Society to proselytize to the First Nations of Canada but his application wasn't processed as Richard Watson, the secretary had died.