William H. Gray | |
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Member of the Provisional Legislature of Oregon | |
In office 1843 1845 |
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Constituency | Clackamas District |
Personal details | |
Born | 1810 |
Died | 1889 |
Children | Caroline Augusta Gray |
William Henry Gray (1810–1889) was a pioneer politician and historian of the Oregon Country in the present-day U.S. state of Oregon. He was an active participant in creating the Provisional Government of Oregon. Gray later wrote the book A History of Oregon, 1792-1849 and was instrumental in the establishment of the Oregon Pioneer Society.
Gray came to the Oregon Country as a lay member of the Spalding-Whitman missionary group. Resigning his post in 1842, he went to the Salem area to work at the Oregon Institute. Gray later became a farmer and a sawmill operator.
In the spring of 1843, Gray's house was the site of the first "Wolf Meeting", as part of the ongoing Champoeg Meetings. At a pioneer gathering on May 2, 1843, the French-Canadians and Americans present were divided about forming a "civil community."Joseph Meek called for the division, and Gray seconded the motion for a division on the question. After voting on each article presented, the basis of the Provisional Government of Oregon was laid. Afterwards Gray was a member of the provisional legislature and of the committee that drafted the First Organic Laws for the provisional government.
In 1854 he purchased a sheep flock numbering 400 in Iowa and took them overland across the continent. Using a scow and the assistance of a steamboat, Gray sailed down the Columbia River for the Clatsop Plains. While navigating from Astoria the scow was harangued by a storm and sunk at Chinook Point with all of Gray's livestock.