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Soldier Advocates Land Around Klamath Lake in 1867

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Says whole country from Klamath to Goose Lake is unsettled and cannot be excelled anywhere.

The Oregonian newspaper reported on June 12, 1867, that Capt. Franklin Burnet Sprague of the 1st Oregon Infantry had announced that land was available in Southern Oregon and Northern California south and east of Klamath Lake.
The newspaper quoted a letter Sprague had sent to the Yreka Journal.
The letter began, in these words, “There are perhaps many (people) who have no permanent homes, and who are living upon rented ground or making a scant living by such employment as they may be able to get, who would like to secure a home where in … time they would become independent.”
The letter recommended such people consider land south and east of Klamath Lake.  It read, “The whole country from Klamath to Goose Lake … is unsettled, and … susceptible of cultivation, and for stock raising (it) cannot be excelled anywhere.”
After asserting anything, except corn and vines, would grow on the land, and in larger quantities than elsewhere, Capt. Sprague ended his letter with a warning.  He said, “Persons designing to settle out here should have one year’s supplies on hand, as nothing can be raised this year by those (already) coming in.”
Source: "HISTORY SNAPSHOT: Land Available in Klamath Area.” The Midge: Cultural Newsletter of the Klamath Basin 7 June 2017(originally published in The Oregonian. 12 June 1867 [Portland, Ore.].

 

 

Episode
3239
Date
Author
Kernan Turner