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   <eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" id="a0">
      <eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="wauar" encodinganalog="identifier" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv29174" identifier="80444/xv29174">WAUMcMickenfamily0040.xml</eadid>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt id="edit-complete">
            <titleproper>Guide to the McMicken Family Papers <date encodinganalog="date" era="ce">1828-1921</date>
            </titleproper>
            <titleproper altrender="nodisplay" type="filing">McMicken Family Papers</titleproper>
         </titlestmt>
         <publicationstmt>
            <publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries</publisher>
            <date normal="2007" encodinganalog="date">©2007 (Last modified: 4/2/2020)</date>
            <address>
               <addressline>Seattle, WA 98195</addressline>
            </address>
         </publicationstmt>
      </filedesc>
      <profiledesc>
         <langusage>Finding aid written in 
		  <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="language" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage>
         <descrules>Finding aid based on DACS (<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Describing Archives: A Content Standard</title>).</descrules>
      </profiledesc>
   </eadheader>
   <archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21" id="recon">
      <did>
         <repository>
            <corpname>University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections</corpname>
         </repository>
         <unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="wauar">0040 (Accession No. 0040-001)</unitid>
         <origination>
            <famname role="creator" encodinganalog="100">McMicken family</famname>
         </origination>
         <unittitle type="collection">McMicken family papers</unittitle>
         <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" normal="1828/1921">1828-1921</unitdate>
         <physdesc>
            <extent>1.83 cubic feet</extent>
         </physdesc>
         <langmaterial>Collection materials are in 
		<language langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn" encodinganalog="546">English</language>.</langmaterial>
         <abstract encodinganalog="5203_$a">Correspondence,
		  financial records, legal documents, diaries, photographs and sketches related
		  to Pioneer family</abstract>
      </did>
      <bioghist encodinganalog="5450_" id="a2">
         <p>Pioneer family</p>
         <p>Includes following families, each related through successive
		  generations by marriage: Reverend Jared F. Ostrander (d. 1874) family of
		  Wisconsin; Asa Wells, (d.1854) family of upstate New York; Gilmore Hays
		  (1810-1880) family of Washington Territory; John Goldsbury Parker (1829-1909)
		  family of Washington Territory; William McMicken (1827-1899) family of
		  Minnesota and Washington Territory. William McMicken was married to Rowena
		  Ostrander McMicken.</p>
      </bioghist>
      <scopecontent>
         <p>Correspondence mainly relative to the family of William McMicken,
		  lawyer, officer of the 10th Minnesota Volunteers in the Civil War, and
		  surveyor-general of Washington Territory. Material also includes financial
		  records, correspondence, legal documents, diaries, photographs, sketches and
		  letters relative to the western campaigns of the Civil War, the Sioux Indian
		  War of 1862-65, and the Gilmore Hayes and John Goldsbury Parker families of
		  Washington Territory; 1828-1921. Herbert McMicken and Helen Parker’s 1878
		  wedding links together the five families represented in this collection: the
		  McMickens, the Parkers, the Ostranders, the Wells, and the Hays. Herbert was
		  related to the Wells and the Ostranders through his mother, Rowena. Helen was
		  related to the Hays through her mother, Jerusha Jane. </p>
         <p>
            <emph render="bold"> Gilmore Hays </emph> was born January 8, 1810 in
		  Kentucky to an “extremely high hat” Scotch-Irish family that had emigrated to
		  the American colonies early in the eighteenth century. He studied law with his
		  mother’s cousin, and after passing the bar practiced in Missouri. Here he
		  married Naomi Know Montgomery, a descendent of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice
		  John Marshall, and through her inheritance assumed ownership of “old Montgomery
		  plantation.” He remained in Missouri until serving in the Mexican-American War.
		  After the war, he visited California and decided to move his family west, lured
		  in part by the opportunity to raise his sons in a non-slave state (he had
		  recently freed his own slaves). After a short time in California, he returned
		  to Missouri with the intention of organizing a wagon-train company bound for
		  Oregon territory. The 1852 trip proved disastrous. He lost his wife and three
		  sons to cholera while passing through Idaho. After arriving at The Dalles,
		  Oregon, he invested almost his entire $12,000 savings in a herd of cattle which
		  did not survive the severe winter. Financially ruined, he joined the remainder
		  of his family in Tumwater, near Olympia. He quickly became involved in civic
		  affairs and was elected to the newly-organized territory’s first Legislature.
		  When the Indian War broke out in 1855, Gilmore was the first man from Thurston
		  County to volunteer for service, becoming captain of Company B. He remained in
		  Washington until lured in 1861 to Owyhee County, Idaho by the territory’s gold
		  rush. Idaho remained his home until the last few weeks of his life, when he
		  returned to Olympia to stay with his daughter, Jerusha Jane Parker. He died in
		  1880.</p>
         <p>Jerusha Jane had married<emph render="bold">  John G. Parker </emph> in
		  her father’s log cabin in 1854. John had arrived in Olympia the prior year.
		  After a brief foray into merchandising, he constructed the trading schooner
		  Emily F. Parker (named, apparently, after his sister). He subsequently would
		  serve as master, pilot or purser of the steamers Traveler, Alida, Isabel, North
		  Pacific, Messenger, and Daisy. He sold his steamboat interests in 1887 and
		  lived out a quiet retirement until his death in 1908. Jane and John had five
		  children, the eldest being Helen, born in 1856.</p>
         <p>
            <emph render="bold"> William McMicken </emph> was born in Youngstown,
		  New York in 1827 and learned engineering from his father. In 1847 he purchased
		  an interest in a Wisconsin firm that manufactured farm machinery. He moved to
		  Minnesota seven years later, breaking up 500 acres of prairie for cultivation.
		  When the Civil War erupted, he joined the Army, and was commissioned first
		  lieutenant in Company B of the Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry. His first
		  military duty was not against the Confederacy, however, but against the Sioux
		  Indians in Missouri. After his Company helped suppress the Sioux uprising in
		  1862, it was subsequently assigned to the Department of Tennessee, the
		  Sixteenth Army Corps. He remained in military service until 1865, achieving the
		  rank of captain. When he returned to Minnesota, he was appointed assessor of
		  internal revenue of the state’s First Congressional district. He served for six
		  years, but poor health occasioned by his military service forced his
		  retirement. Following the advice of his doctor, he moved to the more temperate
		  climate of the Puget Sound region in 1871. After working for the Northern
		  Pacific railroad, President Grant appointed him surveyor general for Washington
		  territory, a job he retained under the subsequent administrations of Hayes and
		  Arthur. During his long term, he surveyed and subdivided the territory’s Indian
		  reservations and also surveyed the San Juan Islands. He retired from the post
		  in 1886 to serve for two years as Territorial Treasurer. President McKinley
		  re-appointed him Surveyor General in 1887, and he would continue to hold the
		  post until his death. A distinguished Mason who occupied the highest offices in
		  Washington, his 1899 funeral was accorded high Masonic honors.</p>
         <p>
            <emph render="bold"> Maurice McMicken </emph> was William and Rowena’s
		  eldest son. He left Olympia in 1877 to study law, first at the University of
		  California and later at the Portland office of the former Senator Cyrus A.
		  Dolph. He returned to the Puget Sound region in 1881, taking a job as a law
		  clerk for the Seattle firm Struve &amp; Haines. After passing the bar the
		  following year, he joined the renamed Struve, Haines &amp; McMicken as a
		  partner. He quickly earned a high reputation as a business lawyer, and became
		  associated with many of Seattle’s principal business institutions. Among his
		  more prominent clients were several of the large mill companies on the Puget
		  Sound. A passionate yachting enthusiast, Maurice was a charter member of the
		  Seattle Yacht Club and spent summers living on his 92-foot boat, The Lotus. He
		  retired from active practice in 1936 and died four years later.</p>
         <p>
            <emph render="bold"> Helen Parker McMicken </emph> found life as a wife
		  and mother arduous. “What mortal woman,” she inquired to the diary she had
		  begun two years after her marriage, “can mend and make for four children, hear
		  lessons, oversee the whole house and provide for the table, receive calls and
		  ever expect to get through? And besides, it cannot be selfish to want to read
		  an hour every day and write a little for practice’s sake.” In addition to the
		  hard work, she had to deal with privation. The family had continual difficulty
		  scraping up enough money to survive, often being able to afford nothing to eat
		  other than oatmeal porridge. As a last-ditch contingency, Helen decided that
		  the contents of the children’s bean bags could provide a dinner, but
		  fortunately she never had to resort to this eventuality. The money problems
		  forced the McMickens to change houses several times, both in their native
		  Olympia and in Seattle. Despite the difficult times, Helen did persevere. “It’s
		  astonishing how poor one can be,” she confided to her diary, “and yet be merry
		  over it. I suppose that’s because we’re honest.” Helen contributed to the
		  family’s meager income by selling her artwork to tourists, and for calendars,
		  score cards, and dinner menus. Eventually, Herbert secured a job in the
		  surveyor general’s office, and with this job the times got easier, although the
		  family never did enjoy complete financial security. Helen died in 1942.</p>
      </scopecontent>
      <otherfindaid>
         <p>
            <extref actuate="onrequest" show="new" href="http://www.lib.washington.edu/static/public/specialcollections/findingaids/0040-001.pdf">View inventory/container list for this accession</extref>
         </p>
      </otherfindaid>
      <altformavail>
         <p> 
            <extref actuate="onrequest" show="new" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/0040-001/field/all/mode/exact/conn/and/order/title">View selections from this
			 collection in digital format.</extref> 
         </p>
      </altformavail>
      <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="a14">
         <p>Open to all users.</p>
      <p><extref href="https://uw.aeon.atlas-sys.com/logon/?Action=10&amp;Form=31&amp;Value=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv29174/xml" role="text/html" actuate="onrequest" show="new" id="aeon">Request at UW</extref></p></accessrestrict>
      <userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="a15">
         <p>Creator's literary rights not transferred to the University of
		  Washington Libraries.</p>
      </userestrict>
      <acqinfo encodinganalog="541" id="a19">
         <p>Purchased from Shorey's Bookstore, 6/15/1959.</p>
      </acqinfo>
      <relatedmaterial encodinganalog="544__$n" id="a6">
         <p>See also the 
		   <extref/>  in Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries.</p>
      </relatedmaterial>
      <controlaccess>
         <famname encodinganalog="600" role="subject">McMicken family--Archives</famname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">McMicken, William, 1827-1899</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">McMicken, Rowena Ostrander</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">McMicken, Helen Parker</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Parker, John Goldsbury</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Hays, Gilmore</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Tibbals, Maude McMicken</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Ostrander, Jared F</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Weld, Cornelia Elizabeth</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Stevens, Isaac Ingalls, 1818-1862</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Denny, Arthur Armstrong, 1822-1899</persname>
         <persname role="creator" encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Tilton, James</persname>
         <corpname role="subject" encodinganalog="610" source="uwsc-naf">United States. Army. Minnesota Infantry Regiment, 10th (1862-1865)</corpname>
         <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651">Washington (State)--History--To 1889</geogname>
         <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Wisconsin--History--19th century</geogname>
         <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">New York (State)--History--19th century</geogname>
         <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Personal Narratives</geogname>
         <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651">Oneida County (N.Y.)</geogname>
         <geogname role="subject" encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">Olympia (Wash.)--Pictorial works</geogname>
         <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Frontier and pioneer life--Washington (State)</subject>
         <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Dakota Indians--Wars, 1862-1865</subject>
         <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Shipping--Washington (State)--Puget Sound</subject>
         <subject source="uwsc">Personal Papers/Corporate Records (University of Washington)</subject>
         <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay">Pioneers</subject>
         <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay">Diaries</subject>
         <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay">Photographs</subject>
      </controlaccess>
   </archdesc>
</ead>

