Portrait and biographical record of the Willamette valley, Oregon, containing original sketches of many well known citizens of the past and present, Part 35

Author: Chapman Publishing Company, Chicago
Publication date: 1903
Publisher: Chicago, The Chapman Publishing Company
Number of Pages: 1622


USA > Oregon > Portrait and biographical record of the Willamette valley, Oregon, containing original sketches of many well known citizens of the past and present > Part 35


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127 | Part 128 | Part 129 | Part 130 | Part 131 | Part 132 | Part 133 | Part 134 | Part 135 | Part 136 | Part 137 | Part 138 | Part 139 | Part 140 | Part 141 | Part 142 | Part 143 | Part 144 | Part 145 | Part 146 | Part 147 | Part 148 | Part 149 | Part 150 | Part 151 | Part 152 | Part 153 | Part 154 | Part 155 | Part 156 | Part 157 | Part 158 | Part 159 | Part 160 | Part 161 | Part 162 | Part 163 | Part 164 | Part 165 | Part 166 | Part 167 | Part 168 | Part 169 | Part 170 | Part 171 | Part 172 | Part 173 | Part 174 | Part 175 | Part 176 | Part 177 | Part 178 | Part 179 | Part 180 | Part 181 | Part 182 | Part 183 | Part 184 | Part 185 | Part 186 | Part 187 | Part 188 | Part 189 | Part 190 | Part 191 | Part 192 | Part 193 | Part 194 | Part 195 | Part 196 | Part 197 | Part 198 | Part 199 | Part 200 | Part 201 | Part 202 | Part 203 | Part 204 | Part 205 | Part 206 | Part 207 | Part 208 | Part 209 | Part 210 | Part 211 | Part 212 | Part 213 | Part 214 | Part 215 | Part 216 | Part 217 | Part 218 | Part 219 | Part 220 | Part 221 | Part 222 | Part 223 | Part 224 | Part 225 | Part 226 | Part 227 | Part 228 | Part 229 | Part 230 | Part 231 | Part 232 | Part 233 | Part 234 | Part 235 | Part 236 | Part 237 | Part 238 | Part 239 | Part 240 | Part 241 | Part 242 | Part 243 | Part 244 | Part 245 | Part 246 | Part 247 | Part 248 | Part 249 | Part 250 | Part 251 | Part 252


Politically a Republican, Mr. Simpson 'repre- sents the most liberal and broad-minded of the local adherents, and at times has actively par- ticipated in town and county affairs. Frater- nally, no man in the conntv is better known or more gladly welcomed to the prominent lodges. among them being the Corinthian Lodge of Al- bany, of which he has been past master two terms; the Royal Arch Masons of Albany; the Cominandery No. 3; and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. With his wife he is a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Of the six children born to Mr. and Mrs. Simpson, George W. is living in Portland, and is interested in mining ; Abner was killed in a mill by the fall- ing of a scaffold; Frank is a bookkeeper in Athena ; Ada is now Mrs. Robson of Albany ; Eva is a graduate of the Albany College, and is at present a teacher of English and elocution in the Tacoma (Wash.) College; and Ora will graduate from the Albany College in the class of 1903. No man in Albany bears a more hon- ored name than does Mr. Simpson, nor is any more emphatically typical of that broad and tol- erant citizenship which commands universal ap- probation.


DAVID NACHTIGALL. A native of Rus- sia, David Nachtigall was born in the southern part of that country, April 16, 1853, the son of Peter and Neta (Schultz) Nachtigall, natives re- spectively of Holland and Russia. The death of Peter Nachtigall having occurred in 1870, at the age of thirty-seven years, his widow afterward


270


PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.


became the wife of John Boese, and now makes her home in South Dakota, being .in her seven- tieth year. Of the thirteen children born to Mr. and Mrs. Nachtigall only three are now living. They are: David, of this review; Toby, a shoe- maker in the state of Missouri; and Mrs. Anna Smith, of Smithfield, Ore.


The early education of David Nachtigall was received in the common schools of Russia, his school days being soon over, however, and an apprenticeship in a linen factory beginning. He was seventeen years old when his father died and he then went to make his home with an uncle with whom he worked for six years, half of the time being spent in the old country and the remainder in the United States, whither he had come with his uncle in 1873. His relative sought a home in York county, Neb., where later David found employment among the farmers, which work meant to him, with his rigid economy and patient industry, the beginning of a com- petency. In 1878 he married a native of his home country, Mary Abrahams, and the two went to housekeeping on a farm of one hundred and sixty acres which he was then able to pur- chase. There they remained until 1892, at which time they came to Oregon. Mr. Nachtigall first rented land in Polk county, near Crowley, and after being satisfied that the country was all one could wish in which to make a permanent home, he bought his present farm of two hundred and eighteen acres, located near Salt Creek in the same county. His purchase was made in 1900, and since that time he has been engaged in gen- eral farming and the raising of cattle, sheep, horses, etc. Thirty-three acres of his farm are devoted to the cultivation of hops.


Eight children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Nachtigall, of whom there are five daughters and three sons. In addition to the success which Mr. Nachtigall has made in his chosen lifework he has, since being numbered among the citizens of Oregon, so won his way into the confidence of the people of the community by his honorable life and intelligent interest in the affairs of the day that they have used their influence to secure his appointment as postmaster of the Salt Creek postoffice, his term extending from 1900 to 1904. Hle is independent in his political views, reserv- ing the right to cast his ballot for the man whose services he thinks will be productive of the most good for the country. Religiously he is a mem- ber of the Baptist Church.


WILLIAM W. ROWELL. As the pro- prietor of the Russ House. Albany, Linn county, WV. W. Rowell is winning a wide popularity in the community, which is not bounded by the limits of the city or county, but his reputation as a successful landlord is carried beyond this by


those who know him in his business capacity. He is a man of splendid personality, as well as a successful business man, and since his purchase of the hotel in 1892 he has built up a good patron- age and has emphatically met with rich returns from his efforts.


Mr. Rowell was born in Albany, Orleans coun- ty, Vt., May 14, 1852, the descendant of an Eng- lish family who truly loved their adopted land. Three brothers of this family had come to the colonies just previous to the breaking out of the Revolutionary war, and so deeply were they impressed with the righteousness of the cause of the colonists that they generously gave their aid in the struggle. The first American born was William, the grandfather of W. W. Rowell, of this review, and his birth occurred in Vermont, where he represented both a New Hampshire and a Massachusetts family. The father, Guy E., also owes his nativity to that state, in which he engaged in farming and stock-raising as a means of livelihood. Being a prominent man in the affairs of the community in which he lived he acted often in an official capacity, serving as selectman at various times. His wife was in maidenhood Betsey G. Page, also a native of Ver- mont, and the descendant of an old New England family. At her death, which occurred in Ver- mont, she was the mother of nine children, all of whom are living, and all located in the New Eng- land states, with the exception of W. W. and his brother, Z. E., who is a farmer in California.


William W. Rowell was the second oldest of his father's children, and was reared on the pa- ternal farm, and educated in the public schools and Albany Academy. When nineteen years of age he began working at the carpenter's trade, and continued in the work until he came to Cali- fornia with his brother in 1875. After engag- ing for two years at his trade in San Francisco, he spent one year in Southern California, and then located in Mendocino county, where he be- came interested in a stock ranch, which he left in 1888 to settle in Linn county, Ore. Here he bought a farm located three miles from Albany, and engaged in its cultivation until 1892, when he sold it and invested the proceeds in his present lucrative business, which has become very suc- cessful under his able managemeent.


The marriage of Mr. Rowell occurred in Ukiah, Mendocino county. Cal., and united him with Miss Mary Harter, a native of lowa, and of the union two children have been born, of whom Edith is the wife of T. A. Riggs, of Dallas; and Oliver is a clerk in the establishment of A. M. Reeves. Politically, Mr. Rowell is a stanch Re- publican, true to the party and to the principles which it advocates. Fraternally, he is a member of the Foresters, the Fraternal Union and the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks.


The stochen.


1


273


PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.


HON. PHIL METSCHAN. Truth is always stranger than fiction, and in the lives of even the most dignified of men is an element of romance. This is noticeable in the record of Phil Metschan, the president of the Imperial Hotel Company of Portland, and ex-state treasurer of Oregon. Lit- tle did the boy of fourteen foresee the future that awaited him as he crossed the ocean, in a three-masted clipper. and during the tedium of forty days on shipboard amused himself by pon- dering upon what he would do in America. But the dreams of the boy never turned to the far- distant shores of the Pacific, nor did they reveal to him the honors which the future held for him as Destiny awaited his coming to the sunset sea.


In Hesse-Cassel, Germany, Phil Metschan was born March 24, 1840, a son of Frederick U. and Caroline C. (Schiricke) Metschan, natives of the same province. His father was a graduate of Heidelberg College, which was founded in 1386, and is the oldest university in Germany. He was a lawyer by profession and an attaché of the Duke of Hesse. Like all of his family, he adhered to the Lutheran religion. His death occurred in February, 1875, and three years later his widow came to America with three of her daughters. Her death occurred in Canyon City, Ore., in 1884. Of her eight children three daugh- ters and two sons survive, one son, Max. being a deputy in the office of the internal revenue col- lector at Tacoma.


When Phil Metschan arrived in Cincinnati he had only $4.75 with which to begin in the new world. However, he had two uncles there. and one of them took him into the meat market to learn the butcher's trade. In the spring of 1858 he went to Leavenworth, Kans., and began in business in Shawnee market, but was taken ill and forced to change his occupation. Those were the days of the Pike's Peak excitement, and he joined the throng of gold-seekers westward bound. In the spring of 1859 he crossed the plains to Denver and thence to California Gulch (now Leadville), where he opened a meat mar- ket. Returning to Leavenworth in the fall of 1860, he enjoyed the privilege of voting for Abra- ham Lincoln. In the spring of 1861 he went back to California Gulch, but soon joined an expedition for the far west, traversing the pony express route and landing in Sacramento just before the floods of 1861. During the winter he was employed on General Hutchinson's ranch. In the spring of 1862 he started for the Caribou mines in British Columbia, but a short stay in Victoria convinced him of the futility of the enterprise and he returned to the States, arriv- ing in Portland in June, 1862. Soon afterward he went to Canyon City, Grant county, Ore., where he followed mining and prospecting at


first, and then opened a meat market, conducting the same and a general mercantile business until 1890.


After settling in Canyon City Mr. Metschan married Miss Mary Schaum, who was born in Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, and died in Salem, Ore., in 1895. His second marriage took place in San Rafael, Cal., and united him with Mrs. F. D. Sweetser, who was born in Canada and accompanied her parents to California. His children, all born of his first marriage, are named as follows: Frank, a stockman at Silvies, Har- ney county, Ore .; Anna, whose husband, George H. Cattanach, is an attorney of Canyon City and ex-representative; Mrs. Amelia Meredith, of Salem; Julia, Mrs. Griffith, whose husband is a physician in the state insane asylum at Salem ; Phil, formerly cashier of the Grant County Bank and now proprietor of the Paris hotel at Hepp- ner, Ore .; Otto, who is engaged in the stock business in eastern Oregon; Anton H., a clerk in the Wells-Fargo Bank; Lillian ; and Edward who is attending the Pennsylvania Dental Col- lege at Philadelphia.


During his residence in Grant county Mr. Metschan was a prominent factor in Republican politics. For four years he held the office of county treasurer, for two years served as county. clerk, and for four years officiated as county judge, after which ( 1888-1890) he again served as county clerk. In 1890 the Republicans placed him on their ticket for state treasurer and he was elected by a majority of sixty-seven hundred, while at the same time a Democratic governor was elected by five thousand majority. He as- sumed the duties of office in January, 1891, and about the same time established his home in Salem. At the expiration of his term he was re-elected by a plurality of twenty-three thousand over his Democratic opponent, his victory prov- ing not only his popularity as a man but also his successful administration in the high office with which he had been honored. In January, 1899. his second term being ended and a constitutional limit of office reached, he retired from the posi- tion in which he had served with distinguished fidelity and efficiency. In May of the same year he purchased the Imperial hotel and incorporated the Imperial Hotel Company, of which he is president and which has enlarged the hotel and increased its capacity.


Any reference to the life of Mr. Metschan would be incomplete without mention of his fra- ternal relations. He was made a Mason in Can- von City Lodge No. 34, A. F. & A. M., of which he is past master. During 1896-97 he was hon- ored with the office of grand master of the grand lodge of Oregon. He was raised to the Royal Arch degree in Blue Mountain Chapter No. 7. of Canyon City, in which he is past high priest.


II


.


274


PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.


For a time connected with Oregon Comman- dery No. I. K. T., he later became a charter member of DeMolay Commandery No. 5, K. T., of Salem, and is also identified with Oregon Con- sistory No. 1, and Al Kader Temple, N. M. S., of Portland. While in Canyon City he was in- itiated into the Odd Fellows as a member of Ho- bah Lodge No. 22, in which he is past noble grand. During 1881-82 he officiated as grand master of the grand lodge, I. O. O. F., of Ore- gon. In the Grand Encampment he is past grand patriarch, and also acted as supreme representa · tive to the Sovereign Grand Lodge in session at Los Angeles and later at Denver. Other organi- zations to which he belongs are Hope Lodge No. I, A. O. U. W., and Lodge No. 142, B. P. O. E., both of Portland. Upon the organization of the Illehee Club of Salem, in which he bore a prominent part, he was chosen its president. and since leaving Salem has still retained his connection with the society.


JOHN W. YORK, now deceased, was a pio- neer of Oregon of 1852. settling in this state in the fall of that year. He was born in Jackson county, Ga., near Raleigh, in 1800, and was an only child of James and Aletha Wright York. He came of English and Scotch ancestry. His grandfather was killed by the Tories. His father, at the age of sixteen, together with two brothers, fought in the Revolutionary war.


When but a year old John Wright York was taken by his parents to St. Louis, Mo., and there his father died, after which the mother was mar- ried again and removed with her family to Ken- tucky, where the subject of this review lived for a few years. He then returned to Missouri and later went to Illinois. He acquired his education by the fireside, for there were no schools of any importance in the localities in which he lived. He, however, became a well read man, possess- ing a natural aptitude for intellectual work. He continually broadened his knowledge by reading, observation and investigation and during the greater part of his life he devoted his time and energies to the work of the ministry. When a young man he was licensed to exhort in the Methodist Episcopal Church, and in 1826 was licensed to preach. He was then given charge of a circuit : it required eight weeks to visit the different congregations therein. His speech was always correct, his arguments forceful, his logic convincing, and he exerted strong influence in behalf of Christianity and the development of upright manhood among his fellow men.


Mr. York was united in marriage to Miss Mary P. Collier, who was born in Jefferson county, Ky., in 1812. They became the parents of eight children, but five of the number died in


.


infancy or early childhood. . Martha C., the eld- est, was born in Carrolton, Green county, Ill., February 5, 1831; Ann Aletha was born at Car- rolton, Green county, Ill .. January 3, 1833 : and Emily Y. was born at Waterloo, Monroe county, Ill., January 24, 1835. They came with the family to Oregon in 1852. Martha Cordelia was married to William Masters at Dayton, Ore., May 13, 1860, and her family history is given in the sketch of his life given elsewhere. Ann Ale- tha became the wife of Rev. C. G. Belknap in Oregon. They reared four children, of whom three are yet living: Charles, Mary and Rosa. Mrs. Belknap died in May. 1880, in California, where she had lived since 1869. Her husband, however, still survives. Emily Y., the other member of the family of Mr. York, is a graduate of Willamette University of Oregon, being the first to pursue a full course in that institution. She afterward engaged in teaching in the public schools for one winter and for several years was a teacher in the "Old Portland Academy." She became the wife of A. W. Moore, of Olympia, Wash., who died within a few years, and she is now living with her daughter, Mrs. Mary E. Houck, in Roseburg, Ore.


In 1842 Mr. York, of this review, was called upon to mourn the loss of his wife, who died in St. Clair county, Ill. He was at that time preaching in central Illinois, being connected with the Illinois Conference. He afterward wedded Nancy S. Barrett, a daughter of Judge Barrett, of Farmington, Mo. ; she died of cholera in 1844, only ten months after their marriage. For his third wife he chose Mrs. Parmelia Ann Quinton. nee Bush. On account of the ill health of his wife he started for the northwest in 1852, hoping that she would be benefited by change of climate. This hope was realized, for her health soon im- proved and she lived until December 17, 1880, when she passed away in Corvallis at the age of sixty-nine years.


Mr. York was the owner of three farms in Illi- nois, which he had purchased at different places where he was engaged in his ministerial labors. He started overland with ox teams and he also had a fine stock of horses and cattle. On the. 15th of April. 1852, he left Carlisle, Ill., and arrived in Oregon in October of that year. While on the trip the Indians stole his stock. and cholera broke out among the members of the party, one of the number dying of that disease. There were eighteen young ladies and seventeen young men in the train of twenty wagons and the party was therefore a lively one and the trip enjoyable. When the family arrived in Oregon Mr. York had only ox teams to haul his car- riage and wagons. Making his way to Cor- vallis he there located a claim of three hundre ! and twenty acres, npon which he established his


275


PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.


home, giving his attention to its cultivation and improvement. He never discontinued his labors in the ministry, however, but preached for one year at Corvallis, for two years at Albany, for one year in the Mohawk valley and for one year as presiding elder of the Umpqua district. Throughout his entire life he preached the gos- pel and was stationed for a time at Dayton, Ore., and later at Rock Creek, near Oregon City. Throughout his residence in this state he re- mained in the Willamette valley, save for the period of two years spent in the Umpqua valley. He covered his circuit on horseback, being one of the pioneer preachers of the northwest. He was on that circuit when the first church was built at Corvallis and up to the time of his death he never faltered in his efforts to establish Chris- tianity upon a firm basis in this state.


In early life Mr. York was a strong Whig, and afterward became a stalwart Democrat, while at the time of the Civil war he gave a stanch sup- port to the Union cause. He was a man of large form, strong and rugged, and proved a very use- ful citizen of the Sunset state from pioneer times down to his death. Selling his farm he removed to Corvallis, where he lived for about twenty- five years, spending his last few years in retire- ment. There is no measurement by which we can determine the strength, extent and scope of his labors, but it is well known that his influence was a powerful factor for good in the early days of Oregon.


WILLIAM MASTERS. They who planted civilization in the northwest, who braved the dan- gers and trials of pioneer life, are fast passing away. On the roll of the honored dead appears the name of William Masters, who was a pioneer of Oregon of 1852. He was born in Lancaster, Pa., May 17, 1819. a son of Christopher Masters, who was born in Chester county, Pa., March 17, 1778, and died in Fairfield, Ind., November 6, 1859, and Mary (Kerling) Masters, who was born November 14. 1781, and died August 10, 1838. In the family were fourteen children, of whom William was twelfth in order of birth. On the home farm he was reared and in the district schools he obtained his early education, which was supplemented by a course of study in a college in Indianapolis, where he was a schoolmate of Gen- eral Burnside. He went to Indiana when nine- teen years of age. In early life he served an ap- prenticeship as cabinetmaker there, later he re- moved to Fairfield, Franklin county, Ind., where he followed his trade.


It was during his residence in that place that William Masters was united in marriage to Miss Mary Garrison. They became the parents of four children during their residence in the cast. In


1852 they started with their family on the long journey across the plains to Oregon. It was with the hope of more rapidly acquiring a fortune and of establishing a good home for his family that Mr. Masters came to the Sunset state. After traveling for long weary months, just as the train crossed the Sandy river, Mrs. Masters and two children died and are now buried in Lone Fir cemetery. The party arrived at their destination in September, 1852, having made the journey with ox teams. Mr. Masters located in Portland, where he opened a wagon shop in partnership with Mr. Jacobs, continuing in that business at the corner of Second and Morrison streets until 1859, when he sold out. He then became a part- ner in an enterprise for the packing and shipping of apples to California and in this was very suc- cessful for a number of years. He then opened a general mercantile establishment. forming a co- partnership with F. Harbaugh and W. W. Baker, being thus engaged until 1863, when he went to the Caribou mines, driving a band of cattle. When the Indians became hostile and waged war against the settlers in 1855-56, he volunteered for service when recruits were called for, going to the Cascades, where the Indians were committing depredations, with a company of volunteers from Portland.


On the 13th of May, 1860, Mr. Masters was married in Dayton, Ore., to Martha Cordelia York, and with his wife he came to Portland to live. By his first marriage he had four children : Lewis L. and Mary, who died at the same time the mother passed away ; S. LaFayette, who was born in 1848 and is now a resident of Tenino. Wash .; and J. Wilbur, who was born in the year 1850 and died in January, 1891. He was a mer- chant of North Yakima and at his death left four sons and a daughter. LaFayette is a farmer and is married and has nine living children. By his second marriage Mr. Masters became the father of three children, of whom one died in infancy. William York, born April 1, 1862, is mentioned later in this connection. Francis K., the other child, was born March 20, 1872. Both were born in Portland. Francis, after graduating from the public schools in Portland, attended the State University at Eugene for one year, was a student in the law school at Portland and was admitted to the bar and is now engaged in the ahstraet business.


William Masters was ever a stanch advocate of Republican principles and an active worker in this party, doing everything in his power to pro- mote its growth and insure its success. He was honored with several public offices and positions of trust : from 1872 until 1874 he served as treas- urer of Multnomah county. No one was ever in doubt as to the position he occupied in regard to public affairs, for he was fearless and outspoken


276


PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.


in defense of his honest convictions. In his busi- ness affairs he prospered. He lived in Yakima for eight years, where he was interested in farm- ing and stock-raising, and in Portland he engaged in speculating in land, buying, improving and then selling property. He became well-to-do, and was widely known as a successful business man. During the last thirteen years of his life he lived retired from active business cares. He started out in life, however, empty-handed and the suc- cess which he achieved was due to his own well (lirected efforts. He made a great deal of money, bnt seven times suffered loss by fire. After con- ing to Portland he purchased a home, his place covering a quarter of a block at the corner of Fourth and Morrison streets. He also lived on Jefferson street at the corner of Fourth street for three years and for fourteen years at the corner of Jackson and Sixth streets, there spending his last days, his death occurring in that home on the 5th of October, 1897. In the Methodist Episcopal Church he was a very active and helpful member. He belonged to the Taylor Street Methodist Church, was a leader in its work and was liberal in his contributions to its support. He also gave generously to other worthy causes. At the time of his death he held the oldest membership in the First Methodist Church here. He gave an unfal- tering allegiance to the temperance cause and was found as a champion of all measures pertaining to the moral progress of the community.


William York Masters, to whom we are in- debted for the history of his honored father, pur- sued his early education in the "Old Portland Academy," and afterward in the Agricultural College at Corvallis, where he pursued a full course and was graduated with the degree of A. M. in the class of 1882. He then read law with the firm of Killin & Moreland, and was ad- mitted to the bar in 1884. He then formed a co- partnership with Judge J. C. Moreland, which was maintained for some time, and since the dis- solution of the partnership Mr. Masters has been alone in practice. He was a stockholder and vice- president of the Pacific Coast Abstract Company, which in 1901 was re-organized under the name of the Pacific Coast Abstract Guaranty & Trust Company, with Mr. Masters as its vice-president and attorney. The office of the company is now located in the Failing building. He also enjoys a lucrative general law practice, is a capable at- torney, having broad and comprehensive knowl- edge of the science of jurisprudence, which he applies with accuracy and correctness to the points in litigation.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.