LIVING HISTORY PERFORMANCE: WILLIAM ROCKFELLOW, WAGONMASTER AND PROSPECTOR
In 1853, William Hurst Rockfellow was the wagon master of a wagon train headed to southern Oregon near the present day city of Talent. He came north during the Gold Rush days in eastern Walla Walla County and operated the Rockfellow & Co. Pony Express, which ran between Walla Walla and the Boise Gold Basin in Idaho. While working as a prospector in Oregon, he, his brother Albert, and three other Jackson County, Oregon friends discovered the famous Rockfellow ledge of gold, now known as the Virtue Mine. He and his partners set up their stamp mill to extract the ore on Powder River, and eventually Baker City grew up around it. Meanwhile, William’s wife operated a boarding house in Walla Walla. One of his daughters, Alice, married Harvey Meacham, who owned the Meacham toll road that ran between Idaho and Oregon and a hotel near the summit of the Blue Mountains between La Grande and Pendleton, Oregon. William Rockfellow is portrayed by his great-grandson, Dick Phillips.
Date and Time
Sunday Sep 30, 2018
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM PDT
September 30 at 2 pm
Location
Fort Walla Walla Museum 755 Myra Road Walla Walla, WA 99362
Fees/Admission
$8 general/$7 seniors & students/$3 kids 6-12
Website
Contact Information
5095257703
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