Alonzo Gesner
Alonzo Gesner | |
---|---|
Oregon State Senator | |
In office 1895–1898 | |
Preceded by | G. E. Hayes |
Succeeded by | L. L. Porter |
Constituency | Clackamas County Marion County |
Personal details | |
Born | March 2, 1842 Coles County, Illinois |
Died | March 6, 1912 Salem, Oregon | (aged 70)
Resting place | Salem Pioneer Cemetery 44°55′13″N 123°02′53″W / 44.920150°N 123.047933°W |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Rhoda E. Neal |
Alma mater | Willamette University |
Alonzo Gesner (March 2, 1842 – March 6, 1912) was an American land surveyor, Indian agent, and politician in the state of Oregon. A native of Illinois, he immigrated as a boy to the Oregon Country with his family where he became a deputy surveyor for the United States government. A Republican, he also was appointed as an Indian agent to the Warm Springs Reservation and later was a member of the Oregon State Senate.
Early life
[edit]Alonzo Gesner was born in Coles County, Illinois, to Reuben A. Gesner and his wife Mary V. Bailey on March 2, 1842.[1] His father was a native New Yorker who moved to Illinois in 1834 where he married Bailey of Kentucky.[1] The family took the Oregon Trail in 1845 to the unorganized Oregon Country and settled in the Willamette Valley.[1] Gesner's parents took up a land claim in the Champoeg District (now Marion County) southwest of the now city of Salem.[1] Once Oregon became a U.S. territory in 1848, Congress passed the Donation Land Claim Act in 1850, and the Gesners were able to secure their claim to their farm.[1] The younger Gesner was educated at Willamette University in Salem before a brief teaching career.[1] He taught in Independence in 1865 where he was the first teacher in a new school and the first teacher for that school district.[2]
Career
[edit]Gesner left teaching after a single year to pursue manual labor and spent a year chopping firewood to enable him to buy a 30-acre (120,000 m2) farm near his parents' property.[1] In 1872, he started working in the land surveying field, working for Jasper Wilkins, a deputy surveyor for the federal government.[1] The following year he went into the business himself, receiving a contract to survey land in the McKenzie River Valley in the southern portion of the Willamette Valley.[1] Gesner continued in the business until 1908, in the process surveying public lands primarily in western Oregon and some in what became the state of Washington.[1] Gesner married Rhoda E. Neal on October 14, 1875.[3] In 1882, he and Wilkins bought the Oregon Statesman newspaper, though Gesner sold-out his share eight months later.[3]
Public service
[edit]In 1872, when he started surveying land he was elected as Marion County's surveyor.[3] Gesner won election again and served from 1876 to 1878 as well.[3] On March 2, 1884, he became the Indian agent to the Warm Springs Indian Reservation in Central Oregon after accepting an appointment from U.S. President Chester A. Arthur.[1] The next year he left the position after 18 months as a new administration was in power in Washington, DC.[1] He was also a member of Oregon's militia for nine years, including nearly three years as a captain.[1]
Gesner was elected as the surveyor of the city of Salem in 1889 and served until 1891.[1][3] In 1894, he was elected to the Oregon State Senate as a Republican.[4] Serving a four-year term, he represented District 4 that included both Clackamas and Marion counties.[5] Gesner was in both the 1895 and 1897 sessions of the legislature, with the 1897 session fruitless as the Oregon House of Representatives failed to organize.[6]
Later years and family
[edit]Gesner had three children with his wife Rhoda; Leroy, Rhoda and Stella.[1] He was a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, the Masonic Order,[1] and the Sons of the American Revolution.[7] Both a brother and nephew also worked as surveyors.[1] Alonzo Gesner died in Salem on March 6, 1912, at the age of 70 and was buried at Salem Pioneer Cemetery.[8]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Glenn, William. “Alonzo Gesner”, Archived 2008-07-08 at the Wayback Machine The Oregon Surveyor, April 1990. Retrieved on January 12, 2009.
- ^ Central High School Band. Our History of Education: The Central School District Past and Present. Archived 2007-05-08 at the Wayback Machine Itemizer-Observer, January, 1973, p. 12.
- ^ a b c d e Daily Oregon Statesman, March 7, 1912, 1:6 & 4:5.
- ^ Republican League of Oregon. (1896). Republican League Register, A Record of the Republican Party in the State of Oregon. Portland: Register Pub. p. 214.
- ^ Oregon Legislators and Staff Guide: 1895 Regular Session (18th). Oregon State Archives. Retrieved on January 12, 2009.
- ^ Oregon Legislators and Staff Guide: 1897 Regular Session (19th). Oregon State Archives. Retrieved on January 12, 2009.
- ^ Hall, Henry. (1891) Year Book of the Societies Composed of Descendants of the Men of the Revolution, 1890. Republic Press, p. 237.
- ^ Alonzo Gesner. Salem Pioneer Cemetery. Retrieved on January 14, 2009.