Jf January. THE AVE ST SHORE. 71 THE LAND OF RED APPLES AND RAIN, l'Y 0. P. MASON. There's a land lying q the Northwest That is lashed by the waves of the sea, Where the evening sun sinking to rest. With gold tinges mountain ami lea. With a climate exceedingly mild, Aud alternate rich vallt-y and plain, Dense foresU, gigantic ami wild, Ti the land ot "red apples and ruin." Unknown in this land is the dearth Thut oft visits "the fair golden State," Here the soil yields the products of earth bv Buunuaw, i couiu not relate. Every year thure's an over supply, And never short cropping of grain, For here it is never too diy, In the land of "r.ed apples and rain." Ah I grand is the Yo-sem-i-te And the mountain of Cnlormln, but if picturostiue beauty you'd see, Up the "grand old Columbia go." Magnificent landscapes so grand, VO attempt a description were vain, Of the towering crags as they stand In the laud of "red apples and rain." Our mountains are covcrei with snow, Ml. Horn), Saint Helens, Rainier, But the vales are all Edens, you know, Where flowers keep blooming all year. In the greenwood the pretty birds sing So wild aud so sweet a refrain, It appears like perpetual spring In the laud of "red apples and rain." To those who, desiring to come To a country so favored and blessed, And secure lor themselves a good home In this lovely land of the West. Droad acres of arable laud Lie vacant within our domain, Awaiting the husbandman's hand, In the laud of "red apples aud rain," Oh, beautiful land of the West ! Dear Oregon, I'm wedded to thee; I love your dense forests the best, I love your grand mountain and lea. Aud if ever from theo I shall roam, No matter for pleasure or gain, May I live to return to my home In the land of "red apples and rain." "For Hie Information of our Ivisl.-ni rMdsrt. we win iute that union is generally ipokeu ot us "The Land of lied Apples mid Haiti." HISTORICAL ADVENTURES ON' THE PACIFIC COAST." INCIUKXISOI VMKklCAN I K AUK AM l HSIOVKRV. As we have now come to n time and events intimately connected with the history of Oregon, it will be proper to retrace our steps a few years in order to make plain the beginning of Amer ican history on the Northwest coast. After the United States had achieved Independence, they began to think of commerce on the high seas. At first they resumed their whale and seal fish eries in the southern ocean, and ex tending their ventures, began to trade with the Califomiaus for hide and tal low; and Anally, to make voyages di rect to China. Hut owing to the state of manufactures in America, they had few goods which they could exchange in China for the teas, silks, and other merchandise of that country; neither had they specie enough to export for these articles. Their captains' had managed, by picking up sandal-wood, abalono shells, cabinet-woods, and sim ilar articles, among the Califomians and islanders, to make up occasional cargoes to exchange for the much-desired tea, without which, in spite of the affair of Boston harbor, the New Kng lander was not quite happy. just at this crisis in the commercial affiles of the infant States, the value of the fur trade in the Pacific became known, chiefly through the published accounts of Cook's last voyage. Here was a kind of exchange just suited to the exigencies of the case. Furs in Canton were better than gold; and there was no valid reason why Boston men should Hot obtain their share of the trade in them. A company was formed for the purpose of carrying on this trade between the Northwest coasl and China. It consisted of half a dozen merchants of Boston, who fitted out two vessels the same wc met at Nootka the ship Columbia, of 2:0 tons, and the slop Washington, of 00 tons burden; laden with blankets, Wads, 1.-!. : U , L..mU amitl . 11 . 1 mirrors, cheap ornaments, molasses anl V , 1, . t ,1. .1 rum. In addition in these articles ol CopTritht Id UTT, by I, of i ,. nrTvrd. smufl. M rlftil trade, they carried out, for distribution at the placet visited, a quantity of the copper coins recently issued by the State of Massachusetts and also med als of copper which were struck ex pressly for the purpose, having on one I side the representation of a vessel under I full sail, with the names of COLUMBIA and Washington around the margin, and the name of their commander, J. Kbndrick; on the reverse were the words, ' Fitted at Boston, N. America, for the Pacific Ocean, by J. Barrell, S. Brown, C. Bul pinch, J. Darby, C. Hatch, J. M. Pintard. 1787." Thus fitted out, the two vessels sailed from Boston on the 30th of September, 17S7: the Co lumbia in command of Captain John Kcndrlck, and the Washing ton con manded by Captain John Gray, We have already followed the Co htmbia from where she doubled the Horn to Nootka Sound. After the vessels were separated, the Washing' ton, though proceeding more slowly, met with no accident, and arrived off the Northwest coast in latitude 46 de grees, where, seeing an opening which looked like the mouth of a river, she at tempted to enter; but Capt, Gray found the " reflux so strong as to prevent his entering, for nine days." lie was also attacked by the Indians while K ing off the mouth of the river, one of his men killed and the mate wounded. Truise circumstances forced Capt. Gray to abandon the attempt to follow up his discovery at that time, ami he proceeded to Nootka, arriving there a few days before the Columbia. On appearing oil" the harbor, the Washington was piloted in by a tug boat belonging to the ship Ww, John Meares, master, trading from the Northwest coast to Macao, in China. Meares was looking for an lnglish vessel, and mistook the Boston trader for that one, An exchange of civilities having thus been begun between the so late antagonistic nations, was kept up between Mr. Meares, the English agent of a company trading under the Portuguese Hag, and the American captains. The plans of both nations, also, thus became known to each other. As we are taking note of discoveries and discoverers, it will be not out of place here to make mention of the re discovery of the Straits of Fuca by the captain of the Imperial tattle, from Ostendj he who had a boat's crew murdered by the Indians at Destruction Island. Capt. Berkley, while crusing along the coast in 1 7S7, had entered the Strait of Fuca, aud recognizing to be that described by the Greek pilot, reported the finding of it, and its lati tude and longitude, to Mr, Meares, at Canton, just before that gentleman sailed for Nootka, where the Amcri can captains found him, and to whom he said nothing about Berkley sdis coverv; if he mentioned the straits at all, he said he had found the 'passage himself: and complicated 1 this diplomatic untruth iatte s between England 1 America afterwards, The vessels lying at Nootka in the autumn of 1788 were the fine, Ipmgtma and Sorthuest Amtiica, anil the tWO American vessels, Columbia and Hash- charts. He called the opening Dcccp ington. The Xorthvtst America was tion Hay, and the northern headland built at Nootka being the first vessel j Cape disappointment, which name it built on the Northwest coast, except still retains, though it is known of the small affair constructed bv Behr- j cially to the t'nilcd States government ing's men of the fragments of his fine as Cape Hancock. In his account of ship which went ashore at Bchiing's his observations, Mr. Mcnres remarks hie, as already related. that " We can assert with safety that Before winter came on the h'tlite no such river as that of the St. Roc ex sailed for China, and the Iphigtnia and ists.as laid down in the Spanish charts.'1 Xrthuest Amenta for the Sandwich Capt. Gray, of the Washington, had Mauds. Mr. Meares had gone to Macao with the cargo of furs colIcUcd during me ear, promising 10 return in the spring, to meet the other vessels at Nootka. In the meantime, how ever, the Portuguese merchant failed whose agent he was credited with be ing, and he remained in China in the capacity of manager of the new " King George's Sound Company," to which belonged the Argonaut and Princess Royaiy whose history at Nootka has al ready been given, as well as that of the tphig-enia and Xortlra ui America. When the Columbia and Washington were left alone in the Sound, their officers began to make themselves comfortable for the winter, and to cul tivate the acquaintance of the natives and their chieftains. The chief of the Nootkas was a line, stalwart savage, called Maquinna, possessing consider able barbarian wealth, aud the usual characteristics of a successful native politician cunning, courage and feroc ity, not Unmixed with some more agree able qualities. But, well as King Ma qulnna could reign among his ow n people, he was as a child in the bands of his new acquaintances, the pale faces. Had it been possible for him to know that of all his v isitors who gave hint and his subjects blankets, knives, beads, tobacco, anil, occasionally, rum, not one but hud designs upon his territory and nil the products thereof, he must then md there have renounced all acquaint- ance with his perfidious flatterer have gone without blankets aud to bacco to the end of his davs. Mr. Meares, the Englishman, obtained per mission tii construct a hut on shore for the convenience of his men while building a vessel, and consequently the territory was Knglish. Capt. Gray received the same generous permission in time, and the country was as much American as it was Knglish. Com mander Martinez kneiv the country to I"-- Spanish, iuid built a fort to drive the rest away ; and King Maquinna, in happy obliviousness of the feuds be tween his white friends, sold privileges Indiscriminately, and took them back in the same innocent disregard of con sequences. Mr. Meares, ou arriving in the Sound from China, proceeded down the coast to where Capt. Berkley had assured him he would find the Strait of Fuca. Fortunately for his ambition, the strait was her, and when he spoke about it afterwards he could say he discovered it, as he did, where he was told to look for it. But one real discovery Mr. Meares did make, and that was of Shoalwatef Bay, which he named ; and named also the northern promontory at the entrance, Cape Shoal water, and the point on the south side of the entrance, Low Point now called Lead Ccltcr Point. Mr, Meares then kept on down the coast until he saw the bay formed by the mouth of the Columbia, which he very Well described as seen from the deck of his ship; but was unable to enter it on account of the "easterly swell rolling on the coast;" and being alarmed at the rapid shoaling of the water, stood out to sea again, without knowing that he had actually looked upon the waters of the great Ban I Roqtte of the half imaginary Spanish ! sharper eves and Meares would have 1 , r 1. . 1 been glad a few years later to take Nil . 1 t uj 1 vm,m um mmmiwm , auu itm evi uumy nau . come near enough to an actual discov- ery long desired to make it extremely vexatious to have barely failed. Before Mr. Meares finally concluded his efforts at discovery, he proceeded as far south as the Cape Falcon of the Spanish navigators which he called Cape Lookout, a name it still retains. From this point he turned back, and returned to Nootka, where our Amer ican captain found him, ami where be cultivated the friendship of Maquinna, and of his cousin-royal, Mieanish, chief of all the country about Nittinat and Clyoquot Bays, near the enhance to thfl Strait of Fuca, and of I.ataochc, chief of the country bordering on t he strait itself. From these native king, if we may believe his statement and when the native character is taken into consideration, no reason appears why we should not be obtained "the promise of a free and exclusive trade willi the natives of the district, as aho permission to build any store-In uses or other edifices which he might judge necessary," As the native chiefs had never yet beheld the strong defensive structures of white men, such permis sion was probably easily obtained. Such was the history of the Knglish occupation of Nootka and other points on the Northwest coast hen the American ships appeared, in the fall of 1 788, anil the Spanish ships in the spring following, The Ch.bia and Washington had wintered in the Sound, trading with the natives, and the Kng- llsh-Portuguese vessels at the Sandwich Islands. The latter bad returned in the spring the l'litgema hi distress, and the Korthwtst America able to go upon a cruise up the coast for fins, on which errand she was absent when the Princess arrived. The American sloop Washington was also absent on a similar errand, with Capt. Gray in command; and the events recorded in the alfair between Martinez and the English captains and supercargoes were wit nessed elnetly hy t apt. Keminck and Mr. Ingraham, one of the males. As elsewhere stated, after the seizure of the English vessels and sending of some of their officers ami crews with them to Mexico, the others were sent as passengers in the Columbia Ut Canton. En November, the Spanish commander was recalled to Mexico, whither lie took all Ins vessels, leaving his newly constructed fort at Nootka unoccupied. In the following spring his place at Nootka was filled by Cap!. Finncm Klisa, who was scut to complete the arrangements for a permanent estab lishment at that point. It was not until 1 795 that the governments of England ami Spain finally settled their diU'erences occasioned hv the seizure of the English vessels; and when they (liil so the terms of their agreement were kept secret, and the place in dispute equally abandoned by both nation, But to return to the American ves sels, whom both the disputants must have considered too Insignificant to create apprehension. When the Co lumbia left the Sound for China, she met the Washington jusl outside the harbor, returning f rom one of her short voyages up the coast; and the captains there held n conference which resulted in Capt. Gray being put in command of the Columbia, and Capt. Kendrick re maining with the Waihinghn, Capt. il ly, who seems to have had the proper qualifications for a discoverer, had just then come from exploring the Strait of Fuca, into which he had pen etrated fifty-five im'les, "in nn cast-south-east direction, and found the pas sage five leagues wide," which is its true width; while Meares' published account made it three times as wide, and of a much greater length than it really is. Gray had also explored the channel seppraling Queen ( hailottc'b