NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Tuesday, June 21, 2022 Ezra Meeker Oregon Trail time capsule to be opened June 23 By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — Ezra Meeker, the famous pioneer who spent the later part of his life memorializing the Oregon Trail and reviving memories of it as storyteller, may have one more tale to share. People opening a time capsule Meeker left in La Grande in 1906 could discover a note or message from the frontiersman that he wanted people to see in the future. The time capsule is set to be opened at 110 Walnut St. at 1 p.m. on Thursday, June 23. The event will be at the site of a stone Oregon Trail marker Meeker dedicated on April 10, 1906, one which had interior space at its base for a time capsule. Little is known about what the time capsule may contain. “The only thing we know is that it may have the dedication speech the mayor of La Grande gave,” said Ronnie Allen, a La Grande local historian who has done extensive research on Meeker’s stone markers and is a member of the Oregon-Cali- fornia Trails Association. Allen has organized the time capsule opening event with major help Dale Counsell, of La Grande, a fellow local history aficionado. Coun- sell said the Oregon Trail has special meaning to him because a number of his relatives came to the Northwest on the Oregon Trail. Dick Mason/The Observer Stu Spence, left, the city of La Grande Parks and Recreation director, and Ronnie Allen, a local historian, exam- ine an Oregon Trail stone marker Friday, June 17, 2022, that Ezra Meeker put up in 1906 on Walnut Street in La Grande. Parks and recreation will help open a time capsule in the marker on June 23. efforts to preserve the overland route. The stone marker on Walnut Street may be the only one Meeker put up that had a time capsule. “It is the only marker that had a time capsule, according to his diaries,” Allen said. The time capsule will be opened with assistance from the La Grande Parks and Recreation Department, which will be using a backhoe for the work, according to Stu Spence, the department director. Once the contents of the time A time capsule of distinction The stone marker is among 35 Meeker set up along the Oregon Trail during the three journeys he made across the United States to promote capsule are removed they will be replaced by items Allen and Counsel have collected for a new time capsule. They will include an Oregon Trail brochure, a copy of the Overland Journal (a quarterly publication of the Oregon-Califor- nia Association) plus items that are or recently have been integral parts of our daily lives today including two face masks, a COVID-19 home test kit, an iPhone, a $2 bill and a quarter. Allen said he is not sure if all of these items will fit into the time capsule. Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY WEDNESDAY | Go to AccuWeather.com THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Once the new time capsule items are placed in the stoner marker, it will be reinstalled in the exact place it is now, Allen said. The marker is in the front yard of the home of Jack and Jennifer Boyd. “I am so excited,” Jennifer Boyd said of her anticipation of the time capsule opening. Attracting Oregon Trail fans The stone marker is easy to miss but many Oregon Trail fans have BMW riders roll into John Day By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle Partly sunny and beautiful Mostly sunny and pleasant 83° 58° 86° 56° Sunny and pleasant Abundant sunshine and pleasant Nice with plenty of sunshine PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 76° 52° 85° 60° 78° 55° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 87° 60° 91° 58° 81° 54° 90° 62° 85° 54° OREGON FORECAST ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 69/57 73/52 85/55 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 80/60 Lewiston 78/56 88/61 Astoria 66/56 Pullman Yakima 85/57 75/56 81/58 Portland Hermiston 80/59 The Dalles 87/60 Salem Corvallis 80/55 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 77/52 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 79/56 81/54 80/48 Ontario 84/53 Caldwell Burns 75° 54° 83° 54° 101° (1958) 42° (2012) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 79/55 0.00" 1.66" 0.52" 7.45" 2.46" 4.90" WINDS (in mph) 82/51 80/45 0.00" 2.16" 0.90" 10.82" 4.29" 7.74" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 73/48 80/57 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 83/58 87/63 73° 56° 80° 53° 103° (1900) 38° (1893) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 74/56 Aberdeen 75/55 82/59 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 73/57 Today Medford 89/57 Wed. SW 4-8 NW 4-8 Boardman Pendleton WSW 8-16 W 7-14 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 83/46 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today New 5:06 a.m. 8:48 p.m. 1:24 a.m. 1:36 p.m. First Full JOHN DAY — The Chief Joseph Rally returned to the Grant County Fairgrounds this year following a two-year absence due to the pandemic. Camping tents and a pleth- ora of BMW motorcycles of all types and ages once again filled the grassy area beside Trowbridge Pavilion over the course of the three-day event. The rally started Thursday, June 16, and concluded the night of Saturday, June 18, with riders leaving town the following day. The event was sponsored by BMW Riders of Oregon and drew riders from all over the Western United States and parts of Canada. Guided rides, riding instruction, speakers, seminars and nightly motor- cycle movies were some of the activities the rallygoers participated in over the course of the event. BMW Riders of Oregon rally chair Alice LeBarron said the group is passion- ate about BMW bikes, but owning one isn’t necessary Last High 106° in Comanche, Texas Low 21° in Bodie State Park, Calif. June 28 July 6 July 13 July 20 NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY to join their club. “Our club and this rally are really open to having other brands of bikes,” she said. “It’s people who are of the same mindset, basically.” LeBarron said she thinks a lot of people have moved to BMW motorcycles over the years due to the number of “WE’LL KEEP COMING HERE. THERE IS SUCH GREAT RIDING HERE, AND THE LOCATION JUST WORKS FOR US.” — Alice LeBarron, BMW Riders of Oregon rally chair different models the company makes that cater to different riding styles and preferences. LeBarron said she’s been coming to the rally in John Day since 2012 and that she even came over the two years that the rally was canceled due to the pandemic: “The two years that we didn’t have our rally ... I came here with a few friends and we camped out and had an unrally.” While LeBarron said there isn’t much interaction between the rally and the community, she added that anybody who is curious about riding or anything concern- ing BMW Riders of Oregon always is welcome to attend the rally and have their ques- tions answered. LeBarron said there were 277 people registered to attend the rally but that the overall number of attendees was a “bit lower than normal” due to the national BMW rally in Springfield, Missouri, being held over the same weekend as Chief Joseph. She added Grant County is a place she looks forward to visiting every year and that she enjoys working with Mindy Winegar and her staff at the fairgrounds. “We’ll keep coming here,” LeBarron said. “There is such great riding here, and the location just works for us.” IN BRIEF NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) no trouble finding it after reading about it in books and online. Jenni- fer Boyd said that in the summer five or six people a week come to her house asking about the marker. The Oregon Trail was close to Meeker’s heart because he had taken the route west from Iowa in 1852 when he was a young man. He later settled in what is now Puyallup, Washington, and was the town’s first mayor. In the 1880s, he made and lost a fortune growing and marketing hops. Meeker then went to Alaska to look for gold, returned and exper- imented with dehydrated foods. He took up writing, producing at least five books before he died. Meeker made his 1906 stop in La Grande while on an eastbound trip along the Oregon Trail in an ox-drawn wagon. He made a second trip across the trail by wagon, and still later retraced portions of it in an automobile. At 94, he made the trip by airplane. He flew over the trail in a week. His 1852 journey took seven months. Meeker died in December 1928, at the age of 97. Boyd said a story from a 1906 edition of The Observer indicates that about 600 people attended the dedication ceremony for the stone marker on what is now Walnut Street. She hopes that a crowd at least that big will be present for the June 23 time capsule opening. “Ezra Meeker would be so thrilled to know that part of the history he kept alive still excites people,” she said. COVID-19 levels ‘low’ or ‘medium’ in Eastern Oregon LA GRANDE — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention monitors commu- nity levels of COVID-19 to help communities decide what prevention steps to take based on the latest data. Levels can be low, medium or high and are determined by looking at hospi- tal beds being used, hospital admissions and the total number of new COVID-19 cases in an area. The CDC listed the following levels for Eastern Oregon: • Morrow County: low. Umatilla County: low. Union County: medium. Baker County: medium. Wallowa County: medium. Malheur County: medium. The CDC recommends staying up to date with COVID-19 vaccines. Those who have symptoms should get tested. For communities with medium levels, additional precautions are issued for those at high risk for severe illness, including talking to a health care provider about the need to wear a mask. — EO Media Group • • • • • CORRECTIONS: The East Oregonian works hard to be accurate and sincerely regrets any errors. If you notice a mistake in the paper, please call 541-966-0818. Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. 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