BAKER COUNTY HISTORY TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 2020 MAP 80.00 Set Stone … for corner to secs 28 29 32 & 33 on top of hill. (The crew is on top of the hill east of Highway 7 at the north end of Bowen Valley. +600 in margin of the fi eld note indicates the height of the hill.) Land Steep and Stony. Good Bunch Grass. Continued from Page 3A After fi eld notes for all 36 sections were written, the surveyors, who have made contact with some of the occupants of the township, learned that the number of settlers in the township was about 20. In the following sections all text is quoted from the fi eld notes without the use of quotation marks. I use three periods … (ellipsis) when text is omitted or is unreadable. All text in ( ) parentheses are my comments. Occasionally I add punctuation for clarity. The fi rst fi eld note begins at the south boundary of the township. North between Secs 32 & 33 Ascend hill (On May 16, 1864, the crew is at the south boundary of the Baker City Township starting to survey north from the bottom of the township. This section line runs right through the BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A Locations of current city streets. middle of future Baker City. line.) Front Street, now known as 40.00 Set Stone…for ¼ Sec Main Street, is on this section corner. North between Secs 28 & 29 Descend hill 35.00 Foot of hill. Powder River 70 lks wide runs North 10° E. -500. (2,310 feet from beginning of the section line. Powder River is 46.2 feet wide running a little east of due north.) 40.00 (2,640 feet) Set Stone for ¼ Sec corner. (This is at the half-mile mark.) 40.40 (2,666.4 feet) Auburn Road bears NE & SW. (The crew crosses Auburn Road, which is headed southwest toward Auburn, the county seat.) 50.75 (3,349.5 feet) Auburn Road bears NW & SE. (The crew again crosses Auburn Road.) 80.00 (5,280 feet = 1 mile) Set post for corner to secs 20, 21, 28 & 29…. Land hilly on 1st half mile and North ½ Mile Level. Soil 1st rate (The soil is rated 1st, 2nd, or 3rd rate for agricultural purposes. The crew is now slightly north of what would be the intersec- tion of Colorado Street and David Eccles Road in South Baker.) East on a random line between Sec. 21 & 28 (The crew is surveying from the intersection of Colorado and Eccles streets one mile east, which is a little east of I-84.) 40.00 Set temporary ¼ Sec corner. 80.20 Intersect N & S Line at corner to secs. 21, 22, 27 & 28 from which corner I run West on a true Line between Secs 21 & 28. Descend hill. (A notation indicated that the elevation drop is 200 feet. The crew is now headed back along the same section line.) 39.90 (2633 feet) Road bears NW & SE. (This is the road from Baker City to Durkee. It is not labeled on the map.) 41.50 (2739 feet) Brook 6 lks wide runs NW. (Sutton Creek is 3.96 feet wide. From here Sutton Creek is headed to its confl uence with Powder River about three-quarters of a mile to the northwest.) 70.50 (4653 feet) Powder River 70 lks wide runs N. (Powder River is 46.53 feet wide and running north.) 80.20 The corner to secs 20, 21, 28 & 29. Land hilly. Soil 2nd rate. In Part 2 of this series (in the Thursday, April 23, issue), we’ll join the Thompson and Chaplin crew as they survey right up the middle of an area of some sagebrush and dusty roads that became Baker City. Land survey system dates to act of Congress in 1785 By Gary Dielman In Oregon and Washington, land ownership is described in terms of where a given piece of land is located within a “Township.” The township is the basic unit of a system that goes back well over two centuries, when the Continental Congress passed the “Land Ordi- nance of 1785.” The ordinance cre- ated the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) for the purpose of describing precisely where land is located. PLSS is still used today, but now it is administered by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM). An excellent history about describing the location of land in the U.S. may be read and/or downloaded at the BLM website below. It may be more than you ever wanted to know, but I think it makes fascinating reading. https://www.blm.gov/sites/blm.gov/ fi les/histrect.pdf The basic PLSS units are six-mile- square “townships.” Each township is divided into 36 sections, each cov- ering one square-mile. The Govern- ment Land Offi ce contracted with surveyors to survey every one of the 36 sections of a township. A proper- ty’s legal description was, and still is, in relation to where the property is located within a given township. In 1864 the Oregon Surveyor General’s The land survey system is based on the township — an area divided into 36 sections, each covering one square-mile. The chart above shows the numbering system for sections in each township. Submitted photo This marker in west Portland was the starting point for land surveys in Oregon and Washington. offi ce was in Eugene City, Oregon, with a satellite offi ce in La Grande. In Oregon and Washington, the starting point of the PLSS system is in west Portland, where the Willamette Meridian (WM) and a Baseline were established in 1851. The WM runs north/south from the Canadian border to the California border. The line runs, for example, 13 miles east of Salem and 17 miles east of Eugene. The east-west Baseline (45° 31’ 11”) runs from the Oregon Coast to the Idaho state line. In Portland, Stark Street, for example, runs down the Baseline. In Eastern Oregon the Baseline runs, for example, east and west three miles south of Elgin. All township locations in Oregon and Washington are in reference to how far they are from the Willamette Meridian and the Baseline. Baker City is located in Township 9 South, Range 40 East, abbreviated T9S R40E WM. In other words, it is the 40th township east of the Wil- lamette Meridian and the 9th town- ship south of the Baseline. Since townships are six-miles square, the Baker City township is 240 miles east of the WM and 54 miles south of the Baseline. Story Miller’s coronavirus chronicle Editor’s Note: This is the fourth installment of the diary that Story Miller, who grew up in Richland, wrote from her home in Italy, where she has lived since 2012. The fi rst installment was in the Herald’s April 9 issue, the second was published April 11 and the third on April 18. All are available at www.bakercity- herald.com Despite being here for eight years, there is still a cultural gap, both in language and working styles and my strong American personality and upbringing, where women did what Italians would consider “men’s work,” doesn’t mesh well with an old- school Italian mentality. Nope, it’s best that I continue with my garden, get through the loads of things I’ve neglected in the house, and intro- duce new things about the world with my daughter, Lamia. For her, there’s beauty in being just under 3 in this moment. Mommy is home all the time now. Everybody is at my disposal, ice pops are plentiful, and I can play outside all the time. As a family, we have also had moments of healing. My daughter learned how to make pasta with her Italian Nonna (grandmother). Mu- sic has been a very important factor in both my husband’s and my lives and we now have time to share that with our daughter as she strums the guitar with Daddy while I either play the harmonica or trumpet. Yes- terday we washed my car by hand and memories fl ooded my mind with how I used to do this with my father and brother on hot summer days, the joy of a sudden water fi ght, and the satisfaction of a job well done. Could it be that COVID-19 could actually help reawaken the innate human need to create and express oneself through art, and music? Could it reawaken skills and activi- ties that have been at the brink of extinction in the wake of this digital era? Because I’m a teacher, many families have asked me what to do about their child’s education. I see many schools and teachers panick- ing about reaching the bar, main- taining reading levels, keeping up with mathematics, etc. I, too, feel the anxiety of making sure my students reach their grade-level objectives but I have also noticed that creativity and practical skills have diminished as more and more kids channel that creativity into digital devices, mostly due to the grueling work schedule and extracurricular activity pace that most families face. What can one do, now that organized sport practice has been canceled? I have to smile because most ranching families simply continue working and the kids work right alongside them. In town and in the cities, the scenario is different, especially with both parents having essential jobs and schools can no longer be taken for granted as free “child care” for 8 hours a day. As a community, we cannot be blind to this fact and so even through social distancing, if help can be provided, these are the families that need everyone’s help. Regarding activities and practi- cal skills that foster common sense, never has it been a better time. In the past 10 years, I can say that I’ve been repeatedly shocked that most middle school kids cannot use sewing thread to tie knots to squares of plastic garbage bags to make parachutes (this has been in the USA and Italy) to study the physics concept of air resistance as a force. As I’ve observed the shift in school curriculums worldwide, it is shock- ing to me that most “laboratory” experiences are now based on the aforementioned activities because many children do not have the op- portunities to engage in these activi- ties with their families, largely due to the pace of organized activities and “keeping up with the Joneses.” Now is the time to reinforce prac- tical mathematical and scientifi c concepts with your child in measure- ment, proportions, geometry and arithmetic while cooking, woodwork- ing, building a tree house, quilting, building a kite, making parachutes, constructing little sailboats, sewing clothes for dolls or oneself, washing DON'T JUST KINDA TV. 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Hopper, Hopper w/Sling or Hopper 3 $5/mo. more. Upfront fees may apply based on credit qualification. skills and ideas simply because time has been provided to create and explore the world (while of course, in the safety of our homes). Having said that, I am off to color Easter eggs with my daugh- ter. Perhaps we’ll talk about how mixing primary colors can make new, secondary colors. Then I’m off to help my mother-in-law prepare our Easter specialty, baked rabbit (shhhh ... don’t tell the kids that we actually eat the Easter Bunny here)! I shall now close this part of my thoughts. I’m incredibly grateful for the warm welcome and questions coming in from Pine and Eagle val- leys. I encourage you to stay alert and please don’t be distracted by the media. Open your eyes to what has happened in other countries and know that we are just as frus- trated as the American people have started and will continue to be. None of this is truly ideal. None of this is fair. Nobody asked for a pan- demic and our businesses and fam- ily livelihoods are taking grave hits as a consequence. I ask you to stay strong and continue the hope that we have been building during these dark times. Perhaps the children of Pine and Eagle valleys can build on what the Italian children have cre- ated by hanging signs of hope Andrà Tutto Bene (It will all be OK). Buona Pasqua (Happy Easter) Imagine The Difference You Can Make DONATE YOUR CAR 1-844-533-9173 FREE TOWING TAX DEDUCTIBLE Help Prevent Blindness Get A Vision Screening Annually Ask About A FREE 3 Day Vacation Voucher To Over 20 Destinations!!!