Stephen T. Church 1829-1871 by Michael Robinson 32° KCCH

Stephen T. Church

1829-1871

Stephen T Church was born on June 1, 1829 in Hyde Park, Luzerne, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Samuel Church and Harriet nee Tripp. He was named for his mother’s father Stephen Tripp, who descended from William Tripp born in 1530. Samuel Church was born on July 26, 1784 in New Hampshire and was the son of Constant Church a Private in Captain Egdell’s Co. Col. John Berry’s Regt. who enlisted on June 30, 1775, and was said to have been at Bunker Hill. Constant Church was the great grandson of Col. Charles Church, born in Rhode Island on May 9, 1682, and he in turn was the son of Capt. Benjamin Church, who fought in the early Indian Wars, King Philip’s War and the first raids on the French at the Grand Pre on the Basin of Maine. Incorporating the Indian style of war he developed the tactics used by Robert Rogers, making him the father of the U.S. Army Rangers. Capt. Benjamin Church born in Massachusetts in 1639, was the son of Richard Church who arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts from Oxford, England in 1634. Richard Church married Elizabeth Warren, the daughter of Richard Warren one of the Freeman on the first voyage of the Mayflower.

Stephen was the 4th of 11 children born to Samuel and Harriet Church in the area around Scranton Pennsylvania. By 1850 Stephen was living with his parents and siblings in Rock, Wisconsin. Two years later Stephen Church headed west following several routes, arriving in southern Oregon in the Fall of 1852. He took up mining and operating Pack Trains in Josephine County, and appears to have crossed over into Northern California at Crescent City. By 1857 he moved north into Lane County where he met and married Elizabeth Catherine Lister. Her parents William Lister born 1805 in Yorkshire, England and her mother Catherine Murray born 1807 in Ireland came to America in about 1825. William came first followed by his wife and infant son Thomas. While in route a pregnant Catherine and her young son were shipwrecked on the Bermuda’s and shortly after she got ashore she gave birth to a second son. Her husband waiting in New York eventually gave them up for lost. They were reunited when a passing vessel picked up the survivors and took them to New York. They settled in Lexington, Kentucky where Elizabeth Catherine, our subject’s mother was born. In 1850 William Lister who was a Physician, was conducting a Manufacturing operation from his home in Woodford, Kentucky. In 1853 William sold his property and the family went by boat to St. Joseph, purchased wagons, oxen and supplies, and hired a driver and a cook for a trip across the plains. One of Catherine’s brothers, his family and their mother stayed behind and came later. The rest of the family headed for Oregon in the Spring of 1853. In 1857 Elizabeth Catherine Lister, then 16 years old married Stephen T. Church age 28, and the couple settled in Harrisburg. The 1860 census shows that Stephen was a Merchant with $600 in Real Estate and $3,000 in Personal Assets. The household contained Stephen his wife and two sons and Elizabeth’s father Dr. William Lister.

In 1862 Stephen T. Church in conjunction with Master Mason Asa McCully, a Charter member of Eugene City Lodge #11 and Thurston Lodge #28, and his brother David, an Entered Apprentice in Lodge #11 and several others started the “People’s Transportation Company”.

 “Stephen T. Church, one of the pioneer steamboat men of the west and the secretary of the People’s Transportation Company, which operated a line of steamboats on both the Willamette and Columbia rivers in opposition to the first transportation monopoly of the Pacific northwest, the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, and rendered a great service to the people in reducing the cost of transportation and opening up new regions to settlement. Mr. Church was one of the largest stockholders as well as the secretary of the company and his name is inseparably interwoven with the history of Portland and the upbuilding of this section of the state, for he was at all times a public spirited man and labored untiringly to promote the general welfare.”[1]

“The People’s Transportation Company operated steamboats on the Willamette River and its tributaries, the Yamhill and Tualatin rivers, in the State of Oregon from 1862 to 1871. For a brief time this company operated steamers on the Columbia River, and for about two months in 1864, the company operated a small steamer on the Clackamas River. The People’s Transportation Company, often called the P.T. Company, was organized in 1862 to compete with the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, commonly known as the O.S.N. Almost every steamboat man not associated with O.S.N. were either founders of the P.T. Company, or were afterwards associated with it. (The O.S.N. was founded by Capt. John C. Ainsworth, a Master Mason and the man responsible for bringing the Scottish Rite to Oregon.)

1 J C Ainsworth
John C. Ainsworth
Founder of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company
Master of Multnomah Lodge #1 1851
Founder of the Oregon Scottish Rite (33° S.G.I.G.)

The principals in the founding of the P.T. company were two brothers, both businessmen and farmers: Asa Alfred McCully (1818-1886) and David McCully (b.1814). Other officers were Stephen T. Church (1829-1871); Edwin N. Cook (or Cooke) (1810-1879), businessman and Oregon State Treasurer from 1862 to 1870; steamboat captain Ephraim W. Baughman; businessman and politician Stephen Coffin; and master shipbuilder John D. Biles… The McCullys, who were heavy shippers in the Willamette Valley, had invested $3,000 into a steamer, the James Clinton to assure access to river shipping free of monopoly control …The P.T. boats posed serious competition to the O.S.N. on the Columbia.” In 1864, Capt. Joseph Kellogg, who brought the 1st Charter to Multnomah Lodge, and thereby setting the Craft to work in Oregon, merged his operations into the company. “In December 1866, Asa Alfred McCully (1818-1886) was president of the company. Other officers, elected at the December 6, 1866 stockholders meeting in Salem, were Edwin N. Cooke, vice-president, Joseph Kelly, George A. Pease, and L.E. Pratt, directors, S.T. Church, secretary, and George Marshall, Chief Engineer. The company was reported, in December 1866, to have earned revenue of $19,000, even after paying expenses.”

[1] History of Oregon Illustrated Vol. 3 by Charles H. Carney Chicago-Portland 1922

 

Asa McCully
Asa Alfred McCully
Founder of the Peoples Transportation Company
Charter member of Eugene Lodge #11 and Thurston Lodge #28
76 Capt Joseph Kellogg
Capt. Joseph Kellogg
Steamboat Captain for the P.T. Company
Brought the 1st Masonic Charter to Oregon 1848
Charter Member of Oregon Scottish Rite 1870 (32° KCCH)
134 Pease Capt George Anson
Capt. George Pease
Director P.T. Company
Master of Multnomah Lodge #1 1863 and 1868
Charter Member of Oregon Scottish Rite

“In January 1871, the P.T. Company’s steamers carried down to Oregon City, from upriver points, 5000 tons of freight.[47] By this time, the P.T. Company was facing new competition on the Willamette River, from the Willamette Locks & Transportation Company, which engaged in serious efforts to construct a shipping canal around the Willamette Falls, but was also running, or preparing to run, steamers against the P.T. Company.

In September, 1871 the empire-building stage coach businessman Ben Holladay incorporated a company with the objective of acquiring the People’s Transportation Company… On September 6, 1871, the People’s Transportation Company, apprehensive that the pending completion of the locks at Oregon City would bring a new challenge to its near-ten year monopoly, voted to dissolve the corporation and sell all its assets to Holladay’s company, the Oregon and California Railroad, for $200,000… During its existence, the People’s Transportation Company had spent over one million dollars for steamboats, docks, and improvement.”[1]

The Death of Stephen T. Church

The 1870 census found Stephen Church and his family living in Salem between fellow P. T. Company officials E. N. Cooke, who was also the State Treasurer, and Asa McCully. All three had large holdings; Cooke had $17,000 in Real Estate and $29,000 personal; McCully, the Company President at the time $1,200 in Real Estate and $30,000 personal and Church with $4,200 in Real and $20,000 in personal assets. Early in 1871, while on a trip to California, Stephen T. Church died in Santa Cruz on March 28, 1871. His body was returned to Salem, with honors and the Steamships of the P.T. Company as shown below in the newspaper articles of the time.

DEATH of S.T.CHURCH–Last evening we received a telegram from C. P. Church at Oregon City, giving the sad intelligence that his brother, our much respected and beloved fellow townsman, Stephen T. Church, died yesterday at Santa Clara, Cal. We individually mourn in his death the loss of a much valued and intimate friend, one who will be often missed and always remembered, not by a few merely, but by many, for he was a true man, known among men for honorable dealing and for the possession of the best characteristics that pertain to man in the capacity of citizen, neighbor, friend. His remains, accompanied by Mrs. Church, will come to Oregon on the first steamer. The sympathies of all will be accorded to his family whose loss cannot be estimated because he was all that a husband and father could be. In his business relations Mr. Church was brought into contact with many persons and he won the respect of all. Successful in business and possessing ample means he was unaffected, unostentatious and sincere. His death leaves a vacancy in our midst that cannot easily be filled.

Daily Oregon Statesman 29 Mar 1871 3:2 In Memoriam–The remains of our deceased fellow townsman, S. T. Church, are no doubt on board of the steamer which left San Francisco yesterday. It will be a sad pleasure that is left to us to honor his memory by attending the poor clay in which has dwelt the soul of him we loved to its last burial. The Societies of which he was a member have taken suitable steps to have the remains received at Portland, and on their arrival here, and no doubt this community, in which he lived so long and was so much respected, will show more than common interest in attending his obsequies.

Daily Oregon Statesman 6 Apr 1871 3:2 FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS–Committees of the Lodges of Odd Fellows and Masons to which the late S. T. Church belonged, went below yesterday to be on hand to receive his remains upon the arrival of the steamer and escort them hither for burial. If the steamer arrives in time the funeral cortege will come up the river to-day on the Reliance, but probably it will not come until to-morrow. If the Reliance comes up to-day the Fannie Patton will come up tomorrow. The funeral services are set for Tuesday, and arrangements are made to have members of the Orders come down on that day, by the Reliance, from Corvallis, Albany and Independence, and also from Oregon City, and if the weather is pleasant many are expected from Silverton and Jefferson, to take part in the obsequies. After the services the up river passengers will return by the steamer Fannie Patton.

Daily Oregon Statesman 9 Apr 1871 3:1 FUNERAL SERVICES–The funeral service for the late S. T. Church will take place this afternoon at 2 o’clock. The steamer Idaho arrived at Portland last evening at a late hour. The boats of the P. T. Company were to be kept ready and start the earliest moment and it is expected that the Fannie Patton will arrive by 10 a.m. with the funeral escort. The place where the services will take place will be designated at an early hour this morning.

Daily Oregon Statesman 11 April 1871 3:1 BURIAL of S. T. CHURCH–Yesterday morning, as announced, the steamer Fannie Patton came up the river with the remains of S. T. Church, bringing, also many family friends, members of the P. T. Company and of the Masonic fraternity, of which the deceased was long a member. The flags of the steamer were at half mast, as were those of the steamers at the wharf here, and also of the Reliance, which soon after came down the river with many members of the Odd Fellows and Masons and other friends of the deceased. The remains were taken to the Congregational Church where the funeral exercises afterwards took place. Many persons had come in from inland towns, and at 2 o’clock the procession moved to the church from the Masonic Lodge, headed by about fifty of the Order of Odd Fellows, to which the deceased also belonged, but having been for many years a Mason, is which Order he stood high, the burial was conducted by them. About one hundred and thirty Masons marched to the church, which could not near hold all who were in attendance. The exercises were conducted by Rev. P. S. Knight whose address was very impressive. Afterwards the procession formed again with the addition of over twenty carriages, and proceeded to the Odd Fellow’s Rural Cemetery where the beautiful burial service was read at the grave by Grand Master, D. G. Clark, of Corvallis, assisted by Rev. T. M. Martin of Salem, as Chaplain. The members of the Orders then marched around the grave and each deposited therein a sprig of evergreen, the symbol of immortality, and with the grand salute, the Order to which he so long belonged, bade adieu to a well beloved companion and friend. Daily Oregon Statesman 12 April 1871 3:1, 2 [2]

Stephen T. Church was laid to rest in the Salem Pioneer Cemetery on April 11, 1871. A few years after his death, in 1874 Elizabeth Catharine Lister, the widow Church married Joseph John Murphy in Salem.

[1] Wikipedia People’s Transportation Company.

[2] Newspaper article found on the Salem Pioneer Cemetery Website

118 Joseph John Murphy
Judge Joseph John Murphy
Master of Champoeg Lodge #27 1862-64
Member of Oregon Scottish Rite (32° KCCH)
  1. J. Murphy was born in Cork County, Ireland on June 22, 1832 and came to Oregon in 1858. He was a Carpenter by trade, but became heavily engaged in Law and Justice. He was Justice of the Peace for Champoeg, Marion County Sheriff, and U.S. Postal Inspector. He studied the Law and was a Lawyer, Judge and State Legislator. He also served as Clerk of the Oregon Supreme Court from 1891 until his death on June 19, 1907.

He was Raised a Master Mason in Champoeg Lodge U.D. on March 1, 1860 and was a Charter member of Champoeg Lodge #27 on September 18, 1860. He was elected Master in 1862, 1863 and 1864 and Secretary in 1865 and 1866. He received the Scottish Rite 32nd° in Portland on October 30, 1894, and he was elected K.CC.H. on October 22, 1901[1]

Judge Murphy had one child by his 2nd wife, the widow Church, Chester Griffin Murphy, born in Salem on February 3, 1876. Catherine Lister Church Murphy died on November 26, 1933 in Salem.

Elizabeth, the youngest daughter of Stephen and Elizabeth Church was born on August 25, 1869 in Salem, Oregon. She was just two years old when her father died two months shy of his 42nd birthday. Judge Murphy was the only father she every really knew. On October 14, 1891 she married Louis Gaylord Clarke of Portland.

[1] Knight Commander of the Court of Honour

17 L Clarke
Louis G. Clarke
Master of Portland Lodge #55 in 1898
Member of Oregon Scottish Rite (33°, S.G.I.G. 1929-1941)

Louis Clarke was born on July 31, 1855 in Zanesville, Ohio. He came to Oregon in August of 1876. He was a Pharmacist with the wholesale and retail business of Woodward and Clark. Later he was Director of the Oregon Mutual Life Insurance company and owner of the Woodlark Building at Park and Alder. He was Raised a Master Mason in Portland Lodge #55 on June 3, 1880 and was elected Master of the Lodge in 1898. He received the Scottish Rite degrees in 1888, the K.C.C.H. on October 19, 1892 and was Coroneted 33° Honorary on January 27, 1894. He served as Sovereign Grand Inspector General of the Scottish Rite in Oregon from 1929 to 1941. He died in Portland on December 4, 1943. His widow Elizabeth Clarke died on April 16, 1960 in Portland.

Masonic History of Stephen Church

It is not known where Stephen T. Church was made a Mason. It is known that he was a member of Crescent City Lodge # 45 in California, from which Lodge he demitted on April 2, 1857. He petitioned Eugene City Lodge #11 on June 20, 1857 for affiliation and his investigation committee consisted of Brothers Skinner, Huff and Goldsmith. He was elected to membership on July 18, 1857. He demitted from Eugene City Lodge, along with several other members who Chartered the Harrisburg Lodge in 1859. We can assume that he served as a Warden prior to his membership in Oregon, as he was the Master of Thurston Lodge under the dispensation granted on October 19, 1859, and was Master when the Lodge was Chartered on September 18, 1860 continuing on until the end of the year when Jackson L. Hall was elected for the year 1861. He remained a member of Thurston Lodge #28 until 1865. Around that time he moved to Salem where he was found as a member of Salem Lodge #4 by 1868. In Salem he was elected as Junior Warden in 1870, and he died in 1871.

by RWB Michael D. Robinson KCCH Orient Historian, written for Eugene Lodge #11 April 9, 2018

 

About the author:

MDR Fall 2016

Michael D. Robinson 32° KCCH, was the second Master Mason Raised in Esoterika Lodge #227, and the first member Raised in that Lodge to serve as Worshipful Master. He was elected Master in 2013 and 2014, and currently serves as Historian.  He is also Historian for Research Lodge #198 and Eugene Lodge #11 and District Deputy of District #13. Brother Robinson was appointed Historian of the Scottish Rite Orient of Oregon in December of 2014. He was the recipient of the “Novus Astorum” from the Portland Valley Scottish Rite in 2010, and the Hiram Award from Esoterika Lodge in 2012. In March of 2015 he was made Secretary of the Eugene Valley, and Director of the Work for that Valley in January of 2017.

Very Successful Southern Oregon Spring Reunion in Medford

The Southern Oregon Spring Reunion was held in Medford on the weekend of March 24-25 raising 6 candidates from the 4° to the 32°. The hardworking members of the Medford Valley, spearheaded by the Knights of St. Andrew hosted the event and conferred the 4th, 6th and 8th on Friday and 14th degree on Saturday. Eugene Valley gave a good rendition of the 18th degree and Roseburg and Klamath Valleys were delivered the 30th and 32nd degree, respectively. Also on hand were dignitaries and members of the Portland and Coos Bay Valleys. Good degrees, food and fellowship abounded.

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Eugene Valley 18th degree team Medford March 25, 2017 – left to right: Rich Maris, Michael Robinson, Sterling Dailey, Steve Karner, Alex Caspar and Terin Mueller.

 

An Update on Our Language Clinics from President William Anton

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Click on the KidTalk illustration above to read an update from our Oregon Scottish Rite Clinics President William Anton

Oregon Scottish Rite Clinics Update

 

A Message From Our S.G.I.G Regarding the Portland Language Clinic and the Board of Directors

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Dear Brethren,

I hope this finds you healthy and in very good spirits.

I have an update on the clinic board and the status of the clinics. The Clinic board met this last Friday and after looking at our finances and discussing what direction we feel we should go, we voted 7 to 1 to close the Portland Clinic. There are some very exciting therapies out there and we are exploring many of them. The decision has been made to work with the three Universities in Oregon that have speech pathologist programs. Which university and how much we work with them is still part of the process we have to explore. We feel that we can help children that have speech difficulties and train new pathologist at the same time. (A daily double) The board also feels that we will be more efficient with the funds that have been entrusted to us.

The board voted unanimously to meet on a quarterly basis. This does not mean that the labors of the board will not continue daily, but we will officially meet quarterly.

Thank you and God bless you all!

Gary Kuney, 33°
S.G.I.G. in Oregon

Salem Valley Thursday Night Feast of Tishri

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September is here and it is time for our first Thursday Dinner.

We will celebrate the Feast of Tishri, Thursday night, September 3, at 6:30 pm.

It will be the Past Grand Master’s Salmon Bake.

MWB John will prepare Salmon, or Chicken for the Land Lubbers, and Jan is practicing her Chocolate cake for the Jerry Frank Cake Contest at the fair.

Please let me know if you will be joining us by replying to this e-mail or calling at 503 363-9240.

Hope to see you there,

Dave

Oregon Scottish Rite 2015 S.G.I.G. Award Recipients

Oregon Scottish Rite is proud to announce our 2015 S.G.I.G. award recipients:

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Baker – Lynn A. Halliday 32°

Baker – Martin RaVell Patterson 32° KCCH

Coos Bay – Fritz H. Thomas III 32° KCCH

Portland – Edwin H. Radford 32° KSA

Salem – Don L. Broxson 32° KCCH

Salem – Richard E. MacKinnon 32°

Salem – Creighton R. Marlette 32°

Salem – Claude A. Weldin 32°

Oregon Scottish Rite 2015 Honour Recipients

Oregon Scottish Rite is proud to announce our 2015 Honourman

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Oregon Scottish Rite 2015 Honourmen – 33° Inspectors General Honorary:

Baker – Charles Richard Aster
Eugene – Dale Lee Vanderpool
Portland – William D. Anton, Sr.
Portland – Paul Andrew Blackburn
Portland – Richard Charles Komraus

 

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Oregon Scottish Rite 2015 Honourmen – 32° Knights Commander of the Court of Honour:

Baker – Daniel Wayne Seaman
Baker – Sherman Nash Weisgerber
Coos Bay – Stephen Neal Shannon
Coos Bay – Ernest Cleveland Turner
Eugene – Richard Dale Varner
Klamath Falls – James Eldredge Davis
Medford – Roland Lee Kari
Medford – Irvine Lawrence Urie
Portland – Carl Alvin Foleen
Portland – Eckhard Heino Gazow
Portland – Ralph Maldonado
Portland – Larry L. Roberts
Portland – Earl Edwin Tradup
Portland – Bryan Everett Witt
Roseburg – Wizard

Salem Valley Scottish Rite Outdoor Conferral of the 21st Degree

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Salem Valley Scottish Rite will confer the 21st degree on Thursday evening, June 18th, at Claude Weldin’s farm, 4767 Viewcrest Dr. SE, Salem,   Take Kubler Blvd     West from I-5, or West at Commercial St, or West at Liberty road, to the top of the Hill, as far as you can go on Kuebler, past Sprauge High School,  and go right, down the hill on Viewcrest approx ½ mile, (watch for signs) then left, down the dirt road past the Blue Berry Field, thru the Cherry Orchard and into the Fir Trees…. Just follow Red Dirt road to the picnic area.

To my knowledge this is the first time a Scottish Rite Degree will be conferred as an Outdoor Degree.    We will have barbequed ribs at 6:15 pm followed by the degree at 7:30pm. 

 Please let me know if you can be will us so we can have enough ribs for dinner. 

No Caps.  Dress casual.