Elliff Family Compilation Part 1

Dublin Core

Title

Elliff Family Compilation Part 1

Description

This document is a 28 page long compilation of resources on the Elliff family. The Elliff's owned a homestead in Douglas County, where Letitia lived and worked after leaving David Carson's estate. Jennene and Dale Johns own the present-day Ranch in Azalea that was once the Elliff DLC. During the time the legal suits were being filed, Letitia and the children had left their home of seven years and moved to the upper Cow Creek Valley in Douglas County. It is thought that she may have traveled south with the Nidey family, pioneers of 1852 who wintered in Santiam City (present-day Jefferson) and traveled south to Cow Creek Valley in late March and early April 1853. The distance from Letitia’s home on Soap Creek to the Hardy Elliff cabin (Johns Ranch in present day Azalea), where the Nidey’s first camped, is about 160 miles, or about one week’s travel at that time. The route taken was the main road from Sacramento Valley to the Columbia River and has been known at various times in its history as the California Trail, the South Road of the Oregon Trail, the Scott-Applegate Trail, and Territorial Road. Now it is mostly I-5 and 99-W. The Elliff Donation Land Claim is central to Letitia Carson's story and sits nearby Myrtle Creek, and her long-time Douglas County home. The document is a compilation of primary documents and literature written of the Elliff's after their passing. It also includes an interview with Fred Weaver, who knew the Elliffs and Carson's.

Creator

Jan Meranda

Source

Jan Meranda Personal Collection

Publisher

LCLP

Date

Unknown

Contributor

Jan Meranda, Zachary Stocks

Rights

No Copyright, Public Domain

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Compilation

Identifier

Resource-13

Coverage

Oregon

Collection

Citation

Jan Meranda, “Elliff Family Compilation Part 1,” Letitia Carson Digital History Collection , accessed April 19, 2024, https://letitiacarson.omeka.net/items/show/206.

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