METHODIST EDUCATIONAL EFFORT IN OREGON TO 1860 87
RAINIER SEMINARY
This school was located at Rainier, in Columbia County. It was chartered Jan. 30, 1855, 29 with the following Board of Trustees: Alexander Abernethy, John S. Hawkins, James Dobbins, Geo. C. Roe, Ezekiel Harper, A. P. Minear, Chas. E. Fox, Wesley Jeans, Wm. Hutchins, John Campbell, Nelson Hoyt, F. M. Warren, A. F. Waller, Enoch Chapman, Seth Catlin. Other provisions are the same as usual except it took seven for a quorum of the board, and both sexes were desig- nated as having the privileges of the school.
I could find out nothing of the subsequent history of this school, but it evidently had gone out of existence by 1860, since it is not mentioned in the reports. Doubtless some rem- iniscent material could be collected from the pioneer residents in the vicinity of Rainier.
OREGON CITY SEMINARY
This institution was chartered Jan. 10, 1856, with the follow- ing list of trustees : 30 Charles Pope. Jr., Thomas Pope, A. E. Wait, Jas. E. Kelley, W.P. Burns, Gustavus Hines, H.K. Hines, Geo. Abernethy, A. Holbrook, P. H. Hatch, C. F. Beattie, Wm. Roberts, Chas. Adams. Other provisions were the same as for the other Academies except no limit was set on income and only five members were required for a quorum.
No further facts up to 1860 are available. The property was valued at $5,000 in that year, but no attendance reports were made. The discussion of the Clackamas County Female Sem- inary above gives an outline of the educational situation at Oregon City.
UMPQUA ACADEMY
Umpqua Academy, like so many of the other schools dis- cussed, grew directly out of religious education, first a Sunday School at the house of Benjamin J. Grubbe at Bunton's Gap, afterward called Wilbur. The first school was taught by a Mr. Eason. This was conducted in a shed which had been made
29 Oreg. Ter. Special Laws, 1855, p. 156.
30 Oreg. Ter. Special Laws, 1856, pp. 62-3.