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Reverend David Leslie's time at the Methodist mission in
Salem was marked by tragedies, but the missionary persevered
through personal hardships to make a lasting impact on the
development of education and religion in Oregon. By
the time the Salem mission closed in 1849, the Leslie's personal
and family life had suffered greatly for his twelve
year service in Oregon. His first house in Oregon was destroyed
in a fire. He witnessed the death of his first wife
as well as other members of the mission. Three of his
four daughters had died while far away from him. In
only two and a half years, his family of seven was reduced
to three. At the time the mission closed, Leslie was
fifty-two years old; the resilient missionary would live twenty
more years in Salem.
David Leslie was born in 1787 in Washington, New Hampshire,
the son of a minister. Misfortune came early in his life as
he lost his parents while still a child; he and his orphaned
siblings were scattered. He was educated in Salem, Massachusetts,
and then at the Wilbraham Academy, the same school attended
by Jason Lee. Leslie specialized in modern languages,
French being his specialty. He received a license to preach
in 1820 at the age of thirty-seven. While serving in
the New England Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church,
he had a close association with Jason Lee, who had returned
from his mission in the Willamette Valley to raise money and
recruit reinforcements for the mission. In 1836, Leslie volunteered
to join his friend in Oregon, sailing around South America
on the ship Sumatra with his wife, Mary A. Kinney Leslie,
and their three daughters. Two more daughters were born
to them here.
Soon after his arrival on September 7, 1837, Lee appointed
Leslie as one of two magistrates for the territory south of
the Columbia River. In March 1838, Leslie was left in
charge of the mission while Lee again traveled to the East,
and remained so for the next two years until Lee returned
with the "Great Reinforcement." In 1839, Leslie
and William H. Willson established a satellite mission on
the Puget Sound, at Nisqually. In August and September
of 1840, Leslie led an exploration further north, through
present-day Washington and British Columbia, nearly reaching
the southern tip of Alaska, to scout out possible locations
for other mission branches. By this time, the mission
was in process of moving from its original location near Wheatland
ferry to a new location ten miles to the south, near
the Indian village of Chemeketa, the present site of Salem.
Leslie took part in the manual labor of constructing the sawmill
and building the dam. He also organized the Methodist Episcopal
Church in Salem in 1841and served as its first pastor.
In February of the next year, Leslie's wife Mary became ill
and died. She was the first person buried in Salem's
Pioneer Cemetery, which was then part of Leslie's land claim.
Feeling ill-equipped to raise five daughters on his own in
sparsely-settled Oregon, Leslie decided to take his girls
to Hawaii where there was a well-established Methodist mission
and a school for the girls. While in Astoria in September
1842, awaiting favorable winds for sailing, his daughter Satira
slipped ashore and was married to a missionary, Cornelius
Rogers. Although the marriage was sudden, Leslie accepted
his daughter's choice; Rogers was remembered as "an outstanding
young man." Leslie left two of his daughters, Helen
and Aurelia, in the care of Satira and Cornelius, and proceeded
to Hawaii where Mary and Sarah were left in a boarding school.
Sadly, Sarah died there only a year later. Mary eventually
returned to Salem and married George H. Jones. In February
1843, while Reverend Leslie was away from Oregon, his daughters
Satira and Aurelia, along with Satira's husband Cornelius
Rogers, Nathaniel Crocker, and two Clatsop Indians were swept
over the falls of the Willamette near Oregon City while canoeing
and drowned.
In the Spring of 1843, Dr. Leslie returned to Salem and resumed
his work at the mission. On January 7, the next year, he married
Adelia Judson Olley, the widow of James Olley and sister of
Rev. Lewis H. Judson. Reverend Judson's two-year-old
son Robert Thomas Judson came to live with the Leslie family.
Leslie and his new wife had two daughters, Sarah and Emma.
Sarah died in 1854 at age six; Emma the following year at
age four. Of his seven daughters, Leslie outlived all
but one. He was survived by his daughter Helen, who
never married and lived with her stepmother Adelia until her
death in 1890.
In 1843, Reverend George Gary was sent by the mission board
in New York to reorganize, and eventually liquidate, the Salem
mission. Gary was quartered in Leslie's home, and the
two men's radically different opinions about the mission led
to conflicts. Gary was misinformed about the mission
and came with strong preconceived notions. As Lewis
Judson, the grandson of Rev. Lewis H. Judson, characterizes
him, Gary was "caustically critical of what had been
done ... was arrogant in his manner and contemptuous of the
mission." The conflict between Leslie and Gary,
along with Leslie's many personal tragedies, gave him a reputation
as an angry and disagreeable man. However, this reputation
may not have been deserved. Robert Judson, who was raised
by Leslie, had many happy memories of his childhood there.
After he had returned to his father's house for a few years,
Judson returned to Leslie's house at his own request, where
he was treated as the son Leslie never had.
When the mission was discontinued, Leslie was assigned the
claim lying between what is now Mission and McGilchrist streets
and between the east edge of Bush Pasture Park and Willamette
Slough. Here he built the fourth house in Salem and planted
an orchard with numerous varieties of apples and pears. In
1860, Leslie sold 100 acres of his property to Asahel Bush
II, and Bush House now stands on the site of the Leslie's
home.
Leslie had been elected president of the board of trustees
for the Oregon Institute, a school for settlers' children,
in 1845. he held this position through the Institute's
transition into Willamette University until his death.
In 1867, he laid the cornerstone of Waller Hall, the first
brick building on the Willamette campus. Leslie also
was one of the founders of Salem's Masonic Order chapter
and the first chaplain of the territorial legislature
and the Grand Lodge of A. F. and A. M. of Oregon.
In the last fifteen years of his life, Leslie became increasingly
physically disabled, but his dignity and continued community
involvement inspired the respect of all who knew him.
He died March 1, 1869. Salem's Daily Unionist
newspaper reported that his funeral service, at the Methodist
Episcopal Church he founded, "was crowded to its utmost
capacity, and the procession to the cemetery, is said to have
been the largest ever seen in this city. Our citizens
united as of one common brotherhood, to pay the last marks
of respect and honor, to the memory of this veteran in the
ministry of the gospel, and early pioneer to the wilds of
an unsettled wilderness."
Written by Virginia Green and Katherine Wallig.
Bibliography:
"David Leslie." Salem Pioneer Cemetery
website. March 3, 2004. <http://www.open.org/~pioneerc/pg26.html#LeslDavi132>
June 8, 2004.
Dobbs, Caroline C. "Reverend David Leslie."
Men of Champoeg. Portland: Metropolitan Press,
1932. Pages 60-63.
"Funeral of Father Leslie." Daily Unionist.
March 4, 1869. 3:1. Salem Pioneer Cemetery website.
March 3, 2004. <http://www.open.org/~pioneerc/pg26.html#LeslDavi132>
June 8, 2004.
Jones, Alfred C. "David Leslie, a founder of Salem,
felt tragedies, triumphs." Statesman Journal.
[undated clipping] Hugh Morrow Pamphlet Collection,
Salem Public Library.
Judson, Lewis. "David Leslie," Marion County
History, Volume III, June 1957, pages 13-15.
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