Jump to content

Frederick Prigg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederick Prigg
4th Secretary for the Provisional Government of Oregon
In office
26 June 1846 – 16 September 1848
Preceded byJohn E. Long
Succeeded bySamuel M. Holderness
ConstituencyOregon Country
Personal details
Born1812
Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England
Died1849 (age 37)
Oregon City, Oregon Territory, United States
ProfessionDoctor and pharmacist

Frederick Prigg (1812 – 1849) was an Oregon pioneer physician and pharmacist. He served as Secretary for the Provisional Government of Oregon, a position that eventually became the Oregon Secretary of State, which is now the second highest office in the state. He opened the first commercial drug store in the Oregon County and served as a district judge in Clackamas County during Oregon’s pre-territorial period.

Early life

[edit]

Prigg was born in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England in 1812.[1][2] He was born into an affluent English family and was well educated. His education included sufficient medical training to qualify him as a doctor and pharmacist.[3][4]

As a young man, Prigg made at least one trip to North America, serving as a medical assistant for a group of emigrants from Suffolk and Norfolk heading for Canada. After delivering the immigrants to Quebec, he returned to England in 1836.[5] By 1837, he was working in a drug store in his home county of Suffolk. Sometime during that year, he was stricken with yellow fever. He later wrote to friends telling them he was recovering. After his illness, Prigg lost touch with his friends in the Suffolk area. By 1839, his friends were concerned enough that they advertised in a local newspaper seeking information about his whereabouts and health.[1][6]

Prigg immigrated to United States in 1843. He arrived in New Orleans, Louisiana alone in January of that year on the steamship New York. The ship’s passenger list records him as a merchant.[2]

Oregon City

[edit]

After arriving in the United States, Prigg immediately headed west, traveling across the Great Plain along the Oregon Trail in a covered wagon. He arrived in the Oregon Country in late 1843. He settled in Oregon City. Prigg had brought a supply of medicines and chemicals with him which he used to open a drug store in the city. While both Doctor John McLoughlin, head of the Hudson’s Bay Company in the Oregon Country, and Methodist missionary Jason Lee both kept stocks of medical supplies prior to his arrival, Prigg’s drug store was the first commercial pharmacy in the Oregon Country. He dispensed drugs such as laudanum, quinine, and various laxatives for treatment of malaria, fever, wounds, and general ailments. His store also stocked household goods, clothes, fabrics, and imported pocket watches.[7][8][9] Prigg advertised his business in the Oregon Spectator newspaper. His advertisements said he had a stock of drugs and chemicals along with expensive fabrics, nice clothes, and English watches for sale.[7][10]

Prigg was also active in civic affairs. He helped found and promote the Pioneer Lyceum and Literary Club. Established in 1844 before the Oregon Country had any newspapers, the Lyceum was a community library and popular forum for discussing timely political topics and Oregon governance issues.[8][9][11] Prigg also belonged to an informal social club that included James Nesmith, Jesse Applegate, and Samuel M. Holderness.[3] In addition, Prigg served as edition of the Oregon Spectator for a brief period in 1846.[12] The Spectator was founded that year and was the only newspaper in the Oregon Country at that time.[13] Finally, he was a founding member of Oregon’s first medical society and served as secretary for the society’s first meeting in 1848.[14]

Government affairs

[edit]

During the fourth pre-provisional legislative meeting in June and July 1845, Prigg served as the session’s revising clerk.[15] In August of that year, Prigg served as engrossing clerk during a special session of the legislature.[16] In October 1845, Prigg was appointed one of three Clackamas County district judges along with Francis Pettygrove and Peter G. Stewart. Court sessions were sometimes held at Prigg’s home in Oregon City.[17] In addition, Prigg briefly served as Clackamas County probate judge in early 1846.[8][9] During that same period, Prigg served as city recorder for Oregon City. In that position, he solicited proposals to remove stumps from city property.[18]

On 21 June 1846, Doctor John E. Long drowned while trying to ford a river near Oregon City. At the time, he was serving as the secretary for Oregon’s provision government. On 26 June 1846, Governor George Abernethy appointed Prigg to the government’s vacant secretary position. In December of that year, the Oregon legislature formally elected him secretary. Prigg served in that position until he resigned on 16 September 1848.[8][9][19][20] Today, Prigg’s secretary post has evolved into the Oregon Secretary of State position, the second highest office in the state.[9][19]

Death

[edit]

Prigg was recognized as a man of good education and ability, but also intemperate in his personal habits. While alcohol was illegal in Oregon at that time, Prigg was known to be a drinker. He often drank a local moonshine called Blue Ruin. In October 1849, Prigg drowned in the Willamette River after falling from the rocky bluff above the river near Oregon City. Some people suspected that his death was the result of intoxication. He was 37 years old at the time of his death.[3][8][9][20] There is no evidence that his body was ever recovered from the river, so Prigg’s final resting place is unknown.[8][21]

It was an interesting coincidence that both Prigg and his immediate predecessor in the provisional government secretary position were both doctors who drowned in a river near Oregon City. Their deaths being just three years apart.[9][20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Information Wanted", Times-Picayune, New Orleans, Louisiana, 6 February 1839, p. 1.(subscription required)
  2. ^ a b "Frederick Prigg", Louisiana, New Orleans Passenger Lists, 1820-1945, FamilySearch (www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKNG-1X3B: Fri Mar 08 21:03:28 UTC 2024); accessed 1 September 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "The Bean Poker Association", Sunday Oregonian, Portland, Oregon, 26 July 1885, p. 3.(subscription required)
  4. ^ "Biographical Files Index ", Oregon Health and Science University Historical Collections and Archives , Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon, accessed 2 September 2024.
  5. ^ "Lynn", Nury and Norwich Post, Norwich, England, 31 August 1836, p. 3.(subscription required)
  6. ^ Olivarius, Kathryn Meyer McAllister, Necropolis: Yellow Fever, Immunity, and Capitalism in the Deep South, 1800-1860, Wolfson College, University of Oxford, Oxford, England, 2016, p 108.
  7. ^ a b "Oregon’s first pharmacist arrived by covered wagon in 1843,", Prescription Drug Affordability Board Quarterly, Oregon Prescription Drug Affordability Board, Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services, Salem, Oregon, 22 December 2023, p. 6.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Corning, Howard McKinley (editor), "Prigg, Frederick, Dr.", Directory of Oregon History, Binford and Mort Publishing, Portland, Oregon, 1956, p. 205.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Bradbury, Bill, "Oregon Secretaries of State, Biographical Sketches, 1841-Present", Secretary of State Administrative Overview, Oregon Secretary of State, Salem Oregon, September 2001, p. 11.
  10. ^ "Drugs and Chemicals", Oregon Spectator, Oregon City, Oregon, 17 September 1847, p. 3.
  11. ^ History of Oregon, Volume I, 1834-1848), History Company Publishers, San Francisco, California, 1890, pp. 296-297 (footnote 6).
  12. ^ "Our Dismissal", Oregon Spectator, Oregon City, Oregon, 2 April 1846, p. 2.
  13. ^ Victor, Frances Fuller (edited by Hubert Howe Bancroft), History of Oregon, 1834-1848 (Volume 1/Chapter 21), History Company Publishers, San Fransico, California, 1886, pp. 575–576.
  14. ^ "Medical Society", Oregon Free Press, Oregon City, Oregon, 26 August 1848, p. 2.
  15. ^ "Pre-Provisional Government", 1845 Meeting (4th Pre-Provisional): June 24-July 5, Oregon Legislature and Staff Guide, Oregon State Archives, Salem, Oregon, accessed 1 September 2024.
  16. ^ "Provisional Government", 1845 Special Session: August 5-30, Oregon Legislature and Staff Guide, Oregon State Archives, Salem, Oregon, accessed 1 September 2024.
  17. ^ "The Corner Stone Laid", Oregonian, Portland, Oregon, 27 June 1884, p. 4.(subscription required)
  18. ^ "Oregon City Corporation", Oregon Spectator, Oregon City, Oregon, 19 March 1846, p. 3.
  19. ^ a b "Secretaries of State of Oregon", Earliest Authorities in Oregon, Oregon Blue Book, Oregon Secretary of State, Salem Oregon, accessed 2 September 2024.
  20. ^ a b c Bancroft, Herbert Howe, History of Oregon, Volume II, 1848-1888, History Company Publishers, San Fransico, California, 1888, p. 36 (footnote 74).
  21. ^ title unreadable, Oregon Spectator, Oregon City, Oregon, 1 November 1849, p. 2.(much of the on-line text is difficult to read; title is probably "Miscellaneous)
[edit]