Northwest Chapter

Covering Oregon, Washington & British Columbia


Our interest is in study, research, protection, preservation, and enjoyment of the historic trails in Oregon and Washington. We have the privilege of living in the territory where overland emigrants settled and started new lives.

Overview

Many of our members are descendants or know descendants of trail pioneers although many don’t have these connections. We strive to preserve our heritage. Some of the more notable NW sites along the trails are the Columbia River, Fort Vancouver, ruts near Echo, Barlow Road, Blue Mountains, Whitman Mission, the End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center in Oregon City, and the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center near Baker City. There is more to see on the Applegate Trail (the Southern Route to Oregon). Our chapter is deeply involved with researching, mapping, and marking the historic trails. We have semi-annual tours which are open to the public of sections of the trails. Please join us – it’s fun!


Chapter Mission

The mission of the Northwest chapter of OCTA is to support and initiate local efforts using private and governmental partners and to join with adjacent chapters in support of the national association efforts in identifying, preserving, protecting and educating the public about the Oregon Trail and California Overland Trail legacy.


Upcoming NW Chapter activities

September 26, 2026

The NW Chapter OCTA fall meeting will be held in eastern Oregon; place and venue to be announced.  The program will be a presentation by Dave Price.

October 10, 2026

NW Chapter OCTA members Leta Neiderheiser and Tam Moore, local experts on the Applegate Trail, will lead a tour of important sites west of the Cascades.

For both events, more details will be coming out as the time gets closer.

 


Upcoming NW Chapter Zoom meetings

NW Chapter Zoom meetings will resume in October 2026.

Please consider making a presentation. Topics may include trail history, trail research, family history, local history, or preservation. Contact Dave Welch (welchdj@comcast.net) for additional information. Each meeting will also include a short business meeting and an update on tours and explorations.

 


OCTA videos available on YouTube

OCTA has posted a series of trails-related videos on YouTube.

Videos range from convention presentations on trail legacy to current trail preservation issues and on-site interviews with trail historians and interpreters.

Enjoy!


National Park Service “Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide Across Oregon” is available

Completed in 2023, this is the last in the series of Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guides developed for national historic trails by the National Park Service over the years. The guide (PDF) is available to download.


National Park Service contracted study is available

A research study “First Year in Oregon, 1840-1869: A Narrative History” was completed in October 2021, and a PDF is available to download. Historical Research Associates, Inc., of Portland, Oregon, conducted the study under contract with the National Park Service.

The study has an introduction, five chapters, a conclusion, illustrations, tables, and a bibliography.

From the introduction:

“After traversing the roughly 2,000mile Oregon Trail, overlanders arrived at their destination: the
fertile and rainsoaked Willamette Valley. The first year in Oregon presented challenges for new
arrivals: Where would they sleep? What would they eat? Could they count on anyone to help them?
How might they work to earn food, clothing, or money? Not all who arrived were pleased with what
they found in the Willamette Valley: decades of boosterism about Oregon had raised the
expectations of some overlanders so high that the reality was a letdown.

This narrative history describes how overlanders survived their first year in Oregon and how the
firstyear experience evolved from 1840 to 1869. While many arrived in Oregon City in the 1840s, or
in Portland in later years, they settled far and wide across the Willamette Valley, the Umpqua Valley,
the Red River Valley, Clatsop Plains, and other parts of Oregon and Washington. They often spent
their first winters in temporary accommodations with friends, relatives, or strangers willing to rent
rooms, and they only later found land where they could build houses and live more permanently.”

Enjoy reading this study!


Explore the Cowlitz Trail

Shortly after Ezra Meeker completed his ambitious 1906 expedition to preserve the Old Oregon Trail the Daughters of the American Revolution approved a proposal to honor the memory of Oregon Trail pioneers in Washington State. The Sons of the American Revolution give support to DAR’s program.


National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, Baker City, Oregon

Memorial Day weekend, 2022, was the 30th anniversary of the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center’s grand opening, held in May 1992.

The Hells Canyon Journal of Halfway, Oregon, printed a series of articles in October, November, and December 2021 about the center’s history.

First article features Dave and Joyce Hunsaker, who were instrumental in the planning, construction, grand opening, and operation of the interpretive center.

Second article describes Dave Hunsaker’s involvement with the planning, design, research, and installation of the center’s interpretive exhibits.

Third article describes the grass roots efforts of local Baker City resident Chuck Rouse and others to obtain funding for the interpretive center. (Second page of this article.)

Fourth article focuses on Joyce Hunsaker and “Fanny,” a fictional interpretive character at the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.

Fifth article features Cammy Warner and the Trail Tenders, established in 1989 in partnership with the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.

 

*Note: You may need to download these PDFs to rotate the view for readability.


Leadership

Below is a list of OCTA Northwest members holding elected and appointed positions with the chapter. Additional information is available in the link below.

President (1/26 – 12/27) Wendell Baskins
Secretary (1/26 – 12/27) and Treasurer (1/25–12/26) Jenny Miller
Director (1/24 – 12/26) Polly Jackson
Director (1/25 – 12/27) Sherrill Beck
Director (1/26 – 12/28) Mark Stevens

NW Chapter Leadership 2026


Resources

Issues Related to the Trails in the Northwest

This section will address current issues of importance to the Northwest Chapter. Of immediate concern is the proposed transmission line from Boardman to Hemingway. This line will severely impact the Oregon Trail

NW Chapter Newsletter

Northwest Trails is the newsletter for the Northwest Chapter. It is published quarterly (January, April, July, October) in electronic and print versions.

Northwest Chapter Policies and Guidelines

This section provides by-laws, policies, guidelines, and other governing information for the chapter.

Richard & Trudy Ackerman Meritorious Achievement Award

Since 2000, the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center has honored individuals that have made significant contributions to trail history.