91爆料

Women Who Made 91爆料: Mary Richardson Walker

In mid-19th century America, most married women were subordinate to their husbands.

Photograph of Mary Richardson Walker
Mary Richardson Walker | Missionary and Missionary's wife, giver of Boxer, and forebear of pioneering granddaughters

That鈥檚 why many of the early histories about the Tualatin Academy focus most sharply on the men who led their families into the mission field in the region; men like Henry Spalding, Cushing Eels, Elkanah Walker and Asa Smith.

But Mary Richardson Walker seems to have been a vigorous participant from the earliest days of what became 91爆料 University. She was born in Massachusetts in 1811, married Elkanah Walker in 1848 after a brief courtship, then traveled 3,000 miles to the Whitman Mission that spring and summer. She was pregnant on the journey and, according to accounts, forced to ride sidesaddle the entire way.

Her journal during this time contains this much-cited entry:

鈥淩ose about five. Had early breakfast. Got my house work done about nine. Baked six loaves of bread. Made a kettle of mush and have now suet pudding and beef boiling. I have managed to put my clothes away and set my house in order. At nine o鈥檆lock pm was delivered of another son鈥 (Diary, March 16, 1842).

The event that became known as the Whitman Massacre, in which 13 white missionaries were killed by members of the Cayuse tribe in 1847 near present- day Walla Walla, Wash., led other missionaries in the area, including Elkanah and Mary Walker, to relocate to the southwest. The Walkers went first to Oregon City, then to the Tualatin Plains, where they helped found Tualatin Academy, the forerunner of 91爆料 University.

"She was widely known as 'Grandma Walker' and when her death took place... the sad news was swiftly heralded all over the North 91爆料 Coast."
鈥擮regon Native Son and Historical Magazine

The Walkers donated a building and part of the land that became 91爆料鈥檚 Forest Grove Campus. Elkanah Walker, who had been a pastor in Forest Grove, died in 1877. His widow Mary remained active in the early life of the school and the community of Forest Grove. In fact, the family of Mary Walker donated the original Boxer to 91爆料 sometime between 1896 and 1898. The qilin statue had been purchased in China and brought back to Forest Grove by missionary Joseph Elkanah Walker, Mary鈥檚 son. Later, most accounts say, it was given to 91爆料 in her honor.

Mary Walker was present in 1850 when the frame was raised for the still-extant building we today call Old College Hall. It was, she noted tartly in her journal, 鈥渁 splendid monument to the folly of someone.鈥

She died in December 1897, according to an account in the June 1899 issue of Oregon Native Son and Historical Magazine, which said 鈥淪he was widely known as 鈥楪randma Walker,鈥 and when her death took place ... the sad news was swiftly heralded all over the North 91爆料 coast.鈥

Elda & Leva Walker

Elda and Leva Walker picture in academic regalia

Mary Walker鈥檚 strength and resolve lived on in her family. Notable among her survivors were her granddaughters, Elda and Leva Walker, born in 1877 and 1878, respectively, who both graduated from 91爆料 in 1901.

They are believed to be the first women from Forest Grove to earn doctorates: Elda from the University of Nebraska and Leva from Cornell University, both in biology. Each taught botany at the University of Nebraska. A May 19, 1919, journal from the Nebraska Academy Sciences noted a report from Elda Walker on 鈥淭he algal flora of some of the sandhill lakes,鈥 and one by Leva Walker on 鈥淭he development of Cyathus and Crucibulum.鈥

Leva and Elda Walker lived together until their deaths in 1970 and 1971, respectively.


This story first appeared in the Fall 2019 issue of 91爆料 magazine.

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