Zebulon C. Bishop
Zebulon C. Bishop | |
|---|---|
| Speaker of the Oregon Territory House of Representatives | |
| In office 5 December 1853 – 2 February 1854 | |
| Preceded by | Benjamin F. Harding |
| Succeeded by | Lafayette Cartee |
| Member of the Oregon Territory House of Representatives | |
| In office 1851–1852; 1853–1854 | |
| Constituency | Washington County |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1815 |
| Died | 21 August 1864 (aged 48–49) |
| Party | Democratic |
| Spouses |
|
Zebulon Comstock Bishop (1815–1864) was an American politician and traveler who served in the Oregon Territorial Legislature as a member of the House of Representatives. He was Speaker of the Oregon House during the 1853 legislative session. After leaving Oregon, Bishop traveled around Asia, eventually returning to the United States.
Early life
Bishop was born in 1815 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1][2] He was the son of Joshua and Martha Bishop.[3]
In 1839, Bishop relocated to Missouri, following his brother Thomas who had moved to Warsaw in Benton County in 1832. By the time Zebulon arrived his brother was operating a frontier store and had been elected county recorder. In Warsaw, Bishop was well liked and worked as a tailor before being elected clerk of the local court.[1][2] Bishop married Mary Ann Alexander on 24 August 1844. Mary was the daughter of Judge George Alexander, a leader in the Benton County community. Together they had one son, George Thomas. His wife Mary died on 12 November 1846.[1][4]
When the Mexican–American War began in 1846, Bishop volunteered to serve in the United States Army. He was commissioned as a captain in the quartermaster corps. He served through the war years and was discharged from the army in October 1848.[5][6][7][8] He served in Company D of the 4th Regiment of Kentucky Foot Volunteers.[9]
Oregon Territory
In 1850, Bishop left Missouri for the Pacific Northwest, leaving his son with his wife's parents. He first traveled to the Puget Sound area and then onto Oregon, settling on the south bank of the Columbia River in the community of St. Helens in Washington County.[1][10]
The following year, Bishop was elected to the Oregon Territorial Legislature, representing Washington County in the House of Representatives. He was one of the three Washington County representatives, all Democrats. The other two representatives were Ralph Wilcox and William M. King, who was Speaker of the House that session. The 1851 session was opened on 1 December 1851 and adjourned on 21 January 1852.[1][11][12] During the session, Bishop served on the military affairs, commerce, enrolled bills, and printing committees.[13][14] As a member of the military affairs committee, Bishop brought a bill to the floor that ask the United States Congress to establish army posts in the Rouge River Valley.[15]
Bishop and the other two Washington County Democrats lost their seats to three Whig Party candidates in the 1852 election.[16]
In 1853, the Washington County Democratic convention nominated Bishop, Robert Thompson, and Charles P. Culver as its candidates for the three House seats representing the county.[17][18] Bishop and Thompson won seats along with a Whig Party candidate, A. A. Durham.[19] When the House was organized on 5 December, Bishop was elected Speaker.[10][20][21] During the session, the legislature adopted a memorial asking the Federal Government to expedite payment to militiamen who had fought in the Rouge River Indian Wars and to pay claims of merchants who furnished supplies to the Army during that conflict.[22] The session adjourned on 2 February 1854.[19] In the next legislative session, Bishop was succeeded as Speaker of the Oregon Territory's House by Lafayette Cartee.[23]
Travel and later life
Either in late 1854 or early 1855, Bishop took a steamship to Formosa and then traveled to Hong Kong. While in Hong Kong, he was profitably employed and lived in a nice home with enough servants to live well.[1]
He returned to the United States in 1856. After arriving, Bishop wrote to his brother in Missouri from Stockton, California. In California, he worked as a miner in the Sierra Nevada mountains and then as a ranch hand before returning to Missouri. By 1860, Bishop was living in St. Louis. Around that time, his son was killed in an accident while attending school in St. Louis.[1] Bishop married Sallie J. Hendrick on 5 September 1860 in Cleveland, Ohio.[24]
On 27 August 1861, Bishop was attacked on a street in St Louis. He was clubbed on the head with a cane by a drunk man Bishop had an on-going disagreement with.[25][26] The attacker was found guilty in court and fined $53 for disturbing the peace.[27]
Bishop died on 21 August 1864 in Cleveland, Ohio.[28]
Personal records
Today, a collection of his papers is held by the Oregon Historical Society Research Library in Portland, Oregon. The collection includes typed transcripts of letters Bishop wrote to his brother Thomas, other family members, and friends in Missouri. Most of the letters were written from locations in the Oregon Territory. However, there is also one letter from Stockton, California and one Bishop sent from Hong Kong. The topics covered in his letters include the 1851 territorial legislature session and the disagreement between the legislature and the governor regarding the location of Oregon's capital. Several of the letters were published in the June 1965 edition of the Oregon Historical Quarterly.[29]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g "Letters of Zebulon C. Bishop, American Traveler". Oregon Historical Quarterly. 66 (2): 161–170. 1965. JSTOR 20612858 – via JSTOR.
- ^ a b Pancoast, Charles Edward, edited by Anna Paschall Hannum, A Quaker Forty-Niner, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1930, p. 97.
- ^ "Zebulon Comstock Bishop", familysearch.org, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah, accessed 21 December 2025.
- ^ Williams, Betty Harvey, Marriage Records Benton County Missouri 1839- 1861, Warrenburg. Missouri, 1967, p. 9.
- ^ "Quartermaster Department", Journal of the executive proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America from December 1, 1845 to August 14, 1848 (Volume XII), printed by order of the Senate of the United States, Government Printing Office, Washington, District of Columbia, 1887, pp. 125, 139, 267.
- ^ Gardner, Charles K., "Zebulon C. Bishop", A dictionary of all officers, who have been commissioned, or have been appointed and served, in the army of the United States since the inauguration of their first president, in 1789, to the first January 1853 ... including the distinguished officers of the volunteers and militia of the states ... navy and marine corps, who have served with the land forces, D. Van Nostrand publisher, New York, New York, 1860, p. 69.
- ^ "Official", Washington Union, Washington, District of Columbia, 9 August 1846, p. 2.(subscription required)
- ^ "Official", Charleston Daily Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, 28 August 1846, p. 2.(subscription required)
- ^ "Mexican War - Company "D" Trimble Co Unit", copied from the Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Kentucky regarding Mexican War veterans, printed by Authority of the Legislature of Kentucky, Capital Office, Frankfort, Kentucky, 1889.
- ^ a b American Legislative Leaders, 1850–1910 page 59.
- ^ "Members of the Legislative Assembly", Weekly Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, 4 July 1851, p. 2.(subscription required)
- ^ "Territorial Government Legislators and Staff" Archived 2023-11-09 at the Wayback Machine, 1851 Regular Session (3rd Territorial): December 1, 1851 – January 21, 1852, Oregon State Archives, Salem, Oregon, accessed 3 December 2022.
- ^ "In the House", Weekly Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, 9 December 1851, p. 2.(subscription required)
- ^ [1] Journal of the House of Representatives, Asahel Bush, Territorial Printer, 1852 Salem, Oregon, pp. 11-13.
- ^ [2] Journal of the House of Representatives, Asahel Bush, Territorial Printer, 1852 Salem, Oregon, p. 22.
- ^ "Territorial Government Legislators and Staff" Archived 2023-11-09 at the Wayback Machine, 1852 Regular Session (4th Territorial): December 6, 1852 – February 3, 1853, Oregon State Archives, Salem, Oregon, accessed 3 December 2022.
- ^ "Democratic Nominations", Weekly Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, 14 May 1853, p. 2.(subscription required)
- ^ "County Convention", Weekly Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, 14 May 1853, p. 3.(subscription required)
- ^ a b "Territorial Government Legislators and Staff", 1853 Regular Session (5th Territorial): December 5, 1853 – February 2, 1854, Oregon State Archives, Salem, Oregon, accessed 3 December 2022.
- ^ "Territorial Government - 1853", Political and Official History and Register of Oregon, Oregon Secretary of State, Harrison R. Kincaid publisher, 1899, p. 44.
- ^ Bancroft, Herbert Howe, "Legislation, Mining, and Settlement 1853-54", History of the Pacific States of North America (Volume XXV; Oregon, Volume II, 1848-1888), The History Company, San Francisco, California, 1888, p. 323 (Footnote 2).
- ^ "Intelligence from the Pacific", Washington Sentinel, Washington, District of Columbia, 27 January 1854, p. 3.(subscription required)
- ^ "Territorial Government Legislators and Staff", 1854 Regular Session (6th Territorial): December 4, 1854 – February 1, 1853, Oregon State Archives, Salem, Oregon, accessed 20 December 2025.
- ^ "Marriages", Lancaster Examiner, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 12 September 1860, p. 3.(subscription required)
- ^ "Violent Atack at the Planters House", St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 28 August 1861, p. 3.(subscription required)
- ^ "Severe Assault", St Louis Republic, 28 August 1861, p. 3.
- ^ "Recorder’s Court", St Louis Republic, 2 September 1861, p. 3.(subscription required)
- ^ "Deaths", Lancaster Examiner and Herald, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 14 September 1864, p. 3.(subscription required)
- ^ "Z. C. Bishop letters, 1837-circa 1965", Archives West, Oregon Historical Society Research Library, Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon, accessed 3 December 2022.