Harvey W. Scott

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Harvey W. Scott
Scott-Harvey-W-1874.jpg
Born (1838-02-01)February 1, 1838
Tazewell County, IL
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Baltimore, MD
Occupation Newspaper editor, The Oregonian

Harvey Whitefield Scott[1] (1838–1910) was an American pioneer, newspaper editor, and historian. Scott is best remembered as the long-time editorialist of The Oregonian newspaper and was regarded by his contemporaries as instrumental in bringing the state of Oregon firmly into the political camp of the Republican Party.

Biography

Early years

Harvey Whitefield Scott was born February 1, 1838 in rural Tazewell County, Illinois, near the town of Peoria, the son of John Tucker Scott, a farmer.[2] The family crossed the Rocky Mountains as pioneers to Oregon in 1852, settling in Yamhill County, where they remained one year before relocating north to Mason County on Puget Sound in the Washington Territory.[2]

Harvey Scott in 1857.

In 1855 and 1856 Scott fought for a year as a volunteer in the Puget Sound War, serving with the local militia in skirmishes against the Nisqually, Muckleshoot, Puyallup, and Klickitat peoples.[3]

With the so-called Indian War at an end, in 1857 Scott walked 150 miles from the family home on Puget Sound to Forest Grove, Oregon, where he attended high school for four months.[2] During this interval Scott's parents moved their own home from the Washington Territory back to Oregon, establishing for themselves a new farm about 20 miles south of Oregon City.[2] The family moved again in 1859, establishing a saw mill at Forest Grove.[2]

Harvey Scott spent the years from 1859 to 1863 splitting his time between farm work and mill work and education, working his way through school.[2] He entered the fledgling Pacific University at Forest Grove and in 1863 became the first alumnus of that institution, head of a graduating class consisting only of himself.[4]

After graduation from school, Scott spent a year in Idaho as a gold miner.[2] This interlude proved brief, however, and in 1864 he returned to Oregon, studying law in the office of attorney E.D. Shattuck, a leading Republican and Unionist during the ongoing American Civil War.[2] Scott supported himself while reading law by working as the librarian of the Library Association of Portland.[3]

In 1865 Scott's plans to become an attorney came to an abrupt end when he was offered and accepted a position as editorial writer for the Portland Morning Oregonian.[2]

Newspaper editor

Scott was editor of The Oregonian newspaper from 1866–1872. His editorials strongly supported the Union and the newly emerging Republican party during the Civil War.

Later career

Harvey W. Scott as he appeared near the end of his life.

After leaving the paper in 1872, Scott was the collector of customs for the Port of Portland until 1877.[3] He then bought a sizable amount of stock in The Oregonian and returned as its editor-in-chief.[3] Around 1880, he vociferously opposed public high schools in Oregon, especially Portland, stating "the machinery of the schools has grown too cumbrous and expensive a system; that there are too many studies; that the high school is not a proper part of the system of public education;... that those who desire for their children an education beyond the common branches of the old-fashioned common school should pay for it."[3]

Scott was a Scottish Rite Freemason.[5]

Historian

Scott also edited the first history of Portland, Oregon, published in 1890, and compiled the six-volume History of the Oregon Country with his son, Leslie M. Scott, who published it after Harvey's death.

Death and legacy

Scott died unexpectedly following surgery in Baltimore, Maryland on August 7, 1910.[5] His body was buried at River View Cemetery in Portland.[6] His wife, Margaret Scott, died in 1925.[5]

Mount Scott, an extinct volcano in Happy Valley, was named after him, as was Harvey Scott Elementary School in Northeast Portland. Using $10,000 left in his widow's will for the purpose, Gutzon Borglum (notable for sculptures on Mount Rushmore) was commissioned to erect a statue of Harvey Scott.[5] The city council chose the summit of Mount Tabor for the statue in 1928, and Borglum placed a model of the statue there in 1930.[5] The bronze statue was dedicated on July 22, 1933, with approximately 3000 in attendance, 23 years after Scott died.[5] Oregon governor Julius Meier was chairman of the event, and Chester Harvey Rowell gave a speech.[5]

See also

Portrait of Harvey W. Scott

Footnotes

  1. Note: Middle name also spelled "Whitfield".
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Portrait and Biographical Record of Western Oregon: Containing Original Sketches of Many Well Known Citizens of the Past and Present. Chicago, IL: Chapman Publishing Co., 1904; pp. 71-73.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Edward L. Polich, A History of Portland's Secondary School System with Emphasis on the Superintendents and the Curriculum. PhD dissertation. University of Portland, 1950; pp. 35–36, 39.
  4. John B. Horner, Oregon: Her History, Her Great Men, Her Literature. Corvallis, OR: Gazette-Times, 1919; pg. 160.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Eugene E. Snyder, Portland Potpourri. Portland, OR: Binford & Mort, 1991; pp. 73–79.
  6. River View Cemetery

Works

Further reading

  • Alfred Holman, "Harvey W. Scott, Editor: Review of His Half-Century Career and Estimate of His Work," Quarterly of the Oregon Historical Society, vol. 14, no. 2 (June 1, 1913), pp. 87-133.
  • Lee Nash, "Abigail vs. Harvey: Sibling Rivalry in the Oregon Campaign for Woman Suffrage," Oregon Historical Quarterly, vol. 98 (Summer 1997), pp. 134-163. In JSTOR
  • Lee Nash, "Harvey Scott (1838-1910)," The Oregon Encyclopedia, Oregon Historical Society, 2015.
  • Lee Nash, "Scott of the Oregonian: Literary Frontiersman," Pacific Historical Quarterly, vol. 45 (August 1976), pp. 357-378. In JSTOR
  • Lee Nash, "Scott of the Oregonian: The Editor as Historian," Oregon Historical Quarterly, vol. 70, no. 3 (September 1969), pp. 197-232. In JSTOR
  • Oregon Historical Society, "Harvey W. Scott (1838-1910)," Oregon History Project, Oregon Historical Society, 2002.

External links