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Order of the Antelope Protects Pronghorns

 
Like other recently arrived pioneers, Martha and Garrett Maupin looked to Oregon as the Promised Land. But in the 1850s paradise had flaws. 
 
Oregon may have seemed far from the troubles brewing Back East, but as the Civil War neared, feelings raged even in the Far West, and especially in Lane County, a hotbed of North-South rivalry.  A Southern sympathizer, Garrett Maupin armed himself with a gun and a whip for disarming antagonists. 
 
Alcohol-fueled fights erupted on the streets of Eugene City until troops arrived from Vancouver and placed a cannon at the courthouse. When things turned too hot for Garrett, he and Martha headed south to Douglas County—just ahead of the law.
 
Their great-great-granddaughter, Janet Fisher, tells their story in a new book called A Place of Her Own. 
 
Garrett died in a Douglas County wagon accident, leaving Martha alone on the frontier with many children and few options. But she took charge and bought a farm there, a family legacy Fisher owns and operates today.

 
 
Source: Fisher, Janet. A Place of Her Own: The Legacy of Oregon Pioneer Martha Poindexter Maupin. Guilford, CT/Helena, Mont. TwoDot/Globe Pequot Press, 2014. "Order of Antelope No Longer Will Be Herd on Oregon Refuge." Seattle Times. AP, Apr. 1992. Web. 16 July 2014
 

Alice Mullaly is a graduate of Oregon State and Stanford University, and taught mathematics for 42 years in high schools in Nyack, New York; Mill Valley, California; and Hedrick Junior High School in Medford. Alice has been an Southern Oregon Historical Society volunteer for nearly 30 years, the source of many of her “As It Was” stories.