George Stoughtenburg, who, while attempting to ford
the Willamette on horseback, about a mile below the
Mission, was drowned. That autumn Shepard was
seriously ill with a scrofulous trouble, which necessi-
tated the amputation of liis leg; he did not long sur-
vive the operation, his death occurring on the 1st of
January, 1840. For two years he had suffered from
the disease. He left a wife and two infant daughters. 82
Thus passed away from his work in the Methodist
Mission its most faithful and successful servant, whose
gentleness had won him the hearts of all his asso-
ciates. He was a large, fine-looking man, but little
over forty years of age at the time of his death. With
Shepard died all interest in the hopeless scheme of
educating the native children of the Willamette. We
cannot blame his associates for feeling its hopelessness ;
to them it was a rootless Sahara, upon which the sun
might beat for centuries without bringing forth fruit
enough to feed a whip-poor-will, And yet his was a
self-sacrificing, generous nature, that never lost faith
in the power of love to redeem the lowest humanity.
Such was the condition of affairs in the spring of 1840. The Lausanne not arriving as early as was ex- pected, Daniel Lee, who had been waiting a few days at the Willamette Mission, grew impatient, for his be- trothed was among the passengers, and he hastened forward to meet the ship at its anchorage. Solomon Smith accompanied him with his Clatsop wife, who wished to return to her own people as a missionary, having experienced a change of heart; and on the 16th of May they started on their trip, and held re- ligious services with the Indians wherever they found it convenient to land. They had just encamped on the 21st of May at Chinook, when a vessel was seen coming up the channel under Cape Disappointment, and anchoring in Baker Bay. Lee lost no time in going on board, and in meeting his uncle and the
82 He was bom in Phillipston, Massachusetts, August 16, 1799.