About the 1st of September of this year, Cornelius
Kogers, who had removed from the Presbyterian mis-
sions of eastern Oregon to the Willamette Valley,
married Satira Leslie, a girl of fifteen years, eldest
daughter of David Leslie. The marriage took place
under circumstances at once trying and romantic.
Mr Leslie, having lost both his wife and his salary as
a member of the Mission, was much concerned about
his future, and thinking that in some way a voyage to
the Islands, where he would place his elder daughters
in school, would help to settle matters for him, made
arrangements to embark with his family in the brig
Chenamas, the same vessel in which Richmond, Whit-
comb, and Bailey, with other families, left Oregon in
September 1842. Rogers' proposal came at the last
moment, and the marriage took place on board the
Chenamas; and it was there arranged that the two
older girls should accompany their father, while the
two younger should remain in the country with their
married sister.
Rogers returned to the Mission with his wife and the two children, and prepared to remove to the Wil- lamette Falls. During the winter Raymond arrived from Clatsop to procure supplies for that station, which were to be carried in a large canoe belonging to the Mission, and in which Rogers determined to embark for the falls, with his wife and her youngest sister. Dr White, who had lately returned to Oregon, and Nathaniel Crocker, of Lansingville, New York, who
Lee gave birth to a daughter, soon after which she died, leaving to the super- intendent only his infant girl as the fruit of two marriages. This child was named Lucy Anna Maria, after both of Lee's wives, and was taken charge ot by Mrs Mines, to whom she became as a daughter. Her own mother, whose maiden name was Lucy Thompson, and who was from Barre, Vermont, was buried in the cemetry at the new mission, to which place and to the same grave were removed the remains of that Anna Maria after whom the child was named. Miss Lee wag educated at the Oregon Institute and Willamette Uni- versity, in which she was employed as a teacher for several years. V\ hen about twenty-two years old she married Francis H. Grubbs, another teacher, and taught with him in the university and several other Methodist schools. Her constitution was delicate, and she died in 1881 at the Dalles, at the age of thirty-nine years. Hines' Or. Hist., 316; Hmes Or. and, Institutions, 240, 247, 257; Independence, Or., Riverside, June 13, 1879; S. I. Friend, iv. 53.