THE QUARTERLY
ofdM
Oregon Historical Society
VonJHK XVIII MARCH, 1917 NumbkeI
Gopyrisht^ 1917. bj tlM Ongon Historical SocictF IW QnartarlydiMTowtmponiibiKty for tiM potitioiit tAkmi by contribiitorotoits pacoo.
HALL JACKSON KELLEY— Prophet of Oregon
CHAPTER ONE Youth and Early Manhood
Any statement as to Kelley's early life must be pieced together from fragments now at hand over forty years after his death as a worn-out old man. That he was bom at North- wood, New Hampshire, February 24, 1790, is set forth by the town records. He was a descendant of John Kelley, one of the settlers of Newbury, Massachusetts. His grandfather was Samuel Kelley of Salem, and his father was Benjamin Kelley, a native of Salem and a physician who practiced in the New Hampshire towns of Northwood, Loudon, and Gilmanton. His mother was Mary ("Polly") Gile of Nottingham.
K"dley was a boy of ten when his family went to Gilmanton after four years' residence in Loudon. He attended Gilmanton academy, and at the age of sixteen taught school at Hallowell, Maine.* In 1813 he graduated from Middlebury college, Ver- mont, with the degree of A.B.^ From his own words it is possible to picture the sort of boy he was.
"Blessed with intelligent and pious parents, who led me in early youth to fear God, I came into active life serious minded; and much inclined to consider my ways, and to seek to know what could make me useful and happy. Before the years of manhood, I resolved on a fearless obedience to the divine com- Vsmands . . .' Pious, maternal instructions, in early youth
I Ltncaiter, Hist, of Gilmanton, 229, 350, 274; Conwell, Hist, of Nottingham, DetrHtld and Northwood, 584; Temple, Hist, of the Town of Palmer, a6s.
9 The nature of his coUege environment is indicated by the fact that thirteen out of twenty-nine members of his class entered the ministry.
3 Kelley, Hist, of the Settlement of Oregon, 6.