talk of counties
previous chapter that a bill creating the office of sur
veyor-general in Oregon, and to grant donation rights
to settlers, and for other purposes, was before congress
in both houses in January 1848, and that it failed
through lack of time, having to await the territorial
bill which passed at the last moment. Having been
crowded out, and other affairs pressing at the next
session, the only trace of it in the proceedings of con
gress is a resolution by Collamer, of Vermont, on the
25th of January 1849, that it should be made the
special order of the house for the first Tuesday of
February, when, however, it appears to have been
forgotten; and it was not until the 22d of April 1850
that Mr Fitch, chairman of the committee on territo
ries, again reported a bill on this subject. That the
bill brought up at this session was but a copy of the
previous one is according to usage; but that Thurston
had been at work with the committee some peculiar
features of the bill show. 34
There was tact and diplomacy in Thurston s char acter, which he displayed in his short congressional
in Oregon before the palmy days of British sway, and of British residents naming counties at all. While Thurston was in Washington, the postmaster- general changed the name of the postoffice at Vancouver to Columbia City. Or. Statesman, May 28, 1851.
31 Thornton alleges that he presented Thurston before leaving Oregon with a copy of his bill, Or. Hist., MS., 13, and further that the donation law we now have, except the llth section and one or two unimportant amendments, is an exact copy of the bill I prepared. Or. Pioneer Asso. frarn. 1874, 94. Yet when Thurston lost his luggage on the Isthmus he lost all his papers, and could not have made an exact copy from memory. In another place he says that before leaving Washington he drew up a land bill which he sent to Collamer in Vermont, and would have us believe that this was the iden tical bill which finally passed. Not knowing further of the bill than what was stated by Thornton himself, I would only remark upon the evidence that Collamer s term expired before 1850, though that might not have pre vented him from introducing any suggestions of Thornton s into the bill reported in January 1849. But now comes Thornton of his. own accord, and admits he has claimed too much. He did, he says, prepare a territorial and also a land bill, but on further reflation, and after consulting others, I deemed it not well to have these new bills offered, it having been suggested that the bills already pending in both houses of congress could be amended by incorporating into them whatever there was in my bills not already pro vided for in the bills which in virtue of their being already on the calendar would be reached before any bills subsequently introduced. From a letter dated August 8, 1882, which is intended as an addendum to the Or. Hint., MS., of Thornton.