Editing Veazie, Arthur Lyle

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ARTHUR LYLE VEAZIE
ARTHUR LYLE VEAZIE
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Arthur Lyle Veazie was born at Dallas, Oregon, September 8, 1868.  His father, Edmund Fuller Veazie, was a native of Hamden, Maine, and his mother was a native of Polk County, Oregon.  The father died in Wasco county, Oregon, in 1877, while the mother, Harriet Jane Lyle, who was born in 1847, died in 1927 and is buried in Portland.  The family history is closely connected with the pioneer development of Oregon.  Felix Scott, great-grandfather of Arthur L. Veazie, with his wife, Ellen Scott and a large family, crossed the plains to the Pacific coast in 1845.  He was born in West Virginia, December 13, 1786.  He moved to St. Charles county, Missouri, in 1819; was a member of the senate for several terms and served as lieutenant governor of that state.  The opportunities of the far west attracted him.  He spent the winter of 1845-6 at Sutter's Fort, now the site of Sacramento.  In the spring of 1845 he journeyed northward to Oregon by pack train and lived in Yamhill county until 1849 and then settled in [[Lane County]].  He engaged successfully in mining in California.  Felix's eldest son (Felix Jr.) returned overland to the midwest (where his uncle lived in Illinois) and bought fine cattle, which he successfully brought to the ranch in Oregon.  Later, Felix Sr., with several associates returned by way of the sea to the Atlantic coast, where they invested their money in fine blooded horses and started across the plains to Oregon with their stock, (as they could not travel by ship due to the gold rush), but the entire party was slain near Alturas, California, in the year 1858.  His son, Felix Scott, Jr., opened the first wagon road through the McKenzie Pass in 1861, taking a train of loaded freight wagons through with ox teams from Eugene to eastern Oregon.
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Arthur Lyle Veazie was born at Dallas, Oregon, September 8, 1868.  His father, Edmund Fuller Veazie, was a native of Hamden, Maine, and his mother was a native of Polk County, Oregon.  The father died in Wasco county, Oregon, in 1877, while the mother, Harriet Jane Lyle, who was born in 1847, died in 1927 and is buried in Portland.  The family history is closely connected with the pioneer development of Oregon.  Felix Scott, great-grandfather of Arthur L. Veazie, with his wife, Ellen Scott and a large family, crossed the plains to the Pacific coast in 1845.  He was born in West Virginia, December 13, 1786.  He moved to St. Charles county, Missouri, in 1819; was a member of the senate for several terms and served as lieutenant governor of that state.  The opportunities of the far west attracted him.  He spent the winter of 1845-6 at Sutter's Fort, now the site of Sacramento.  In the spring of 1845 he journeyed northward to Oregon by pack train and lived in Yamhill county until 1849 and then settled in [[Lane County]].  He engaged successfully in mining in California.  Felix's eldest son (Felix Jr.) returned overland to the midwest (where his uncle lived in Illinois) and bought fine cattle, which he successfully brought to the ranch in Oregon.  Later, Felix Sr., with several associates returned by way of the sea to the Atlantic coast, where they invested their money in fine blooded horses and started across the plains to Oregon with their stock, (as they could not travel by ship due to the gold rush), but the entire party was slain outside Winnemucca, Nevada, in the year 1858.  His son, Felix Scott, Jr., opened the first wagon road through the McKenzie Pass in 1861, taking a train of loaded freight wagons through with ox teams from Eugene to eastern
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Oregon.
It was also in the year 1845 that John Eakin Lyle, a grandfather of Arthur L. Veazie, came to Oregon.  He was born near Knoxville, Tennessee, and was married in Oregon in 1846 to Ellen Castlio Scott, who had crossed the plains with her father, Felix Scott and  Felix's second wife, as his first wife had died in childbirth, Ellen Castlio, born 1805 in Davidson County, Tenn.  John E. Lyle was the first school teacher of Polk county and a monument marks the site on which he conducted his school, which was advertised in the Oregon Spectator of Oregon City, March 19, 1846, as follows:  
It was also in the year 1845 that John Eakin Lyle, a grandfather of Arthur L. Veazie, came to Oregon.  He was born near Knoxville, Tennessee, and was married in Oregon in 1846 to Ellen Castlio Scott, who had crossed the plains with her father, Felix Scott and  Felix's second wife, as his first wife had died in childbirth, Ellen Castlio, born 1805 in Davidson County, Tenn.  John E. Lyle was the first school teacher of Polk county and a monument marks the site on which he conducted his school, which was advertised in the Oregon Spectator of Oregon City, March 19, 1846, as follows:  

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