Previous County
Surveyors:
Surveyor |
From |
To |
Comments |
R.V. Short |
185? |
July 5, 1858 |
Forced to resign
- see notes below |
C.M. Walker |
July 6, 1858 |
August 1, 1859 |
Resigned |
Ahio S. Watt |
August 4, 1859 |
July 4, 1860 |
|
Charles Handley |
July 5, 1860 |
July 8, 1864 |
|
Ahio S. Watt |
July 9, 1864 |
July 4, 1870 |
|
Charles Handley |
July 5, 1870 |
July 7, 1874 |
|
R.S. Shook |
July 8, 1874 |
July 11, 1876 |
|
B.E. Harris |
July 12, 1876 |
July 2, 1878 |
|
Aaron Frazier |
July 3, 1878 |
July 8, 1880 |
|
H.S. Maloney |
July 9, 1880 |
July 8, 1884 |
|
J.C. Cooper |
July 9, 1884 |
July 6, 1886 |
|
J.D. Fenton |
July 7, 1886 |
July 4, 1888 |
|
J.C. Cooper |
July 5, 1888 |
November 6, 1889 |
|
H.S. Maloney |
December 4, 1889 |
July 8, 1890 |
|
C.E. Branson |
July 9, 1890 |
July 7, 1896 |
|
H.S. Maloney |
July 8, 1896 |
July 5, 1898 |
|
C.E. Branson |
July 6, 1898 |
January 3, 1905 |
|
Robert W. Jones |
January 4, 1905 |
??????? |
Failed to take
oath of office |
Henry W. Herring |
November 8, 1906 |
July 3, 1957 |
died while in
office |
Harold E. Cox |
July 12, 1957 |
December 31,
1974 |
|
Richard P. Lucht |
January 1, 1975 |
February 15,
1977 |
|
Norris Jones |
February 16,
1977 |
January 2, 1995 |
|
Dan Linscheid |
January 3, 1995 |
present |
|
Some biographical facts about
some of our county and private surveyors, along with opinions of the quality of their
work, include:
- R.V. Short, our first county
surveyor, who was declared ineligible to hold the office after the Oregon Legislature
changed the boundary of the county (near it's easternmost corner), making him a
non-resident. Not much known about his survey work, given the fact that the county
courthouse burned to the ground in January of 1857, destroying nearly all land-related
records.
- Courtney
M. Walker, second known county surveyor. Courtney was no newcomer to the state,
having arrived here in the late 1830's. Rebuffed by the countys school superintendant in
his efforts to become a teacher, C.M. suceeded R.V. Short when Short's position was
declared vacant due to a change in the county line. It can be difficult at times to read
Mr. Walkers handwritten notes. Since he set only wooden stakes and called out bearing
trees, it has also been hard to follow in his footsteps.
Ahio S. Watt, Donation Land Claimant, who served
various official positions in Territorial Oregon. Ahio was an original Donation Land
claimant in the county. In the early days of county government, elections were held
'viva voce', and qualifications to hold various offices were basically an indication of
willingness to do the job, whether it be clerk of the Probate Court (now called Circuit
Court), county sheriff, surveyor, etc. Based on existing commissioners journals, one can
only assume the cycling between Watt and Handley over a 14 year period constituted a
friendly switch-off of duties between the two. His work is considered to be of
average accuracy given the time period.
- Charles Handley, (1811-1895)
who was first mate and captain of several small ships off the coast of Australia before
settling in Yamhill County. He served 2 terms as County Assessor before being elected
surveyor. Then he took a 6 year break to allow Watt to be surveyor again. Elections
in those days were 'viva voce' or by oral vote only. Not known for quality survey work.
Many times he reported bearings as Exx°N or Wxx°S, confusing to say the
least.
- Jacob C. Cooper, (1845-19??)
served as Deputy U.S. Surveyor on several contracts. In one of his field books is found
the following note: "Grove of Yellow Jackets: offset and stampede. Chain in a gallop.
Most likely some correction necessary to be made. At safe distance Shot in with
telescope".
- Hundley
S. Maloney, (1849-1929) an uncle of Henry Herring, who no doubt had something
to do with Henrys coming to Oregon from Tennesee in 1905. Surveys by H.S. are hard to
categorize, given the wide swings in accuracy which one can find following in his
footsteps. We have some of his original field books in our archives, which can give some
insight to what he did on a particular job.
- Henry 'Hank' Herring,
(1882-1957) who was appointed to the office in 1906, at age 24, after the person elected
failed to take the oath of office. Henry served as county surveyor for nearly 51 years. He
died while in office in 1957. Hank is still fondly remembered by many of the county's old
timers. It was said he could recall from memory almost as many details of the locations of
corner markers as were retained in the county surveyors office. Accuracy of his surveys is
considered average for the era and area. We have 31 of his field books on file, covering
nearly all of the surveys he performed prior to the early-to-mid 1920's, when he went to
removeable sheet field books or simply yellow paper. (Times were tough during the
depression years!)
- J. Grant Hefty, private
practitioner who was in business with Sylvander Simms in the Willamette
Valley. Born in 1871, J.G. was an engineer who, in 1904, was working for the
joint U.S.-Canadian International Boundary Commission. Also in 1904, he married Miss
Jennie Crawford, Granddaughter of Medorem Crawford, early pioneer from the Dayton area.
J.G. must have been working out of state quite regularly, since he was engaged running
levels for the USGS in Washington State (Stevens & Ferry counties) in 1905. His
earliest survey in this county was in 1909 (CS 2034h), wherein he indicated Sylvander
Simms was a chainman. Generally, Hefty & Simms' work is considered as good or better
than average for this era and location. J.G. The family moved to Washington in 1919, and
to Chevy Chase in 1925.
- Sylvander Simms,
partner with J.G. Hefty. Married Nella Hadaway in 1911 in Yamhill County. The late Dave
Bascue, PLS from the Salem area, recalled visiting Sylvanders' office in the mid 1950's in
Willamina. Dave recalled seeing an office crammed with maps and calc sheets, and Mr. Simms
smoking one cigar after another. Marc Riggins, current Marion County Surveyor, has
discussed Mr. Simms with Paul Ferguson, a previous Marion County Surveyor. Paul worked on
many jobs for Simms, and he related that Simms was known to be rather boisterous and
abrupt in his dealings with the county surveyors office in Salem in the 1950s... he would
walk in, pick up a field book or three and walk out, almost daring someone to confront him
on it. Another of his traits was to get upset at one or more of his field crew members for
one reason or another, fire them (one or all), and then call some of them up within a day
or two to hire them back. Between 1909 and 1919, he partnered with J.G. Hefty, and
apparently, sometime between about 1920 and 1930 he moved his operations totally to Marion
county, following his partners move back east. He worked almost exclusively in Marion
county from 1930 until the mid-1940's, when he began doing a few jobs in Yamhill
county. In his earlier work (1908-1920) , the accuracy of his work is considered to
be so-so, when he partnered with Hefty. In Marion county, the accuracy of his early work
(1930-1945) is thought to be within the top 20% of all private surveyors, but the accuracy
dropped off by the time he died in the mid-1950's.
This webpage was created on
4/20/96 and last updated 5/23/2006 by Dan Linscheid, Yamhill County Surveyor.