An engraved portrait of the pioneer and mountain man Joseph Lafayette Meek. From about 1828-1840, Meek was a fur trapper in the Rocky Mountains. In 1840, he joined a group of pioneers who were on their way to Oregon. He established a farm north of present-day Hillsboro in the Tualatin Valley and became prominent in Oregon's territorial government. The engraving is by J. C. Buttre based on a photograph by Joseph Bucktel. It appeared as the frontispiece to a book by Mrs. Frances Fuller Victor, 'The River of the West. Life and Adventure in the Rocky Mountains and Oregon...' (Hartford, Conn: Columbian Book Company, 1870).
This collection brings together archival material on the history of 'Boxer,' Pacific University's mascot. Letters, news clippings, photographs and other items are included, illustrating its history from when the Boxer statue first arrived on campus in the 1890s through its disappearance in 1970. Efforts to find, recreate and commemorate the statue since that time are also covered.