Ebook
From tilling the valley's virgin soil to building a widely proclaimed opera house, the Bushnell family started with so little and built so much. In the prequel to this book, A Continent Between Us, James and Elisabeth each traveled west on separate wagons trains, each surviving many perils. They were finally reunited again in Oregon. In this account, they homestead together in the southern Willamette Valley. In their early years, they endured floods, diseases, many deaths, and devasting fires. They built homes, churches, and schools. They were blessed by faith and family. James never gave up and kept envisioning a better life for all those he knew and loved. He and his next wife, Sarah, dreamed and worked until they had a small city to be proud of, including a city water system, stores, banks, hotels, a ballroom, an opera house, churches, many schools, and a university that lasts to this day. The James Bushnells were just one industrious family surrounded by other determined pioneers. Yet, this amazing family provided so much for others, then and now. They led their community in faith, vision, and perseverance in ways that still stand strong more than a century later.
“A powerful telling of lives well lived. Kathleen Box has artfully shared a fascinating story of conviction in the face of hardship and tragedy, and of faith celebrated in moments of triumph due to the pioneer spirit of James Bushnell and his family. Bushnell University stands as a testimony to what the Lord can do through the service of ‘dreamers and doers.’”
—Joseph Womack, president, Bushnell University
“Kathleen Box has provided a valuable resource for those interested in the history of Junction City specifically and of white settlement in the Willamette Valley in general. A worthy sequel to A Continent Between Us, completing the incredible story of James Bushnell and his family begun there.”
—Steve Silver, cataloging and collections specialist, Linfield University
“A fascinating, unique peek into Oregon history! Kathleen Box makes good use of a rare stash of lifelong diary entries from her great-great-grandfather James Bushnell, pivotal in the development of higher education in southwest Oregon. A great read.”
—Carol Cure, former regional director, Institute on Religion and Aging
Kathleen Pitney Box grew up soaking in family stories about pioneers and Native Americans. She also got to handle and observe many of their artifacts collected by her grandfather, Clarence (Bushnell) Pitney, when he turned his living room into a museum. She is a semi-retired teacher who now lives in Vancouver, Washington. She has loved reading historical fiction since her childhood. She has authored A Continent Between Us (2018), an account describing four separate, perilous journeys of her great-great grandparents, James and Elisabeth Bushnell, a young couple from Missouri. Just as with her books’ main characters, Box’s faith, family, and friends keep her going.