Background
Ralph Geer was born in Windham County, Connecticut, on March 13, 1816, to Joseph Carey Geer, Senior and Mary Johnson Geer.
Ralph Geer was born in Windham County, Connecticut, on March 13, 1816, to Joseph Carey Geer, Senior and Mary Johnson Geer.
A native of Connecticut, he lived in Ohio and Illinois before taking the Oregon Trail west to Oregon where he started a nursery and later raised livestock and grew flax. At times a Republican and later a Democrat, he served in the Oregon House of Representatives and as the clerk for the county. He was related to both Homer Davenport and T. T. Geer.
The family moved to Madison County, Ohio, when he was still a boy.
In 1847, Geer and his family immigrated to the Oregon Country over the Oregon Trail. Geer settled east of Salem in the Waldo Hills and began building a nursery using seedlings he carried with him over the Oregon Trail.
His nursery started with pears and apples. In 1848, during the Cayuse War against Native Americans in retaliation for the Whitman Massacre, Geer served as captain of a company of men protecting the Willamette Valley.
In March, he led those troops into battle at the Battle of Abiqua Creek.
Also that year he worked as a teacher. Geer imported English sheep to Oregon in 1858 and later became an early farmer of flax in the Willamette Valley. In 1854, he was elected to the Oregon Territorial Legislature to represent Marion County.
He served during the 1854 to 1855 session in the lower House of Representatives.
In July 1868, he was elected to the office of county clerk for Marion County. Geer served in that office for a single term, leaving in June 1870.
Ralph Geer was the uncle of Oregon Governor Theodore Thurston Geer. He was also the grandfather of political cartoonist Homer Davenport.
Ralph Carey Geer died in the Waldo Hills on January 9, 1895, at the age of 79 and was buried at Mountain.
Hope Pioneer Cemetery east of Salem in the Waldo Hills. Geer"s house, still located on his original Donation Land Claim is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the R. C. Geer Farmhouse.
Originally a Republican, he later switched party affiliations to the Democratic Party.