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Jefferson Public Radio State of Jefferson
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State of Jefferson

There are bumper stickers and t-shirts "Jefferson: A State of Mind," pamphlets such as "The State of Jefferson, a Dream That Died: or Did ItGreat Seal?", books like A Guide to the State of Jefferson, a Fourth of July Jefferson Days Celebration, a State of Jefferson Chamber, an annual State of Jefferson Cultural Resource Management conference, the Jefferson State Computer User's Group, and of course, Jefferson Public Radio. What's it all about?

If At First You Don’t SecedeThe history of what is now the state of Jefferson goes back to 1542 when Spanish conquistadors sailed up her coast and claimed the region for Her Catholic Majesty. Between this very early conquest and 1778 the area was claimed by both Britain and the United States. With the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, Jefferson officially became a territory of the U.S. and later two great states, Oregon and California, divided her and each took half. Since that time, the region has periodically seethed with rebellion and state secessionist sentiment--some of it quite serious.

While the great western migration brought settlers successfully to the region in the 1840's and 1850's, and as mining grew and agriculture grew in the area, transportation issues achieved greater concern. Citizens of Jefferson were many miles from the capitals and centers of commerce and culture in their respective states. Jeffersonians tended to feel isolated and neglected and this sense germinated a sense of independence which has endured.

The first recorded "rebellion" of Jeffersonians was quite serious and occurred in 1852. At the first California state legislature a bill was introduced to create a "State of Shasta" which encompassed much of what is now Jefferson. The bill died in committee but only because of the pressure of other legislative business. The next year a new attempt was made with the proposed state to be called "State of Klamath" but this effort was interrupted by a major Indian uprising which occurred that year.

In 1854 a new separate statehood movement began, this time centered in southern Oregon, and variously called by the name "Jackson Territory" and the "State of Jefferson." A proposal to create such a state was actually presented before Congress and the agitation continued until Oregon was granted statehood in 1859.

Unlike these serious attempts, efforts to launch Jefferson in the twentieth century have been largely tongue-in-cheek. The major "uprising" came in 1935 when concerns over poor roadways, which hampered the logging, mining and agricultural industries which had grown up in the area, was the major focus.


 Independence is at hand.

Stopping cars at border

In November, 1941, still aroused by the poor state of highways in the area, a provisional government was elected with Judge L. Childs of Crescent City as governor. The Yreka 20/30 Club printed a Proclamation of Independence and then local citizens, armed with hunting rifles and cheered by their neighbors, erected roadblocks across U.S. Highway 99 and began collecting tolls from travelers who were "crossing the state line." When a California Highway Patrolman arrived on the scene, he was told to "get back down the road to California." The group created the "Great Seal of the State of Jefferson"--a gold pan with "XX" painted on the bottom, which they said symbolized Jeffersonians being "double-crossed" by their mother states. To highlight their frustrations with poor road conditions, these parties issued a Proclamation of Independence which read:

You are now entering Jefferson, the 49th State of the Union.

Jefferson is now in patriotic rebellion against the states of California and Oregon.

This State has seceded from California and Oregon this Thursday, November 27, 1941. Patriotic Jeffersonians intend to secede each Thursday until further notice.

For the next hundred miles as you drive along Highway 99, you are traveling parallel to the greatest copper belt in the far West, seventy-five miles west of here.

The United States government needs this vital mineral. But gross neglect by California and Oregon deprives us of necessary roads to bring out the copper ore.

If you don't believe this, drive down the Klamath River highway and see for yourself. Take your chains, shovel and dynamite.

Until California and Oregon build a road into the copper country, Jefferson, as a defense-minded State, will be forced to rebel each Thursday and act as a separate State.

State of Jefferson Citizens Committee
Temporary State Capital, Yreka



December 4, 1941 was to be a major event in Jefferson's development. The San Francisco Chronicle (which won a Pulitzer prize for its coverage), the Portland Oregonian, Life and Time magazines, and four units of Hollywood newsreel companies, all arrived in Yreka for the inauguration of Judge John L. Childs as governor. Signs were plastered throughout Yreka which read: "Our roads are not passable, hardly jackassable; if our roads you would travel, bring your own gravel."

Three days later the State of Jefferson blew away in the winds of war from Pearl Harbor and the Jefferson statehood movement was quickly shelved while the nation began unifying behind the war effort.

 More Recently . . .

Again in 1956 groups from Cave Junction and Dunsmuir wreaked minor havoc in their respective state capitals by threatening to secede and take the "State of Shasta" with them. Quick action on their grievances at the state level temporarily mollified them.

 Lately . . .

The Jefferson movement has had more tourist than political overtones and has been used to point out to the world that in the northernmost reaches of California and the southern most portions of Oregon is the last great frontier of the Pacific slopes. However, some vestiges of political vitality to the Jefferson movement still exist. In the early 1990's, California Assemblyman Stan Statham, of Redding, very publicly advocated the division of California into two, or three, separate states and pushed the process far enough that an advisory plebiscite over the state's division appeared on the statewide California ballot. In Oregon secessionist rhetoric is seldom as seriously focused.

 The Voice of the State of Jefferson

Jefferson Public Radio, which originally consisted solely of Ashland station KSOR, began extending its service area outside Ashland by using translators, which are relatively inexpensive, small relay transmitters. Because of the extremely mountainous conditions in the region, KSOR eventually constructed the largest network of translators of any U.S. public radio station and located these translators in the various California and Oregon communities which had expressed interest in receiving the KSOR programming. Ignorant of the history of Jefferson, the placement of KSOR translators--by responding to the interests these communities expressed in receiving KSOR programming--naturally evolved with the location of translators throughout Jefferson's historic borders. Later, when KSOR began to add to its family of radio stations, the station wanted to adopt a name for its entire network of KSOR and its associated radio stations. By then aware of the history of the State of Jefferson and the fact that the station's service area now covered that same territory, Jefferson Public Radio was the obvious choice. JPR began using that name in 1989.

The State of Jefferson is a natural division, geographically, topographically and emotionally. As one Jeffersonian put it: "Jefferson is the state that never was and never will be but that has lived in men's minds for a hundred years."

Sources: San Francisco Chronicle, December 6, 1986
History of the State of Jefferson, Yreka Museum


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