It is appropriate that Clanrick
Crosby is buried in the Masonic Cemetery here in Tumwater.
Even though he was not among the original pioneers who founded
New Market in 1845, he was the one who was responsible for
giving Tumwater its shape and for fostering its industrial
growth.
He was born in Massachusetts in 1814. Unlike so many of the
early settlers, he did not cross the Oregon Trail. A member of a
seafaring family, he captained a ship that sailed into Portland
in the spring of 1850. With him he brought a brother, a sister,
their spouses and children, the children of another brother that
included Nathaniel Crosby, and his own wife and children. He
arrived in the Puget Sound area in April, 1850.
He purchased the rights to the grist and saw mills along the
Deschutes River in Tumwater from
Michael T. Simmons and took out a Donation Land Claim that
included Tumwater's upper, middle and lower falls. By so doing
he held the key to Tumwater's economic development. He also
devised the initial plat of the City of Tumwater. Although the
official plat on record at the Thurston County Auditor's Office
is dated 1869, it is apparent from property records that he had
platted Tumwater as early as 1857.
Sometime in the 1850s he started a mercantile store. The Crosby
Store was an important fixture in Tumwater for years. He sold
land to Ira Ward and Smith
Hays for their flour and saw mills in 1857, to
James Biles for his tannery in
1859, to Franklin B. Kendall for his sash and door factory in
1869 and to William Horton for
his pipe factory in 1870. He supervised his own flour and saw
mills.
In 1863 he started construction on a grand new flour mill, but
did not complete it until 1866. The Crosby Lincoln Flour Mill
was a magnificent structure, 40 x 60 feet in size and 5 'li
stories high. In photographs of Tumwater, it dominates the
landscape. The building burned in 1905, long after it had left
the possession of the Crosby family.
Clanrick and Phebe Crosby were
married in Boston in 1837. They were blessed with 6 children:
Clanrick, Jr., Phebe Louisa, Cecelia, Fannie, William and
Walter. When Phebe died in
1871, her obituary stated that, "She will be long remembered for
her estimable virtues." When Clanrick died in 1879, his obituary
read, "Mr. Crosby was one of the old pioneers of Thurston
county, and up to the time of his prostration, he had become so
identified with the commercial interests of Olympia and Tumwater
that his name was a household word throughout the upper Sound
county."