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Ephraim Badger

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Barry County, Missouri, United States
Death: January 08, 1936 (83)
Provolt, Josephine County, Oregon, United States
Place of Burial: Applegate, Jackson County, Oregon, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Ephraim Badger and Elma Rosetta Rose
Husband of Nancy Octavia Badger
Father of Daisy Viola Lewman and Rose Arizona Bailey
Brother of Thomas Ruble Badger; Elizabeth Hirons Grisham; George W. Badger and Margaret R. Slater
Half brother of Thomas Jefferson Rose; James Monroe Rose; Harvey Crawford Rose; William Henry Rose and Charity Arizona Flook

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Ephraim Badger

From the Find A Grave page on Ephraim Badger Jr.:

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Badger&GSfn=E...

  • Birth: Sep. 3, 1852 - Barry County, Missouri, USA
  • Death: Jan. 8, 1936 - Oregon, USA

Pioneer Oregon gospel preacher. For additional info, go to www.ncbible.org.

Burial: Missouri Flat Cemetery, Applegate, Jackson County, Oregon, USA

  • Maintained by: Tom Childers
  • Originally Created by: Evelyn
  • Record added: Feb 25, 2007
  • Find A Grave Memorial# 18062639

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From Ephraim Badger's page on NCBibile.org:

http://ncbible.org/nwh/ProBadger.html

The life-story of preacher Ephraim Badger is fascinating.

Ephraim's father was also named Ephraim and his mother was Elma Ruble Badger, sister of William and David Ruble. Elma's brothers are the subject of a separate pioneer profile. Ephraim's older brother was Thomas Ruble Badger.

Ephraim Sr. died in Missouri before Ephraim Jr. was born and Elma married Andrew Jackson Rose before they came overland to Oregon. A. J. and Elma are buried in the Lebanon Masonic Cemetery in Lebanon.

Ephraim's younger half-sister Charity Rose attended the Hamilton Creek School on Berlin Road east of Lebanon, so it is likely that the preacher-to-be did, too. The family may have lived near Waterloo.

As a youth growing up near Lebanon, Oregon, Ephraim acquired an acreage and built a small house. His vocation was raising sheep. He had time to read while watching them and decided to read the Bible. This led him to want to be baptized into Christ, but the church people around him did not believe this was necessary.

Ephraim finally made a trip to Portland and met with a Mr. Gilstrap of the Church of Christ. This may have been D. F. Gilstrap, but we do not have record of him living in Portland at that time. The young inquirer was duly immersed and returned to watching his sheep.

The young Christian soon met and married Nancy Octavia (Tavie) Lovelady, a great-granddaughter of Thomas Crawford McBride. She had been born at Independence, Oregon in 1861. They were married in 1877.

Because his brother, Thomas Ruble Badger, had settled near Moro in present-day Sherman County, Ephraim moved his family there about 1882. (One record says 1886.)

The family moved back to Mill City, at the north edge of the Linn County in 1888. A number of kin had settled here. Nancy's grandmother, Martha Ann Bounds, was here. Her first husband was Dr. Thomas C. McBride who had drowned in 1849. After living for a while with her father-in-law, Thomas Crawford McBride in Yamhill County, she had married John Bird Bounds. But he is not in the story now. Ephraim's brother, Thomas Ruble Badger had returned here from Central Oregon.

About this time, Ephraim took a correspondence course from the famous Dr. Ashley Johnson. Mr. Badger may have seen the tiny ads in the Christian Standard. We have simulated one here:

CORRESPONDENCE BIBLE COLLEGE

Full course by mail. Seventh year. Many pu-

pils. Pamphlet free. Ashley S. Johnson, L. L. D.

Pres. Kimberlin Height, Tenn.

Johnson's courses were so popular that he established the School of the Evangelists, now known as Johnson Bible College in Knoxville, TN. Ephraim's education was at the hands of a genuine professional.

The family then moved to Monroe, Oregon where Nancy had been raised.

Sometime after this, he began the life of traveling and preaching. He belonged to that hardy band of preacher-farmers who evangelized Oregon and Washington before the turn of the century. Ephraim is listed in the 1880 census as a farmer, but by the time of the 1900 census, he lists himself as a minister.

Ephraim and Nancy (Tavie) had two children. One was Rose Arizona Badger Bailey and she died before her own children were raised, so Ephraim and Tavie raised them to adulthood. Their other daughter was Daisy Viola and she married Richard F. Lewman.

One family source locates Ephraim and Nancy in Drain, Oregon from 1894 - 1898. This allowed the girls to attend Normal School. Daisy attended the four years, but Rose was sick and attended only a year. Another record says that Daisy also attended Ashland Normal Teachers College.

An obituary on the passing of Samuel Nelson Beeks in Goldendale, Washington, says that he "united with the Church of Christ in October 1895 under the preaching of Rev. E. Badger." The town seems to be Goodnoe Hills, Washington. Either Mr. Badger was conducting a Fall meeting for the church or he was resident there.

By 1902 the family had moved to Ashland, Oregon where they lived until their daughters married. We have a large family photo taken at this time. The house, built by Ephriam, was located in what is now a city park.

One note in the Christian Standard mentions that he held a short gospel meeting in Falls City, near Dallas, Oregon.

It is probably at this point they moved to Graton, near Sebastapol, California. The purpose was to establish a church-related school, Pacific Christian Academy. The school is still in existance and has an extensive web site. Daisy wrote, "He was very instrumental in helping to start this school."

Ephraim may have been called to Graton because of a Badger cousin living in Sonoma County. This is not at all certain.

In their later years, the Badgers were based in the Grant's Pass area. They may have moved to be near their daughter, Daisy Lewman, who lived in that vicinity at Provolt. They were living there in 1914. Tavie's mother, Lavina McBride, was living with or near them when she died in 1918.

Oral history has it that Ephraim used to walk over the hill from Provolt to Gold Hill to preach for the Church of Christ there. Once he layed down to rest on the way and woke to find some small crawling critter in his clothes. He also made the trip from Provolt to Coos Bay and back to preach.

The Badger's great-grandson Melvin A. Davis, has recalled some events of those years. He was born and raised in the home of Ephriam and Nancy Badger:

The other thing that I can remember about that same time is Grandpa Badger had a large barn with two horses in it and he would go out and spray the apples and cherries with the horses pulling the spray rig. He was always a gentleman and let me walk behind him so that the spray wouldn't get on me. When he was through, he put me on the horse and I rode back to the barn and he would talk to me. He would let me sit on his lap and he would either read the Bible to me or tell me a Bible story. I can also remember him preaching at times. He was a wonderful man in my sight.

One historical record says that "Rev. Badger was instrumental in establishing the first telephone line in the Provolt area."

The historical folder for the 91st Reunion of the Falls City Christian Church in 1985 lists Ephraim Badger as the minister from 1925 to 1926. He was followed by Earl Downing.

Kay Alsing met Tavie and her daughter Daisy in Medford about 1950. She described them as "Both neatly dressed, quiet, lovely ladies . . . . "

It was a little after this that Melvin Davis remembers:

. . . we went up from Sebastopol and visited Grandma Badger with my mother at a care home. When we went in, she was carrying food trays around to the elderly women. She was 92 at the time. I ask her what she was doing and she told me "I'm helping these old women." . . . She was a wonderful and caring person.

Ephraim and Tavie share the same headstone in the Missouri Flats Cemetery near their retirement home in Southern Oregon. Tavie's mother, Lavina Lovelady, is buried in the same row with them.

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Ephraim Badger's Timeline

1852
August 3, 1852
Barry County, Missouri, United States
1878
September 29, 1878
Lebanon, Linn County, Oregon, United States
1880
July 18, 1880
Ashland, Jackson County, Oregon, United States
1880
Age 27
Lebanon, Linn, Oregon, United States
1900
1900
Age 47
Ashland, Jackson, Oregon
1910
1910
Age 57
Eugene Ward 1, Lane, Oregon
1920
1920
Age 67
Analy, Sonoma, California
1930
1930
Age 77
Analy, Sonoma, California
1936
January 8, 1936
Age 83
Provolt, Josephine County, Oregon, United States