Obituary: Colorful Pioneer Woman dies, Mollie Nichols, The Dalles, Wasco Co., Oregon ********************************************************************************* USGENWEB ARCHIVES(tm) NOTICE: All documents placed in the USGenWeb Archives remain the property of the contributors, who retain publication rights in accordance with US Copyright Laws and Regulations. In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, these documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. They may be used by non-commercial entities so long as all notices and submitter information is included. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit. Any other use, including copying files to other sites, requires permission from the contributors PRIOR to uploading to the other sites. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. ********************************************************************************* Transcribed and formatted for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Earline Wasser January 2003 ********************************************************************************* Mollie Nichols The Dalles Optimist Friday, January 28, 1938, Front page Colorful Pioneer Woman Once Lived in Antelope. Time marches on and "Aunt Moll" Nichols, once a dashing figure as she rode horses around Antelope (Oregon) and later Tumalo (Oregon), is dead at the age of 90. None of the younger generation will remember "Aunt Moll" but the name will recall some of the pioneer figures of Central Oregon to those who have passed the bibical age of three score years and ten. Daughter of roving pioneer parents, Miss Mollie Nichols was born at Dallas (Oregon) but moved to Wasco county while still a girl. She first lived in Antelope country, then in the heydey of its glory, and there she became known far and wide as a fine horsewoman. Her father, Frank Nichols, was a well known character and at one time was sheriff of old Wasco county when it took in all the country from the ridge of the Cascades on the west to the broken peaks of the Blue mountains on the east. It was he who, as a state representative, introduced a bill in the state legislature which carved Crook county out of what was then all of Wasco county. Later the Nichols, father and daughter, moved to Prineville (Oregon), where he established and operated the first drug store in that city. When fire destroyed the store, they moved on together to the new frontier at Tumalo (Oregon), then known as Laidlaw. Laidlaw, at that time was a booming western town, larger than Bend, due to the construction of the Deschutes County Municipal Improvement district, better known as Tumalo irrigation project. Settlers were flocking into the town at that time, and the young city boasted of two stores, a meat market, restaurant, hotel, livery barn, and a nespaper, besides a hotel and other business. Nichols and his daughter ran the hotel for some time. Later they bought one of the show places of the city, a huge residence which had been built in the boom days and was known as the James property. Here they made their home and here in the course of time occurred the death of the older Nichols. After his death "Aunt Moll" continued to live in the big house, sharing it with a relative, Ed Dean, until his death about four years ago when she was persuaded by relatives to give up living in the big house all alone and moved to Grant's Pass (Oregon) to be with her niece, Mrs. Fred N. Wallace. And it was there, while "Aunt Noll" was busy making plans for a last visit to the scenes of her childhood, that she mounted her saddle and cantered out the long trail which takes all old pioneers, at the last, over the Great Divide. END Written permission to reprint given by The Dalles Chronicle, The Dalles, Oregon