A Northwest Icon

George Washington of Centralia
July 1, 2018 at 12:00 a.m.
This larger-than-life mural of George Washington, the founder of Centralia, and his trusty companion Rockwood can be seen at the corner of Pearl and Main streets in downtown Centralia.
This larger-than-life mural of George Washington, the founder of Centralia, and his trusty companion Rockwood can be seen at the corner of Pearl and Main streets in downtown Centralia.

...by …by Brian Mittge

…by Brian Mittge


The history of the Pacific Northwest includes a fascinating chapter: the African-American founders of Centralia, a town about halfway between Seattle and Portland.

George and Mary Jane Washington founded Centralia on the northeastern edge of their 640-acre farm, laying out the streets and naming them in discussions around their kitchen table.

Mary Jane, originally from Louisiana, had African and Jewish heritage. She came to Centralia by way of Hawaii and Victoria, British Columbia. She named the streets that George laid out, and she picked names reflecting her faith (Pearl and Gold evoke the streets of heaven) and her Southern birth (Magnolia and Pine streets).

As they expanded the city — known at first as “Centerville” — they gave land to the city. A public park, known as George Washington Park in his honor, is now home to the Centralia library. They gave land to start churches (with George cutting & hewing the timber for the city’s first Baptist church) and donated the city’s first cemetery. George and Mary Jane helped found a beautiful seminary on the hill above Centralia, giving that part of Centralia — Seminary Hill — its name.

Most importantly, George supported his neighbors and town during hard times. He gave work to those in need; he gave food – buying wagon loads of rice and staples during hard times. He even gave away shoes when his neighbors were down and out. He refused to foreclose when people couldn’t pay their bills. With quiet confidence, he told them he knew they would be good for it.

“I want to do right by my fellow men,” he sold his stepson, Stacey Cooness. “And if I do, then I’ll never lose anything by it.”

He was beloved during his lifetime. When he died in 1905 at age 88 after a buggy accident, the mayor asked businesses to shut down in mourning. His funeral, in the church he helped build by hand, was the largest the city had ever seen.

George Washington’s Life — a Remarkable Story

From narrowly escaping a life of slavery in Virginia to coming west on the Oregon Trail, Centralia’s founder lived a life of adventure, difficulty and, ultimately, great success. He was born to a white woman of English descent and an African- American slave father, who was sold to a distant owner shortly after George’s birth.

To save him from becoming a slave himself, George’s mother made the heartbreaking decision to ask a married couple to raise her son as their own.

James and Anna Cochran did exactly that. They took George with them as they moved west with the frontier. George grew up like Daniel Boone, becoming a skilled marksman and learning to tan his own leather and sew his own clothes. His foster mother also taught him to love the songs in her big hymnal.

George went into business as a young man, but racist laws in Missouri derailed him time and again, and nearly sent him to jail. Amazingly, the Missouri Legislature passed a law excluding him from most of those laws. Still, he was not free to pursue his dreams, so he decided to head west.

“If there’s a decent place in this world, I’m going to find it,” he told his foster family, and when they asked to come with him, they all vowed to stay together until the end.

After adventures and life-threatening illness, George came to the Oregon Territory — but the area’s racist laws banned him and all blacks from this frontier country. To avoid the heavy hand of these racial exclusion laws, he came north to this area far from the seat of territorial control (another black pioneer with a presidential name, George Bush, settled in the Tumwater area for the same reason).

After nearly losing his homestead to claim-jumpers who aimed to take advantage of the laws against blacks owning land, George worked with his white foster parents, the Cochrans, to homestead the land where he later founded Centralia.

George’s new neighbors sent a petition to the Oregon Territorial Legislature, calling for “a special act in his favor” to exclude him from these racist laws. “Since he has been residing among us his conduct has been that of an Honorable, Industrious, Law-abiding man,” the petition, signed by 112 white pioneers, declares. The territorial Legislature voted in favor of the petition, and finally Washington had that “decent place” of his dreams.

Bicentennial Observance Celebrates Washington’s Legacy


A statue of the city founders, George and Mary Jane Washington, will be dedicated on August 11 at George Washington Park in downtown Centralia

Centralia-area residents began meeting in January of 2017 to plan a big 200th birthday bash for George Washington. It quickly became clear that the ideas they had were much bigger than one day, and a yearlong observance was organized, culminating in a grand finale celebration and dedication of a George and Mary Jane Washington statue on August 11, 2018.

The city of Centralia’s annual Fourth of July Summerfest parade in 2017 was dedicated to George Washington’s bicentennial, and other events have been held throughout the year. Hundreds of people attended the 200th birthday party on Aug. 12, 2017, with kids’ games, free hot dogs and shaved ice, music from the Two Town Tuners barbershop chorus, a 5K run around the borders of George’s original 640-acre homestead, and much more. The next day, a pioneer-style church service in George Washington Park honored the couple’s deep, life-changing faith.

On Aug. 15, 2017, the precise day of George’s 200th birthday, Centralia College held a ceremony officially rededicating Washington Hall to George’s memory.

Local business owner, Todd Watson, restored the colorful George Washington mural downtown as a way of showing his respect for the founder and his ideals. Events have continued throughout the bicentennial year.

George and Mary Jane Washington Statue Dedication

The people of Centralia and beyond have pulled together to create a bronze statue of George and Mary Jane Washington to honor the founders on the 200th anniversary of George’s 1817 birth in Virginia. And a scholarship fund will be given to Centralia College’s students showing George and Mary Jane Washington’s spirit of overcoming obstacles with a community-minded spirit.

Join the people of Centralia at the statue dedication from 10am to 2pm this August 11, 2018 at George Washington Park in downtown Centralia. For more information, visit www. OurGeorgeWashington.com.

Brian Mittge is chair of the all-volunteer George Washington Bicentennial Committee and is co-authoring the first definitive biography about him. Mittge is a fourth-generation Lewis County resident and is the former editor-in-chief of The (Centralia) Chronicle. He lives with his wife and their three children in rural Lewis County. He can be reached at, brianmittge@hotmail.com.


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