Basque Fact of the Week: Jordan Valley, the Little Basque Town in Oregon

The American West was a strong draw for many young Basques seeking opportunity. Jordan Valley, Oregon, was one of those areas that provided opportunity for young Basques. Jordan Valley first attracted miners around 1863 when gold was discovered. The first Basques arrived soon after, in 1890, as part of the sheep industry. So many Basques came that Jordan Valley became known as “Home of the Basques.” The Basque influence was so strong that, in the early 1900s, Americans living there said they felt like they lived in the Basque Country.

Basque residents of Jordan Valley, c. 1914
Courtesy Oregon Hist. Soc. Research Lib., 21730, found on the Oregon Encyclopedia.
  • The population of Jordan Valley has always been small, maybe about 300 people during the decades of 1910-1930. More than half of the residents were Basque. The Basques lived separately from the American neighbors, retaining their old customs. They were so isolated that their children often only knew Basque and had trouble when they started school, where teachers forbade speaking the language. Their houses often had a touch of green or blue with red roofs, reminiscent of the baserri back home.
  • While Basques probably passed through the area in the 1860s with the discovery of gold, they didn’t really start settling in the area until 1889, when Antonio Azcuenaga and José Navarro arrived. While they were the first, it only took a few decades for Basques to be the dominant population. Many other Basque families followed, including the Eiguren, Elorriaga, Telleria, Yturri, Elordi, and Madariaga families. By the 1940s, 50% of the local farms were owned by Basques and Basques 90% of the sheep owners, according to a study by Joseph Gaiser.
  • In 1914, in cooperation with the local Irish population, the Basque community built the Catholic Church, Saint Bernard’s. They followed up in 1915 with a fronton, the only fronton in Oregon then, and now. After many years of disuse, the fronton was renovated in 1997, with a grand celebration when the renovation was complete (I was there!). About 1500 people, mostly descendants of the Basques of Jordan Valley, came to the celebration.
  • Because of the strong Basque identity, Jordan Valley was, with maybe the exception of Boise, the only place were certain traditions were still practiced. For example, on New Year’s Day, young men would go from house to house, singing Urte Barri Ekarri (Bringing the New Year), hoping for a drink from each house. Children did something similar on the day of Saint Agueda, hoping for bacon and sausage as their reward.
  • Even as late as 2001, Basque names abounded in local businesses. Aiden Madariaga was the owner of the Sahara Motel and the Chevron gas station. Jim Zatica was the owner of the Basque Station Motel and the Texaco gas station. Robert Telleria (my uncle!) was the owner of the town’s only supermarket, Telleria’s Market (sadly, I can’t find a single photo of the Market, run by my grandpa for many years before my uncle took over, online). Brother and sister Jim and Marcia Elordi were the owners of the bar, J.V. Club and Coffee.

Primary source: Totoricagüena Egurrola, Gloria Pilar. Estados Unidos de América. Oregón. Enciclopedia Auñamendi, 2019. Available at: http://aunamendi.eusko-ikaskuntza.eus/es/estados-unidos-de-america-oregon/ar-49293/

13 thoughts on “Basque Fact of the Week: Jordan Valley, the Little Basque Town in Oregon”

  1. Jim and Marcia are brother and sister, not brothers. Accariguis owned the station. I am not aware of Aiden owning it it. Maybe he bought it later but not aware if that if so.

    1. Aiden had purchased the station from Accariguis. ? After his passing it was ran by his son Johnny and daughter in law Kathy!

    1. Thanks Heather. I had heard about it. It’s too bad, but I assume the building just wasn’t sound anymore.

  2. My grandfather was born and raised in Jordan Valley. He married and had a child with a Basque woman, her name is unknown, in the early to mid 1920s. They did not stay together and my grandfather raised their son. I’m researching my family tree but cannot locate a marriage record. Sadly, anyone who would have any info has passed on. Lewis Clark Palmer was my grandfather’s name.

  3. I believe Floyd Accaraguis owned the Cabanna Hotel in Boise and owned the hotel in Jordan Valley at the same time. I worked on the remodel in the 70s. Floyd was a great person!

  4. Some of my great uncles with the last name Garaitonandia arrived there in the early 1900, but I lost track of their family history. Would love to find any information.

    1. Hi Francisco, I might suggest starting off asking at the Basque Museum in Boise, as they have collected a large amount of data about Basques in the greater areas there. They might also have other directions they can point you to. Hopefully, someone who knows more will see this and answer as well, but in the mean time, that would be one place to start.

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