About this Event
Henry Adams Cupper - A Suffolk Pioneer – Geoffrey Robinson
During the second half of the 19th century, a steady stream of emigrants left East Anglia to settle in the United States, Canada and Australasia. The collapse of the agricultural economy, brought about mainly by cheap imports, was one of the causes for this increasing flood of hopeful humanity. In the early 1870s, the rise of trade unionism affected agriculture, causing some farmers to question their future prospects.
Henry Adams Cupper, whose ancestors had farmed in Worlingworth and Framlingham, Suffolk, was one such farmer - youthful, and possessing a pioneering spirit. He took his young family on a dangerous journey of adventure in 1877, crossing the Atlantic and travelling to the furthermost reaches of the U.S.A. to carve out a new life in the virgin territory of Oregon. This is his story.