Beyond the Oregon Trail - Spring Series
Mar 09 - May 03, 2026
Current Holder
Colin Buckingham
Claim Banner
My Name Is Burned In
The Claim Chains Me Here
Aspects refreshed Mar 23, 2026
The Claim Banner emerged from the first wagon trains that reached the Willamette Valley - settlers who arrived with nothing but the clothes on their backs began marking their chosen plots with whatever materials they had, scraps of cloth tied to sticks, carved wooden markers, anything that declared this is mine. Over time, the practice became formalized into a recognized symbol of frontier achievement, a physical manifestation of the homesteader's right to build and remain.
The Claim Banner manifests as a rectangular strip of weathered canvas, roughly three feet by two, attached to a rough-hewn wooden crossbar. The fabric bears the faded outline of a claim marker - a rectangular plot with coordinates that seem to shift depending on the viewer's angle. An iron spike protrudes from the bottom edge, designed to be driven into any surface to anchor the banner in place, and cannot be removed once driven. The colors are muted earth tones - burnt umber, raw sienna - with accents of frontier gold along the borders where the paint has not yet worn away.
The Claim Banner serves as proof of land rights in Oregon Country - only those who complete the full trail with their position intact can claim it. It marks the transition from traveler to Homesteader, granting the bearer a permanent place in the ledger and declaring their identity as someone who staked their future and won.
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