Zane Grey, famed author of such western novels as Riders of the Purple Sage, was one of the architects of the hardscrabble mythos of the American West. In 1925, he commissioned three dories for a fishing expedition down the lower Rogue River. Grey loved the Oregon wilderness so much that he purchased land on the river’s banks, built a cabin, and wrote a book there, Rogue River Feud, published in 1929.
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