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Jew Gangster 1st Edition Kubert Download

The document provides links to download various ebooks related to Jewish themes and gangster history, including 'Jew Gangster 1st Edition' by Joe Kubert. It lists several other recommended titles along with their download links. Additionally, it includes details about the 'Jew Gangster' ebook such as its ISBN, file size, and publication year.

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White Spires United Presbyterian Church
Mrs. Wayne Dawson

Helen Horton
In the late 1840’s, missionaries of two branches of the Presbyterian
faith—the Associate and the Associate Reformed—arrived in the
Willamette Valley. In July, 1850, Dr. T. S. Kendall organized the
Associate Presbyterian Church in the Oakville neighborhood, and this
is still a strong rural church. In 1851, Wilson Blain arrived in the
valley. He had lived in Oregon City and had been editor of the
“Oregon Spectator.” He organized a church at Union Point, near
Brownsville, Oregon. Other missionaries followed.

The difficulties of travel and the great distances from church centers
soon caused the question of union to come up, resulting in a compact
being drawn up uniting these bodies into the United Presbyterian
Church of Oregon. Taking part in the Union were Dr. Kendall, Dr.
Irvine, and Rev. J. P. Millar of the associate group. In the Associate
Reformed group were Rev. Blain, Rev. James Worth, and Rev.
Jeremiah Dick. This union took place at the home of Rev. Blain,
October 20, 1852. These two bodies united in Pittsburgh into the
United Presbyterian Church of North America in 1858.

In October, 1853, the Albany Church was organized, the first to 55


be organized as the United Presbyterian Church. The Rev. J. P.
Millar was pastor until his death in April, 1854. He was killed by an
explosion of the Steamship “Gazelle” near Oregon City.

Dr. Irvine, who was pastor at Oakville (Willamette), followed the Rev.
Millar, by giving part time to the Albany Congregation until 1873. He
severed his connection with the Willamette Church, moving to Albany,
where he was pastor until his death in 1895. He was Moderator of
the General Assembly in 1878.

The Albany congregation met in the Courthouse, an octagonal


building which burned in the 1860’s. A church was built in 1863 at
Fifth and Washington, on ground obtained from Thomas Montieth.
This building served many years, but on June 20, 1891, the
cornerstone of the present church was laid and the church formally
dedicated, August 7, 1892.
The General Assembly met in Albany in 1894, and Dr. Irvine was able
to attend one meeting in a wheelchair. The next pastor to remain
many years was Dr. W. P. White. He came in the fall of 1901, and was
pastor until 1920. In 1906, the Dr. S. G. Irvine Memorial pipe organ
was installed at a cost of over $2,800. It is still in use.

Again the General Assembly met in Albany in 1952, with


commissioners from all over the United States and the mission fields.
In 1953, the church observed the “100th Anniversary” of the
organizing of the church. The contractor for building the church was
J. B. Cougill; it cost about $16,500. The architect, who drew the
plans for the present church, was Walter Pugh, of the firm of
McCauley and Wickersham of Salem. The name “White Spires” was
made official on January 8, 1958.

The spires are outstanding and are the highest points in Albany. The
supports are made of laminated wood. Though swaying badly during
the typhoon of October 12, 1962, it stood, although traffic was
blocked off for hours. The stained-glass windows were not broken.
They are very unusual both in design and coloring. The White Spires
Church still stands and the present pastor is the Rev. Ralph R.
Hawthorne.

56
Boston Mills
(Thompson Mills)
Lottie E. Morgan

Helen Horton

“Boston Mills” was a familiar name to early Oregon pioneers. It was


one of the early gristmills. Men would take their wheat by horseback
or in wagons from miles around to this mill and take home the flour
for their families. Boston, like many other settlements, hoped to be a
city and perhaps the county seat.

Eliza Finley Brandon (Mrs. Thomas Brandon), 1850-1948, says: “My


father, Richard Chism Finley, built the original mill at the old town of
Boston in 1856-1858. He owned a half interest. Alexander Brandon
and P. V. Crawford each owned one-fourth interest. It was destroyed
by fire. With the flour-mill there was a carding factory. There a fire
was kept burning all the time to warm the wool as it was worked.
The fire probably started from this. Soon after the fire, the mill was
rebuilt. All the massive timbers for both mills were cut out and hewed
by hand in the woods near Crawfordsville, and hauled to Boston—an
immense task.”

There used to be fairs at Boston in the early days—not really in


Boston but in the country to the east across the Calapooya, at the
foot of a small hill between Saddle Butte and the Calapooya River.
This hill was called Bunker Hill because it was near Boston, and one
time two settlers had a fight there over a land claim, “The Battle of
Bunker Hill.”

Pioneers relate that Boston once had a post office, established 57


September 22, 1868, two stores, and a blacksmith shop, in
addition to the mills. When the railroad passed one and a half miles
to the west, Boston failed to develop as a town, and Shedd became
the railroad station.

Mr. E. D. Farwell, pioneer, says the ownership of the mill ran like this:
Finley, Crawford and Brandon; Finley & William (Billy) Simmons;
Simmons Brothers; Simmons and Knoll; Simmons & Thompson, then
Thompson, the present owner.

We are told that the old timbers, mentioned earlier, remain in the
present reconstructed structure, and that the old millstones lie under
the water of the millrace. The white walls of the present mill are
reflected in the clear waters of the millrace, the busy wheels continue
to hum, and flour is ground for descendants of the pioneers of early
days. The well-kept home of Mr. Otto Thompson, the present owner,
stands nearby, only a short distance from the home of “Billy”
Simmons, the miller of earlier days.

58
The Chase Orchard
Fannie Chase

Oregon pioneers must have had a diverting time clearing the land,
planting orchards, tilling fields, and erecting homes. Doing all the
planning called for constructive creation and real achievement.
However, I wonder whether the one who moves into a ready-made
house doesn’t have even more thrills and flights of imagination. I
consider myself a fortunate mortal to dwell in a place with an
interesting historical background. I was fascinated by the Oregon
farm that my father and mother bought, near Albany.

My early childhood was spent in the sandhills of Nebraska, a land


characterized by tumbleweeds, prairie fires, and hot winds. Until I
arrived in the Willamette Valley, I had never seen a lilac or a rose in
full bloom. I shall always remember my first glimpse of the new
Oregon home. On that Spring morning, no sky had ever been so
blue, no fields so green, no fruit trees so pink and white.

The house with its high ceiling, grained woodwork, and flower
conservatory aroused my greatest curiosity. How excited I was after
several weeks’ sojourn to discover a tiny cellar that had escaped
unnoticed! It had been the special location of a barometer and other
instruments for official weather records.

The farm was a part of the Cline donation land claim of the 59
1860’s. In 1887, Mr. and Mrs. John Briggs bought ten acres of
this tract, cleared the land, erected buildings, planted trees, and
established a rose and shrub nursery. In 1902, fifteen years later,
when Mr. Briggs began to fail in health, the farm was sold to J. L.
Howard; and, in 1906, it was sold to Nels Savage.

My father purchased the farm in 1908. For fifty-four years it has been
called The Chase Orchards, but older residents still refer to it as the
Old Briggs Place. Old Mr. Briggs was a dyed-in-the-wool Britisher.
Everything he planted was English to the extreme: English box,
English laurel, English holly, English hedges—all fashioned in precise
rows, circles, and squares.

If Mr. Briggs could see his old home now, he would find many
changes. The little pines, firs, and cedars are giant in size, real
patriarchs of the forest. English ivy covers the farm buildings, and the
box hedges are broad and rambling. The nursery stock forms a rose-
garden lawn with panels of the same old-fashioned roses that were
planted seventy-five years ago. Filbert, walnut, and holly orchards
have replaced some of the original trees.

In those early days, there were two entrances: a large gate for the
carriage, and a small picket gate leading to a narrow walk between
the hedge and the driveway. At another corner, near the farm
buildings, was a secondary entrance designed for farm vehicles and
delivery wagons. Woe to the misguided laborer who, inadvertently
blundered through the wrong gateway!

Much of our knowledge of the early activities was gained from Mr.
Briggs’ widow, who lived only a short distance from us. From her we
acquired a floral language of technical titles for trees, shrubs, bulbs,
and flowers. We ourselves made a special contribution to the time-
honored Pacific Coast flora by adding a cutting from the rosebush
that our Great-grandfather Chase had brought to New York State, a
century and a half ago. We are not pioneers. We are not Webfoots.
We are not Oregon mossbacks. We cannot claim relationship to a
native son or a native daughter. We simply adopted a friendly Oregon
community, which is still animated by the courage and industry of
former beauty-loving Oregonians.

60
History of Early Albany Schools
Mary Myrtle Worley

The account of perhaps the first instruction given in Albany, dates


back to the 1840’s. Since there were not enough children in the
community for organization of a school, it cannot be classed as one.
Mrs. Abraham Hackleman gathered a few small children into her
home, a log house which stood in Hackleman’s Grove, and taught
them reading, writing and numbers.
The following incident illustrates the very busy life of these pioneers:
When it came time for the geese to be picked, Mrs. Hackleman did
not want to neglect the children, so the geese were brought in, and
the picking went on with as little interference with spelling and
writing as possible.

The first school was situated in the west part of town, not far from
the cemetery, and was taught (1851) by Dr. Reuben Cohman Hill. Dr.
Hill was a practicing physician and a Baptist minister. In 1850, he
crossed the plains to California on the back of a mule and soon after
came to Albany, where he taught the first school before returning
east for his family. Soon after this, Andrew J. Babb conducted a 61
subscription school in one small room near the location of
Takenah Park. During the Civil War, feeling ran so high that the school
was divided. One subscription school, the Republican, stood where
the Methodist Church was on Third and Ellsworth streets; and the
other, known as the Dixie School, Democratic, was located on the
southwest corner of Second and Montgomery streets.

A daughter of Oregon pioneers, Miss Lottie E. Morgan has said: “In


Albany, Takenah Park has been officially marked as a part of the
Pioneer Oregon Trail, and it eventually became the site of Albany’s
first Central School. One who attended the first Central School, in
1866, tells that it was a one-room building, some thirty by fifty feet in
size, standing in the block known as Takenah Park. Soon after this
date, two ells were added, forming a T-shaped building, where more
teachers, perhaps three, and more pupils were accommodated.”

Mrs. Zella M. Burkhart contributed the following, copied from a


manuscript by J. J. Davis, who came to Linn County with his parents
in 1847, and attended the first school taught in Linn County in 1848:
“Mr. Anderson Cox, having several children, built a school house on
his place that summer and hired a teacher, Robert Huston, for a term
of three months. He was the first teacher in Linn County.”

By the 1880’s, Albany had three schools. The Central School at


Takenah Park has four rooms and four teachers and took care of
pupils beginning with the advanced section of the third grade. Dr.
Oliver K. Beers was one of the teachers at Madson, which was then a
one-room building. There were sixty pupils in five classes of the first,
second, and lower level of the third grades. The Maple School did the
same grade of work. The schools at this time were free, being
supported by taxation. Albany Collegiate Institute at this time had a
preparatory department for those in the upper grades. Because some
people had not yet outgrown the idea that free schools were for
paupers only, there arose again two rival groups among the young
people, known as College “Bummers” and the District “Scrubs.”

62
Linn County Courthouse
Florette Nutting and Helen J. Horton

Linn County, Oregon, is a mountain and river-valley region, extending


from east to west from the summit of the Cascade Mountains to the
Willamette River. The Santiam River and the Calapooya River,
tributaries of the Willamette River, which have their sources in the
Cascades, traverse the valley at approximately the county’s northern
and southern boundaries.

In mounds south of Albany have been found human skeletons, and


utensils and weapons of possibly Indian manufacture, pointing to the
custom of burying with the dead, the weapons and implements used
in life. This indicates that Linn County was a happy hunting ground
for a large tribe of Indians known as the Calapooya tribe, which gave
this name to the river flowing into the Willamette River at Albany.

Earliest settlements were made in Linn County at Albany, Brownsville,


and Lebanon, in the Spring of 1846, by pioneers who had crossed the
plains the year before and had wintered near Oregon City. The first
cabin was erected in 1845 by William Packwood, where the old
Indian trail, between Scio and Lebanon, crossed Crabtree Creek. It
was sold to John Crabtree in the Summer of 1846. The Earl family
were the first permanent settlers. They built a cabin about two miles
east of Knox Butte in the Spring of 1846, and in the same year
settlers located at Brownsville and Lebanon.

Brownsville was the county seat then. The schoolhouse on the


Spalding donation land claim in South Brownsville was the first 63
courthouse. Organization of county government occurred
December 11, 1849. Albany was designated as the county seat of
Linn County by legislature in January, 1851; and, in 1852, a
courthouse was erected.

Linn county’s second courthouse, erected in 1852, was identical in


plan with the famed Octagon House. The Octagon courthouse cost
nearly $5,000. This wood-frame building, located on West Fourth
Avenue, Albany, burned to the ground September 1, 1861. The fire
did not destroy the county records in use at the time, as they were
protected by a fireproof vault. However, many records and historical
documents from the early days of Albany and Linn County were
completely destroyed.
The Courthouse, pictured here, was completed between 1862 and
1865, at a cost of $35,000. The architecture was similar to Southern
Colonial. It had a brick portico and four large Corinthian columns, two
stories high. In 1899, the third story and the clock tower were added
to the original building.

At the turn of the century, the town that didn’t possess a large town
clock, with chimes, was not a town worthy of mention. Accordingly,
the courthouse addition was designed around the clock tower. The
clock itself had four ten-foot faces and was kept in motion by 1,000-
pound weights. The bells, which rang Albany people to work in the
morning and sounded curfew at night, could be heard in Sodaville
when the wind was right. The clock was made by the Seth Thomas
Company and kept nearly perfect time throughout its lifetime.

Not only was this courthouse interesting from a material standpoint


but also for its outstanding usefulness to the whole community. In
addition to housing the courtroom and county offices, it often served
as a town hall, meetings of various kinds being held in the courtroom
or in the attic above the second floor. In these same rooms, many
eminent lecturers, evangelists, and other visiting speakers drew
appreciative audiences of town and country folks. Some of the
county’s able lawyers made their first speeches there. Directly to the
north of the courthouse lay a vacant block which, in those early days,
was called the “Courthouse Square.” Also, closely associated with the
courthouse was the square, two-storied brick jail which stood on the
southeast corner of the block. It was erected in 1871 at a cost of
$9,550. When the second courthouse was enlarged and remodeled,
the addition of a third story, two towers, a town clock, a statue of
justice, and other adornments changed the style and appearance of
the building completely, and the old courthouse became only a
memory to those who had loved it.

64
STATE of OREGON
Portland
West Union Baptist Church
Joe Meek Donation Land Claim
Old College Hall, Pacific University
George Gay House
George Fox College
Belleque House
Champoeg Farmland
Amity Church of Christ
Wheatland Ferry
Salem
Monmouth Normal School
Stump House
Fort Hoskins
Bishop Simpson Chapel
Albany
Octagonal House
Lynn County Court House
St. Charles Hotel
Montieth House
White Spire Presbyterian Church
Eugene
Villard Hall
Wilkins House
Christian House
Condon House
Walton House
Cartwright House (Lorane)
Applegate House (Yoncalla)
Transcriber’s Notes
Silently corrected a few typos.
Retained publication information from the printed edition: this
eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
_underscores_.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OREGON HISTORIC
LANDMARKS: WILLAMETTE VALLEY ***

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