Posts tagged ·

Rouge River

·...

Fort Yamhill Blockhouse and Joel Palmer House

2 comments

Fort Yamhill Blockhouse and Joel Palmer House

This is the second building left from Fort Yamhill. After the Fort was disbanded and sold, the Blockhouse was moved nearby and used as a storage shed.

Fort Yamhill Blockhouse 1024x768 Fort Yamhill Blockhouse and Joel Palmer House history buildings

It remained as such until 1911 when it was moved to Dayton, Oregon and setup in the city park. There is some talk about moving it back to Fort Yamhill when rebuilding of the fort starts.

What is most interesting about this blockhouse is it’s odd construction. The second floor is offset at ninety degrees from the first floor. There is no mention in any literature that has been found yet, even the Fort Yamhill military records, as to why this building was built this way. There doesn’t seem to be any records of any other blockhouses at other Forts built in the same design either. The design is slightly more useful then normal as it removes any blind spots during attacks.

Fort Yamhill History Plaque 1024x768 Fort Yamhill Blockhouse and Joel Palmer House history buildings

Nearby, and most likely not a real coincidence, the Joel Palmer house is nearby. As Joel Palmer was the first Superintendent of Indian Affairs and requested the building of Fort Yamhill to protect the Grande Rhonde Indian reservation, this nearby plaque says it’s a memorial to him.

Joel Palmer House 1024x768 Fort Yamhill Blockhouse and Joel Palmer House history buildings

The house is now a restaurant and has a nice wine selection now.

Dayton, Oregon also has a huge number of other historic houses, many of which are on the National Historic Register.

Oregon Ghost Towns and other historical locations

7 comments

This is a major update of my original Google Maps “Historic Oregon” file.

Download here

About forty new towns were added. I’ve also separated them out by Category instead of just alphabetical listing. More battles and military sites have been added, along with some general spell checking and links to web pages with information about the site.

Historic Oregon presented in Google Earth

6 comments

Here is version 1.0 of my “Historic Oregon” Google Earth file. Included in this file are Ghost Towns, Locations of Historic Events, Locations of Forts and Camps, lighthouses, Missions, Indian Battles, Historical Markers, Heritage Trees(coming soon,) Shipwrecks, and Native American Tribes (coming soon too,) and remaining covered bridges. In other words, pretty much anything of historical interest.

Download here

There is about 100 hours of work into this file. It could not have been done without much dependence on the following resources:

Fort Wiki
Ghost Towns.Com
Google
Covered Bridge Society of Oregon
www.markeroni.com
National Register of Historic Places
Oregon Travel Council Heritage Programs
And most importantly, Oregon Geographic Names by Lewis A. McArthur which is based off his father’s work.

This is a HUGE file and is roughly 25% complete by my estimate so it may take a while to load. If you have any information about locations please email rick@hamell.net and I’ll add it in with proper credit. New versions will be released to this page. Please feel free to redistribute it, but I would appreciate a link back here if you do.

Note on Ghost Town Classifications.

I found this to be a very handy guide but had to expand it. I added a Class H which is the same as a Class D, but with few original buildings. I also added a number guide to give an idea of the town’s main purpose during it’s peak population.

Ghost Town Classifications:

Class A: barren site
Class B: rubble and/or roofless building ruins
Class C: standing abandoned buildings (with roofs), no population, except maybe a caretaker.
Class D: semi/near ghost towns. A small resident population, many abandoned buildings.
Class E: busy historic community, yet still much smaller than in its boom years.
Class F: Not a stand-alone class, but an addition to any of the above. This class usually designates a restored town, state park, or indicates some other “additional” status.
Class G: the town joined or was absorbed by a neighboring thriving city.
Class H: Same as Class D, with no or very few original buildings

Originating Purpose:
1.) Mineral Explotation
2.) Agriculural or Live Stock
3.) Timber
4.) Shipping or Travel Depoe, Stage Coach Station, Train Station
5.) Religious or idelogical
6.) Recreation and Service (Saloon Towns)

Thus a towns classification of B1 means an abandoned gold town with a few traces of buildings and other structures such as mine entrances.

Classifications are assigned by myself based on direct observation of the town, or best guess based on Google Maps and Internet searches. Many towns main economic activity changed multiple times during their lifetimes. In these cases the first or largest is used for the classification.

****10/13/09 Updated

I have added a HUGE amount of more information to this. Many new towns, Cemetaries, Civilian Conservation Corps Projects, Events, Early Explorers, Musuems, Native American Tribal grounds and camps, and much more. Again, please be sure to email me rick@hamell.net with any updates and corrections you might have.

Partly powered by CleverPlugins.com