Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1978)
The residents of Or dinance, like the resi dents of most small towns have an appreci ation for solitude at twilight. In the evening, they gather on their front porches, listen to the crickets, roll in the mud, and make loud belching noises. Photo by Gfeg Gawtowskj inherit town Photo by Grog Gawtowski When the Army moved out, the pigs just took over and the town of Ordinance has since become the home of 27,000 wallowing, belching residents. But when the Department of Federal Public Housing built the self-contained town 30 years ago, it didn’t intend the municipality for pigs. Ordinance was part of a scheme to put civilians to work on the northern Oregon Umatilla Army Depot. In 1941, the Army had a munitions depot site, but no nearby town to provide By JOCK HATFIELD Of the Emerald workers. Rather than move the depot site, the Army made a town from scratch. “The Army brought in several thousand civilians,” recalls Vi Castille, public relations director for the depot.” There wasn’t any nearby housing for them, so the Army built it.” The Army built the town in a field. By 1944 Ordinance had everything the res idents needed for a convenient exis tence. They had a variety store, a post office, a school, a barber shop, and a nursery school — all in box-like perma nent buildings. “It was comfortable, just like a regular town,” recalls Juanita Bliss, whose hus band, David, directed the housing. “We had an honorary mayor, a city council, and any entertainment we could think of.” As war became more popular, the town’s population grew. Workers brought their families and moved into two and three-bedroom units. Ordinance’s population reached a peak during the Korean War, with 11,000 residents. After the wars ran out the government filled the town with dam workers. But when the dam was finished in the late 1950s and the workers went home, the government found itself with a spare town. The demand for towns wasn’t big. Because the government wanted to depopulate the area, authorities re quired that Ordinance not be used to house people. This left few alternatives. Two bids were turned in and one of these was for the town’s water tower. The other was turned in by Stafford Hansell, who had a dream. Hansell had always had an interest in pigs. But he had never raised them on a large scale. “We had read an article in a farmer's quarterly about converting buildings to house pigs,” he says, “and we decided to try it on the town.” “Pigs and people required pretty much the same facilities,” Hansell says. “We tore out the insides of the buildings, boarded up the windows, and put in slanting floors.” Hansell moved pigs into the beauty parlor, the post office, the nursery school and the restaurant. Pigs were soon eat ing in the library, lounging in front yards and having piglettes in the supermarket. Hansell now has 27,000 pigs. Only a few of the town’s 300 buildings are un occupied by the pigs, and these Hansell has saved for himself and his workers. Hansell enjoys living in the town, and says he doesn’t miss human company. "A farmer likes to be near his livestock,” he says. "I like my place here as well as my apartment in Salem.” After 18 years of housing pigs, Ordi nance has changed some. The windows on the buildings are missing. Pigs have battered the walls and sows swim in the front yard swamps. But this is deprecia tion which must be expected when keep ing boarders. The town’s scent has changed too, but there’s no one around to smell it except the Army. After the government sold the town, the Vietnam War came along, bringing a renewed interest in munitions depots. Just as the pigs took over the town, the Army brought the depot back to life. Since then the pig farm and the Army depot, have grown side by side — the only structures in the midst of miles of fields and desert. “The smell doesn’t bother us a bit,” says a spokesman for the Army. “You’ve got to expect it in a rural community.” Bliss often visits her old town: the supermarket, the barbershop, Mr. Bow ers' grocery store, and her own home. She thinks, if anything, the pigs are an improvement. “The trees have grown up where we didn't have them before, and the ponds make it prettier," she says. "It looks better than it did before.”