12 • NOVEMBER 2019 COAST RIVER BUSINESS JOURNAL WELL PRESERVED Erick and Johanna Lindgren Cabin 89990 Hawkins Road, Warrenton, Oregon W ARRENTON — David Rogers, a master log builder from Rhodo- dendron, Oregon, recently held a workshop on log construction at the Erik and Johanna Lindgren cabin. He examined the Cullaby Lake structure with students from Clatsop Community College’s Historic Preservation program. Like other experts before him, Rogers was impressed by the quality of construction and the the Finnish culture. JOHN GOODENBERGER FOR THE COAST RIVER BUSINESS JOURNAL materials used therein. The cabin is a unique example within the county and has deep roots within Historic significance The 68-year-old Erik Lind- gren and his neighbor, William Merila, constructed the cabin in 1928. It was set near the edge of a meadow on Soapstone Creek, in the hills of the Nehalem Valley. The cabin was built among a clus- ter of buildings including a sauna, meat smoker and barn. It was constructed from red The Lindgren cabin is located in Cullaby Lake Park. cedar, hand-split into planks, then hewn with scalloped-shaped axes. The logs were joined with full dovetail joints and stacked one on top of another. No nails were needed for the walls, gravity held them in place. Further, the planks were so carefully crafted, there were no gaps between them. The men felled huge, old- growth timber. One of the cabin’s hewn planks is five inches thick and forty-seven inches wide.