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Rest Homesites In The World
BROOKINGS-HARBOR PILOT. BROOKINGS, OREGON
THURSDAY. JULY 20. 1950
up Salmon Creek on a narrow bers. Mrs. Kerns announced the of a landscape gardner. Most of
sled, with han lies behind to help appointment of committee chair- the planting as well as the sup
it keep it upright, w’hile it was men. Hostesses were Mrs. Ruth ervisory work were contributed.
BY EMIL R. PETERSON, Historian
pulled by one horse. Ropes were Bathiany, chairman, Mrs. Alice Malin park has a fine swimming
CoosC
v Pioneer and Historical Association
tied to the top of the organ and Perkins and Mrs. Viola Hanscam. pool, bath house bleachers and
sons.
FOURTH INSTALLMENT
an extra man went on the upper
Mrs. Kerns gave a comprehen plans for other improvements as
Some years after the arrival
Coming back to the earlier per-
side of the trail to keep the or sive report of the recent Oregon well as the money is raised. This
i d, when the Eckley country cf those three Greene brothers, gan from rolling over.
State Garden Club Federation is a $170.000 project and was
v as populated by several fam ‘ Uncle Tim’’ died and was bur
“Within a few months a school meeting at Klamath Falls. This first started six years ago. The
ines with many children, schools ied on the hill back of his house
< ommunity raised $44,000 for the
fcr the community were a real 1 Di Deer Park. Reports do not district was organized, using Un ’hree-day convention was attend
park before it was put on the
I roblem. I reported earlier thatiievcal whether “Uncle Tim” had de Bart’s homestead cabin as a J ed by about 300 women wrom all
ax rolls, a year later.
J< seph A. Haines had told about made any arrangements for the school house. Desks and seats over the state.
M r s. Geof-ge Eisenhauer of
Azalea Garden Club was com
luring Miss Ellen Tichenor of i iisposal of his property. How- were home-made and boards
Pea
s ort on is president of the
Port Orford for three terms of ¡ (\er. the nephews arranged for painted black were used for writ plimented for outstanding work
tfree months each at $25 per’ ’heir father, James B. Green, to ing. The school was named Deer in conservation. Two resolutions Oiegon Federation of Garden
month and board; and that later
them. He was Tim’s broth- Bark, after the name of Uncle introduced by this club were Clubs. She was chosen for her
*wo years of office: Fellowship
they had a man teacher from | or. He came and brought along Tim’s ranch. The first teacher passed unanimously.
The first resolution called for and Community service.
ban Francisco on the same terms, the rest of the family: Frank, was Miss Sophia Tillman of Co
In a brief speech to members
quille;
the
next
was
Miss
Flor
establishment
of chairs in Hu-
Whether other families shared in Alfred and Alma; also an oider
cf
Azalea Garden Club last week
Curry man Ecology at the University
that school, I do not know. Mr. married daughter, Emma, with enee von der
Mrs. Clara Kerns stated that
Haines reported that in 1874 he
husband. Edwin J. Bigelow,) county (She is now Mrs. Chap- of Giegon and Oregon State.
h
U ¡culture would be* stressed
bought a home at Wilbur near ond their six children. Six weeks man, retired, residing in North
The second was that the Ore-
this
year in club’s program. ‘Af-
I seburg, where he moved his after their arrival in the Eckley Bend). Miss Birdie Walker was gon Federation of Garden Clubs
family and kept the children in country, their seventh child was the third teacher; she later mar- support the National Resources ter all,’ she said, ‘we are inter
school there for 13 years, moving born. They named her Dora. (Do ried Frank Tichenor. Then came Legislative Interim Committee est d in our own gardens, and
in each others. We enjoy meet
beck to their Eckley home in keep this name, Dora, in mind; came Miss Edna Hill of Remote. 1 eport of the state legislature.
ing together in a sociable ex
for she grew up, married J. N The teachers boarded T ound, ! Between
1887.
business
meetings,
Gearhart, present county asses staying at the different homes ♦he delegates were taken on a change of ideas and in acquiring
I have been unable to learn
new knowledge as an aid to our
sor of Coos county; and it is according to the number of chil
lake cruise, a trip through the
just when the first public school
ga.uening endeavors.’
this same Dora who is sup ph dren from each family
Oregon Technical Institute and
was organized or established at ing
most of the information for
To fíe Concluded
on garden tours.
Lek ley. A small building used this
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Burmeister
series of stories about the
there sometime in the early his-
/
trip
to
Southern
Klamath
’who accompanied their son end
Eckley country).
t< 1 y of the community has been
county gardens and a tour thru daughtek’-in-law to Bend alter
The two families. Greenes and
referred to as the “Chicken
Malin Park were particularly in- the Fourth, to visit another son,
Bigelows,
came with their teams
By B. Miller
House” school, having had a’ lean,
। teresting in view of our own returned home late Saturday by
i ,
-
to shed on one side to shelter a and wagons, up the Sacramento
A new year began for Azalea landscaping project.
bus. They enjoyed the trip im-
b‘w hens. Surely there must valley, over the Siskiyous via j Garden Club, Thursday, July 13.
Malin park was literally hewn mensely, and also the sido trip
have been more to the schooling, Ashland. Grants Pass, Rosel urg. । Mrs. Clara Kerns was installed oui of the desert. Lawns planted
to Tulelake, Calif., where Mr.
Lut available information appears over the old Coos Bay wagon । as piesident, Mrs. Erskine Miller and thousands of shrubs put out
Burmeister said :“I never
meager. Five of the Guerin boys road to Dora, then down to Myr-■ as vice-president and Mrs. Chas, ui der the constant supervision
such barley crops in my life.
Were given two
each in tie I oint. up the South Fork to Grayshel as secretary-treasurer.
the Bishop Scott school at Port I h e Bill Warner place, where! There were brie! reports of in
land, and their sister, Anpie, went most of the party rested. Two of I terest only to garden club mem-
to St. Helens Hall for three years. the boys went on with saddle
he
Guerin
who horses to notify the “home folks”
went to the Bishop Scott School of the arrival of the new con
vs ei e William,
Thomas, tingent. Edwin C. Greene came
down with all his 14 saddle and
George and Janies.
Alh ed B. Gieen, commonly pack animals to bring the family
known as "rim” Greene, or “Un- in. There were no roads then,
only trails, till 1895, when the
de Tim,
been previously
mentioned in this s ory. “Tim” first road reached the Eckley
country.
had an older brother, lames, who
The three brothers who had
was born in Ohio in 1819. James
grew up, married, moved to lo- come earlier had not seen their
way, and later to Caflifornia father and other members of the
8-lnch Saw
there were seven children in family tor a number of years. I with 2 % "cut
tie James Green family whim must leave the scene of their depth.To48"
re-union to your imagination;!
4he mother died.
so their trip with the 14 pack blade and
After so m e correspondence
horses over the winding moun fence.
with “Uncle Tim,” three of the
tain trail.
f Ider boys came to visit an dlo
In a recent report from Mrs.
Uy their hands at mining. The
lough and rugged Eckley coun Gearhart, she wrote: “Within a
try seemed to apepal to them, few weeks each family had a
so they remained and took up house boards 12 to 14 feet long
homesteads and became perma were easily split from Port Or
nent residents. Those brothers ford cedar. Floors made from this
were Barton M., a carpenter; i white w°od were the pride of
Charles A. and Thomas J., each f the " omon. Very thin strips were
° mill-wright. Thomas was ac-i
for slats in the beds on
which
were placed mattresses of
companied bj his wife and two
straw and wool. And good beds
5 big capacity tools in
kl they were, too.
c- ' unit . . . for much
les» Thai the co»t of
“An organ and a rug loom had
5 singie purpose tool»!
I been
in California, to be
workshop in one nffh
i shipped by steamer to Empire;
J
15-lnch
the »pacel
then up Coos Bay to the head of Drill Prêts.
(
Isthmus Inlet; hauled over the | Drill» to cen
]
I
Isthmus, down Beaver Slough. । ter of 15-in.
T
। up the river to Myrtle Point—1
At Residence in
î
from there it was hauled to the 33-lnch Lathe. 15
HARBOR.
OREGON
S
John Wagner place at Rural—, Speed» 800 to 3600 RPM.
Slosed Saturdays
I
now Powers.” From here on the
I
mode of transportation was ra
o
Open 9 to 5 Daily
ther unique. I’ll let Mrs. Gear
hart tell: “The organ was hauled
HAS ANYONE SEEN ECKLEY?
Along Azalea Row
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