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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 28, 2015)
LIFESTYLES WEEKEND, MARCH 28-29, 2015 AP Photo/The Gazette-Times, Amanda Cowan Homeowner Patricia Benner strolls along the outside of the Gorman House, which is the oldest existing residence in Oregon directly tied to early black pioneers, in Corvallis on March 17. The Oregon State Historic Preservation Office has announced that the Gorman House is now listed in the National Register. Pioneers in history Corvallis house owned by black pioneers added to National Register By THERESA NOVAK Corvallis Gazette-Times CORVALLIS — A small Corvallis house that is the oldest in Oregon to be built by black pioneers has been added to the Na- tional Register of Historic Places. The house at 641 N.W. Fourth St. orig- inally was built for Hannah and Eliza Gor- man, a mother and daughter who moved to Oregon as slaves but who built a life in Corvallis that was perhaps not typical of the times. “They were beloved,” said Patricia Ben- ner, a retired river ecologist and historian. She and her husband, Tony Howell, bought the house in 2004 because it was about to EHEXUQHGDVD¿UHGHSDUWPHQWWUDLQLQJH[- ercise. “I knew I had to rescue it.” She also wanted to tell the story of the people behind the house. Benner and local historians Mary Gal- lagher of the Benton County Historical So- ciety and Oregon State University archivist May Dasch pieced together this account over the following years: Hannah and Eliza Gorman’s names ap- pear in the 1844 roster of John Thorpe’s Oregon Trail Company as “Eliza, a mulato girl” and “Aunt Hannah, a negress.” They lived for a time with John Thorpe’s family, and an 1850 census listed the Gor- mans as members of his household on his donation land claim in Polk County. By 1856, however, mother and daughter had moved to Corvallis, when Eliza was about 16 and Hannah was 48. On land pur- FKDVHGIURP:LOOLDP'L[RQRQHRI&RUYDO- lis’ founders, Hannah and Eliza built a mod- est one-story dwelling with a mud-mortared chimney (still there) where they operated a laundry and sewed clothing. AP Photo/The Gazette-Times, Amanda Cowan Patricia Benner, owner of the Gorman House in Corvallis, looks through historic documents in the home’s kitchen March 17. A letter written in September 1861 by Catherine Blaine of Lebanon, the wife of a 0HWKRGLVWPLVVLRQDU\UHÀHFWVWKHDWWLWXGHV of the times as it described her impressions of the Gorman home/business and of Eliza, “a mulatto girl,” who was to make over a black silk dress for her while she waited — and observed: “I must stop here and tell how nice ev- erything was at Eliza’s. She and her mother, AP Photo/The Gazette-Times, Amanda Cowan A flight of stairs leads the way to the two bedrooms upstairs at the Gorman House in Corvallis. Hannah, live together, take in washing and sewing. They will wash from $1.50 to $2.00 worth in the morning and then Eliza will do a day’s work at sewing. She has a machine and some days does $2.50 worth in a day. Everything about the house is as clean and neat as can be, some of the negro love of ornament displaying itself. Their bed va- ODQFHV UXIÀHG DQG VWDUFKHG WKHLU SLOORZ and bolster cases trimmed; such handsome bed quilts, too; then the bed was so perfect and sweet.” Eliza died at age 30. Her obituary, pub- lished July 17, 1869, in the Corvallis Ga- zette, also offered insights into how she was regarded: “Her intelligence, modesty, kind and sympathetic disposition, consistent Chris- tian life and uniform courteous behavior has ZRQWKHUHVSHFWDQGFRQ¿GHQFHRIWKHHQWLUH community. Herself and (her) aged mother, by industry and economy, had built them a comfortable home, furnished it in good VW\OH DQG VXUURXQGHG LW ZLWK IUXLW ÀRZHUV and everything necessary to human comfort and happiness. They seemed to live only for each other, and to make others happy.” The obituary also noted “The large num- ber of citizens in attendance and the atten- tion she received during her illness was the strongest proof of the high estimation in which she was held. She will be missed, and her loss mourned, by nearly every family in Corvallis.” Soon after her daughter’s death, Han- nah moved to Portland and sold the house in 1875. But she returned to Corvallis and was living there at the time of her death in 1888. Both she and Eliza are buried in Crys- tal Lake Cemetery. Listing the house on the National Reg- ister is honorary, but it does open the door WRVWDWHDQGIHGHUDOWD[EUHDNVDQGSUHVHUYD- tion grants, said B.A. Beirle of Preservation Works, a Corvallis educational association. And there is plenty of work to be done. 7KH KRXVH KDV EHHQ H[WHQVLYHO\ PRGL¿HG and damaged over the years, although some original portions remain. Benner said the ¿UVWRUGHURIEXVLQHVVLVWRJHWDIRXQGDWLRQ under the house. During that work, samples of soil will be taken to search for lye or other evidence of the laundry operation that once was there. On a recent Tuesday, Benner’s affection IRUWKHKRXVHZDVUHÀHFWHGLQWKHZD\VKH carefully placed a frilled curtain in the win- dow of the kitchen in what likely was the area where washing was done. A rug, table DQGYDVHRIVSULQJÀRZHUVGHFRUDWHGLQWKH OLYLQJURRPDVSDUWRIVKRZLQJLWIRUWKH¿UVW time since its listing. It won’t be its last. In May, the house will be part of a sev- en-stop bus tour by the Salem-based Ore- gon Black Pioneers Association. ³,W¶VDOOYHU\H[FLWLQJ´%HLUOHVDLG³7KH modesty of the Gorman House belies its VLJQL¿FDQFHWR2UHJRQ´ 1C