Mill Street (Springfield)

From Lane Co Oregon

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*Throughout its history, the [[Mill Pond]] served as a popular place to gather for picnics, canoing, fishing, and swimming. For a time, a diving board and changing room were erected at the corner of Mill and [[28th Street (Springfield)| 28th]].
*Throughout its history, the [[Mill Pond]] served as a popular place to gather for picnics, canoing, fishing, and swimming. For a time, a diving board and changing room were erected at the corner of Mill and [[28th Street (Springfield)| 28th]].
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*The school district replaced the pioneer school building in the 1880s. The [[Mill Street School]], as it was called, was only a one-story, two-room building, which the student population quickly outgrew. The school was the first of a series of schoolhouses to occupy the [[Mill Street (Springfield)|Mill]] and [[D Street (Springfield)|D Street]] site that now holds the present school administration building, which was built in [[1921]] as a high school (Graham 1978a).
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[[Category:Springfield schools]]
[[Category:Springfield]] [[Category:Springfield Beacon]] [[Category:Springfield roads]] [[Category:Mill Street_(Springfield)]]
[[Category:Springfield]] [[Category:Springfield Beacon]] [[Category:Springfield roads]] [[Category:Mill Street_(Springfield)]]

Revision as of 23:11, 13 August 2007

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1850s

  • Springfield was platted in 1856, at which time two blocks between South A, Main, Mill, and Third Streets were laid out into eight lots each. The lots measured 66x120 feet, with streets 66 feet in width and alleys 14 feet wide. Though the town was oriented to the Willamette River, it developed along a standard grid system that was aligned to the four cardinal directions.
  • Throughout its history, the Mill Pond served as a popular place to gather for picnics, canoing, fishing, and swimming. For a time, a diving board and changing room were erected at the corner of Mill and 28th.
  • The school district replaced the pioneer school building in the 1880s. The Mill Street School, as it was called, was only a one-story, two-room building, which the student population quickly outgrew. The school was the first of a series of schoolhouses to occupy the Mill and D Street site that now holds the present school administration building, which was built in 1921 as a high school (Graham 1978a).
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