1912
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- | =Springfield= | + | =[[Lane County]]= |
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+ | ==[[Coburg]]== | ||
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+ | *Fire at Springfield Booth-Kelly plant causes management to dismantle Coburg plant and | ||
+ | reassemble it to Springfield location. Within 3 weeks, 300 people were without work. Folks | ||
+ | went to [[Mable]], [[Wendling]], Springfield, [[Marcola]], [[Vaughn]] to find work. Others moved their houses on to bottom land and returned to their farming pioneer roots. | ||
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+ | ==[[Springfield]]== | ||
*[[Stevens, Welby|Welby Stevens]] is Mayor of [[Springfield]] in [[1911]] & [[1912]] and cast the deciding votes allowing Springfield to remain a "wet" town. | *[[Stevens, Welby|Welby Stevens]] is Mayor of [[Springfield]] in [[1911]] & [[1912]] and cast the deciding votes allowing Springfield to remain a "wet" town. | ||
*[[McKlin, Merton|Merton McKlin]], a prominent builder, designs & constructs the [[Merton McKlin House|McKlin House]] for his wife [[McKlin, Civility|Civility]] in [[1912]]. | *[[McKlin, Merton|Merton McKlin]], a prominent builder, designs & constructs the [[Merton McKlin House|McKlin House]] for his wife [[McKlin, Civility|Civility]] in [[1912]]. | ||
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+ | *The 1912 Sanborn fire insurance maps show a [[Hall, H.L.|plumbing]] and tinning shop (Polk 1907:163-177). | ||
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+ | *The [[1907]] and [[1912]] Sanborn maps show the majority of Springfield’s businesses on Main Street; except for the intersection of Mill and [[Main Street (Springfield)|Main]], [[Mill Street (Springfield)|Mill Street]] was no longer used as a commercial center. This may be because of the [[Option Law (Springfield)|Option Law]] that was passed in [[1906]] making it illegal to sell alcohol in the city closed the local saloons on Mill Street. | ||
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+ | *The [[1912]] Sanborn map shows a lumber company called [[Fisher-Bally Lumber Company|Fisher-Bally]] located in the [[Kelly Butte]] area. | ||
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+ | *Listed in city directories from [[1892]] and into the 20th century and noted on the [[1907]]/[[1912]] Sanborn maps area a sash and door factory, planing mill, box factory, [[Springfield_Match_Company|match factory]] and shingle mill. The Sanborn maps show the planing mill and sash and door factory as part of the sawmill complex. | ||
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+ | *In [[1912]], the farm of [[Weaver, Albert|Albert Weaver]] produced enough milk to support a wind-powered cheese factory (Jones 1957:36). | ||
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+ | *By 1912, there was a moving pictures house owned by [[Bryan, Joe|Joe Bryan]] in downtown Springfield; vaudeville entertainers appeared there in [[1910]] (Graham 1978b:5). |
Current revision as of 23:27, 17 September 2007
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1910s: | 1900s 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920s |
[edit] Lane County
[edit] Coburg
- Fire at Springfield Booth-Kelly plant causes management to dismantle Coburg plant and
reassemble it to Springfield location. Within 3 weeks, 300 people were without work. Folks went to Mable, Wendling, Springfield, Marcola, Vaughn to find work. Others moved their houses on to bottom land and returned to their farming pioneer roots.
[edit] Springfield
- Welby Stevens is Mayor of Springfield in 1911 & 1912 and cast the deciding votes allowing Springfield to remain a "wet" town.
- Merton McKlin, a prominent builder, designs & constructs the McKlin House for his wife Civility in 1912.
- The 1912 Sanborn fire insurance maps show a plumbing and tinning shop (Polk 1907:163-177).
- The 1907 and 1912 Sanborn maps show the majority of Springfield’s businesses on Main Street; except for the intersection of Mill and Main, Mill Street was no longer used as a commercial center. This may be because of the Option Law that was passed in 1906 making it illegal to sell alcohol in the city closed the local saloons on Mill Street.
- The 1912 Sanborn map shows a lumber company called Fisher-Bally located in the Kelly Butte area.
- Listed in city directories from 1892 and into the 20th century and noted on the 1907/1912 Sanborn maps area a sash and door factory, planing mill, box factory, match factory and shingle mill. The Sanborn maps show the planing mill and sash and door factory as part of the sawmill complex.
- In 1912, the farm of Albert Weaver produced enough milk to support a wind-powered cheese factory (Jones 1957:36).