1911
From Lane Co Oregon
(Difference between revisions)
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
*Booth-Kelly built and leased a steam plant to the Oregon Power Company in 1911. Later that year, a fire burned down everything on the Booth-Kelly site except the steam plant. | *Booth-Kelly built and leased a steam plant to the Oregon Power Company in 1911. Later that year, a fire burned down everything on the Booth-Kelly site except the steam plant. | ||
- | *[[Springfield Creamery]] opened. It produced cheese and ice cream. In the [[1980s]] it moved to [[Eugene]] where is produces [[Nancy Yogurt]] that is sold in over 33 states. | + | *[[Springfield Creamery]] opened. It produced cheese and ice cream. In the [[:Category:1980s|1980s]] it moved to [[Eugene]] where is produces [[Nancy Yogurt]] that is sold in over 33 states. |
*[[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. |
Revision as of 21:04, 21 August 2007
Locations · People · Equipment · Chronology · Index · Categories · Browse · Discussion · FAQ · Help · Things to do · Article requests
1910s: | 1900s 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920s |
Springfield
- In 1911, a city-sponsored organization known as “Permanent Improvement” was responsible for repairing the road network of the town. Many of the muddy, rutted streets were graded, and Main Street was macadamized from Mill to 10th Streets (Graham 1978b:6).
- Booth-Kelly built and leased a steam plant to the Oregon Power Company in 1911. Later that year, a fire burned down everything on the Booth-Kelly site except the steam plant.
- Springfield Creamery opened. It produced cheese and ice cream. In the 1980s it moved to Eugene where is produces Nancy Yogurt that is sold in over 33 states.
- Welby Stevens is Mayor of Springfield in 1911 & 1912 and cast the deciding votes allowing Springfield to remain a "wet" town.