June 2019 – Shedd OR
We had done a lot of reading
about Thompson’s Mills State Heritage Site since we were selected to be hosts
at the park, but the pictures hadn’t prepared us for the shear size of the
place when we rolled down the driveway the first time. The silos are as tall as
Cape Blanco Lighthouse, and then there is that five story, 130,000 square foot mill
behind them. We turned to each other and wondered what we had gotten ourselves
into, especially when the chickens and ducks were pretty casual about getting
out of the road.
Luckily the fowl weren’t the
welcoming committee. We were expected, and one of the current volunteers
directed us to a temporary site for the night until the outgoing hosts cleared
one of the regular sites in the morning. After setting up, we went to the mill
for a quick look around. It was as big inside as it looked from out, and packed
with very old, dusty machines driven by a bewildering array of line shafts,
pulleys and belts. I was right when I stumbled onto this on the ‘net;
this is my kind of place!
Schroeder is going nuts |
The three host campsites are
brand new and all we had hoped for. New lawns separated the sites which are
surrounded on three sides by large fields. After a few days, I used the large
riding mower to cut a path around the perimeter of the fields for better dog
walks, and Lucy and Schroeder clearly seemed to enjoy exploring it. It is far
enough from the chickens and ducks that they can be off leash, a real treat for
the dogs, for the fowl and for us.
The first morning it became
apparent that hosting here was quite different than any other place we’ve been.
Hosts are encouraged to “own” the place and to use considerable initiative
maintaining the mill, making any needed repairs and suggesting improvements. I’ve done a little carpentry, electrical repair, plumbing, pump repair, rigging and other stuff
I’ve forgotten. We have the run of a pretty good workshop for whatever we need
to tackle.
Tom Parsons has been the ranger
in charge for ten years and really knows the whole site, inside and out. Luckily,
volunteers Don and Penny overlapped with us through June. They have
spent six months a year here for five years and are intimately familiar with
every facet of the mill structure and operation. Penny is the go-to person for
the ducks and chickens. Yes, three days a week we are also farmers. More on
that later.
Original posts and beams |
Describing this place isn’t
easy. On the one hand it is OSHA’s worst nightmare because almost everything will seriously hurt you if you aren’t careful. That’s why it’s so interesting, though, because
everything is right there: belts fly, pulleys spin, machinery pounds away and
you are in the middle of it all, watching the whole show. Some of the belts go
up (and down) over five stories, from the water powered turbines in the cellar to
the top of the main grain elevator.
Don and I got to figure out how to replace a belt, including making a splice when one broke. We used a tool that was on display as an artifact that might be as old as the mill, and parts that the archivist had cataloged and put in storage. It took two attempts but it’s been running for a month now.
Water powered, and it still runs |
Don and I got to figure out how to replace a belt, including making a splice when one broke. We used a tool that was on display as an artifact that might be as old as the mill, and parts that the archivist had cataloged and put in storage. It took two attempts but it’s been running for a month now.
Visitors are free to wander the
grounds and the first floor of the mill, but most join us for a tour
which includes visiting the basement where we can open the flume gates to run
one of the turbines that is still connected to machinery on the first, second
and third floors. That’s a real kick for everyone, and it never gets old for
us, either. We also have a section of the mill that was electrified in the 1940’s and set
up as a very live demo. Four elevator banks fly by, a corn cracker starts
hammering away, and a big seed separator comes to life. Everyone gets a real kick out of that, too.
It will take weeks to finish the logos |
When we arrived, the silos were
encased in scaffolding and surrounded by safety fences. The roof of the silos and much of the roof support structure was being replaced. That work wrapped up
in late June and the scaffolding finally came down. The painting crew moved in and spent the next week water blasting every surface of the silo to prep for paint.
That really made a mess! It did get a little old trying to give tours while all
that was going on, but the visitors were all understanding. Finally, a
muralist began to repaint the large, colorful logos that have graced the silos for over 100 years.
This mill is the last survivor among hundreds of small water powered mills that dotted western
Top of #1 turbine |
Main drive shaft from #1 turbine still operates |
Originally roughly 3,000 square
feet and two stories high, the mill is now 130,000 square feet and five stories
tall, excluding the silos. Most of that expansion took place under three
generations of the Thompson family, from 1891 to 1976. Despite that
growth, the original mill is still in place, buried within the present
structure. The mill was expanded in every possible direction, and then the
expansions were expanded! The original 12" x 12" hand-hewn posts and the beams that
connect them are easily seen and still make up over 50% of the mill’s
machinery space.
Building a platform over the mill race, just part of the job |
We really like this part of Oregon . The Willamette Valley is very different from the coast. Home to about 300 wineries, the valley is also the second
largest grass seed growing region in the world (New Zealand is first, who’d of
guessed?). When we arrived, the huge fields all had a slight yellowish fog of
pollen hanging over them. My allergies immediately
kicked up to the point that I was afraid we would have to quit and leave –
nothing I had on hand worked at all. On a whim, we stopped at a local
pharmacy in Brownsville .
The pharmacist asked me a couple of questions and handed me two OTC products
that I’d never heard of and I was cured. That, and Randy’s
Main Street Coffee where Randy makes everything himself made Brownsville one of our
favorite places in the area. Don’t miss Randy’s and the town itself if you are
anywhere nearby.
We also enjoyed exploring Corvallis and Albany ,
small cities just a few miles apart with pretty different personalities. Corvallis is a college
town, home to Oregon State University.
It’s a lovely town with great charm during the summer when school is out. The
population increases close to 50% when
OSU is in session, which I’m told by everyone I asked makes a big impact on
congestion, parking and the general tempo of daily life. No one sounded like
they were planning to move, though.
A college town wouldn’t be complete
without Trader Joe’s and Corvallis
didn’t disappoint. It was one of the first places we went, since we hadn’t been
close to one for a few months. On the same trip we celebrated my birthday at Sada Sushi & Izakaya. I had been
looking forward to sushi since we left California
last fall. That’s way too long between fixes, and it was really good, too. We both ate way too much.
A month into our stint here and
I think we are now comfortable guiding visitors through the mill. Like she did
at Cape Blanco , Kayeanne has spent many hours
poring over the records that Doug Crispin, the first ranger in charge of the
mill, and several others have created. She has also watched hours of interviews
conducted by Doug with the last owner of the mill and with people who worked
here over several decades. She now knows the history of the place in more
detail than I do. I want to take one of her tours.
Books I read this month included
Blue Highways by William Least Heat-Moon
Leave Tomorrow by Dirk Weisiger
More soon,
Bob