Showing posts with label Hotel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hotel. Show all posts

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Izaak Walton Inn

Izaak Walton Inn in Essex, Montana, on May 24, 2003

Adjacent to the railroad yard Essex, Montana, is the Izaak Walton Inn. Named after English writer Izaak Walton, for whom the Walton Ranger Station in Glacier National Park is also named, the Izaak Walton Inn was built on railroad property in 1939 in three months at a cost of $40,000 by the Addison Miller Company, which also operated it under contract for the Great Northern Railway as lodging for railway workers. Measuring 36 feet by 114 feet, the Tudor Revival inn featured 29 guest rooms, 10 bathrooms, a lobby, dining room, kitchen with a two-ton stove, drying room, store room and general store. 

Izaak Walton Inn in Essex, Montana, on May 24, 2003

Located at the south end of Glacier National Park 27 miles from West Glacier and 30 miles from East Glacier, it was anticipated that Essex would become a southern gateway to Glacier National Park, however World War II prevented that development. With the inn never living up to its tourism potential, the Addison Miller Company sold it to Harry Stowell in 1965 for $5,000. George A. Walker purchased it in 1968. Sid and Millie Goodrich bought it in 1973. Larry and Linda Vielleux acquired it in 1982. The inn was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 18, 1985, and was renovated in 1995 with bathrooms added to every guestroom.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

South Park Blocks #12: Sovereign Hotel

1211 SW Broadway

IMG_2232 Sovereign Hotel in Portland, Oregon on February 15, 2010
Sovereign Hotel on February 15, 2010

Also on the same block as the Oregon Historical Society is the nine-story Georgian-style Sovereign Hotel which was designed by Carl L. Linde and built in 1923.

IMG_2231 Sovereign Hotel in Portland, Oregon on February 15, 2010
Sovereign Hotel on February 15, 2010

The building actually fronts on Broadway, and the Washington Ellipse is behind it. The hotel was converted to apartments in 1938.

IMG_2252 Sovereign Hotel in Portland, Oregon on February 15, 2010
Sovereign Hotel on February 15, 2010

The Sovereign Hotel was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 2, 1981 and was purchased by the Oregon Historical Society in 1982.

IMG_2254 Sovereign Hotel in Portland, Oregon on February 15, 2010
Sovereign Hotel on February 15, 2010

The ground floor houses the Oregon Historical Society Museum Store. On the back of the building is a mural of the Lewis & Clark Expedition painted by Richard Haas in 1989.

Continue to 13: Peace Chant

South Park Blocks #3: Roosevelt Hotel

1005 SW Park Avenue

IMG_2097 Roosevelt Hotel in Portland, Oregon on February 15, 2010
Roosevelt Hotel on February 15, 2010

As I continue down the South Park Blocks, I am going to include some adjacent buildings of note, such as the Roosevelt Hotel at the corner of Salmon and Park.

IMG_2098 Roosevelt Hotel Plaque in Portland, Oregon on February 15, 2010
Roosevelt Hotel Plaque on February 15, 2010

The Roosevelt Hotel was built in 1924 and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Continue to 4: Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Hood River #20: Hood River Hotel

102-108 Oak Street

IMG_6724 Hood River Hotel in Hood River, Oregon on June 10, 2009
Hood River Hotel on June 10, 2009

This brick building was built in 1913 as an annex to the 1880s wood-frame Victorian-style Mt. Hood Hotel, which stood behind it where the parking lot is now. In the 1920s, the lobby had been moved into the annex, which fronted the new Columbia River Highway, and the original hotel was demolished. This building was used as a hotel and boarding house until 1970. Pasquale and Jacquie Barone of Vancouver, British Columbia purchased the hotel in September 1988 and began restoring it. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 21, 1994. Current owners Brian and Penny Cunninghame purchased the Hood River Hotel in September 2000.

IMG_6723 Hood River Hotel in Hood River, Oregon on June 10, 2009
Hood River Hotel on June 10, 2009

Historical Photos:
Hood River Hotel (UO)
Hood River Hotel (UO)
Hood River Hotel (UO)
Hood River Hotel (UO)
Hood River Hotel Detail (UO)
Hood River Hotel Interior (UO)
Hood River Hotel Interior (UO)
Hood River Hotel Interior (UO)
Hood River Hotel Interior (UO)
Hood River Hotel Interior (UO)
Hood River Hotel Interior (UO)

Continue to 21: LaFrance Building

Hood River #3: Hotel Waucoma

205 Cascade Avenue

IMG_6640 Hotel Waucoma in Hood River, Oregon on June 10, 2009
Hotel Waucoma on June 10, 2009

The Hotel Waucoma was designed by The Dalles architect C.J. Crandall in 1904. It was built at a cost of $14,000 and was one of the earliest brick buildings in downtown Hood River. The hotel had 27 rooms featuring steam heat, porcelain bathtubs and a call bell system.

IMG_6641 Hotel Oregon in Hood River, Oregon
Historical View of the Hotel Oregon
(HRCHM
)

After an expansion that increased the number of rooms to nearly 100, the hotel was renamed the Hotel Oregon in 1909. The hotel's original two-story veranda was removed in 1911 when concrete sidewalks were poured. The hotel was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 10, 1981. It is now the River City Saloon.

IMG_6762 Hotel Oregon in Hood River, Oregon
Historical View of the Hotel Oregon
(Oregon Historical Society
)

Historical Photos:
Hotel Oregon, 1910 (UO)
Hood River Hotel (UO)
Hood River Hotel (UO)

Continue to 4: Ezra L. Smith Building

Sunday, August 9, 2015

The Dalles #80: Bank Hotel

209 East Second Street

IMG_6389 Bank Hotel in The Dalles, Oregon on June 10, 2009
Bank Hotel on June 10, 2009

This building was the Bank Hotel in the 1930s and 1940s. The restaurant in this building was one of the places poisoned with salmonella bacteria by the followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh in 1984. It was previously the Chuck Wagon Lounge and is now The Vault.

Continue to 81: Granada Theatre

Saturday, August 8, 2015

The Dalles #38: Oaks Hotel

200 East Second Street

IMG_6392 Oaks Hotel in The Dalles, Oregon on June 10, 2009
Oaks Hotel on June 20, 2009

The High Victorian Italianate-style Oaks Hotel was built around 1890. Since 1908, it has been the Harry Taylor Saloon, Harry Jones Confectioner, Bettengen Cigar Store and today Sigman's Flowers and Gifts.

Historical Photos:
Jessie's Flowers, July 5, 1954 (UO)
Sigman's Flowers, June 3, 1978 (UO)

Continue to 39: Mary Morehouse House

The Dalles #14: Skibbe Hotel

624 East Second Street

IMG_9596 Skibbe Hotel in The Dalles, Oregon on October 20, 2009
Skibbe Hotel on October 20, 2009

The Skibbe Hotel was built in the 1870s by Fred and William Skibbe and features a saloon and restaurant. The fire of 1891 apparently started in the hotel's restaurant. The hotel was not always the most respectable establishment, and was the last brothel to close down in the 1950s. Today the building is home to Turner's Home Furnishings.

Continue to 15: The Dalles Iron Works

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Site of the Portland Hotel

…Continued from Animals in Pools.

Portland Hotel in Portland, Oregon (1890-1951)
Portland Hotel (1890-1951)
Oregon Historical Society Photo

The block on which Portland's first public school building sat was sold to railroad magnate Henry Villard in 1883. After the school was moved in 1885, Villard began building a hotel to serve rail travelers, but his finances ran out when only the foundation was finished. For the next four years, the site was referred to as Villard's ruins. Eventually, a public subscription raised funds to complete the hotel. In 1890, the six-story, 284-room Portland Hotel opened. Over the next 60 years, eleven U. S. Presidents stayed at the hotel, but time took its toll, and the hotel closed in 1950 and was demolished the following year, replaced by a parking lot.

Historical Photos:
Postcard View of Portland Hotel (Multnomah County Genweb)
Postcard View of Portland Hotel (Multnomah County Genweb)
Postcard View of Portland Hotel (Multnomah County Genweb)

IMG_3305 Portland Hotel Gate & Fencing at Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Oregon on September 7, 2008
Portland Hotel Gate & Fencing on September 7, 2008

This gate and fencing along Sixth Avenue are all that remain of the old Portland Hotel. The installation is dedicated in memory of Melvin Mark.

IMG_3304 Portland Hotel Gate & Fencing at Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Oregon on September 7, 2008
Portland Hotel Gate & Fencing on September 7, 2008

Continue to Pioneer Courthouse Square

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Historic Downtown Salem #72: Central Stage Terminal & Hotel

181 High Street NE

IMG_3162 Central State Terminal & Hotel in Salem, Oregon on September 4, 2006
Central Stage Terminal & Hotel on September 4, 2006

The three-story Mediterranean style Central Stage Terminal and Hotel was designed by Morris H. Whitehouse and was built 1921 as a bus depot and hotel addition to the Odd Fellows Hall next door. The first floor originally had an entrance for a restaurant on the south, a hotel and bus depot entrance in the center, and a store entrance on the north. The hotel rooms were on the second floor and the third floor was used by the Odd Fellows as a billiards room and library.

The Central Stage Terminal and Hotel Company was incorporated on September 10, 1921 by J. E. Lewis, L. R. Applegate, and John H. Carson. By 1925, W. W. Chadwick was president of the company and Richard Shepard of Eugene was secretary/treasurer. The company leased the facility for $650, and subleased the space to auxiliary businesses, including a barber shop, a coffee shop, and a cigar ship. In 1928, Chadwick moved the business across the street to the Senator Hotel building at the corner of High and Court, and from then on the Chemeketa Lodge used the hotel. Frank H. Strubble made revisions to this building and the Odd Fellows Hall to the north in 1935-1937 and again in 1951, and James L. Payne made more revisions in 1952.

Continue to 73: Odd Fellows Hall

Historic Downtown Salem #65: J. Hughes New Salem Hotel

153-191 High Street SE

IMG_3170 J Hughes New Salem Hotel in Salem, Oregon on September 4, 2006
J. Hughes New Salem Hotel on September 4, 2006

John Hughes was born in 1831 and started west toward California in 1852. Instead he came to Portland, Oregon, that fall and settled in Marion County. In 1857 he married Emma Pringle and they farmed for seven years before John Hughes opened a store in Salem in 1863 selling groceries, paints, oils and other goods. He operated this business for forty years and also built a commercial block, part of a bank block, and had an interest in the Salem Flouring Mill. He died in the early 1900s as the oldest merchant in Salem. His daughter Lulu Bush presided over the John Hughes Company, which was founded in 1906, with J. Frank Hughes as secretary-treasurer. By the 1920s, J. Frank Hughes was managing the John Hughes Company.

IMG_5909 J Hughes New Salem Hotel in Salem, Oregon on April 7, 2007
J. Hughes New Salem Hotel on April 7, 2007

This site was originally the site of several woodframe Chinese shops, a restaurant, and a Chinese cabin. The John Hughes Company built the current building on the site in 1924. Originally, retail shops occupied the ground floor with the New Salem Hotel on the second floor with a first floor lobby on High Street facing the Elsinore Theater. The John Hughes Company owned this building until the mid-1940s. The J. Hughes New Salem Hotel is now inside the Downtown Historic District. Businesses housed here include the Jaquith Music Company.

Historical Photos:
Hughes Building, 1945 (Salem Public Library)

Continue to 66: Elsinore Theater

Historic Downtown Salem #62: Phoenix Grand Hotel (Salem Armory Site)

201 Liberty Street SE

IMG_3503 Phoenix Grand Hotel in Salem, Oregon on September 6, 2006
Phoenix Grand Hotel on September 6, 2006

Just outside the Downtown Historic District, the Phoenix Grand Hotel was built at a cost of $17 million and opened in March 2005. The Phoenix Grand Hotel features 193 rooms and is attached to the Salem Conference Center. It is built on the site of the Salem Armory. The Armory was dedicated on June 17, 1912. It was demolished in 1962 and the Marion Motor Hotel was built in its place. The motel was demolished in 2004 for the new Phoenix Grand Hotel.

IMG_5877 Phoenix Grand Hotel in Salem, Oregon on April 7, 2007
Phoenix Grand Hotel on April 7, 2007

Historical Photos:
Salem Armory, 1911 (Salem Public Library)
Salem Armory, June 17, 1912 (Salem Public Library)
Salem Armory, 1915 (Salem Public Library)
Salem Armory, 1959 (Salem Public Library)
Salem Armory, August 1961 (Salem Public Library)
Marion Motor Hotel, 1975-1980 (Salem Public Library)

Continue to 63: Crystal Garden Ballroom

Historic Downtown Salem #51: Bligh Hotel-Theater Site

441 State Street

IMG_3508 Bligh Hotel & Theater Site in Salem, Oregon on September 9, 2006
Former site of the Bligh Hotel-Theater on September 9, 2006

Thomas Gregor Bligh built the Bligh Hotel and Theater on this site in 1912. The building was demolished in June 1975. The alley in this block features a brick arch that was built in 1986-1987 as part of a city-initiated urban renewal project.

IMG_3175 Alley Arch at Bligh Hotel & Theater Site in Salem, Oregon on September 4, 2006
Brick arch near Bligh Hotel-Theater site on September 4, 2006

Historical Photos:
Bligh Hotel, circa 1940 (Salem Public Library)
Bligh Hotel demolition, June 17, 1975 (Salem Public Library)

IMG_3174 Alley Arch at Bligh Hotel & Theater Site in Salem, Oregon on September 4, 2006
Brick arch near Bligh Hotel-Theater site on September 4, 2006

Continue to 52: Grey Belle Restaurant

Historic Downtown Salem #43: Reed Opera House

189 Liberty Street NE

IMG_8979 Reed Opera House in Salem, Oregon on September 8, 2007
Reed Opera House on September 8, 2007

This Italianate and Commercial style building was designed by architect G. W. Rhodes for General Cyrus Adams Reed. Reed came to Salem in 1852 and was influential with the early economic development in Salem, including Jones, Reed & Company (Salem’s first sash and blind company), the Willamette Woolen Manufacturing Company, the first telegraph, and the Oregon Central Railroad. He was Adjutant General of Oregon during the Civil War and served three terms in the state legislature where he sponsored bills for the construction of the first state capitol, regulating gambling, closing saloons on election day, and prohibiting public executions.

IMG_3216 Reed Opera House in Salem, Oregon on September 4, 2006
Reed Opera House on September 4, 2006

The Opera House was built at a cost of $75,000 and consists of over 1 million bricks. The Opera House opened October 9, 1869 with a 1,500 seat auditorium on the second floor. The Oregon Supreme Court and State Library were located on the third floor and seven stores were on the first floor. An Inaugural Ball was held here in 1870 for Governor Grover, and a banquet to celebrate the legislative appropriation for a new state capitol was held in 1872. The western portion of the building served as a hotel under various names, including the Opera House Hotel, the Tremont Hotel, and the Commercial Hotel. The dining room later became the Opera House Saloon, later renamed the Bureau Saloon.

IMG_3968 Reed Opera House in Salem, Oregon on October 3, 2006
Reed Opera House on October 3, 2006

Eventually E. P. McCornack, president of the First National Bank of Salem, took over the building, and the opera house closed in April 1900 after the Grand Opera House opened at the Odd Fellows Hall. The interior was redesigned by McCornack for use as Joseph Meyers and Sons Department Store, which later became Miller's Department Store. The first floor became a single room, with the main entrance on Liberty Street becoming a main store entrance and a new stairway provided access to the offices on the second floor and a Masonic Lodge room on the third floor.

121105 004 Reed Opera House in Salem, Oregon on December 9, 2005
Reed Opera House on December 9, 2005

The building was rehabilitated again in 1976, with space for almost two dozen new small retail shops created in the basement and on the first floor. The Reed Opera House was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 8, 1978. In 2003, the building was purchased by Roger Yost, who renovated it yet again and replaced the rooftop pediment, corona and brackets that had been removed decades ago.

IMG_8978 Reed Opera House in Salem, Oregon on September 8, 2007
Reed Opera House Pediment on September 8, 2007

Additional Links:
Reed Opera House at Salem Online History
Reed Opera House at the Salem Oregon Community Guide

Historical Photos:
Reed Opera House, 1880 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1888 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1888-1895 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1893 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1893 (Oregon State Library)
Reed Opera House, 1920 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1970 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1965-1978 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1975-1980 (Salem Public Library)
Reed Opera House, 1992 (Salem Public Library)

Continue to 44: McCornack Block Addition

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Lebanon #20: Lebanon Hotel

661 South Main Street

IMG_4199 Lebanon Hotel on October 21, 2006
Lebanon Hotel on October 21, 2006

The 80-room Lebanon Hotel was built in 1913 at a cost of $65,000, replacing a wood frame hotel that burned in 1912. The hotel formally opened on May 7, 1913 with Senator M.A. Miller presiding as toastmaster with guest speakers from throughout the state. It originally had a mansard roof with dormer windows giving it another story of height. This can be seen in the photo at the top of the Lebanon Genealogical Society's Lebanon in the Early 1880s page. This structure was removed in 1964, leaving the building with its current appearance. The hotel closed in 1953, and the lobby was turned into a coffee shop in 2005, although many historical parts of the lobby were preserved, including the woodwork, staircase and functional switchboard. The main floor is home to several other businesses as well.

Continue to 21: Gem Theater

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Longview #7: Monticello Hotel

1405 17th Avenue

Monticello Hotel in Longview, Washington on September 5, 2005
Monticello Hotel on September 5, 2005.

The Monticello Hotel, opened on July 14, 1923, two days after Longview's dedication, was the first building built in Longview. Robert A. Long knew that he would need a luxurious hotel in order to convince potential business investors to the new city. The lobby features murals by renowned landscape artist Joe Knowles of Seaview, Washington.

Postcard View of the Hotel Monticello in Longview, Washington
Postcard view of the Hotel Monticello when new.

This was not the first Monticello Hotel in the area. Before the Long-Bell Lumber Company came to Cowlitz County, Harry Darby Huntington owned a Monticello Hotel on the Cowlitz River. This original Monticello Hotel was destroyed in a flood in January 1923.

Originally owned and operated by the Long-Bell Lumber Company, in 1956 the International Paper Company took over and gave the Monticello Hotel to the city as a gift in September 1957. In 1959 it was leased to Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Clark. Ten months later, the Clarks offered to buy it from the city, and the city agreed. The Clark added the 20-room Monticello Motor Inn annex on the north side of the hotel. In 1962, the Columbus Day Storm knocked down the original “Hotel Monticello” sign on the roof. It was replaced by the current “Monticello Hotel” sign.

Eventually the Clarks divorced, the hotel was auctioned at a sheriff’s sale in 1964, and the Aid to Lutherans, holder of the mortgage, took over. The Longview Development Corporation was formed to save the hotel, and it was leased to John Bailey through 1965. In 1966, R.B. Wallace of Seattle took an option to buy the hotel. In 1971, Wallace found a Bremerton company to buy the hotel. None of these owners were successful, and in August 1972 the Longview Development Corporation took court action to break Wallace’s purchase contract and reacquire the hotel. On December 19, 1972, the Internal Revenue Service seized the bar inventory and locked the doors to the hotel, closing it for the first time. In 1972, Dick Winters purchased the hotel for $350,000. After a remodeling, the hotel reopened in December 1973.

Eventually, the hotel was acquired by McKenzie-Smith Investors of San Diego. Larry and Annabelle Juell acquired the hotel through foreclosure in 1996, and found new owners. Philip Lovingfoss and his wife Annabelle Juell-Lovingfoss (remarried after the death of Larry Juell) foreclosed on the hotel in 2001, and spent about $300,000 restoring the building.

In June 2013, celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay filmed an episode of Hotel Hell at the Monticello Hotel. On January 1, 2014, the hotel’s restaurant, bar and banquet facilities were closed.

Historical Photos:
Monticello Hotel in 1924 (University of Washington Library)
Monticello Hotel (R.A. Long Historical Society)

Related Links:
Monticello Hotel at the Cowlitz County Parcel Search

Continue to 8: Robert A. Long Park

Friday, May 2, 2014

Rainier #14: Bryant Building

109 A Street East

Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on September 5, 2005
Bryant Building on September 5, 2005.

The Bryant Building, better known as the Hotel Rainier, was built after the fire of June 28, 1924 destroyed the old building belonging to Arthur Bryant that was in the same location. Before the fire, the old building housed the Commercial Hotel, operated by Mrs. Arthur Bryant; Bob’s Bargain Center, owned by Robert S. Fishback; the Bungalow Cafe, owned by Charles A. Hitchman; the Rainier Hardware Company owned by Fred J. Tucker; and W. A. Rader’s confectionary.

A Street in Rainier, Oregon in March 1910
View of A Street in March 1910, showing buildings that were destroyed in the 1924 fire on the right.
(Michael Clark collection, used with permission)

The new Bryant Building was completed in October 1925 and featured several storefronts on the first floor and the Hotel Rainier on the second floor. The Grand Theatre in the easternmost storefront opened on October 18, 1925. Other original occupants included the Interstate Restaurant and J.W. Wright & Company of Portland. The storefront on the west has been home to the Ol’ Pastime Tavern since around 1938.

Mural of the Bryant Building, circa 1953
Mural depicting the Bryant Building in 1953, showing the Pastime Tavern, Columbia Café, and Rainier Theatre.

The Grand Theatre was renamed the Roseway Theatre on April 7, 1931. On March 18, 1933, the theatre was renamed again to the Rainier Theatre. The theatre went through a number of owners over the years, before closing for good in June 1958.

Related Links:
Rainier Theatre at CinemaTour

A Street in Rainier, Oregon in the 1980s
This photo of a train running down A Street in the 1980s shows the Bryant Building with the original balcony and a roll-up door over the former theater space.
(Photo by Cliff West)

By the 1950s, the Interstate Cafe space had become the Columbia Cafe. In April 1971, the theatre space became Best Auto Parts. Interestingly, in June 1971, a Western Auto store opened in the former Columbia Cafe space. On November 7, 1977, Sweet Earth Plant Shop opened in the former Western Auto space. Later, the former theater space was occupied by Rainier Appliance for many years until that business moved to the Sammons Building on the highway in 2007.

058-1 1930 Ford Model A in front of Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon in July 2002
A Model A Ford in the 2002 Rainier Days in the Park Parade, with the Bryant Building in the background. Rainier Appliance was occupying the former theater space at the time. Note the missing second floor balcony.

The second floor originally had a balcony overlooking the street. The original balcony was removed in the mid-1990s, but the door and the beams that supported it remained in place.

IMG_1879 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Bryant Building on July 13, 2008.

The building and tavern were purchased in 2008 by Sloan and Jennifer Nelson.

IMG_1880 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Bryant Building on July 13, 2008.

After purchasing the building in 2008, the Nelsons built a new balcony in place of the original.

IMG_1882 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
New Balcony on July 13, 2008.

The entrance leading to the stairs to the hotel rooms above has been restored. The original home of the Rainier Theatre, which had been Rainier Appliance for many years until that business moved into the former Elam's space on the highway, is now home to Noni's Necessities. The ground floor also houses the offices of the Nelsons' Hometown Property Management.

IMG_1881 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Restored Hotel Entrance and former theater space occupied by Noni’s Necessities on July 13, 2008.

In the 1990s, a mural was painted on the Hotel's west wall.

Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on September 5, 2005
Rainier – The River Town mural on September 5, 2005.

The mural, titled "Rainier - The River Town," loosely depicts Rainier in the early 1900s, and was painted by Rainier Elementary School students under the direction of artist Lynn Takata.

IMG_1878 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

The mural was sponsored by the Rainier School District, the Oregon Arts Commission, Artists in Education, the Rainier Elementary PTO and the Rainier Kiwanis, with special thanks to Marie Oberg (who was Rainier Elementary's Librarian at the time) & Esther & Larry Gates.

IMG_1861 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1874 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1875 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1877 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

The mural included several scenes of riverboats and industries that were prevalent in Rainier at the turn of the century including agriculture and a sawmill.

IMG_1862 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Sternwheeler depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1867 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Sternwheeler depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1872 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1866 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Sawmill depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1873 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Farm depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1864 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
House depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1865 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Old Rainier Fort depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

One of the more interesting items included in the mural is this depiction of Rainier's fort, which has been described as actually being more of a stockade, consisting of logs stood on end to form a wall 40-50 feet high, topped with a sentinel platform, and without a blockhouse as depicted here. It was built around 1858 to serve as a storehouse and to offer protection and defense from Native Americans, though they never posed much of a threat to the residents of Rainier. Rainier was never attacked by Native Americans, and only once early in its history were the town's women and children gathered inside due to concern about an attack that never occurred. The fort was eventually abandoned and all trace of it disappeared in the late 1800s.

IMG_1876 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Historic Buildings depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

The mural also included depictions of several of the historic buildings in town.

IMG_1871 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Dibblee House as depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1870 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church as depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1869 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
United Methodist Church as depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1868 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
Pharmacy Building as depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

IMG_1863 Rainier - The River Town Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 13, 2008
George Moeck House as depicted in the Rainier – The River Town mural on July 13, 2008.

This mural has since been painted over and was replaced in 2009 with a smaller mural depicting the building as it appeared in 1953. This mural is shown below.

IMG_8171 New Mural on the Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on July 11, 2009
New Mural on July 11, 2009.

IMG_0465 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on February 24, 2011
Bryant Building on February 24, 2011.

IMG_0652 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on February 25, 2011
Bryant Building on February 25, 2011.

IMG_20140208_083540_433 Bryant Building in Rainier, Oregon on February 8, 2014
Bryant Building on February 8, 2014.

Continue to 15: Rainier Union High School