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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Historical
lumber to be recycled
Thanks to efforts
from Sisters resident Linda Faria, a bit of local history will be preserved
for the community to enjoy. Lumber extracted from dilapidated buildings
in Sisters will be showing up in other projects around town.
Faria, who has called Sisters
home for the past 13 years, recently purchased the lot on the corner of
Hood Avenue and Pine Street. The four buildings on the property were in
varying stages of disrepair, and Faria decided to clean up the lot.
"I hated to think of someone
coming in and just 'dozing down the old buildings," said Faria. "So I
decided to take the lumber and utilize it."
Part of the lumber will resurface
as wainscoting in The Palace on the corner of Cascade Avenue and Fir Street
(also recently purchased by Faria). The rest will be recycled into barnwood
furniture and offered for sale in the new 1880s Gift Gallery inside The
Palace.
"I wanted the wood to still
be a visible thing," said Faria.
Two sisters from the valley
will craft the old lumber into rustic furniture. Faria sells their work
at her Buffalo Horn art gallery.
A bit of the lot's history
was unearthed through an environmental report done on the property.
"A man named Howard Trowbridge
had the shacks erected immediately after World War II, when he returned
from military service with his wife," Faria said.
"The original buildings were
described by Trowbridge's nephew as 'four walls with which to keep out
the rain.' There was no foundation, power or running water."
According to the report, the
buildings were later reconstructed and updated. The Trowbridges lived
on the property until 1964.
"There was never a bathroom
in the house," said Faria. "The building closest to the alley was the
outhouse. We actually got some nice boards from the inside and the ceiling
of that building."
Besides recycling the lumber,
Faria has plans for some of the contents of the old buildings.
"We gathered boxes full of
stuff we found in the houses," said Faria, "Canning jars, old magazines
-- even old distributor caps. I will be using some of the memorabilia
as decorations to add to the nostalgia of the gift gallery." |
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