West Linn: Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
Autor Cornelia Becker Seigneuren Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 dec 2008
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780738558509
ISBN-10: 0738558508
Pagini: 127
Dimensiuni: 163 x 231 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
ISBN-10: 0738558508
Pagini: 127
Dimensiuni: 163 x 231 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
Descriere
The largest iron meteorite discovered in the United States, weighing 15.5 tons, was unearthed in West Linn in 1902 and featured in the 1905 Worldas Fair before journeying to New Yorkas American Museum of Natural History, where it remains. West Linn was carved onto the map years before, when Robert Moore purchased 1,000 acres of land in 1840 from the Wallamut Indians at Willamette Falls. Soon a lumber mill and flour mill were established, and the region was given a new nameaLinn Cityaafter free-state advocate Lewis F. Linn. Hugh Burns and the Miller, Fields, and Walling families also figured in early West Linn history. Though an 1861 fire, then flood, destroyed what was Linn City, the falls continued drawing industry. Officially incorporated into Oregon in 1913, West Linn, known for its hills, trees, rivers, and famous meteorite, is a sought-after community in which to raise families and made the 2005 top-100 list of best places to live.
Recenzii
Title: Local author celebrates release of new book
Author: The West Linn Tidings
Publisher: Midge Pierce
Date: 1/22/2009
The first thing you notice about author, mother, mentor and now West Linn historian Cornelia Becker Seigneur is her community pride.
aSo many generous people living here give so much back, a Seigneur said. aMy book is for everyone. My hope is to unify our town.a
The recent release of her pictorial history book, aImages of America: West Linn, a coincides with this yearas 150th anniversary of Oregon. It is the first comprehensive compilation of historical photos and facts about the town originally designated as Millsburg until a grassroots movement decided West Linn was a better moniker.
She dedicated her book to local residents, as well as her supportive family. The book will be officially unveiled at a signing and celebration at 6 p.m. on Monday at the West Linn Public Library. aWe live in a caring, service-oriented town, a she said. aThis is part of our rich heritage.a
In her research, she discovered that the Willamette River flooded the original Linn City; that at its dedication, the Oregon City Bridge was declared the most beautiful bridge in America; and parts of West Linn had electricity before New York.
The bookas timeliness is reflected in renewed interest in Oregonas earliest settlements on the eve of the Sesquicentennial. In a town previously known primarily for its mammoth meteorite and impressive falls, Seigneur focuses on the traditions of volunteerism and the dedication of organizations such as the Boy Scouts and Lions Club. Milestones of change are reflected in photos from the 19th century. Herfavorites include pictures of school children from the turn of the century through the 1950s.
A journalist, diarist, columnist, editor, photographer, teacher, mentor and mother of five, Seigneur has a writeras curiosity about lives that inspire. During her 13-year career, she has written about universal journeys and pays homage to those who face challenges with positive solutions. Above all she celebrates family, as manifested in her pictorial release.
aThis has always been a family town, a she said. aPeople have continuity and personal histories here. If they move away, they often move back. This is a place where grandchildren return to live in their grandparentsa homes.a
Before the growth spurts and pressures of the 1990s, West Linn was still a quiet town with more in common with the pace of the past than the lightening speeds of our present.
aOn a typical Sunday 100 years ago, families would go to the Methodist Church on Willamette Falls Drive, a she said. aLater they might gather for a community dinner. Did you know there was a (electric car) that ran to the church?a
She also unearthed surprising items like the equestrian center that housed Roy Rogers horse, Trigger, and the bowling alley in the West Linn Inn located above the power plant before it was torn down in the 1980s.
Copies of the book will be available for purchase at the Monday event. Special guests include Grammy award winning guitarist Mark Hanson and Bill Hughes, grandson of Ellis Hughes (who discovered the Willamette Meteorite).
Several stores have confirmed they will carry aImages of America: West Linn, a including Market of Choice, Bulls Eye Coffee, Healthy Spaces, the Heritage Falls Gallery and Dragonfly Greetings and Gifts. The West Linn Adult Community Center will also carry the book.
Title: 'Images of America: West Linn' details city's history
Author: Yuxing Zheng
Publisher: The Oregonian
Date: 1/21/2009
West Linn residents would be calling Millsburg their home were it not for some pioneer-style democracy in 1913.
When the city incorporated that year, the original vote by the naming committee called for Millsburg. But those judges didn't really like the name and announced in a local newspaper a week later that the city would be called West Linn.
That kind of local history is offered in "Images of America: West Linn," a softcover book released Jan. 19 in the national "Images of America" series. Written by West Linn resident Cornelia Becker Seigneur, the book details, with about 200 photos, the city's beginnings, the Willamette meteorite, its rivers, famous residents, government, education, neighborhoods and culture.
"Preserving our history is vital to any community," said Seigneur, who is a neighborhood correspondent for Clackamas County Weekly. "Knowing our roots, knowing where we came from helps bring us all together and realize our similarities. We have such a rich heritage here in West Linn, and just honoring our past is really important."
The book highlights the city's dependence and rise from its location on the Willamette River, which occasionally flooded and ruined riverfront buildings. Photos detail the Willamette Falls Locks and the nearby paper mill and electric plant that would shape riverside commerce for decades.
One chapter -- and the cover -- is devoted to the famed Willamette Meteorite that brought the city worldwide notoriety. A 1903 photo shows Ellis Hughes, the West Linn man who discovered the15.5-ton iron meteorite the previous year, with one foot on the rock and another on the makeshift cart he fashioned to surreptitiously move it to his property from land owned by Oregon Iron and Steel Co.
The meteorite, the sixth-largest found on Earth, now sits in the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
"It's the largest meteorite to be discovered in the U.S.," Seigneur said. "I was not even aware of that, the grand scale of that meteorite puts us on a really international map."
Seigneur spent more than six months last year working on the book, initially spending five to 10 hours each week contacting local residents and historic groups. As she got closer to her July deadline, she said she sometimes found herself working around the clock.
A West Linn resident for two decades, Seigneur came up with the idea to write a book on the city's history and in November 2007, she got in touch with editors from Arcadia Publishing, which publishes the "Images of America."
Seigneur said she purposely sought out photographs from personal collections, rather than relying primarily on local historical societies. Many of the previously unpublished photographs come from 40 or 50 private collections, she said.
"As we look back at our past," she said, "we see people who cared so deeply about establishing West Linn, keeping it beautiful, having a safe place to live, and that tradition continues."
Author: The West Linn Tidings
Publisher: Midge Pierce
Date: 1/22/2009
The first thing you notice about author, mother, mentor and now West Linn historian Cornelia Becker Seigneur is her community pride.
aSo many generous people living here give so much back, a Seigneur said. aMy book is for everyone. My hope is to unify our town.a
The recent release of her pictorial history book, aImages of America: West Linn, a coincides with this yearas 150th anniversary of Oregon. It is the first comprehensive compilation of historical photos and facts about the town originally designated as Millsburg until a grassroots movement decided West Linn was a better moniker.
She dedicated her book to local residents, as well as her supportive family. The book will be officially unveiled at a signing and celebration at 6 p.m. on Monday at the West Linn Public Library. aWe live in a caring, service-oriented town, a she said. aThis is part of our rich heritage.a
In her research, she discovered that the Willamette River flooded the original Linn City; that at its dedication, the Oregon City Bridge was declared the most beautiful bridge in America; and parts of West Linn had electricity before New York.
The bookas timeliness is reflected in renewed interest in Oregonas earliest settlements on the eve of the Sesquicentennial. In a town previously known primarily for its mammoth meteorite and impressive falls, Seigneur focuses on the traditions of volunteerism and the dedication of organizations such as the Boy Scouts and Lions Club. Milestones of change are reflected in photos from the 19th century. Herfavorites include pictures of school children from the turn of the century through the 1950s.
A journalist, diarist, columnist, editor, photographer, teacher, mentor and mother of five, Seigneur has a writeras curiosity about lives that inspire. During her 13-year career, she has written about universal journeys and pays homage to those who face challenges with positive solutions. Above all she celebrates family, as manifested in her pictorial release.
aThis has always been a family town, a she said. aPeople have continuity and personal histories here. If they move away, they often move back. This is a place where grandchildren return to live in their grandparentsa homes.a
Before the growth spurts and pressures of the 1990s, West Linn was still a quiet town with more in common with the pace of the past than the lightening speeds of our present.
aOn a typical Sunday 100 years ago, families would go to the Methodist Church on Willamette Falls Drive, a she said. aLater they might gather for a community dinner. Did you know there was a (electric car) that ran to the church?a
She also unearthed surprising items like the equestrian center that housed Roy Rogers horse, Trigger, and the bowling alley in the West Linn Inn located above the power plant before it was torn down in the 1980s.
Copies of the book will be available for purchase at the Monday event. Special guests include Grammy award winning guitarist Mark Hanson and Bill Hughes, grandson of Ellis Hughes (who discovered the Willamette Meteorite).
Several stores have confirmed they will carry aImages of America: West Linn, a including Market of Choice, Bulls Eye Coffee, Healthy Spaces, the Heritage Falls Gallery and Dragonfly Greetings and Gifts. The West Linn Adult Community Center will also carry the book.
Title: 'Images of America: West Linn' details city's history
Author: Yuxing Zheng
Publisher: The Oregonian
Date: 1/21/2009
West Linn residents would be calling Millsburg their home were it not for some pioneer-style democracy in 1913.
When the city incorporated that year, the original vote by the naming committee called for Millsburg. But those judges didn't really like the name and announced in a local newspaper a week later that the city would be called West Linn.
That kind of local history is offered in "Images of America: West Linn," a softcover book released Jan. 19 in the national "Images of America" series. Written by West Linn resident Cornelia Becker Seigneur, the book details, with about 200 photos, the city's beginnings, the Willamette meteorite, its rivers, famous residents, government, education, neighborhoods and culture.
"Preserving our history is vital to any community," said Seigneur, who is a neighborhood correspondent for Clackamas County Weekly. "Knowing our roots, knowing where we came from helps bring us all together and realize our similarities. We have such a rich heritage here in West Linn, and just honoring our past is really important."
The book highlights the city's dependence and rise from its location on the Willamette River, which occasionally flooded and ruined riverfront buildings. Photos detail the Willamette Falls Locks and the nearby paper mill and electric plant that would shape riverside commerce for decades.
One chapter -- and the cover -- is devoted to the famed Willamette Meteorite that brought the city worldwide notoriety. A 1903 photo shows Ellis Hughes, the West Linn man who discovered the15.5-ton iron meteorite the previous year, with one foot on the rock and another on the makeshift cart he fashioned to surreptitiously move it to his property from land owned by Oregon Iron and Steel Co.
The meteorite, the sixth-largest found on Earth, now sits in the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
"It's the largest meteorite to be discovered in the U.S.," Seigneur said. "I was not even aware of that, the grand scale of that meteorite puts us on a really international map."
Seigneur spent more than six months last year working on the book, initially spending five to 10 hours each week contacting local residents and historic groups. As she got closer to her July deadline, she said she sometimes found herself working around the clock.
A West Linn resident for two decades, Seigneur came up with the idea to write a book on the city's history and in November 2007, she got in touch with editors from Arcadia Publishing, which publishes the "Images of America."
Seigneur said she purposely sought out photographs from personal collections, rather than relying primarily on local historical societies. Many of the previously unpublished photographs come from 40 or 50 private collections, she said.
"As we look back at our past," she said, "we see people who cared so deeply about establishing West Linn, keeping it beautiful, having a safe place to live, and that tradition continues."
Notă biografică
Since moving to West Linn in 1989, Cornelia Becker Seigneur has been writing about the area in The Oregonian and West Linn Tidings newspapers. Thanks to many individuals, as well as the Clackamas County Historical Society, Clackamas Heritage Partners, and Oregon Historical Society, Seigneur shares this permanent history of West Linn.