Wednesday, May 24, 2017

HAPPY 100TH BIRTHDAY TO THE FRANK MURRAY BARN



THIS IS ONE OF THE 1984 GLENWOOD SCHOOL ANNUAL BARNS IDENTIFIED BY OSMAR KUHNHAUSEN.  OSMAR CALLED IT THE FRANK MURRAY BARN AND HARRY AND TRAVIS MILLER CALL IT THE MURRAY BARN.  THAT MADE RESEARCH EASIER.  A SPECIAL TREAT, IS THAT THE BARN IS 100 YEARS OLD THIS MONTH.
I TRIED TO BE ACCURATE IN MY RESEARCH, BUT LIKE ALL HISTORY, I AM SURE THERE ARE SOME MISTAKES.  IF YOU HAVE MORE INFORMATION TO ADD, OR FIND A MISTAKE, DON'T HESITATE TO EMAIL ME.  

SOME HISTORY ABOUT THE FRANK MURRAY BARN
How does Harry Miller know that the Murray Barn is 100 years old this May of 2017?  
Harry said, years ago, he was doing repair work on the barn and Ervin Schweighoefer pulled in.  Ervin said,  “You know, I can remember when I rode by here and Frank Murray was building this barn.”  Harry asked him, “When was that?”
“Well, I don’t remember the day,”  said Ervin,  “but it was May, of 1917.”

Fredrich Wilhelm Schweighoefer,  came to Camas Prairie, from Prussia Germany around 1900.  He was single and a hired man for John and Betsy Wyers.  By 1906, he was married and had filed for a land patent  on land in the Laurel area, along the old Laurel/Trout Lake Road.  The Schweighoefers had two sons.  Ervin and Kurt.  Ervin was born around 1908.  He attended the Lincoln School, the Laurel School and White Salmon High School.  He spent most of his adult life in Trout Lake
At the time he stopped to talk to Harry, he was staying with Willie and Gail Gribner.  Willie’s mother was a Schweighoefer. 

The land where the barn sits was first filed on for a land patent by Reuben Medley.  Reuben was living here in Camas Prairie in 1880, along with about 15 other families.  By 1900 the Medley family was gone.  
On the 1913 survey map, Frank Frazier owns the land where the Murray barn sits. He also owned several other parcels in the Lakeside area including his home place which is just below the Lakeside School on the west side of the BZ/Glenwood Hwy.   It was one of the locations of the Fulda Cheese Factory.  
Frank and wife Bertha Wellenbrock Frazier moved to the Yakima Valley in about 1918.
I would guess that Frazier sold the property to Frank Murray. Some of his other land holdings Frazier sold to the Castle family.   

Frank Murray was born in 1873 to James and Emily Jane Murray who came to the Panakanic-Missouri Flats area in the 1880’s from the Willamette Valley.  He was a brother to Ed, Riley, Martha, (Della),  and Nora. 
Frank’s WWI military draft registration lists him as "stout physical build, medium height, hair color black and eye color gray".   
In 1900 Frank is single and   working in Camas Prairie as a farm hand for Richard Kreps.  In 1902 he marries Suzetta Castle at the home of her parents Crockett and Ann Castle.
Suzetta  was a sister to Garver Castle, and Piccola Hathaway.   
On the 1913 maps, the Castle families own land up on the Plateau and at Lakeside.  I suspect Frank and Suzetta were living up on the Plateau after their marriage since daughter Gladys was born at Panakanic in 1904.  Daughter Wanda was born at Laurel in 1917. 

 Frank passed away January 1, 1926 at the age of 52.    Suzetta had to auction the farm and household possessions in order to pay expenses.  I think Frank may have been ill, because she had some medical expenses to pay.  Just about every resident of the valley is listed on the auction list for their purchases.
10 chickens, 21 head of cattle, 1 brindle cow and calf, 1 post hole digger, 3 hay slings, 1 pare schaps, 1 lamp, 1 wooden bowl, etc.  

When I was a kid, we would come to Glenwood for the Rodeo. As we passed the Murray barn, my dad would point and say,  “that’s where the telephone office was.”  That doesn’t mean my dad knew what he was talking about, but, Suzetta, also known as Zettie, eventually moved to Lyle, where she was the telephone operator for years.  
Mrs. Kamma Sorensen Clark, in her history of Lyle says:
“The Castles settled in Glenwood and raised cattle. Zettie (Mrs. Frank Murray) became a telephone operator in Glenwood. Her husband, Frank, died while quite young and Zettie was left with two daughters to raise. Later on she accepted the telephone office in Lyle, ………She was the operator here for many years, about 25 or 30, almost until her death. She was on duty day and night, and would go out of her way any time to help anyone in trouble. 
     Everyone loved her and she is greatly missed. She surely made a great contribution to Lyle. She bought several houses here and improved them. Her daughter, Wanda Rutledge, lives here.”

Suzetta Castle Murray Tol, passed away August 22, 1958 at her home in Lyle.

Hazel Parsons tells a great story about how telephone central worked.  You would turn the crank for one long ring, and that would put you through to the operator.  She would answer, and you would tell her where you wanted your call directed.  If residents had to make an emergency call during the night, the operator better hear the one long ring. 
For a time, the Fulda Post Office was located at the home of H.E. Mitchell, where Travis now lives. Pauline Mitchell was the last postmaster, and Fulda PO was disbanded in 1912.  They must have kept it on the map for 1913.
 There was a time when Lakeside was a busy area, with a school, cheese factory, post office and telephone office.  
The Bertschi/Medley Canyon Road that comes out at the Murray Barn was a well traveled route to the Plateau and Pankanic, in those days.

THE BLUE IS THE LOCATION OF THE FRANK MURRAY BARN
RED IS THE LOCATION OF THE FULDA CHEESE FACTORY.
I HAVE ALSO MARKED, IN RED,  THE LOCATION OF THE LAKESIDE SCHOOL, BUT I AM NOT SURE IT WAS BUILT IN 1913.  I NEED TO ASK JERRY LADIGES.
THE ORANGE IS THE LAKESIDE CHURCH.
NOTICE THE BERTSCHI/MEDLEY CANYON ROAD WHICH COMES OUT AT THE MURRAY BARN. 
BLACK IS THE 1913 FULDA POST OFFICE 
GREEN IS WHERE ERVIN SCHWEIGHOEFER WAS STAYING WHEN HE STOPPED TO TALK TO HARRY MILLER. 





Saturday, May 6, 2017

THE ZEIGLER/BARLOW BARN: IN MEMORY OF BONNIE PARSONS HARRIS


PHOTO BY DARLISA BLACK @ STARLISA.NET

This is written in memory of Bonnie Parsons Harris
The barn where she played as a little girl

When family friend and  long time born and raised Glenwood resident Lela Ward knew I was interested in doing research on some of Glenwood's old barns, she gave me a slip of paper with page numbers and names.

The 1984 Glenwood School Annual featured eight photos of barns in the Glenwood area.  Lela and DeRowland Ward had taken Lela's Uncle Osmar Kuhnhausen for a drive and had him identify the barns by the names he called them.  Osmar was born in Glenwood in 1897, so by the time 1984 rolled around, he had been farming and ranching here for a while.

The first barn I picked from the  list, was the barn on the Zeigler Place.  That's what everyone calls it now.  "The Zeigler Barn".  But Uncle Osmar had it labeled "The Barlow Barn".  I had never heard the name Barlow connected with the Glenwood Valley, but I have only lived here 47 years, so I am a new comer.  I asked several local ranchers.  They had never heard the name Barlow.  I checked my 1913 Klickitat County Atlas.  By golly, there was the name I.H. Barlow listed on this 40 acre piece of property.  

1913


I googled Google about  I.H. Barlow.  A few references came up about an I.H. Barlow who had lived up in the Appleton area.  
I turned to my next best source of information for barns.   Hazel Bertschi Parsons.  Hazel was born 88 years ago to one of the early Glenwood homesteading families.  She now lives in White Salmon, where life is a little easier and her daughter Bonnie can help her with day to day activities.  Hazel has a sharp mind, but I wasn't sure she would remember me.  When she answered the phone, I said, "Hi Hazel, this is Laurene Eldred in Glenwood."  In her typical Hazel gruff voice, she said,  "I can see that."  
Ahhhh, Hazel uses Caller ID.  
"Well Hazel, I am doing some research on the old barn at the Zeigler place.  Osmar Kuhnhausen called it the Barlow Barn."
"That's right",  says Hazel.  "Uncle Barlow helped build that barn".

Wow!!  I knew Hazel was knowledgable about history in the area, but this was more than I had hoped for. 
A PROGRAM ABOUT THE BARLOW FAMILY AND BARN 
Sunday, May 7, 2017 the Camas Prairie Pioneer Association is having their bi-annual meeting.  President Joann Hutton asked me if I had any ideas for a program.  I suggested we have long time member, Hazel talk about her "Uncle Barlow,"  who was married to Anna Leaton.  The Leatons are another Glenwood Pioneer family.  
I called Hazel and asked her if she would do the main program, and tell us what she knew about "Uncle Barlow and the Barlow Barn?"  Yep, she would do it but Bonnie had to do the speaking for her.  
Hazel got the ball rolling.  She contacted a member of the Leaton family to come and give a presentation about the Leaton side of the family.
 Bonnie  called  to tell me her mom had contacted a member of the Zeigler family, who said she would come to the meeting and offered to give us a tour of the barn!  
Bonnie was excited about the tour.  The Parson family had lived on this farm, when Bonnie was a little girl, and she could remember playing in the barn. 

Thursday morning, May 4, I received the news that, gentle, soft spoken,  Bonnie had unexpectedly passed away.  Bonnie loved old barns.  She and I were making plans, now that spring was here, to take Hazel on a drive and learn about some of the old barns in the area.  I am so sorry to have missed that opportunity and I am so sorry that she missed the chance to visit the barn of her childhood. 

I suspect Hazel will not be at our Sunday Camas Prairie Pioneer potluck and meeting, so I am going to put down some of the information I have gathered on Uncle Barlow and Aunt Annie.  After the meeting  I should have more to add to the story of the Zeigler/Barlow Barn.  
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The first file for the land where the barn sits,  in Township 6 Range 12 E Section 27 was a homestead claim in 1893 by Charles (Karl) Kuhnhausen.  
Charles and Amelia were the parents of the many Kuhnhausens who settled in Glenwood/Camas Prairie.  Charles also applied for land in section 28 which is west of the barn, across the road on what most of us know as the Grubb or Gamble place.  I do not know which parcel Charles and Amelia's home sat on.  Charles passed away in 1899 or 1900.  In 1905 the estate is in probate and Amelia is granted the land and home.
I might also add that a Gessler or Geisler also applied for a homestead claim in both sections 27 and 28.  Mrs. Gessler was a half sister to Amelia Kuhnhausen

Amelia is in the center of this photo.  Charles has passed away.    
Osmar Kuhnhausen, who started this search, is in the front row, with big sister Sophie's arm around him.  



The 1913 map shows a home on both parcels.  
In 1913 I. H. Barlow owns the 40 acre piece in section 27 and William Kuhnhausen owns the land in section 28. 
I don't know what transactions take place between the time I. H. Barlow owns the land to ownership by the Zeigler family.



IRVING HERBERT BARLOW:                                          SARA ANNA LEATON BARLOW:
1849-1938                                                                                1854-1943 




I. H.  Barlow was born in Lansing Michigan.   Anna Leaton was born  in Lincolnshire, England.  Her family immigrated to the U. S. when Anna was three.  They were married in 1872,  moving west in 1886.  They spent some time in Kansas, before moving on to Portland,  then Hood River, then Appleton, where they took a pre-emption claim in Appleton.  Dates on their arrival, vary from 1888 to 1905.  I suspect the 1905 date is when they moved to Lyle.

They had never lived in the woods and they thought it was terrible.  

Mr. Barlow, who was a carpenter started a sawmill.  They brought their cattle, with no hay provisions, not realizing how much snow fell in Appleton.  They started the first post office in Appleton.  The winters were tough and after four years they sold, eventually moving to Lyle.  

According to the memories of Jennie Wright Stump, Mr. Barlow had been a dance teacher when living in Michigan.  During the long winters at Appleton, he would teach dancing to the young people.  She also recalls him directing the play, "Uncle Tom's Cabin", during the winter of 1890.

He built and owned a store in Lyle.  There is mention of him building several schools in the area.  

I have a Hood River 1903 newspaper clipping of Mrs. I. H. Barlow advertised as a dressmaker.



The Barlows raised an adopted son Reuben.  He passed away in Lyle at age 84 in 1958.  His obituary says he arrived in Lyle in 1896. 



UPDATE:
After the Camas Prairie Pioneer Meeting.

Hazel Parsons came to the meeting.  She said Bonnie would have wanted her to come.  She did not have a lot of memories of her Aunt and Uncle Barlow.  She just remembered sometimes visiting them.  When she and her family lived at the Barlow Barn place, she thinks Paul Ladiges owned it.  
Sylvia Holly gave an interesting history of the Leaton family.  We learned that the Barlows came first to Appleton/Missouri Flats.  The William Leaton family followed a year later.  William and Anna Barlow were brother and sister.  William and Addie Leaton and family moved down into the Camas Prairie/Glenwood Valley to begin ranching.  They purchased what I think was the Trenner and Hoult farms.  

Some of the children of the Leaton family married into local Glenwood families, including daughter Cassie, Hazel's mother.  

Laraine Zeigler Durham, the current owner of the Zeigler/Barlow barn came from the  Portland area to attend the meeting.  She said her family bought the farm from a man named Frank Lemon.  They came in 1950.  Her father was a mechanic for J. Neils Logging.  They left in 1958.  I don't remember what year she said she bought the farm back.  She has done a lot of structural work on the barn to straighten and stabilize it.