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OHC IN THE PRESS

Heritage haunting

Actors from last year's "A Haunting History" pose at the Oswego Heritage House, where the spooky event will return Oct. 19.

Lake Oswego Review

Learn about spooky Oswego history - if you dare


Holly Bartholomew Oct 2, 2024 

Lake Oswego residents are invited to immerse themselves in the thrills and chills of local history Saturday evening, Oct. 19 at the Oswego Heritage Council’s “A Haunting History.”

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....

Carpenter Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Check out vintage cars and boats at upcoming Lake Oswego show


Corey Buchanan Aug 7, 2024 

Organizers of the Oswego Heritage Council’s Collector Car & Classic Boat Show describe the annual event as an informal and intimate experience, providing attendees the chance to closely examine vintage vehicles and discuss their finer points and histories with owners.

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Attendees gathered at Sundeleaf Plaza to admire boats during the Oswego Heritage Council's Collector Car & Classic Boat Show in 2022. Staff file photo: Adam Wickham

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Lucy Pollard's story is featured through love letters, photographs and her 1919 wedding dress at the exhibit.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Love letters shine light on century-old Lake Oswego courtships


Corey Buchanan Jun 6, 2024 

Inspired by the acquisition of love letters from various women to an eligible Lake Oswego bachelor over a century ago, the Oswego Heritage Council has introduced a new exhibit titled “LO in LOve: Love Stories from Early Oswego.”

The exhibit features true love stories mined from the Oswego Heritage House’s archives.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....

Lake Oswego Chamber of Commerce

Archivist Mark Browne receives the Herald Campbell Award

Mark Browne, Archivist for OHC, was awarded the C. Herald Campbell Heritage Champion Award at the Chamber of Commerce's Community Awards on Thursday, May 23rd, for his impressive work in archival preservation across the city.

WATCH THE AWARD VIDEO....

Director Kathryn Sinor hands off the award to Mark Browne, with Board President Jeff Gudman modeling the historic peg from the Peg Tree in the background.

Painting

The Oswego Heritage House recently
restored an 1893 painting.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Torn painting produced by Lake Oswego artist in 1893 is restored


Corey Buchanan Apr 24, 2024 Updated 18 hrs ago

Though it’s known for providing written histories that shed light on how the 19th and 20th century residents of modern Lake Oswego once lived, the Oswego Heritage Council recently underwent a project that provides a visual glimpse into the past.

The council recently restored a painting from 1893 and is now displaying it at the Oswego Heritage House on 10th Street.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Heritage house unveils artifact that shows life in Lake Oswego over 150 years ago


Corey Buchanan Feb 28, 2024 Updated Feb 29, 2024

With a new item on display, the Oswego Heritage Council is highlighting a stand of trees that served as a gathering space for early Lake Oswego residents as the town was first forming.

The council added to its collection a peg used for placing lanterns on the trees that once lined Furnace Street to the Iron Company Furnace as early as the 1850s. The peg is on display at its museum on 10th Street.

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The peg was used to place lanterns for lighting while the community gathered next to the trees.

Heritage Council

The Oswego Heritage Council runs the
Oswego Heritage House on 398 10th St.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Lake Oswego heritage council joins initiative to increase museum access


Corey Buchanan Jan 30, 2024

The Oswego Heritage Council is joining an initiative to make museums around the country more accessible.

The council has joined Museums for All, through the Institute of Museum and Library Services, to provide free memberships to people who receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits. This initiative provides free and reduced admission and membership to 850 museums across the country.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....

Micro Stream Radio

Preservation Oaks Interview


Sean Radcliff Jan 15, 2023 

Preservation Oaks highlights Museums, Cultural and Heritage Institutions, Historical and Genealogical Societies, and history focused Media Creators across the United States. Recently the Oswego Heritage Council and the town of Lake Oswego were highlighted. The Executive Director, Kathryn Sinor was interviewed by Sean Radcliff, creator of Preservation Oaks. Have fun and find out more about the Council, the services it offers, and how you can help, by listening to this interview.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW HERE....


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The Iron Workers Cottage in Old Town is the last surviving house of its kind from an era when Oswego was an iron mining town.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Lake Oswego group undertakes preservation of Oregon Iron & Steel Company records


Corey Buchanan Dec 18, 2023 Updated Dec 19, 2023

The Lake Oswego Preservation Society received a $5,245 grant from the Oregon Heritage Commission for the preservation of records from the company associated with the founding of Lake Oswego — the Oregon Iron & Steel Company.

The Oswego Heritage Council and the Lake Oswego Public Library are also helping out.

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MACC-TVCTV

Learn about the first female owned landscape architecture firm in the PNW 


Dr. Mark Browne Oct 25, 2023 

Learn more about the fascinating women who founded the first female owned landscape architecture firm in the Pacific Northwest. Brought to you by the Lake Oswego Preservation Society, Oswego Heritage Council and the Lake Oswego Public Library.

WATCH THE FULL VIDEO.... 

Edith Schryver and Elizabeth Lord photograph

Edith Schryver and Elizabeth Lord

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The Oswego Heritage House will showcase how people have coped with death over time during event and ongoing exhibit. This photo shows grave markers for members of the Pollard family in Lake Oswego.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Learn about Lake Oswego's evolving relationship with death at event 


Corey Buchanan Oct 16, 2023 

In honor of Halloween and a new exhibit, the Oswego Heritage House will transport people back to 1905 — when seance mediums traveled to Lake Oswego to help the grieving communicate with their lost loved ones and the process of preparing the dead was more communal.

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KGW8

How infrastructure and a name change helped transform Lake Oswego 


Devon Haskins Sept 13, 2023 

"They literally could not give away lake front property," said Mark Browne, a volunteer archivist at the Oswego Heritage House in Lake Oswego.

With more than 13 miles of lake shoreline, Lake Oswego or Oswego Lake, whatever you decide to call it, is home to some pretty pricey real estate. These days, homes sell for millions of dollars.

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A survey map of 1852 shows the name of Oswego Lake as Sucker Lake.

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An attendees gets behind the wheel of a vintage car at the Oswego Heritage Council's Collector Car & Classic Boat Show in 2022.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Lake Oswego car and boat show returns this month 


Corey Buchanan Aug 11, 2023 

Car buffs and boating aficionados rejoice.

The Oswego Heritage House Collector Car & Classic Boat Show will return to Lake Oswego Sunday, Aug. 27, and there is still time to register your car or boat for the occasion.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....


Genealogical Forum of Oregon The Bulletin

Flirting by Fruit Box: An Early 20th Century Dating App


Courtney Clements June 2023

Every couple has been asked at some point in their relationship "how did you meet?" The answers vary widely--college classes, workplaces, church socials, dances, dating apps, etc. For one set of couples in the early twentieth century, the answer may have been "a strawberry box." Young women (primarily), who worked on farms or for fruit packers, would slip notes in the hopes of receiving a response from an eligible young man.

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Lucy Pollard in her vineyard, undated, LOPL.2016.3.2.470B, Pollard Family Collection, Oswego Heritage Council.

LO Chamber Awards web

C. Herald Campbell Heritage Champion Award Courtney Clements with Kathryn Sinor and Jeff Gudman at the Lake Oswego Chamber of Commerce Community Awards.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Community members, organizations honored at Lake Oswego chamber awards


Corey Buchanan May 24, 2023 Updated May 30, 2023

Andrew Edwards capped the annual Lake Oswego Chamber of Commerce Community Awards with a simple message: “Carpe diem,” or seize the day in English.

“Carpe diem is a war cry. Carpe diem invokes inspiration. It urges us to shed our inhibitions, have some courage and grab every opportunity that comes our way,” he said.

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City of Lake Oswego HelloLO The Historian

The Story Behind the Painting:Willamette Falls Painting Donated to Oswego Heritage Council

Mark Browne and Courtney Clements May 2023

The Glenn family, who trace their lineage to Oswego pioneers Waters and Lucretia Gurney Carman through the Carman's middle daughter Henrietta "Etta" Susanna Carman Magone, recently donated a family treasure to the Oswego Heritage Council. This image of Willamette Falls was painted by English artist Alexander Maxwell MacKechnie (1855-1893). MacKechnie worked as an art tutor to Etta Magone's daughters and died tragically attempting to save Francette Magone from drowning in the Tualatin Canal. She perished as well.

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Willamette Falls by Alexander Maxwell MacKechnie (1893)

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Ralph Holcomb (left) and pastor Jennie Ott (right) honor Mark Browne for the work he did to organize the church's archives.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Lake Oswego church unearths its past to prepare for future


Corey Buchanan Mar 3, 2023 Updated Mar 7, 2023

To forge a path forward, pastor Jennie Ott said, the Lake Oswego United Church of Christ needed to properly consider its past.

But with documents randomly stacked in boxes, thumbing through the clutter to find a clear view into this history wasn’t possible. So, in 2021, church leaders contacted Oswego Heritage House volunteer archivist Mark Browne.

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Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Oswego Heritage House shines light on Lake Oswego women’s history


Corey Buchanan Feb 10, 2023 Updated Feb 14, 2023

Because women were largely shut off from sources of power and opportunity until relatively recently, Oswego Heritage House volunteer Courtney Clements said histories of local communities like Lake Oswego often revolve around men.

This is one reason why diaries can be an important counterpoint and supplement to traditional narratives.

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Clara and Cora Wilmot were sisters living in Lake Oswego in the late 19th century
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Kathryn Sinor in front of the Oswego Heritage House, January 2023.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

New Oswego Heritage Council executive director strives to make history accessible


Corey Buchanan Jan 20, 2023 Updated Jan 26, 2023

Diving into local history, Kathryn Sinor said, helps us understand the world as it is today and glean perspectives that can make us better.

“I love local histories, especially. I love the history of smaller areas that are really personal to people. It’s such a great way for us now to understand how and why we exist the way we do,” she said. “These local history institutions are a great gateway to that understanding.”

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Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Oswego Heritage Council gifts artifacts to Grand Ronde cultural center


Mia Ryder-Marks Mar 17, 2022

Artifacts found in a Lake Oswego backyard over 50 years ago have found a new home in the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde's Chachalu Tribal Museum and Cultural Center.

The Oswego Heritage Council donated the artifacts to the museum and cultural center Tuesday, March 15. The obsidian artifacts were tools identified as a projectile point and a scrape made from stone glass. The tools were commonly used by Indigenous tribes while hunting and preparing food.

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Oswego Heritage Council gifts artifacts to Grand Ronde cultural center

Two Indigenous artifacts found in a Lake Oswego garden were donated to the Chachalu Tribal Museum and Cultural Center. 

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Walling family's legacy lives on

Nancy Dunis Jul 20, 2017

George and Frances Walling left a major legacy in the Lake Oswego area: Part of their donation land claim became the campus of Marylhurst University and the nearby Marylhurst neighborhood. In fact, the old Walling home served as a dormitory for students for many years.

George Washington Walling was born Dec. 18, 1818 in Ohio and moved with his parents, Lucy and Gabriel Walling, to Iowa in 1828. Restless, the senior Wallings and their son George, his wife Frances and other members of the family headed west in 1847. Albert, the eldest son of George and Francis, was born on the Oregon Trail in Pacific Springs, Wyo.

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A Marylhurst altar and cemetery stand on what was part of the Walling family's donation land claim in a photo taken sometime after 1937.

A Marylhurst altar and cemetery stand on what was part of the Walling family's donation land claim in a photo taken sometime after 1937.

Sheep graze below the Shipley barn in this early view from Stevens Meadow.

Sheep graze below the Shipley barn in this early view from
Stevens Meadow.

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Shipley-Cook farm plays key role for generations


Nancy Dunis May 4, 2017

Adam Randolph Shipley and James Preston Cook were two early settlers who made significant contributions to the history of Lake Oswego. Both men traveled from Ohio across the Oregon Trail to settle in Oregon. Shipley, his wife Mary and their son came in 1852; Cook came in 1883. 

Shipley, who took a keen interest in agriculture and horticulture, was one of the first to import and grow grapes in the area. Fondly called "Father Shipley," he helped launch Oswego Grange No. 175 as a place for social events and a schoolhouse for local children.

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Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Paulings find eternal peace in Oswego Pioneer Cemetery

Nancy Dunis Feb 16, 2017

One of the world's greatest scientists, humanitarians, defenders of civil liberties and proponents of good nutrition is buried next to his wife in Oswego Pioneer Cemetery. Dr. Linus Pauling and Ava Helen Pauling were remarkable human beings, together and individually.

Together, the Paulings played a key role in the establishment of a Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, gathering 13,000 signatures of scientists from around the world — including 38 Nobel laureates — in the late 1950s and early '60s that they presented to the United Nations, calling for disarmament and the end of testing.

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Linus and Ava Helen Pauling are among the many community members buried in the Oswego Pioneer Cemetery,

Linus and Ava Helen Pauling are among the many community members buried in the Oswego Pioneer Cemetery,

Lucy Pollard
Lucy Pollard (nee Puylaert)

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

Lucy Pollard among area's first pioneers


Nancy Dunis Dec 15, 2016

Lucy Mary Pollard — who was born Lucy Mary Puylaert — is considered one of Oswego's earliest pioneers. The fourth of eight children, Lucy was only 3 months old when her family settled in Old Town in Oswego in 1890. Her parents, Peter and Johanna Puylaert, were Belgian immigrants.

The family moved from Old Town to a 10-acre farm on what is now Bergis Road. The property extended from both sides of Bergis down to McVey Avenue and was across from the Catholic cemetery. It was Lucy who found and purchased the acreage.

"Lucy loved that home and the gentle land," remembers Theresa Truchot. "It had a well; fertile soil; and it raised good crops."

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....

Pamplin Media Group Lake Oswego Review

McVey Avenue named in honor of one of area's first firefighters


Nancy Dunis Jan 21, 2016

Arthur "Red" McVey played many roles in Lake Oswego, including janitor, power-plant construction worker, citizen advocate and preservationist. But his first love was fighting fires.

McVey became a volunteer firefighter in 1911 and remained active in the Oswego Volunteer Fire Department.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE....



Firefighters Arthur Red McVey and Joe Nemec sit in a fire engine for a photo taken around 1946.

Oswego Heritage House and Museum
398 10th St.
Lake Oswego, OR 97034
(503) 635-6373

Hours of Operation:
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
10:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Free entrance

The Oswego Heritage Council is a  501 (c)(3)
EIN # 93-0983947

Copyright © 2024, Oswego Heritage Council. All rights reserved.

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