Lower Fern Ridge School - Junction City, OR
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
N 44° 09.510 W 123° 13.810
10T E 481596 N 4889503
A one-room schoolhouse destined for scrap wood was saved, relocated and rehabilitated to the Camas Country Mill Farm and Bakery.
Waymark Code: WMY734
Location: Oklahoma, United States
Date Posted: 05/03/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 0

Located at the Camas Mill Farm and Bakery is a relocated one-room schoolhouse formerly known as the Lower Fern Ridge School. The Camas Mill website highlights this school:

THE WALLS OF THE LOWER FERN RIDGE SCHOOL STILL SHOW THE GRAPHITE SIGNATURES OF LOCAL SCHOOL CHILDREN FROM OVER 100 YEARS AGO.

One hundred years ago, the distinct silhouettes of one-room schoolhouses were rural anchors in areas across the west, much like stone grist mills, which existed to support isolated local communities. Left to decay in the wake of rapid modernization, we believe these pieces of living history are worth reviving, preserving, and sharing. As we work on-farm and at the mill to reinvigorate local grain raising and milling, we are also preserving this schoolhouse as a community asset for all to enjoy.

Anyone who drove Alvadore Road knew the building--the weather-worn siding and abrupt facade tucked behind plum trees, a quietly decaying relic that stood out against neighboring metal outbuildings.

When the school was slated for a new life as scrap wood, Tom and Sue Hunton were compelled to make an offer, move the schoolhouse on farm, and attempt to restore it. Sue’s background as a school teacher and her ongoing commitment to education, Tom’s penchant for taking on ambitious projects, and a shared desire to preserve the living history of the area led to their purchase of the schoolhouse from generous neighbor Sonja Davidson.

Moved across the fields and over the creek to it's new home at 'Rose's Place' on Hunton's Farm, work on the schoolhouse moved quickly, thanks to the tremendous effort of friends, neighbors, and mill manager Steve Jones. Lifted off the boulder-like rocks that served as its foundation for decades, Tom Mains gave the schoolhouse a solid foundation, custom siding from Majestic Forest Products replaced the bowed-out original, and Northwest Door and Sash created stunning windows. The orchard was pruned, blackberries ripped out, garden planted...and we opened our doors on Memorial Day to let the community see the progress. Ms. Juni Fisher played two evenings of western ballads, and folks milled around late past sunset, boots and sandals shuffling across the floors again. Lew Bailey, a WWII veteran and last living student of the school, rang the original bell to inaugurate the schoolhouse's new life.

Since we opened our doors, we have hosted two weddings, numerous holiday parties, children's summer pioneer camp, and the first annual Camas Country Pie Baking Contest--and the best is surely yet to come! Come see the schoolhouse when you visit the Camas Country Schoolhouse Bakery and Store, and see enjoy restoration in progress!

Thanks to the support of the Oregon Travel Philanthropy Fund, you can see our schoolhouse featured on the Travel Oregon website here.

A campaign began in 2013 to preserve and relocate the school as noted in a YouTube video embedded on their website. From the video, it was shared that the school was built between 1887-1889. Lew Bailey, a WWII veteran and last living student of the school, etched his name on the side of the school in 1936 and was still viewable all these years later. The school was relocated from the small community of Alvadore, southwest of this site.

Original or Re-creation?: Original

Year the school first opened.: 01/01/1889

Year the school closed.: 06/01/1936

Is the schoolhouse still open as a school?: no

Address:
91948 Purkerson Rd
Junction City, OR United States


Web Address (if available): [Web Link]

Does the school offer 19th century classroom reenactments or day camps?: yes

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