Avola One-Room Log School House - Avola, BC
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 51° 46.944 W 119° 19.411
11U E 339727 N 5739391
While searching for a Benchmark in the Village of Avola, upon finding it we discovered it to be attached to an old log schoolhouse.
Waymark Code: WM117QX
Location: British Columbia, Canada
Date Posted: 09/01/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
Views: 2

Eighty Two years old (or Eighty, depending on who's talking) when we happened by in 2019, the school was closed in the early 1980s as the result of the declining population of Avola. Now the property of the Thompson Nicola Regional District, the schoolhouse underwent renovations in 2013, but not without a few hiccups, as the news article further below will attest.

Today the building is used as a community hall, regularly housing a variety of activities such as fitness classes, a book exchange, a drop in centre/coffee house and the usual functions and events generally associated with a small town community hall.

The following is from the back of a small postcard we obtained at the schoolhouse.
Avola One-Room
Log School House

Built in 1937 with local logs by "the Finn Brothers" from Scandinavia. They also built the Community Hall. Photo: 1958 Mrs. West was the school teacher. She lived in the log house which is up on blocks 2 lots up the hill. 18 children were enrolled from K-Grade 7. Note: Queen Elizabeth's portrait, penmanship cards above chalkboard, globe. This is before the Maple Leaf Canadian flag, so there would have been a Union Jack. Older grades had to board in the city until 1969. Note: Windows on the east to let in natural light. Steep north-south roof line to shed snow. Foundation: sand-gravel from the river bank. Original chinking was "oakum." Now owned by TNRD. Renovations 2013.
Protesters block
Avola schoolhouse repairs
KEITH MCNEILL | Jul. 3, 2013
A small group of Avola residents blocked the access to the Avola log schoolhouse Tuesday afternoon, June 25, preventing a contractor from beginning repairs to the 70-year-old building. Reason for the demonstration appeared to be the protesters feared the walnut shell blasting the contractor planned to do would damage the building.

“Research the Avola group has done has convinced them that this pressure treatment will irreparably damage the wood, erase the hand-hewn broad axe strokes and strip off the layer of natural color, which is the Avola old log schoolhouse’s character-defining element,” said Eleanor Deckert, one of the organizers.

According to Deckert, Willow MacDonald, Thompson-Nicola Regional District director for Thompson Headwaters (Area B) arrived at the schoolhouse about 45 minutes after the blockade began. The Avola protesters told her that they were unhappy with a decision made by the Thompson Headwaters services committee during a June 18 meeting to have the contractor go ahead with the renovation project.

The June 18 meeting was held immediately after an open house held to discuss the proposed renovations with the community. During the open house the consensus of those present seemed to be that the choice of stain color to be used should be left to the discretion of the contractor, Brad Dohms of Vavenby...

...During the June 18 meeting it was stated that the contractor had previously used walnut shell blasting when he renovated the Upper Clearwater and Blackpool community halls for the TNRD. The objective of the treatment would be to remove only the gray, oxidized wood, the meeting was told. It would renew the wood, not make it look new. Other than that, the question of what method and material to be used to clean the building’s exterior did not seem to be an issue at the time.

Following Tuesday’s blockade, Deckert reported on Wednesday that she, Bob Jensen and Tammy Wilson had been invited to a meeting early this week with Ron Storie, TNRD manager of community services, and Sukh Gill: chief administrative officer of TNRD. The meeting would take place in the District of Clearwater offices on Tuesday afternoon, July 2, Storie said last week. “The important thing to stress is that the regional district is willing to listen but we have to do what the majority of the residents want,” he said.

The manager of community services confirmed that the schoolhouse is TNRD property. The regional district would not support getting heritage status for the building at this time, he said. Because of the concerns raised about walnut shell blasting, the TNRD is doing additional research into the process.
From the Clearwater Times
Address:
6366 Avola Village Road
Avola, BC Canada
V0E-1C0


Web Site: [Web Link]

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