Showing posts with label 1910. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1910. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

1910 Leslie Methodist Church Parsonage

Built to serve as the parsonage of the Leslie Methodist Church in 1910, this former home was originally located on the corner of Commercial and Myers Street. The ministers who lived there included the Reverends S. Harlow Johnson, C. Dean Poindexter, Joseph Knotts and Kenneth Abbott. In 1984 the church was demolished and the Queen Anne style parsonage moved to its present location at 1305 Cannon Street SE. It was renovated to serve as a doctor's office.

1910 Court Street and "Piety Hill"

This 1910 photograph is included to illustrate the changes in the historic Piety Hill residential neighborhood since it was then seen from the State House dome, a popular place for Salem aerial photography. This view of Court Street gives a good view of more than two blocks of homes:
At Summer Street in the foreground at right, the Cooke-Pattons shared a city block (between Winter and Summer Streets) with the Thomas Kay family.
At Winter Street were the Krause family, then the Bishops (Fannie Kay Bishop) and the Max Burens. Two other houses are obscured by trees.
At Cottage Street there is an empty lot and then, just visible, the McNary house. The Eugene Breyman house, just beyond at the corner is not seen. However, the old City Hall rises in the left margin of the picture. Notice the barren hills of what would be West Salem.
Looking up Winter Street, are the homes of Joseph Albert, George Pearce, Thomas Rigdon.
The numerous church spires illustrate why the neighborhood got its name.
The Unitarian Church (center), St. Joseph's Catholic Church's Sacred Heart Academy and St. Paul's Episcopal Church have all moved to new locations.
The Court Street houses would be demolished by 1963.
The one structure still remaining is Garfield School, the white building in the upper right margin.

1910 Parrish House

Among the several historic photographs of the Parrish House as it looked at 745 Capitol Street, the one above is the most charming. The original homestead may have built as early as 1856, but this picture shows the alterations made about 1910 which transformed the structure. The tall and narrow sash windows, capped by a wooden cornice, suggest an Italian style of architecture. By the time of this picture, the original direction of the gable had been changed, along with other alterations after two fires. A porte-corchere, not seen here, was added in 1915.


Reverend Parrish was a missionary who came to Oregon with Jason Lee in 1840. In 1854 he was appointed an Indian agent. He also was a circuit riding preacher in the Willamette Valley and chaplain at the state prison. He is credited with donating much land, time and money to the cause of education in the early years of Salem’s history. He died in 1895 and is buried in Jason Lee Cemetery. Parrish Middle School, built across the street from the original location of the house, was in a cluster of oak trees called “Parrish Grove”, on what had been his donation land claim.

Like two other houses in this block along Capitol Street in the 1980s, the expansion of the North Capitol Mall for the Oregon State Archives caused their removal. To its north was the Rockenfeld House, moved from Court Street; to its south was the Hinges-Kimball House, moved from Summer Street ~ both for the 1937-9 construction of the Oregon State Library. The Hinges-Kimballl House went north on Capitol Street. Both the Parrish House and the Rockenfeld House were moved to what became the A. C. Gilbert Discovery Village where they are today.

The two pictures below were taken just before the Parrish House move. The one immediately below was published in the local newspaper. The other was recorded by a neighbor with his video camera. On the way to its new home on Water Street, the movers faced a challenge when the Parrish house became temporarily trapped under the Marion Street Bridge.



Below is the house as it appeared in a restored condition in 2008. A lattice screen has since been added along the front porch.