Workers on the site of the foundation work for the Student Union Center, Washburne Hall. It was completed in 1963 and is now referred to as the University Center.
Architectural drawing of the renovation of Brown Hall. Designed by Robert C. Skippen from the shell of a former Camp Adair building and named for Tabitha Moffat Brown, the building was the Student Union building for a time during the mid-Twentieth Century. Brown was later called the Mother Symbol of Oregon and was a co-Founder of Pacific University.
Sepia-toned image of a two-story, Italianate house set in a yard surrounded by gardens and trees. Set in a four-acre block near the center of town, the house was built by a local dentist and his wife, George and Adeline Rogers, and was dismantled in the 1930s by new owners, who used materials from the house to build a new home nearby. The property is now a city park, Rogers Park.
Sepia-toned image of a cross-gabled, two-story house with steeply pitched, flared roofs and shingle siding. The house sits in a large yard and is surrounded by shrubbery. Museum records identify this as the 'Ward family home.'
A Colonial Revival style house that was used as the First Congregational Church parsonage until 1960. Other building are visible behind and to the left of the house.
A winter scene of the front of a house. The house is two story Victorian style with two gables in the front. A horse hitched to a sleigh is standing our front with a man in the sleigh. In the far distance on the left, behind the house is a double steeple church. Location is unknown.
Photo of a white 2-story Victorian home, Gothic Revival style, with gable front and “L” plan, picket fence, pointed arch door above first story bay window. Garage on right side of house is visible, and large tree next to bay window. Small tree between windows on south wing of home. Well-driven road in front of house (Hawthorne). Looks to be late winter/early spring.