Color photograph of a shake-shingled building with a green shingled roof, behind another building. A parking lot and a large pine tree fill the foreground, while another building with square white concrete sectioned corners and glass windows sits to the middle left of the image.
Black and white image of a white, two-story gabled building with double front doors and curtains in the double-hung, single-paned windows. There is a covered front porch, and a rail fence runs in front of the building, which appears to be somewhat overgrown. A sign at the very top of the front facade reads 'Washington Grange No. [illegible]'.
Handmade quilt square which depicts local grange building as part of the 15-panel Heritage Quilt of Cedar Mill Description from related pamphlet: BLOCK 5 LEEDY GRANGE 339 by Shirley Corey. The Leedy Grange building is located in the Milltowner area facing Saltzman Road near Cornell. This building was orginally built to house Modern Woodmen before 1900 (an organization now apparently absorbed by Woodmen of the World). In 1913 the structure was sold to Leedy Grange and because the building seemed unsafe, the second story was removed. The upper floor held a ballroom with an outside stairway for access like many of the community halls. Today, the attic of the building has a beautiful hardwood floor.
A faded black and white photograph shows various members of the Butte Grange No. 148. The members pose on the porch landing in front of the Butte Grange Hall, a white clapboard-sided building with a gabled roof. Behind the members is a doorway into the grange hall. Double-sash windows are visible to the left and right of the doorway. Above the doorway and the left window are two signs with the same inscription: 'Butte Grange No. 148 / P. of H. / Organized April 22, 1874' Three men standing in the back row each hold a staff, and another man standing to the far right holds a staff with an owl carving on top. Several men and one woman are wearing hats. A woman in the front row holds an infant, and a woman in the back row holds a young girl. All members have a ribbon pinned to their left breast. In 1874 when the Butte Grange was established, the area around present day Tigard was known as Butte and East Butte.
A black and white photograph of male and female members of the Tigard Grange. The members are arranged in two rows: the front row members sit on the edge of an uncovered porch landing and the back row members stand behind them on the porch. In the back row, the third person from the left, a woman holds a violin in her left hand. To the right of her, a man holds a staff in his right hand and a trumpet in his left hand. Behind him, another man holds a staff that features a owl carving at the top end. To his right, a woman holds a staff in her left hand. Two children are seated on the far right of the front row. Many members of the group display award ribbons on the left side of their chest.