Sunday, March 17, 2013

The Oregon Electric Railroad

The following story is courtesy of Finn J.D. John - Offbeat Oregon

The Oregon Electric railroad line: State's past, and future?

The plush rail service left artifacts along its lines after being made obsolete by the popularity of automobiles.


The  Pirtle transfer station on the Oregon Electric Railroad line just south
of Albany is now derelict and covered with graffiti. Note the "O" and "E" in
the upper corners. (Finn J.D. John)
About two miles south of Albany city limits, at the edge of a field dotted with grazing sheep, is a derelict building in a stand of trees beside a lonely stretch of railroad track.

It's tall, square and classical-looking. In fact, it looks like the shell of something that was once very impressive. And it's about 200 yards from the nearest road -- a tiny rural lane that sees perhaps two cars an hour at most.

This is Pirtle Station, a transfer station on the Oregon Electric Railroad line that once connected Portland to Eugene.

The Oregon Electric was launched in 1907 as a short passenger line running from Portland to Salem. Five years later, the line was extended with great fanfare to Eugene.Electric railroads were taking the country by storm at the time.

While a steam train had to include a heavy, expensive locomotive pulling a long string of cars to be cost -effective, an electric could consist of one car, with an electric motor between its wheels. The only trouble was, you couldn't send the power more than a hundred miles or so, or the voltage would bleed off. So using electricity only really worked on short, local lines between cities.
This video was made by Charles Turner at www.darewehope.org during
a haircut at the shop of Ivan "The Hairable" Tadic, a Portland history buff
with a particular interest in the Oregon Electric line. Tadic remembers the
line when it was operating, in the 1930s.
On the Oregon Electric, the coaches were plush and comfortable, the service fast and dependable -- and, powered entirely by electricity, cheap and easy to maintain. The future looked bright for the new rail line.
Of course, it wasn't. The same year it was launched, Henry Ford created the automotive assembly-line system that would result in thousands of inexpensive Ford Model Ts crawling all over Oregon within a decade. The better cars became, the fewer people chose to ride the rails. By the time World War II ended every passenger electric railroad in Oregon, from the Oregon Electric to the streetcars in Portland, had died for lack of business.

The Oregon Electric itself shut down electric operations in 1945, but by then it was exclusively hauling freight. It went from making almost $1 million in 1920 to $17,313 in 1932. The following year, when the Public Utility Commission held a hearing to end passenger service on the line, only six people came.
But you can still see plenty of evidence of what it was like, all along the line.

Of course, in Eugene there is the Oregon Electric Station restaurant. This famous eatery occupies the station built there after the line came to Eugene in 1912; it's a Georgian Revival building with a very distinctive triple-arch facade, and there are a couple of the old coaches outfitted as dining areas. It's been lovingly restored to its original glory.

In Albany, the station -- only slightly less fancy -- is now home to Ciddicci's Pizza, a place with deep roots in the community, at which one can pore over pages from old Albany high-school yearbooks varnished over on the tabletops.

But the indirect effects of the Oregon Electric line are much more pervasive today. This cheap, fast service from Portland made the south Willamette Valley accessible to thousands of people who otherwise wouldn't have come. It's no accident that the towns it went through became some of the biggest in the valley.

Ironically enough, all commercial railroads are electric today. The difference is, the electricity is no longer sent over wires to the trains; the power is generated in the engines by massive diesel generators.

(Sources: Johnson, Emory R. Elements of Transportation. New York: Appleton, 1909; Culp, Edwin D. Stations West: The Story of Oregon Railroads. Caldwell, ID: Caxton, 1972; www.oes-restaurant.com; www.pdxhistory.com)

 

Monday, March 11, 2013

Hiking Oregon's History by William L. Sullivan

Hiking Oregon's History by William L. Sullivan

This is a terrific book, even if you don't venture out for the hikes found inside.  It provides an enjoyable history lesson that is a great introduction to some very beautiful hikes.

Our own Briggs Creek is featured in the "Gold!" chapter, and it is such a great place to spend an afternoon exploring; it's become one of my favorite hikes.

So far, my husband and I have taken about 60% of the hikes in this book, so we can attest the accuracy of the directions and how easy or difficult the trail is.

The Starvation Creek Falls was the first hike we went on from Hiking Oregon's History.  When Sullivan describes "... a clifftop viewpoint.  From there you can see the entire sweep of the Columbia Gorge...", he means it; it is absolutely breathtaking!

The next hike we plan on taking is 29. Rogue River.  We can't wait to "Cross Oregon's bloodiest battlefield to a riverside waterfall."


Hiking Oregon's History can be purchased now for just $18.95
 
or at the Josephine Historical Society's Bookshop located in the Research Library at 512 K Street, Grants Pass.

Be sure to check out our Online Bookshop for more titles.