Tumgik
#Stayton Oregon
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
https://caninecommunicatorsoregon.godaddysites.com/?mibextid=Zxz2cZ
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Stayton, Oregon, USA https://goo.gl/maps/ZzWTnSTCahDhEWnR7
3 notes · View notes
gacougnol · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Dorothea Lange
Migratory child in camp at end of day. Bean pickers' camp near West Stayton
Oregon. 1939
156 notes · View notes
whitepolaris · 28 days
Text
Stayton Cemetery
Pioneer life in nineteenth-century Oregon was difficult. The work was hard, and people were often isolated on their large homesteads. Despite the isolation on these farms, regular gatherings-such as church on Sunday-brought people together to exchange news, help, and sometimes diseases. Because of poor hygiene, but mostly because of inadequate medicine, many diseases plagued the early pioneers. Cholera struck everyone equally: rich and poor, male and female, old and young alike. More tragic were the diseases that always seemed to attack the young, like diphtheria.
Between 1980 and 2000, there were only fifty-two reported cases of diphtheria in the United States. In the early 1920s, there were about 150,000 cases of diphtheria, which may not sound like many in a nation of millions, but most of the people who got it were children, and more than 10 percent of them died of the disease. It was a terrible illness for parents to watch their children suffer from, as their necks swelled up, and slowly, ever so slowly, their windpipes were sealed shut by a crust the infection created inside their throats. There was nothing that people could do about it for years, until a doctor in the late 1880s invented a series of tubes that could be put down the throats of diphtheria sufferers to keep them from suffocating. It took many years for a vaccine to be developed. Unfortunately the vaccine came too late for the Grier family.
In December 1885, the Griers spent a lot of time together in their small cabin. One of the Grier children got diphtheria-probably at church-and it spread quickly. Between December 16 and December 31, William, Christopher, and Mary Grier all died of diphtheria. All three were buried in Stayton Pioneer Cemetery, and as a testament to the family tragedy, all three are remembered on a single stone. The real tragedy is that too many families lost all of their children in the same way, and stones like this may exist in many of Oregon's pioneer cemeteries.
The town of Stayton is located about twelve mils southeast of Salem, on Highway 22. The cemetery itself is located on Boedigheimer Road, about a third of a mile north of its junction with Highway 22.
1 note · View note
fkyumerica · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
I fucked 18 kids and looked like a woman after. he mated with all of them.
well there it is and wtf polack
Oregon, 1939, Dorothea Lange photograph. Captioned: "Young mother, aged twenty-two, has one little girl three years old. Merrill, Klamath County, Oregon. In mobile unit of FSA (Farm Security Administration) camp. New baby expected in December. During this year she has worked with her husband in: strawberries (Helvetia, Oregon); cherries (Salem, Oregon); beans (West Stayton, Oregon); hops (Independence, Oregon). Is now in potato pickers' camp at the end of that season. "We haven't got a cent now and we've lost our car because we've helped some people out. It seems like it's taken every cent to eat off, that and traveling around.""
Can't help but wonder what became of this woman and her family.
1 note · View note
hoppytrailspod · 1 year
Text
HT017 - Track 7 & Snow Peak
Thank you for joining us once again as we make our way down the Hoppy Trail. It's only Nick and Travis this time, no special guests! We talk about a great beer from Track 7 Brewing in Sacramento, California; and Nick tells us about Snow Peak Brewing in Stayton, Oregon.
  As always, we talk about food and whatever else comes up. Make sure you give a shoutout on social media to everyone we talk about, and remember to Always say Yes! to the Hoppy Ending!
  Send us your questions and feedback to [email protected]; and find all of our links by going to www.hoppytrailspod.com. You can find more content by Sequoidea Productions, LLC, by going to www.sequoidea.com
  Track 7 Brewing - https://track7brewing.com/
  Snow Peak Brewing - www.instagram.com/snowpeakbrewingco
  Check out the newest episode!
0 notes
oregontennis · 1 year
Text
2023 Oregon 4A/3A/2A/1A Boys All-State Tennis Teams
FIRST TEAM Zach Moore, Cascade EJ Roedl, Marist Catholic Ethan Tieu, OES Haruto Zaitsu, St Mary's Medford Andrew Forstyh, Marist Catholic Jack Kiefer/Peyton Tyner, Marist Catholic Ben Rosenfeld/Lucas Holliday, Catlin Gabel Richard Li/Lucas Olander, OES Paul Kelly/Paul Capek, The Dalles Nathan Chen/Riley Nordhoff, Catlin Gabel
SECOND TEAM Reid Ravassipour, St Mary's Medford Aston Selly, Catlin Gabel Sameer Shenoy, OES Kai Villano, Marist Catholic Maxwell Tsai, OES Rand Freres/Theo Freres, OES Liam Rutherford/Jake Anderson, Stayton Sam Thornton/Henry Gonyea, Marist Catholic Sriram Dinesh/Bao Pham, St Mary's Medford Lucas Peterson/Landus Ho, St Mary's Medford
0 notes
smalltott-blog · 2 years
Link
Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Vintage Filson Mackinaw Cruiser Size 48 Lot 110.
0 notes
e-102 · 4 years
Text
HEYYY GUYSSS
WELCOME TO STAYTON OREGON
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
82 notes · View notes
korashime · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Oregon, at noon on a Tuesday. 
16 notes · View notes
amusingamati · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Don’t forget to breathe.
Stayton, Oregon
July 2007
amati©
4 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
RV Thursday! Stayton, Oregon, USA https://goo.gl/maps/wLnu5THktpeDHFs4A
1 note · View note
bikerlovertexas · 5 years
Video
11 notes · View notes
whitepolaris · 1 month
Text
Cemetery Safari
How people treat their dead, both at burial and afterward, reveals a lot about their culture. Were the rich buried with the poor? Do the graves of the famous share space with the infamous? Oregon prides itself on its democratic past and present. In places like Lone Fir Cemetery in Portland, madams and shanghaiers share space with politicians and the wealthy. Many of Portland's historic and modern celebrities like Virgil Earp and Lyle Alzado rest in beautiful River View Cemetery. Dr. John McLoughlin and his wife rest just outside their Oregon City home, and recently, a few people preferred to have their cremated remains rest in a battered lighthouse in Tillamook Bay, much to the dismay of some relatives
Most would agree that the graves of one child is more tragic than those of a dozen adults. Three children from the same family all died and rest together at Stayton Cemetery, while four boys from the Mill Creek reformatory face one another in fellowship.
Perhaps the most tragic grave marker of all commemorates the victims of a Christmas Eve fire in Silver Lake that killed people in a matter of minutes. Tragedies just as dark may have caused spirits like the legendary witch of Lafayette Cemetery to attack intruders, while something dark just watches and waits at Linkville Cemetery. And while some people perform voodoo rituals at Portland's Columbian Cemetery, the State of Oregon still hopes to reunite the remains of several thousand people who died at mental health facilities with those loved ones who may have forgotten their existence. This all shows that Oregon cares for and about her dead, in many and diverse ways.
As always, if you visit any of the cemeteries mentioned in Weird Oregon, or anywhere else, we ask that you act respectfully. Try to stay on any paths or walkways and do not damage any headstones or take any offerings or mementos away. Please treat the graves as if the person resting there is someone you cared deeply about.
0 notes
myvq · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#Stayton #Oregon looks very #Apocalypse teeze this morning due to the #wildfires in the area. Very 2020 #weather (at Stayton, Oregon) https://www.instagram.com/p/CE7DwJ2jyhC/?igshid=1w5f0orwuzcun
0 notes
rolandopujol · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
It was 103 years ago today that a fellow named Roy W. Allen set up a roadside stand in Lodi, California, to sell root beer, a nickel per frosty mug. The root-beer recipe he bought from an Arizona pharmacist was a hit, and Allen soon recruited Frank Wright to help him run the business. Among their collaborations was combining the initials of their last names to create the A&W brand. Wright was eventually bought out, kindly leaving his initial behind. Allen kept franchising stores by the hundreds, pioneering the drive-in concept with “tray boys” catering to customers in cars. An American institution was born! So on A&W’s birthday, I raise my frosty mug to celebrate – and I mean this literally, as I keep an A&W mug in my freezer, though the potables it usually carries are more potent. Let’s begin our tour with two photos of the A&W in the Adirondack Mountain town of Wilmington, New York, which has been here since 1966 and still proudly displays its “pilgrim hat.” Next, we head to San Rafael, California, and the A&W that’s just off the 101 Freeway. I’d spotted it for years on my drives from San Francisco to Santa Rosa (for the Charles M. Schulz Museum, one of my happy places) and northward to wine country. I finally pulled over in 2020 for a bite and got to say hello to Great Root Bear, or Rooty, a 1970s mascot who’s back in good corporate favor after fading for a spell. From Northern California, we’re off to Faribault, Minnesota, and an A&W where an earlier mascot, Papa Burger, part of the Burger Family, greets you out front. (Rooty fans need not worry; our furry friend is the dining room greeter.) Next, you can still have a bonafide 1960s experience at the A&W in Cortland, New York. You can either eat inside the turquoise pilgrim hat or go the carhop route and find a spot under the canopy. The Order Matic awaits your culinary commands! Finally, we stop at the A&W in Stayton, Oregon, where I got this moody shot during my visit last year. What are your memories of A&W? #retrologist (at United States of America) https://www.instagram.com/p/CfC8Q-CLMoQ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
37 notes · View notes