8 Jul 2018

motorharp: line drawing of kid with glasses intently reading (Default)
Yesterday provided amazing weather for a hike through another rich part of town.

Fun things I learned:
I felt amazing afterward! Like, a little euphoric.  I need more hiking in the sun, is what I learned!

The plots of land in Portland Heights originally sold for $250 - no one wanted them because of the mudslides. When the trestle cable car was built (Up 1000ft with a 20% grade! Aaaaah! Over a ravine! Aaaah!), the price jumped to $10k within 30 years.

The library on the PSU campus (Millar) was built in 1968 with a curved front to accommodate an 1890s copper beech tree, which has edible nuts!

The Simon Benson house was moved to the PSU campus in the late 1990s and Benson was a beloved philanthropist who was responsible for the Benson Bubblers (public water fountains) in 1912 to provide an alternative for citizens who may visit a bar to have a drink. There are a lot of recreation areas that are part of his legacy.

And, ugh!, the diagonal paths through the park blocks were put in in 1905 to discourage local kids from playing baseball there. Ugh! Grownups.

Not a fun thing - the Ladd mansion carriage house has been torn down.

Alexander Kerr, who invented the Kerr Economy Canning Jar, lived downtown. After his wife Albertina died in childbirth, he donated his his house to a society that sheltered abandoned children.  The Albertina Kerr Centers now help emotionally disturbed children and care for teens and adults with developmental disabilities

Goose Hollow used to have a pond with actual geese in it in the 1800s.

At the end of SW Mill Street, the stairs up to SW Vista are gone, along with the building they used to be next to. We had to turn around and go back down the 153 steps and back track a little. Also not fun. But, exercise!

Fire is required for Sequoia cones to open and release their seeds.

One of the houses on the walk was just ridiculous and beautiful - built in 1934 for the Bowles, designed by A. E. Doyle whom they sent to Italy "to soak in its architectural ambiance", it cost $750,000 (which translates to $7.5M today) to build, has gold and silver leafed walls, a fur vault, and sterling silver water fixtures. It's on the National Register of Historic Places which means it has to be open at least one day a year to the public. Future plans!


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