The Collier Logging Museum is located on Hwy 97 near Chiloquin, Oregon. It is a huge outdoor display showing the living history of logging in Oregon. It is free (though they do accept donations) and is well worth the stop. The kids will love it! We didn't stay that long, and though I took a lot of pictures, I missed some displays on the back side.
Nestled up along side of Spring Creek, there is a Pioneer Village. Log cabins and buildings have been relocated to this spot from other areas in Oregon. Folks have worked so hard on this, and I love this sort of thing so I took a lot of photos. The buildings were locked and were dark inside, so I didn't know what the camera was going to pick up as I put the camera up to the windows.
Here is the village. You can enlarge the pictures by clicking on them so that the plaques are easier to read.
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1. Banta Log Cabin
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2. Redden Log Cabin
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3. Sheepherder's Cabin
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4. Bear Flat Store
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5. Sawbones Log Cabin
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6. Gilchrist Log Cabin
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7. Homesteader's Log Cabin
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8. Explorer's Cabin
(This one might not be accurate.)
If you enjoyed this post, you might also like to check out this post that I did several years ago: Ft. Rock Village Museum Post. It is of the museum at Ft. Rock, where they also brought in old buildings from Oregon and set up a little town.
Please come back again soon!
Hugs,
~ Kathy M.
12 comments:
How interesting. I do like these recreated villages; they give a real flavour of how it might have been. You did well with the ones where you put the camera to the window.
Nice post Kathy. Can you imagine living in a cabin little bigger than say my living room and dining? Especially without windows. The doctors office looks like a place I would look forward too. lol All I could think of was what it was like going to get teeth pulled back then. Uhgg...
Great pictures! I love visiting places like that. The interior pics are especially interesting... can you imagine what it was like being treated in that doctor's cabin? (shudder)
Lovely post, it's nice to see how people lived back in the olden days.
Excellent tour! What an interesting layout detailing how it was back in the day! Such rich colors on your captures it was like being there as well.
Oh, great pics and interesting stuff. Have you, by any chance, read Janet Oakley's Tree Soldier? She writes historical fiction and a couple of her (award winners) are set in the logging camps in Washington and Oregon during the depression. She travels and does historical talks, too--I really think you'd like her. (she is one of my ABNA friends and a very nice woman)
I love pioneer villages that demonstrate how life was and how things worked. If I ever get to Oregon, this is a place I'd like to visit.
How fun and interesting. I just love log cabins!
You sure get around. :) The water in the second photo is SO BLUE! It looks so refreshing.
Hi, Kathy,
Thanks for visiting my blog! I find yours very interesting and we have a lot of the same interests, I see from yours. I'd love to be able to paint like you, my attempts are rather pathetic. I'm more like a Grandma Moses. Ha. Many good regards to you. :)
Ruby Young aka "Blabbin' Grammy"
Thanks, everybody! I am glad that you enjoyed this post. We went to Train Mountain and the logging museum on the same day. They are only a few miles apart.
Kathy M.
Hi Kathy. This is exactly the kind of travelogue what I like so much. I enjoyed it. Hugs, Prenter.
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