volume 16 • number 2 spring 2007 thompson street rascal · 2013. 3. 7. · volume 16 • number 2...

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Eliot NEws Volume 16 • Number 2 SpriNg 2007 A Publication of Eliot Neighborhood Association eliot Neighborhood ASSoCiAtioN Membership Meetings Monday, April 9 Monday, May 14 7:00 – 9:00 pm Emanuel Hospital Medical Office Building West Conference Room 501 N Graham St William “Billy” McNicholas, born in the Eliot Neighborhood, shared with me what it was like to grow up here in the 1930s. Among other things, he told me some of the mischief he got into when he was between the ages of 9 and 11 playing with the other kids on the block. Here is his story: I was born on April 12th, 1926 at my home at 46 NE Thompson. We called the area the Albina District. We had Upper and Lower Albina. There were many immigrants on Thompson Street—German, Irish, Italian, Greek and Dutch…a Dr. Al- den. From what I remember, except for the children playing together, the adults didn’t socialize much, they were busy working hard and taking care of their kids. My folks are from Ireland. My mother’s name was Mary Agnes and my father’s name was Patrick Joseph. I had four brothers—Tom, Pat, Mike and Martin, who died as a baby— and one sister, Mary. We attended Immaculate Heart Church at the corner of Williams and Stanton. There were a bunch of children in the neighborhood and we’d play softball, baseball, catch and touch football. We would roller-skate on the street and sidewalks. I remember that NE Second Street was really smooth, so we would play hockey games on [metal] roller-skates. Most of the streets were paved with asphalt, but Russell Street was cobblestone. Sometimes when we played touch football the ball would hit Mr. Fromong’s electric wire and affect his radio reception. Then he would chase us down the street! We often played marbles in the parking strip. We’d put little holes Announcing Please Join Us! By Jennifer Jako, Eliot resident contInues on page 7 thompson street Rascal in the packed dirt in a circle and lag for the pots. Next door to my house was a big abandoned apartment house. We would climb up to the balcony with paper bags full of water and drop them in front of people walking by. One time we soaked my older brother on his way to the trolley stop to meet a girl for a date. If people came after us, we’d crawl into the apartment’s wood chute, climb up, and hide in the attic. We’d stick a toothpick in the door- bell of Dr. Allen who lived on the corner of Thompson and Williams, then run away. I think it would make his bell keep ringing! We would take a penny, drill a tiny hole in it, thread through a fine bit of copper wire and leave the penny on the sidewalk. Whenever someone bent down to pick it up, we’d yank it away. One woman figured it out and stepped on the penny before we could pull it back! We made our own go-carts and rode them up and down the streets and sidewalks. We’d use a 2 x 4, an apple box, two cross pieces of wood, and a roller-skate split in half. One axle of the skate wheels became the front wheels and one axle became the back wheels. Our family didn’t own a cam- era, so I don’t have many pictures from back then. We didn’t own a car until 1936. The trolley ran on Union [Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd] and Williams Avenue. The trolley on Union Avenue went over to Vancouver. They went by at regular intervals. When the street car would stop on the corner of Williams, we would sometimes swing the arm away that connected the trolley to the lines overhead. We’d run off and the 1937, Home from the Beach William “Billy” McNicholas Jefferson High School football player A young rascal BOISE-ELIOT SCHOOL PTO Boise-Eliot parents and neighbors, please join us for the Boise-Eliot Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) meetings. Find out about what’s new at the school and how you can be involved. Meeting dates: April 10 May 8 June 5 Time: 5:30 pm Location: 620 N Fremont, in the school library Childcare is provided.

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Page 1: Volume 16 • Number 2 SpriNg 2007 thompson street Rascal · 2013. 3. 7. · Volume 16 • Number 2 SpriNg 2007 A Publication of Eliot Neighborhood Association eliot Neighborhood

Eliot NEwsVolume 16 • Number 2

SpriNg 2007

A Publication of Eliot Neighborhood Association

eliot Neighborhood ASSoCiAtioN

Membership MeetingsMonday, April 9  Monday, May 147:00 – 9:00 pm

Emanuel HospitalMedical Office Building West Conference Room501 N Graham St

William “Billy” McNicholas, born in the Eliot Neighborhood, shared with me what it was like to grow up here in the 1930s. Among other things, he told me some of the mischief he got into when he was between the ages of 9 and 11 playing with the other kids on the block. Here is his story:

I was born on April 12th, 1926 at my home  at  46 NE Thompson. We  called  the  area  the  Albina 

District. We had Upper  and Lower Albina. There were many immigrants on Thompson Street—German, Irish, Italian, Greek and Dutch…a Dr. Al-den. From what I remember, except for the children playing together, the adults  didn’t  socialize  much,  they were busy working hard and taking care of their kids. 

My  folks  are  from  Ireland.  My mother’s name was Mary Agnes and my father’s name was Patrick Joseph. I had four brothers—Tom, Pat, Mike and Martin, who died  as  a  baby—and  one  sister,  Mary.  We  attended Immaculate  Heart  Church  at  the  corner of Williams and Stanton. 

There  were  a  bunch  of  children in the neighborhood and we’d play softball,  baseball,  catch  and  touch football. We would  roller-skate on the street and sidewalks. I remember that  NE  Second  Street  was  really smooth, so we would play hockey games  on  [metal]  roller-skates. Most  of  the  streets  were  paved with asphalt, but Russell Street was cobblestone.

Sometimes when we played touch football  the  ball  would  hit  Mr. Fromong’s electric wire and affect his radio reception. Then he would chase us down the street!

We  often  played  marbles  in  the parking  strip.  We’d  put  little  holes 

Announcing

Please Join Us!

By Jennifer Jako, Eliot resident

contInues on page 7

thompson street Rascalin the packed dirt in a circle and lag for the pots.

Next door to my house was a big abandoned  apartment  house.  We would climb up to the balcony with paper  bags  full  of  water  and  drop them  in  front  of  people  walking by.  One  time  we  soaked  my  older brother on his way to the trolley stop to  meet  a  girl  for  a  date.  If  people came  after  us,  we’d  crawl  into  the apartment’s wood  chute,  climb up, and hide in the attic. 

We’d stick a toothpick in the door-bell  of  Dr.  Allen  who  lived  on  the corner of Thompson and Williams, then run away. I think it would make his bell keep ringing!

We would take a penny, drill a tiny hole in it, thread through a fine bit of copper wire and leave the penny on the sidewalk. Whenever someone bent down to pick it up, we’d yank it  away. One woman figured  it  out and stepped on the penny before we could pull it back!

We  made  our  own  go-carts  and rode them up and down the streets and sidewalks. We’d use a 2 x 4, an apple box, two cross pieces of wood, and a roller-skate split  in half. One axle of the skate wheels became the front wheels and one axle became the back wheels.

Our  family  didn’t  own  a  cam-era,  so  I  don’t  have  many  pictures from  back  then.  We  didn’t  own a  car  until  1936.  The  trolley  ran on  Union  [Martin  Luther  King  Jr. Blvd]  and  Williams  Avenue.  The  trolley on Union Avenue went over to Vancouver. They went by at regular intervals. When the street car would stop on the corner of Williams, we would  sometimes  swing  the  arm away that connected the trolley to the lines overhead. We’d run off and the 

1937, Home from the Beach

William “Billy” McNicholas

Jefferson High School football player

A young rascal

BOISE-ELIOT SCHOOL PTOBoise-Eliot parents  and neighbors, please  join us  for  the Boise-Eliot Parent Teacher Organization (PTO) meetings. Find out about what’s new at the school and how you can be involved.

Meeting dates: April 10  May 8  June 5

Time: 5:30 pm

Location: 620 N Fremont, in the school library

Childcare is provided.

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eliot NeWS2

eliot moNthlY meetiNgSIf you live or work in Eliot, you are welcome and encouraged to attend the monthly meetings of the Eliot Neighborhood Association, which are held the second Monday of each month at Emanuel Hospital.

It’s a great opportunity to meet your neighbors, stay informed about what’s going on in Eliot, help build a stronger community, and have input into decisions that may affect you. Also consider joining a committee or becoming a board member (we have vacancies).

Emanuel Hospital, 501 N. Graham, Medical Office Building West Conference Room

eliot Neighborhood ASSoCiAtioNThe Eliot Neighborhood Association (ENDA) is a nonprofit corporation whose members are the residents and business owners of the Eliot Neigh-borhood. Its purpose is to inform Eliot residents about issues affecting the neighborhood through meetings, newsletters and other activities. Members of the neighborhood association must be over 14 years old and live, own property, have a business, or represent a nonprofit within the neighborhood. The Eliot Neighborhood Association was founded in 1969. It is recognized by the City of Portland, is a member of the Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods, Inc., and has representatives on several other groups and committees.

eNdA boArd memberSChair  Gary Hampton, 503.282.5429, [email protected]

Co Vice Chairs  Chris Bleiler and Jennifer Jako503.284.6650, [email protected]

Treasurer  Carol Kennedy, 503.331.1312, [email protected]

Recorder  Naomi Saks

Newsletter Editor  Tony Green, 503-221-8202, [email protected]

Eric Aronson, 503.282.4126, [email protected]

Howie Bierbaum, The Wonder Ballroom 503.284.8686, [email protected]

Pauline Bradford, 503.287.7138

Co Board Members  Matt Gilley and Vickie Walker503.233.0929, [email protected] or [email protected]

Kirsten Jenkins503.515.6633, [email protected]

Clint Lundmark, [email protected]

Jim Shikany, [email protected]

Laurie Simpson, 503.280.1005, [email protected]

Matt Svybersky, Volunteers of America, Men’s Residential Center503.335.8611, [email protected]

Co Board Members  Chris Yeargers and Marie D’Hulst 503.284.4392, [email protected] or [email protected]

eNdA lANd uSe CommitteeChair — Mike Warwick503.417.7555/503.284.7010, [email protected]

Chris Bleiler, 503.998.8806, [email protected]

Pauline Bradford, 503.287.7138

Matt Gilley, 503.233.0929, [email protected]

Gary Hampton, 503.282-5429, [email protected] Kirsten Jenkins, 503.515.6633, [email protected]

Jason Mershon, 503.330.0922/503.331.2929, [email protected] Laurie Simpson, 503.282.1005, [email protected]

eliot NeWS is published four times a year by the Eliot Neighborhood Association. It is delivered or mailed free of charge to every address in the neighborhood. It does not have a ISBN.

Editor: Tony Green, 503-221-8202 • [email protected] Layout: Lisa J. Switalla • 503-460-2558 • [email protected]: [email protected] Coordinator: Kirsten Jenkins • 503-515-6633

Rights to articles are retained by the author. Opinions of the authors do not necessarily reflect the official positions of the Eliot Neighborhood Association

Editor’s NoteU

You’d  think  when  the  Office  of  Neighborhood  Involvement’s  budget includes $25,000 in grants that the money would go to…well, neigh-

borhoods.

But that’s not the way it worked out recently when a subcommittee of the Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods doled out more than $25,000.

Not only did most of the money go to non-profit groups, but 40 percent of the neighborhoods within NECN (Eliot included) did not even apply.

In an email exchange, the head of ONI assured me that notice was sent to neighborhoods. Eliot board members I contacted, however, didn’t re-member seeing the notice, which I suspect got buried in the avalanche of notices the city sends out.

So who gets the money? A group of quasi-professional, non-profits that are experts in applying for grants.

Not  exactly  a  shocking  result.  Non-profits,  with  their  single-minded purposes and paid staff, are more likely succeed in such a system.

Amalia Alarcon, who heads ONI, said the city council said the money should be available to groups other than neighborhood-based entities.

This is hardly surprising. Portland officials like to brag about the city’s active neighborhood associations, but I think elected officials mostly find citizen participation a nuisance. Unlike non-profits, which have easily di-gestible goals, we represent a vast mix of views that sometimes get in the way of some commissioner’s best-laid mega-project.

So, would you give these groups more money?

For those who want to see the numbers, here’s what I found:•  7 out of 12 neighborhoods within NECN applied for a grant (58%)•  Of those, King, Vernon and Concordia received nothing.•  Boise, Humboldt, Sabin and Woodlawn received virtually the entire 

amount applied for.•  Total amount asked for: $17,934•  Total received: $9,254•  32 non-profits of various types applied. 8 received funding.•  Total amount asked for: $206,740    •  Total received: $16,117

In sum:

•  42 percent of the neighborhoods within NECN did not apply for a grant.•  30 percent of the neighborhoods in NECN received funding, and 

they received 36 percent of the total.

I urged Ms. Alarcon do better outreach before the next round of grants. I suspect we will have to watch out for ourselves. •

By Tony Green

eliot NeWS Ad rAteS

Category Size (h x w) 1x 2x 3x 4x1/16 page 2.25" x 5" $ 25 $ 42 $ 63 $ 84 1/8 page 4.5" x 5" $ 37 $ 68 $ 97 $ 122 1/4 page 8.25" x 5" $ 58 $ 108 $ 154 $ 194 1/2 page 8.25" x 10.25" $ 105 $ 195 $ 277 $ 349 Full page 16.25" x 10.25" $ 188 $ 353 $ 502 $ 632

Please make checks out to eliot Neighborhood association and mail to: Susan Bailey, 535 NE Thompson St., Portland, OR 97212.Questions? Call Tony Green at 503-221-8202 or email [email protected]

Eliot News has a per issue circulation of 3,000 and is hand-delivered or mailed to nearly 100% of the homes and businesses in the Eliot neighbor-hood. It is also distributed to residents and businesses in surrounding neigh-borhoods, including Irvington, Sabin and Boise.Eliot News is an 8-page tabloid (11 x 17) newspaper and is published four times a year. Ad deadlines are March 1, June 1, Sept. 1, Dec. 1.

Saving and Improving Housing in Eliot Neighborhood for 25 Years.

Houses and Apartments for rent. (503) 806-3502

BAILEY & WARWICK

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WiNter 2007 3

equity group, inc.

Kirsten Jenkins503.515.6633

RE/MAX Inc., RealtorsOffice: (503) 287-8989

Pending Listings Bed Bath Sq Ft Price

1 N Fremont #401 0 1 1,058 $399,00041 NE Tillamook 3 3 1,368 $260,000536 NE Cook 3 1 2,179 $286,000608 NE San Rafael 3 1 2,006 $299,500126 NE Graham 3 3 3,100 $389,900126 NE Thompson 3 1.1 2,340 $398,7002056 NE Rodney 4 2.1 1,763 $399,9002529 NE 7th 3 1.1 2,119 $425,0002625 NE 7th 2 2.1 1,209 $450,000

Sold Listings Bed Bath Sq Ft Price

111 N Monroe 3 2 1,898 $287,000106 NE Tillamook 2 1 749 $215,00010 NE Fargo 2 1 742 $225,000216 NE Tillamook 3 1 1,336 $249,900542 NE Knott 2 2.1 1,302 $261,5002738 NE 7th 2 1 1,872 $294,50023 NE Cook 4 1 2,025 $287,500130 NE Fremont 3 1.1 1,816 $314,900204 NE Thompson 3 1.1 1,500 $322,000608 NE Ivy 4 2 2,795 $396,000633 NE Graham 3 2 2,308 $395,000123 NE Graham 3 2 2,574 $415,000533 NE Fargo 4 2 3,340 $468,00040 NE Fargo 5 2 4,370 $485,000

Kirsten Jenkins’ Real Estate Report

Want to know about: Great new capital gains tax laws? Current market information on your home?

I know your neighborhood.

XER

Around the NeighborhoodB

eliot neighborhood History A “cornerstones” African American Buildings History Program Saturday, April 1410:00 am–NoonFree admission, snacks and beverages. Location:  Mark Woolley Gallery at the Wonder Ballroom,  

        128 NE Russell St., PortlandCo-sponsored by: Eliot Neighborhood Association

T he rich past of Eliot is sure to surprise you and provide food for thought on how to preserve the neighborhood’s wealth of historic buildings. Cathy 

Galbraith, Executive Director of the Architectural Heritage Center, will ad-dress how Eliot began in 1872 as the original townsite of the city of Albina, and gradually grew from the riverfront up the hill, expanding to the east and north. After annexation to the city of Portland in 1891, the neighborhood remained home to German-Americans and other immigrants, including those from the Scandinavian countries. By 1916, Eliot had the third largest com-mercial area in the city, clustered on Russell Street at Albina, Vancouver, and Williams avenues. With the passage of time, the older housing stock attracted a steadily growing population, including the explosion in growth that came with World War II. African-Americans found homes in the neighborhood, especially with the Portland Realty Board’s race-based restrictions, beginning in 1919, on where people of color could buy properties. The destruction of hundreds of buildings for Memorial Coliseum, I-5, Fremont Bridge, and Emanuel Hospital erased much of the neighborhood’s built history, but there is more that still stands.

  Pre-register  online  at  www.visitahc.org  or  call  the  Architectural  Heritage Center at 503.231.7264.

Volunteer for the following:·  Help Clean Up and Paint Over·  Identify Graffiti Locations·  Photograph Event

T he  City  of  Portland  Graffiti  Abatement  program  will  sponsor  a  graffiti cleanup Saturday, May 19th, in Eliot Neighborhood, starting location to be 

announced to volunteers. The cleanup will be held from 9:00 am–1:00 pm on Saturday and will be comprised of work by both Youth Employment Institute (YEI) and Goodbye Graffiti crews, and a minimum of 10 volunteers from Eliot neighborhood-business area. 

The contractor-crews will focus on paint-out or power-wash removals from private properties (provided we have signed owner-permission prior to the event). Volunteers will remove graffiti from properties “in the right-of-way”, including utility poles, dumpsters, newspaper boxes, and other sites that are not routinely cleaned by agencies or owners. 

Materials will be provided by the Graffiti Abatement Program. 

Volunteers must sign a volunteer agreement and application, available at the Graffiti Program webpage, www.portlandonline.com/oni/index.cfm?c=32420 

Please contact Jennifer Jako, Vice Chair, Eliot Neighborhood Association, if you can photograph the day of the event, help identifying graffiti and/or have a graffiti location to report for the May 19th Clean Up. Please email her at [email protected] with “Graffiti” in the subject heading or call 503.544.4757.

Research has shown that prompt removal of graffiti prevents repeat vandalism.

eliot neighborhood Graffiti Paint out collaborative cleanup

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eliot NeWS4

O n the west side of North Wil-liams  Avenue,  a  few  blocks north of the busy Rose Quarter 

area, there is a one story brick build-ing  that has  received  little notice  in recent  years  but  is  loaded  with  Af-rican-American  history.  This  rather ordinary building at 2017 North Wil-liams has been run-down and vacant for  years  and  is  partially  obscured by vegetation. Only recent plans for development of the property and its surroundings have brought its history to  light.  The  good  news  is  that  the New Seasons Corporation, a grocery chain of quality foods, purchased the property and plans to place its admin-istrative headquarters on the site. 

Unfortunately, due to the poor condi-tion of the brick building, the company plans to demolish it.

Jacob  J.  Tranchell,  a  building  con-tractor  who  shared  ownership  with Daniel H. Kinley, originally constructed the building in 1914. Mr. Kinley, who lived to the south on lower Williams, opened Rose City Creamery Company in the building with an office. Henry 

Kittery was his partner in the cream-ery. By 1920, the name was changed to  Alsea  Creamery  Company,  which remained until 1930, when it was re-modeled into retail space. Due to the Great  Depression,  the  building  was vacant during numerous years in the 1930s.  But  it  believed  that  in  1938, William  McClendon  founded  the Peoples Observer, a local weekly paper in  support  of  African-Americans,  in this building. It is known that in 1940 the  paper  was  being  printed  in  this building and his wife Ida served as the managing editor. At the beginning of World War II, there was a surge in cir-culation of the paper due to the arrival of many African-American workers for the war effort. This paper provided an alternative view of issues and activities not  covered  by  the  dominant  press. The  new  arrivals  to  Portland  during the war faced much hardship from the locals  and  this  paper  was  influential for  helping  them  gain  local  support. Also at this time, Bill McClendon es-tablished  another  paper  in  his  office here that became the forerunner of the Portland Observer,  a  dominant  paper 

in  today’s  African-American  commu-nity. Also during the war, McClendon gave  McKinley  Burt,  an  accountant, office space here. Mr. Burt was noted as  being  the  first  to  operate  a  black accounting  business  in  Oregon.  He later  became  a  professor  at  Portland State  University  and  authored  the book “Black Inventors in America”. He remained a columnist for the Portland Observer for many years until his death in 2001. William McClendon went on to establish the Black Studies Depart-ment  at  Reed  College  and  remained an  integral  part  of  that  department until his death in the late 1990s. The National Black Publishers Association gave him a significant award for all of his hard work.

In  about  1945,  McClendon  sold the building to Robert Bird Jr. and his wife, Mary. The Birds opened the Blue Ribbon  Café  or  Bird’s  Blue  Ribbon Barbecue.  It  proved  to  be  a  popular place for many Portlanders, both black and white,  for many years until Bird sold  the  establishment  in  the 1960s, although  it  continued with  the  same name for a number of more years. The Bird family was significant in Portland’s early  African-American  community. 

Roberts’ father, Robert Bird Sr., came to  Portland  in  the  early  1900s  from the West Indies and became active in improving the rights of the few black citizens living here. He advanced to be-came president of the Universal Negro Improvement  Association  (UNIA)  in the 1920s, a period that saw the rise of the KKK in Oregon. In the 1970s, the building saw use as an upholstery shop  that  remained  until  about  the early 1990s, when it remained vacant up to this day.

New Seasons will demolish the build-ing, but it also plans to put up a com-memorative plaque about the building’s special place in Portland’s history.

Information  on  African-American history  provided  by  Bosco-Milligan Foundation and the 1998 publication “Cornerstones  of  Community,  Build-ings  of  African-American  History”. This will also be an excerpt of a book The History of Albina,  anticipated  for publication  in  2007  by  the  author. Roos seeks any old photographs and historic stories and also conducts his-toric research on homes in the Eliot & Boise  neighborhoods  at  very  reason-able rates. He can be contacted at 503-282-9436 or [email protected]

Homes and Buildings of Eliot. By Roy E. Roos

2017 north Williams street

2017 North Williams Street

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eliot eAterieS

Breakfast/coffee/cafés Bridges Café 2716 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. 503-288-4169

Eliot E-Mat Café 2808 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. 503-280-8889

Goldrush Coffee Bar 2601 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.503-331-5955

Tiny’s Café2031 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.503-467-4199

Waypost 3120 N. Williams St.

Bars/taverns820 820 N. Russell St., 503-284-5518

Bill Ray’s Dive 2210 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

McMenamin’s White Eagle Café & Saloon 836 N. Russell St., 503-282-6810

Sloan’s Tavern 36 N. Russell St., 503-287-2262

Spice 2808 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

Waypost 3120 N. Williams St.

Widmer Gasthaus 929 N. Russell St., 503-281-3333

Lunch/Dinner Café Wonder 128 N.E. Russell St. 503-493-0371

Chuck’s Market, J&S Grocery 2415 N. Williams Ave. 503-281-6269

Doris’ Café 3606 N. Williams Ave., 503-460-2595

Echo2225 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.503-460-3246

Mint 816 N. Russell St., 503-284-5518

Pizza A Go Go3240 N. Williams St.503-335-0300

Popeye’s Famous Fried Chicken 3120 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. 503-281-8455

Queen of Sheba 2413 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. 503-287-6302

Russell Street BBQ325 N.E. Russell St.503-528-8224

Tropicana Bar Be Cue 3217 N. Williams Ave. 503-281-8696

FHHow’s the food at The Café Wonder or Tiny’s?Who pulls the best espresso shots in Eliot?Where is the happiest “Happy Hour” in the neighborhood?We need reviews for our Local Food Finds column. Visit your favorite haunt, write up a review and send it to The Eliot News at [email protected]

Calling all Foodies!

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eliot NeWS6

434 N. Tillamook StreetPortland, Oregon 97227

Phone (503) 281-1238 CCB0040364

T he Big Yellow House at 23 NE San Rafael is sometimes affectionately referred  to  as  “The  Beast”  by 

our family and friends. They watch in awe  at  the  enormous  scope  that  the continual  maintenance,  repairs  and renovations seem to encompass.

The home was built  in  1909  for  a Chinese Doctor and his wife, Leo Gee and Sadie Starbuck Wo. The main floor of the house is much as it was, contain-ing a parlor, a sitting room, a dining room, a large kitchen and an oversized entry that leads, not only to the living quarters,  but  to  the  Doctor’s  office. With  five  bedrooms  on  the  second floor,  including  a  duplex  room,  and two additional attic rooms for servants, the initial square footage is estimated over 5,000  square  feet  including  the basement. 

Dr. Wo practiced natural and herbal medicine  and  was  probably  the  first naturopathic  physician  in  Portland. The  fact  that  he  owned  property  in the city, at a time when Chinese were prohibited from doing so by state law, is  a  testament  to  the  success  of  his practice. 

In addition to the Wo family of five, the original residents included Sadie’s 

father, Charles, two servants and two boarders. 

The house was designed by archi-tect David L. Williams who designed many local commercial buildings and at least two other homes in the area—1914 NE 22nd and 1924 NE 24th. The  design  marries  traditional  Four Square  architecture  with  Chinese influences. Carved into the stairway banister  Yin  and  Yang  symbols  can be  seen  as  well  as  the  twelve  ray sun,  originating  from  the  twelve traditional Chinese hours of the day. (In  traditional  Chinese  medicine the two hour peak periods correlate with the Twelve Vital Organs that are connected via the Twelve Meridians.) The exterior boasts a slightly curved roof, in the style of Chinese temples (to ward off evil spirits) and parts of Chinese characters make up the front porch structure.

Since  its  original  construction,  the porch has been enclosed and a 20' x 20' meeting room has been added to the back of  the house, which brings the dwelling’s  total  square  footage  to “beast” proportions.

According  to  public  records,  the Wo  family  owned  the  home  until 

the  mid-thirties.  The  next  fifty  years saw  three  owners,  some  vacancies and  some  pretty  sorry  times  until  it was purchased in the late 80’s by Safe Ministries.  It  became  a  group  home for  at  least  ten  residents with offices in  the  enclosed  front  porch  and  a sanctuary in the meeting room in the back. It remained that way for the next 17 years.

Once again the house has become a family “compound”, echoing its origins as a place  for extended  family and a practiced  vocation.  A  one  bedroom apartment  in  the  basement  that  was built  by  the  previous  owner  houses our  nephew  Conor  Gilles  and  his girlfriend,  Autumn  Dawley.  Another 

the Big Yellow House aka “the Beast” By JoAnn Gilles

apartment being built in the attic space is almost complete. Our daughter, Kate Gilles and her boyfriend Jacob Allsup are about to inhabit that space. The rest of the house is left for my husband Otis and me to share with artist friends. 

As a painter, I have plenty of room for studio space and the meeting/sanc-tuary  room at  the back of  the house serves as a place to teach painting. One night a week friends and acquaintances gather, share a bite to eat and explore the process of creativity in paint. The community, the expression, the discus-sion, and the family point the direction, not only to the future of The Big Yellow House, but to its past and its healing, spiritual nature.

Flagship Store Now Open!3964 N Mississippi Ave

The classroom—shared space. (The bathtub will go in the new apartment upstairs)

1909 photo of house with Dr. Wo and child

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A lan Sanchez, owner the motel on  San  Rafael  and  Rodney, signed a nuisance abatement agreement on 2/16/07. 

Lower Eliot neighbors have made a concerted effort, working with police, the Northeast Coalition of Neighbor-hoods  and  the  Multnomah  County DA’s  office  to  improve  conditions  of the motel.

Here are the elements of the agreement:1. Owner or designee will conduct 

background checks on all occupants that intend to establish tenancy, or are approaching tenancy based on time (prior to three weeks).

neighborhood Dispute—Portland Pensione update2.  In addition to the background 

check, occupants will be required to obtain a copy of their PPDS printout for use in the background check, obtained from the Portland Police Records Division, and provide it to the owner as a condition of, and prior to the establishment of, tenant status.

3. PPB will provide a current photo list of persons excluded from the Drug Free Zone on a monthly basis.

4. Owner or management will provide occupant, tenant, and guest registration information to officers of the Portland Police Bureau when requested.

5. Owner and management will enforce existing guest registration requirements and 8 pm guest restrictions, when applicable.

6. Owner and management agree to attend the Landlord Training program presented by John Campbell and sponsored by the City of Portland.

7. Owner and management agree to evict problem tenants when identified.

8. Owner and management agree to continue to cooperate and work with district and NRT officers in identifying and eliminating problems on the property.

conductor would have to reconnect it! We’d also flatten 16 penny and 8 penny nails on the rails. We were rascals!

My friend Irene, who was two years older than me, lived right next door at 36 NE Thompson. Her family would sometimes go to the store, forget their keys  and  lock  themselves  out.  They had  a  little  hole  in  the  door  for  the milkman  to  leave  milk.  I  was  small enough that I could squeeze through the milk opening to let them back in the house.

My father kept a nice vegetable gar-den in our yard with an apple and a cherry tree. We had a good-sized shed in  the back. We  raised chickens and pigeons—the  chickens  for  eggs.  My brothers raised pigeons that were called tumblers. They would do flips in the air. My brothers would sell the pigeons to people in town then afterward the pigeons would fly back to our house! 

We also raised pigeons as squabs for food to sell to the Chinese restaurants. My brother and I would go under the Steel Bridge and raid the pigeon nests for squabs to sell. The railroad police caught us up there one time and I was running so fast I hit my head square on one of the steel trusses. That hurt! The police caught up to us and let us know we had no business being up there.

Families  burned  briquets  made  by the  Portland  Gas  &  Coke  Company (now NW Natural)  located on Front Avenue. They were made out of a by-product powder from gas production and  compressed  into  briquets.  They also burned coal and slab wood. You could drive down streets and see the wood piled up. You would hire a man with a  truck  to pick up  the wood at the mills and saw it into stove-length sizes and drop it off at your house. He would  pile  it  against  the  telephone pole in front of our house on Thomp-son. We’d fill a wheelbarrow and put the wood through an opening  in the basement window. My dad and older brothers would split it so it would fit in the stove. When they trimmed logs back then they wasted a lot—four to 

six inches depending on the size of the log. Keeping the house warm back then was not a problem.

We had a potbelly stove in the dining room and a wood burning stove with gas  in  the  kitchen.  We  were  blessed with mild weather in Oregon and lots of wood to burn. We were never cold in the winter. At night you had to build up a good fire so that we’d keep warm through the night.

One  of  our  bedrooms  had  a  pull- out bed that looked like a cupboard. There was a piano and a davenport in the front room. The older boys shared a room and, until I was older, I shared a room with my sister.

During  the  Depression,  people would come up from Sullivan’s Gulch (which was a hobo town) and offer to work in exchange for food. My mother would make them a sandwich and a cup of tea. They would make a mark on  the  sidewalk  in  front  of  all  the houses  where  they  could  find  food for work so they would know where to return.

We  never  drank  coffee,  we  always drank tea. My mother would place tea leaves in a porcelain teapot and pour in the boiling water. Each time she would add more leaves, so that by the third or fourth pot, when you had a cup of my mother’s tea it would make you stand at attention!

tHomPson stReet RAscAL, from page 1

In July 1936, we left the house we had been  renting on NE Thompson, and my father, a longshoreman, finally saved up enough to put a downpay-ment on a bigger house for the family at 219 NE Cook. “I  remember being able to look out to the west from that house  and  clearly  see  the  occasional gas flames shoot up  from the Gas & Coke Co.!”

Full  of  vim  and  vigor  at  age  eighty, Mr.  McNicholas’  recollections  at  10 years old are clearer than mine, and I’m  only  34!  He  still  remembers  all the  street  names  and  listed  them  as you go North like he still lived in the neighborhood. He went  to  Jefferson High School and played guard on their football team. He enlisted in the army while at Jeff and spent two years in the military, which took him to India. 

His career as a steamfitter was honed in  Portland’s  shipyards  and  during construction  of  Vanport  College.  He worked first for M. Harder Plumbing Co.—now  Harder  Mechanical  Con-tractors—then at Johnson Controls Co. as a journeyman mechanical contractor for  industrial  projects.  He  furthered his  professional  education  at  Purdue University. 

He  remained  active  in  the  church, helping six Indonesian families come to America, and then secured homes and jobs for them.

He  sang  in  his  church  choir,  the Portland Symphonic Choir and even accompanied Jim Nabors! His reputa-tion as one of Portland’s leading Irish tenors  was  confirmed  for  me  when he broke into song right before I left his home. He sang an Irish love song with  such  emotion  in  his  beautiful voice  it  brought  a  tear  to  my  eye.  I knew he was singing about his now departed wife. 

He and his wife, Norma, were togeth-er for “fifty-seven years, two months, and ten days.” They had six children and adopted two of his brother’s chil-dren for a total of eight. He keeps in touch with many of the kids he grew up with in Eliot. 

Look  for  McNicholas’  childhood friend  Irene’s  perspective  in  a  future issue of The Eliot News. 

If  you  know  of  someone  who  has Eliot history to tell, please email The Eliot News editor, Tony Green at [email protected]

William and Norma McNicholas at their wedding in 1947 (left) and in 1996 (right).

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ELIOT NEIGHBORHOOD SPRING CLEAN-UPSaturday May 12 • 9 am–1 pm

Drop-off at N. Graham between Vancouver and Williams

FEESc Small Vehicle — $5

, Pickup — $10 and up

f Oversize loads — $20 and up

Separated Metals — Reduced cost

# Donated Bikes — Free

THIS CLEAN-UP IS FUNDED BY METRO, THE CITY OF PORTLAND AND THE NORTHEAST COALITION OF NEIGHBORHOODS

Have any questions?Want to volunteer?

Contact Chris at 503-284-4392

Clean out your basements!

Get out those boxes!

Need help hauling your materials?Pick-up assistance is available for our senior or disabled residents!

Call ahead to arrange for pickup. Fees still apply. One load limit.

Contact Chris at 503-284-4392 r

YES!BRINGFurniture

Debris & JunkYard Debris

MetalBicycles (no charge)

NO!DON’T BRING

Paint, RecyclablesTree Stumps, Sod, DirtRefrigerators, Freezers

Regular Household GarbageHazardous Materials

C