Our house was two bunkhouses set in a "T' with the porch to get from one to the other. The kitchen and Eric and my room was in the top of the "T". The living room and Mon and Dad's bedroom was in the main part. Mary and Judy's bedroom was a step or two down from what was the back door.
All I remember was it was cold and dark on the porch getting to bed. There were things lining the wall and for a four year old it was a long walk.
I am told we had a shared spicket between us and Bess's house, that Mom and her took turns keeping warm so as not to freeze. The outhouse was fancy with two holes and a heat lamp for a light.
Drugstore
Main stop in town
Friday, July 22, 2011
Sunday, July 17, 2011
The School
"Do we realize how lucky our children were to have had this wonderful start. Wonderful for them, for us, for Idaho, for America."-Anita Scott
Mrs. Henry Mathias, Mrs. Walt Hornsby, Mrs. Ellis Cole, Mabel Riggers, and Thelma Greer were some.
"There were two school buildings, an upper elementary and lower elementary. In the upper elementary, students entered a large two room building with low (eight foot) ceilings and windows all they way around. As you entered the building you were in a long hallway that led to a sunken area. The sunken area had a drinking fountain in the middle with restrooms on each side. In 1962, only one room, the one on the left, was used as a classroom, the other was used for storage.
The lower elementary school held grades one to three depending on the number of students in each class. As you entered there was a place for your coats and boots. Mrs. Riggers classroom could barely hold all of the material she had kept over the years. There never seemed to be enough room for the students.
At the end of the 1968-69 school year the school was closed."-Fred Smith
Mrs. Henry Mathias, Mrs. Walt Hornsby, Mrs. Ellis Cole, Mabel Riggers, and Thelma Greer were some.
"There were two school buildings, an upper elementary and lower elementary. In the upper elementary, students entered a large two room building with low (eight foot) ceilings and windows all they way around. As you entered the building you were in a long hallway that led to a sunken area. The sunken area had a drinking fountain in the middle with restrooms on each side. In 1962, only one room, the one on the left, was used as a classroom, the other was used for storage.
The lower elementary school held grades one to three depending on the number of students in each class. As you entered there was a place for your coats and boots. Mrs. Riggers classroom could barely hold all of the material she had kept over the years. There never seemed to be enough room for the students.
At the end of the 1968-69 school year the school was closed."-Fred Smith
The Drugstore
"The Drug Store-where, besides the soda fountain; the Post Office was located for many years. Also, the only public telephone was in that much used booth on the drug store porch. The stage from Lewiston pulled up in front and the passengers spilled out most every night about 8:00 pm Sunday nights when the loggers returned from town. The drug store was a beehive of activity as the men had a quick treat at the soda fountain and made last minute purchases before the speeders left for the camps." - Anita Scott
Friday, July 8, 2011
Townsites
Evidently there was "townsite 1" and "townsite 2" and "townsite 3"; which I knew as "the Circle" and "where we lived" and "where Virgil Baldwin lived".
They were three different areas of the valley, but still much the same. all the people knew each other and watched out for each other. As a kid, you could be disciplined by Maude Vaughn or Neomi Smith or Velma Anderson or Bess Dickinson or Anita Scott or Alice Rauch, it was all the same.
Thursday, July 7, 2011
Logging Superintendent
"Headquarters was governed by the "Logging Superintentant" who seemingly subscribed to the tenet; the least government is the best government. He was helped by the residents who exercised self-discipline and self-government. In the "50's it was forbidden ground for corporate hierarchy to tremmel." Howard Bradbury,Wallace Bowl,Gordon Dickinson; each in turn ran Headquarters. "a freedom existed that was seldom experienced elsewhere".-Wayne McGaw
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Monday, July 4, 2011
Entering Headquarters

Coming out of Pierce, passing the Standard Oil Plant of Lawrence Mays, through Hollywood, Cardiff Spur, CTPA, around the bend of Dogpatch and down the hill; "you entered a new and different world. Trains, speeders, warehouse, parking lot,wooden sidewalks, cookhouse, bunkhouses, company house" in townsite 1,2 3 (four was out of town),"grocery store,drug store, community hall and post office. All of which served as a "hub" for supplying outlying logging camps."--Wayne McGaw
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