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The Multnomah County Poor Farm is a former poor farm located in Troutdale, Oregon, United States.Established in 1911, the building and its surrounding grounds operated as a poor farm housing the ill and indigent populations in the Portland metropolitan area at the beginning of the twentieth century, after the closure of a poor farm in the city's West Hills.
Andrew Herbst, general manager of the Misty Meadow Farm Creamery in Washington County, used to have a corn maze on the property, which has been in his family over a century. The pandemic changed ...
The oldest of ten buildings on this farm is the cross-wing western farmhouse that was completed in 1883. Other buildings include a two-story barn, a privy, a woodshed, and a chicken coop, amongst other structures. The farm was settled in the 1850s, with the newest building a garage completed in the 1920s. [16] 21
Farms on the National Register of Historic Places in Oregon (9 P) Pages in category "Farms in Oregon" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
The black pinto filly was born to 5th-generation Misty descendant and Chincoteague pony Nightmist's Little Angel - a bay pinto mare with some Thoroughbred and American Paint Horse blood - and was named "Angel's Stormy Drizzle" (or "Drizzle") by her owners, Billy and Bonnie Beebe. The foal is the great-great-granddaughter of Stormy, out of Misty ...
Peaceful Meadows began as a farm in 1920. William and Nellia Hogg opened their ice cream shop there in 1962. They opened a second location in Middleboro in 1977 and the Plymouth shop four years later.
1843: 18-year-old Edward Henry Lenox (from Kentucky) travels over the Oregon Trail and stakes a claim to the present farm site. 1850-59: Robert Imbrie acquires the Lenox farm and builds the current granary. 1863-66: Robert has the three-story, gabled farm home built. 1897: Robert dies. 1933: Imbries begin selling barley to Blitz-Weinhard.
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