A group portrait of five men and two boys working on a hops farm near Forest Grove, Oregon, possibly in the Hillside neighborhood. This image probably dates from 1910-1914. The men, who are all wearing work clothes and hats, hold hoes in front of them. One man holds a pipe in his mouth. The hops vines around them hang from strings supported by tall poles. Flaws in the photograph are due to dust and deterioration of the emulsion layer on the negative.
A team of men harvest hay or grain from a field using steam-powered machinery. A steam tractor engine and a "Case" brand boiler pulled by two horses stand on the left. A pile of wood used to power the engine and two barrels sit nearby. A long belt attached to the steam tractor engine is running a third machine, possibly a thresher or baler (right). Men stand atop a horse-drawn wagon behind the machine on the right, carefully raking hay, while another empty wagon stands nearby. A recently-cut field of hay or grain is in the background, alongside a grove of oak trees. Small haystacks lie scattered around the field. This photograph was taken around 1910-1914 near Forest Grove, Oregon (possibly in Banks or Hillside), by William Alonso Clapshaw. Flaws in the photograph are due to dust and deterioration of the emulsion layer on the negative.
Several men and boys stand with a set of Adriance brand reaper-binders in Banks, Oregon, circa 1910-1914. A caption reads: "One Day's Delivery of Binders By John Wunderlich, Banks, Ore." John Wunderlich was a merchant in Banks at the time. Many houses are in the background of this image; a woman stands of one their porches. The reaper-binder machines were used to cut grain and bind it into bundles or sheaves, which would then be pushed into cone-shaped stacks that would be left to dry in the fields. This photograph may have been taken at or near the train depot in Banks. For another version of the same scene, see image: PUA_MS154_055
A steam tractor engine (left) powers a belt that drives a threshing machine (right, behind hay wagon). This photograph was taken circa 1910-1914 north of Forest Grove, Oregon, possibly at or near the property now found at 42440 Purdin Road. The ridgeline in the background of the photograph closely matches the modern view looking southwest from that location.
The men standing on the wagon are loading harvested grain - perhaps oats or wheat - into the thresher, which is separating the grain from the chaff. The grain is coming out of a chute that descends from the lower right side of the thresher. The chaff, or straw, is shooting out of the thresher into the barn on the right. A field with many tree stumps and wildflowers appears in the foreground. The Coast Range, farms and groves of oak stand in the background. For a similar image by the same photographer, see Image PUA_MS154_026.
Threshing of a grain harvest, probably near Forest Grove or Banks, Oregon circa 1910-1914. A steam-powered tractor engine (right) turns a long belt which drives the threshing machine on the left. Men standing on the wagons with pitchforks are feeding harvested grain -- possibly oats -- into the thresher, which separates the grain from the chaff. Men standing by the empty horse-drawn wagon (left) are gathering the grain from a chute that extends from the thresher, while the chaff, or hay, is being shot into the air, forming huge pile (left, background). Additional workers wait nearby, while what may be a covered chuck wagon sits by the steam tractor. Cut grain that is waiting to be threshed waits in the field in the foreground. For a similar image by the same photographer, see Image PUA_MS154_023.
Men on a farm near Forest Grove, Oregon, fill a silo attached to a barn. The man in the bowler hat (right) is tending an engine that is driving a belt. The belt turns a wheel which is attached to a silo-filling machine (center, with tall white pipe extending vertically). The man by the silo-filling machine is feeding hay into its hopper, which the machine chops and then blows through the pipe into the silo. A third man, standing on the wagon drawn by two horses, is delivering the hay -- possibly alfalfa. This was likely to be used as livestock feed. A farm dog stands on the right, and one more man stands almost behind the silo, facing away from the camera. A pulley system is attached to the side of the barn. This photograph was probably taken in the Hillside, Gales Creek or Banks neighborhoods between 1910-1914.
Two farmers wearing overalls and straw hats sit on a pair of plows, each of which is drawn by a team of two horses. A young horse (or possibly a mule?) stands near one of the horse teams. This photograph was taken in the vicinity of Forest Grove, Oregon circa 1910-1914, possibly in the Hillside or Hayward communities northwest of town. A field stands behind them, with a partially cleared forest and several houses on the hill in the background. This photograph appears to have been overexposed, and also has some damage due to deterioration of the emulsion layer on the negative.
Several men and boys stand with a set of Adriance brand reaper-binders in Banks, Oregon, circa 1910-1914. A faint caption reads: "One Day's Delivery of Binders By John Wunderlich, Banks, Ore." John Wunderlich was a merchant in Banks at the time. The binder machines were used to cut grain and bind it into bundles or sheaves, which would then be pushed into cone-shaped stacks that would be left to dry in the fields. This photograph may have been taken at or near the train depot in Banks. For another version of the same scene, see Image PUA_MS154_022
A farm in Patton Valley, north of Gaston, Oregon and near Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
Sheep grazing by a river in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
Dairy cows standing in a pasture. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
Dairy cows grazing in a pasture in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
An orchard in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A row of irrigations sprinklers at a farm in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
An irrigation system in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A river in Scoggins Valley that served as the irrigation source for the farms in the valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A tractor driving in a field. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A tractor pulling an aerator through a plowed field. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
Young plants growing in a field. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A green pasture in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A plowed field in front of an orchard in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A plowed field in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).
A tractor spraying at a farm in Scoggins Valley. Scoggins Valley was flooded and dammed into Hagg Lake in 1975. This slide is a part of the Scoggins Valley Dam Collection (RG.5.12).