The Villager Feb. 2014 | Page 18

Page 18 February 2014 The Charbonneau Villager There's Plenty of Miles on the Miley House, Relocated 5 Miles Away The Miley family in front of their house, circa 1900. Jacob is at the left. Photos: Aurora Colony Historical Society. Looking Back . . . A Series of Historical Vignettes on Charbonneau and the Area MICK SCOTT The two-story log house stood guard for 125 years at the north end of what now is Old Farm Road before it was rescued for a renewed life in a new location. For much of the last half of the 19th Century, the Jacob Miley House overlooked its busy Willamette River landing where steamers docked with goods and supplies to be transported by wagon to the Aurora Colony five miles away. The Miley family legacy in the area dates from 1863 when 19-year-old William “Cap” Miley and 250 other followers of Dr. William Keil migrated to Oregon to settle in what Miley described as a “little hamlet in the woods.” The communal colony, patterned after the one they left in Bethel, Missouri, was bordered by the Pudding River to the north and east, and a tributary, Mill Creek, to the west. The old-world log home at the colony's river landing was built in 1865 by members of the commune. Dr. Keil, founder of the colony, had purchased the land from George Law Curry for the purpose of establishing a shipping port for his communal enterprise. Curry's large home was located one-half mile to the west, just off what is now French Prairie Road. Jacob Miley, Cap's brother, migrated to the communal settlement that same year from Bethel to take up residence in the house. The 23-foot by 37-foot house was built of stacked, hand-hewn logs, covered on the exterior by horizontal clapboard siding. Five rooms were on the ground floor with four rooms on the second, reached by a flight of 13 stairs. A small attic was above. Colonists were known for their simplicity, so the Mileys white washed all the interior walls. The only accent color was what became known as “Aurora Colony blue.” A focal point in the original house was a huge walk-in fireplace with a cooking hearth. It would be home for Jacob and his wife Elizabeth, whom he married in 1863, and their five children. Elizabeth died in 1876, but Jacob remarried in 1882 to Maria, a widow who happened to be Elizabeth's sister. Jacob Miley farmed extensive hop yards that stretched across part of present-day Charbonneau. He eventually bought the land in 1881, after Dr. Keil's death, when communal ownership was dissolved and the properties were divided among colonists. Jacob died at age 68 in 1907. But the Miley family continued to occupy the house into the late 1930s. They finally abandoned their home after some difficult times that lingered following the Depression. The house then stood vacant for decades until the 1970s when it became a sales and operating office for Willamette Factors, the developers of Charbonneau. The house, now more than a century old, offered some challenges. Debbie Alexander, ofice manager for Factors at the time, recalls bats nesting in the chimney then exiting through the fireplace into the office space. “We finally boarded up the fireplace opening to keep the bats out and the rest of us in.” The Miley House was used as a storage facility once Factors moved to the Village Center commercial building after it was completed in 1979. By the late 1980s, the historic Jacob Miley House was to be de- stroyed to make room for new residential construction. Historic preservationist Mike Byrnes was brought in to salvage the leaded glass windows. After removing sheet rock from interior walls along with some flooring, however, he saw the original craftsmanship and the historic nature of the house. This, he thought, was something that should be preserved. He negotiated with Willamette Factors for possession of the house, settled on a purchase price of $1 and moved the house in 1990 by flatbed truck to Aurora at a cost of $14,000. Factors, which was poised to either burn or demolish the house, A newly constructed wall fronts the Miley House shortly before its move to Aurora. www.charbonneaucountryclub.com