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Memorial Day 2022 at Winona Cemetery
Memorial Day 5/31/2022 at Winona Cemetery. This fast paced patriotic event featuring local members of our community starts with a missing Man Maneuver fly over at 10:45 a.m. Afterwards there will be a free barbecue picnic at Tualatin Community Park.
Althea Pratt-Broom at 100
A local legend turned 100 this year. Althea Pratt-Broom saved the historic Sweek House in 1955 and founded what would become Willowbrook Art Camp there in 1978. She and her late husband Jack Broome founded the Friends of the Tualatin Wetlands with it's roots in 1976 and by 1981 would be know at the Wetlands Conservancy. Get an inside peek of Althea and Tualatin's only building in Tualatin on the register of National Historic places with this 2009 interview with our very own Larry McClure.
Tualatin Historical Society Celebrates International Women’s Day.
Recorded in 2010 this program tells the story of famous women in Tualatin's History...it's Herstory. But we don’t stop there. We also celebrate women having current impact on Tualatin. Join us as we salute 15 women who’ve made Tualatin what it is today.
Tualatin Historical Society’s first annual poetry contest
Celebrate Arbor month with us and the city of Tualatin. Learn more about our first annual Arbor Day Poetry Contest and how to win a tree, an annual membership and your place in history.
Meet the Heritage Center’s new manager
Rick Wheelock brings a love of history and many more things needed in his new role as Manager of the Heritage Center.
Mastodon’s Teeth Taken From Well
REPRINT: The Oregon Journal, October 31, 1937
Mastodon’s Teeth Taken From Well
Widely separated areas in Oregon recently have given up evidences of wild life in the state in prehistoric times. Near the grass toots of a new well he started on his farm near Tualatin, Charles M. Roberts, chief of police there, uncovered some teeth and parts of the skeleton of a mastodon. The skeleton rested in a low rich onion growing field, where not more that 20,000 years ago, believes Dr. H. C. Dake, Portland student of paleontology, the mastodon may have been a victim of the last great ice age which extended down nearly into Oregon, forcing these great mammals to migrate to the warmer climates of the south.
A real life Saint Nick at the Heritage Center. 🎅
When Tualatin was barely a one stop sign town in the late 1940s and 1950s, the volunteer fire department would use its ladders to string lights on a tall redwood across Boone Ferry from today’s CI (then the Spot Tavern). Tualatin historians Loyce Martinazzi and Yvonne Addington remember families would gather around a big bonfire nearby to sing familiar carols. Elves from the fire department would then help Santa distribute donated toys they had repaired. Local church women sewed new clothing for cast-off dolls especially for children in need. See how we honored this tradition in 2021….
Ice Age Foundation makes progress towards Tualatin-based Interpretive Center
There is an increased public interest in identifying and learning about the current relationship to the Ice Ages, which still affects our lands today. Area collectors and public places now open to the public have simply run out of room to preserve and display our ancient history properly. The Tualatin Ice Age Foundation was created to finance and provide space for local collections and displays and learn about Tualatin’s ancient history and the surrounding areas over 10,000 years ago.
Heritage Center Wins Backyard Habitat Certification
“The site assessors were impressed by our plant identification signs and the two updated guidebooks for visitors coordinated by THC manager Cindy Frost. Also attention-getting was weed removal work regularly done by Karin Olson and Margie Torgeson over the past several years.”
Tualatin Historical Society Celebrates our Veterans for the whole month of November.
Celebrate Veterans with the Tualatin Historical Society.
Thanks to you our 2021 Heritage Evening was a success.
The 2021 Heritage Evening netted over $9000 thanks to the continue support of our members and community. See details here.
Tualatin’s Winona Grange Celebrates 125 Years
Tualatin’s oldest community organization was founded long before Tualatin was incorporated in 1913. Twenty-four-farm family members met in 1895 to organize the Grange and chose the name Winona to honor the deceased eldest daughter of J. R. C. Thompson.
Tualatin resident Joe Lipscomb served with the Marine Corps on the front lines of the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Read more about Joe Lipscomb and his service in a war that has never been declared over.
Over 100 years of representation in one room!
Some well known faces meet with Tualatin Chamber’s new CEO.
Thanks to the Mazamas Organization THS now has an original 1916 Tualatin High School “Tuala” Yearbook
A must see!
What was highschool life like in 1916 Tualatin? Have a peek!
Mayor Frank Bubenik: Tualatin's state of city looks promising.
Tualatin Mayor Frank Bubenik discusses Tualatin’s state of the City now emerging from the pandemic
Rare Geological Find is now at Heritage Center
Thanks to an unexpected discovery at a Lake Oswego construction site, a new historical artifact will soon be on display outside the Tualatin Heritage Center. A two-ton chunk of rhyolite, a type of igneous rock that is not normally found in Oregon, is now believed to have been deposited in the Willamette Valley by the Missoula Floods around 15,000 years ago. It was found during excavation of the new Lakeridge Junior High School site in Lake Oswego.
The mastodon has figured prominently in the American imagination
The mastodon has figured prominently in the American imagination since the nation’s founding. Thomas Jefferson, who was famously obsessed with the animals, had bones laid out for study in the White House and is even rumored to have instructed Lewis and Clark to gather evidence of living elephants in the interior of North America.
Living Legends: Larry McClure
Larry McClure is still a small-town boy at heart so he and his wife Ellie hit the jackpot when they decided to settle in Tualatin in May 1972.
The Immortal Life of Nami Sasaki
Nami Sasaki - From Japan to Oregon to a relocation camp and back home again
Nami Sasaki’s in-laws had emigrated from Japan and in 1914 bought a 100-acre hops farm south of Tualatin. By 1939, Nami and husband Ajiro (Art) took over managing the farm and grew mostly berries. During WW2, the family was forced to move to an Idaho relocation camp, along with other West Coast Japanese-Americans.
Capture the magic of our 15th Annual Heritage Evening