Pine Ridge, Oregon
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (March 2018) |
Pine Ridge was a company town located on the Klamath Indian Reservation, about a mile and a half north of Chiloquin, Oregon.
Wilbur Knapp built a small sawmill on the site in 1916 for Modoc Lumber Company, as well as a few houses. The area was originally known as "Aspgrove." In 1924 the mill was sold to the Forest Lumber Company from Kansas City, who built a large mill and changed the name to Pine Ridge.[1] After Forest Lumber Company bought the property, houses were built to a higher standard.
The town included a sawmill, offices, hotel, school, residences, and company store. It was destroyed by the Pine Ridge fire on August 19, 1939, and never rebuilt. The office vault was the only surviving structure, and a house was later built adjacent to it, incorporating it as a room.
- Elevation: 4,186 feet (1,276 meters)
References
[edit]- ^ "The lumber mills". City of Chiloquin.
- Pine Ridge: A Forgotten Town in Klamath County, Oregon, by Francis Juris (1917-2018)
- Chicago Tribune, August 21, 1939: "Forests Ablaze over 1,000 Mile Pacific Front."
42°35′38″N 121°51′42″W / 42.59389°N 121.86167°W