Columbus Townsite (detail)
To the left of Stonehenge you see a row of basically 5 buildings. That is actually Maryhill. The first building is the Meadowlark Inn, then the Annex, then the Kidder House and then the Maryhill Land Office. The last one is debatable, due to the location in the photo. I really think it might be the Friend's Church that Hill built for his "folly of a community". That church only had one service ever held in it, a dedication. I still chuckle at the time I went up to where the church and Mary's Cottage were located. All that was left of the church was the deep basement with a cow skull and a beer can in it. Go figure that one out....Drunken cow..................
Hill built a big reservoir up above the area and it broke loose and the water came roaring down....thankfully the town of Columbus was a little ways downriver from where his flood went through.
I know Columbus /Maryhill from two time frames. My family from 1873 to the early 1900's and from the 1950's when good friends lived in the Kidder house and ran a rock shop in what had been the Maryhill Land Office. I knew the two house keepers that Sam Hill had at The Meadow Lark Inn. Both delightful little old English spinsters with a beautiful English garden on the side. I wish I had of known at the time that Clara and Lucy were in fact involved with him, as I can just imagine what I could have gleaned from the two of them....Sam Hill did not have any great wonderful feelings for anyone, which included his wife and two children, but he had great affection for these two, as they were given through his will the use of Meadow Lark Inn for the remainder of their lives.
If you take Highway 97 up the hill to Goldendale, you can pull off to the side and look down into the canyon where Sam Hill built his dam.
...if not for the bad research (booze) by the Hill folk, the utopia would have been located in the white salmon area if I remember correctly...
Arlen, you are correct. Hill was so impressed with White Salmon that he offered to buy that land but was refused with great anger when it was found he approved and partook of liquor.
The fountain at the Maryhill Townsite / Stonehenge still exists, but it has seen better days...
Photo by A. F. Litt, June 2, 2022"The 'who's who' of Hood River was invited to Maryhill on May 5, 1912 to tour Sam Hill's demonstration highway. Their efforts were aimed at securing approval of the Columbia River Highway project, which changed Hood River in profound ways."
"GOOD ROADS" MOVEMENT 1912
Posted by Historic Hood River June 11, 2013
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Present that day were:
C.K. Marshall
O.H. Rhoades
G.A. McCurdy
Roy D. Smith
W.L. Clark
Murray Kay
Samuel Hill (Host)
Clarence Gilbert
W.E. King
C.P. McCan
Leslie Butler
R.E. Scott
That is the fountain at the corner where you come up from Columbus (Maryhill) and make the turn in front of the old stone store to go out to the location of the Meadow Lark Inn, Annex, Kidder House, Maryhill Land Office and Stonehenge. I know as a child I even climbed into it on a number of occasions. it is still there. I do not know if it ever spouted water. There were water lines put in around there, but don't know when they were activated. There was water there in the late 1940's when Clara and Lucy lived there, along with Tiny Bishop who leased the land office building for his rock shop.
Are those names in order, left to right, as in the picture? Love those hats and face hair.
nels, I believe the names are left to right. That puts Sam Hill and Leslie Butler in the right place. Unfortunately the notes on the photo don't say for sure.
Sam Hill had dreams of a big community at Maryhill and tried to dam the creek and have water for his city. This was his fallback community after his plans for a city "where the rain meets the sun" (in White Salmon) were thwarted. He never was successful getting the water to his city and it was a huge failure. The fountain and the dam are both still there.
If I recall the dam broke, at least once pouring water down the canyon. The most beautiful part of the "dream?" was Lucy and Clara, as far as I am concerned. At least they were the last people remaining in what became known as "Sam Hill's Folly." I always wished I could have seen the church and Mary's Cottage before they were torn down. I do remember the majority of the other buildings prior to their burning. Especially Meadowlark, Kidder House, and the land office. The land office had these wonderful old pigeon holes in one wall, like those of the old time post offices, but these were deep and that is where the maps were rolled and kept.
"On May 5, 1912 a group of Hood River business and community leaders traveled to Maryhill to meet with Sam Hill and learn about his proposal to construct a paved highway through the Gorge. Here's their host mugging for the camera."
SAM HILL, AT YOUR SERVICE
Posted by Historic Hood River December 13, 2017
http://historichoodriver.com/index.php?showimage=1776
He did a lot of good, where roads were concerned, but had his "dark side" that is for certain, that most people are unaware of. He had a lot of visions of grandeur, which became known as "Hill's Folly." He went up to Columbus and fully intended to run the people who had resided there since its founding out, but their pioneer spirit was greater than his father-in-laws money and he failed. They never were impressed by him. Horrible husband and parent to say the least and all his illegitimate children running all over the place.
He never lived at Maryhill, only Clara and Lucy ever resided there and I knew them when I was a little girl.....
I can tell you where this photo was taken. On the little front porch of the Maryhill Land Company Office. Have walked on that porch and went through that door many, many times....
Seems like a lot of "good deeds men" in world history, also had a dark side.
Also seems like a lot of newcomers with grandiose ideas, don't mind moving in and telling the "locals" how they should live.
Hill like so many ambitious business men, had abundant energy. Some of that energy and money provided a way for farmers on the east side of the state to ship their product.
".....They formed the Washington State Good Roads Association and they chose Hill as president. Hill declared, "Good roads are more than my hobby; they are my religion."......
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Just think, we could have had Maryhill right here on the White Salmon bluff. Remember the story of Sam Hill ready to make the purchase of the Jewett Farm, but when he proposed an alcoholic toast, Mrs. Jewett nixed the sale.
The decision to make Bingen the Railroad Depot for the North Bank RR rather than White Salmon:
...the St. James Hotel sat where Stonehenge is now. When he decided to build Stonehenge he moved it back and renamed it Meadowlark Inn. If you go up there now you will see a medium sized bush. That bush sat in Clara and Lucy's English garden.
Original 1909 fire hydrant from Sam Hill's planned Maryhill townsite (Photo by Scott Cook)
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Maryhill-Columbus Cemetery (Photo by Pamela Elbert Poland)
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