Human settlement in Oregon, United States
Sawmill and mill pond of the Long-Bell Lumber Company in Vaughn, Oregon, in August 1947.
Vaughn is an unincorporated community in Lane County , Oregon , United States.[ 1] It is located about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Noti in the foothills of the Central Oregon Coast Range near Noti Creek.[ 2] Author Ralph Friedman described Vaughn as "a mill in the meadows".[ 3]
History
Vaughn was established in the 1920s by the Snellstrom Brothers Lumber Company.[ 4] The company town was later owned by the Long-Bell Lumber Company , then sold to International Paper (IP) in the mid-1950s.[ 4] Vaughn is near the route of Coos Bay Rail Link (formerly the Central Oregon and Pacific Railroad Coos Bay Line, once a branch of the Southern Pacific Railroad ).[ 5] On a 1930 map the community is shown on the property of Roland Vaughn.[ 5] Because the railroad makes a horseshoe bend and misses the community, the railroad's Vaughn Station is about a mile west of there.[ 6] [ 5]
Today Vaughn is the site of a Rosboro Lumber Company laminated beam plant that was purchased from Weyerhaeuser in 2005.[ 7] [ 8] The beam plant was built by Bohemia, Inc. in 1988.[ 9] [ 10] Bohemia also ran a plywood plant at Vaughn, which it had purchased from International Paper in 1982 after IP closed it; Bohemia reopened the mill in 1983.[ 9] [ 11] [ 12] [ 13] The plywood plant was closed temporarily in 1985 after a section of the roof collapsed.[ 14]
References
^ "Vaughn" . Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey , United States Department of the Interior . November 28, 1980. Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ Oregon Atlas & Gazetteer (7th ed.). Yarmouth, Maine : DeLorme . 2008. ISBN 0-89933-347-8 .
^ Friedman, Ralph (1990). In Search of Western Oregon (2nd ed.). Caldwell, Idaho: The Caxton Printers, Ltd . p. 215. ISBN 0-87004-332-3 . Retrieved January 31, 2016 .
^ a b Carlson, Linda (2003). Company Towns of the Pacific Northwest . Seattle : University of Washington Press . p. 239. ISBN 0-295-98332-9 . Archived from the original on February 22, 2012.
^ a b c McArthur, Lewis A. ; McArthur, Lewis L. (2003) [1928]. Oregon Geographic Names (7th ed.). Portland, Oregon: Oregon Historical Society Press. p. 990. ISBN 978-0875952772 .
^ "Vaughn Station" . Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey , United States Department of the Interior . May 22, 1986. Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ Miller, Wayne. "Rosboro Plans To Double BigBeam Production" . Miller Wood Trade Publications. Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ "Rosboro: Committed to Your Business" (PDF) . Rosboro Lumber Company. Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ a b "Bohemia to sell its Calif. Mills; Oregon Plants Also Considered" . The Bulletin . Associated Press. December 5, 1990. Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ United Press International (October 7, 1987). "Beam Plant Planned" . The Bulletin . Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ Bacon, Larry (November 25, 1987). "Bohemia Considers Purchasing Sawmill" . The Register-Guard . Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ Wyant, Dan (September 20, 1988). "Bohemia Starts Up New Facility for Producing Laminated Beams" . The Register-Guard . Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ Bishop, Bill (September 14, 1983). "Mills to Close Permanently" . The Register-Guard . Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
^ "55 Employees Return to Bohemia Plant Jobs" . The Register-Guard . April 27, 1985. Retrieved June 12, 2011 .
44°01′25″N 123°26′13″W / 44.023734°N 123.437043°W / 44.023734; -123.437043