place

Stayton High School

1949 establishments in OregonHigh schools in Marion County, OregonOregon school stubsPublic high schools in OregonStayton, Oregon
Stayton High School main entrance Stayton Oregon
Stayton High School main entrance Stayton Oregon

Stayton High School is a public high school in Stayton, Oregon, United States. Formerly known as Stayton Union High School, and established proper in 1921, Stayton High School became a unified school in 1949.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Stayton High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Stayton High School
Gardner Avenue,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Stayton High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.802895 ° E -122.800924 °
placeShow on map

Address

Stayton High School

Gardner Avenue
97383
Oregon, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Stayton High School main entrance Stayton Oregon
Stayton High School main entrance Stayton Oregon
Share experience

Nearby Places

David and Maggie Aegerter Barn
David and Maggie Aegerter Barn

The David and Maggie Aegerter Barn is a gambrel-roofed barn in Linn County, in northwestern Oregon, that was built in 1915. It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1999.Linn County, at the center of the Willamette Valley, was a tremendously productive agricultural area. The area was settled by 1850, at which time there were already 160 farms. At one time the county produced and exported more wheat than any other area of its size. Barn designs evolved over the years.The Aegerter Barn is unusual for having an overhang around all four sides of the structure, a feature perhaps relating to Aegerter's Swiss heritage. Aegerter or his forebears had emigrated from Bern Canton, in Switzerland, where overhangs in barns are common. Overhangs protect lower level doors from the elements. It is the only such barn in Linn County.The barn was designed and/or built by Anton Schindler and Nick Lulay. It is privately owned.A photo of the barn from the digital collection of the University of Oregon shows decorative medallions on the upper level of one side of the barn. It also shows shingle cladding, perhaps wood shingles, protecting the upper level on that side, while the protected lower level is not shingle-clad.It is located not far from the Michael and Mary Ryan Barn, the only Pennsylvania Dutch barn in Linn County, which features overhangs on two sides. The Aegerter Barn, the Ryan Barn, and five others were nominated for NRHP listing as part of the MPS study.It is located at 41915 Ridge Drive, approximately eight miles from the small city of Scio. An aerial photo shows the barn is located behind other buildings in the farm property. It is a 38 by 48 feet (12 m × 15 m) structure. Its NRHP nomination describes:The first level has three aisles, arranged longitudinally, and was originally used for livestock stabling and grain storage. The second level functioned as mow space. The most distinctive feature of the barn is its multiple (four-sided) overhang of the upper level mow over the lower level walls. The only barn in Linn County with a four-sided overhang, the design choice may relate to the Swiss heritage of the related Aegerter and Flick families associated with this property. The farmstead also includes a wood-frame, one-and-a-half-story Craftsman style farmhouse (1924), a pump house, a windmill, a metal barn, and a garage.