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<br />KU LLBY Kent R <br /> <br />From: <br />Sent: <br />To: <br /> <br />LARSON Darryl L (OR) <br />Thursday, March 09, 2006 12:01 PM <br />KULLBY Kent R <br /> <br />RECEIVED <br />MAR -9 2006 <br />CITY OF EUGENE <br />PLANNING DEPARH,,1ENT <br /> <br />March 9, 2006 <br /> <br />Planning Commission <br />City of Eugene <br /> <br />RE: Letter of Support for Street Re-naming <br /> <br />Dear Members of the Planning Commission: <br /> <br />For several months, members of Shelton-McMurphey-Johnson Associates have been in contact <br />with the city manager, mayor and council in hopes of naming the newly improved 3rd/4th <br />Connector Street to one that acknowledges the history of the Shelton-McMurphey-Johnson <br />House and the prominent family that built it. <br /> <br />Led by Building and Grounds Chair, Ray Wiley, the Associates have made some significant <br />findings regarding the area around the Shelton-McMurphey-Johnson (SMJ) House at 303 <br />Willamette Street (The area's only Victorian House Museum); a City owned treasure built in <br />1888. Those findings are as follows: <br /> <br />The east-west street in front of the house, that we have been calling the 3rd/4th <br />Connector has never been officially named by the City. That roadway is very old; it shows <br />in photographs going back to 1890 when it was called "The Carriage Road" by Dr. and Mrs. <br />Shelton. The road right-of-way was part of the Southern Pacific RR Reserve (given to them <br />by Eugene <br /> <br />Skinner) until it was transferred to Eugene on February 6, 1975. After that the City paved <br />a very narrow strip between Pearl and Lincoln, but never named it. Now it has been brought <br />up to City Standards, a wide boulevard, with landscaped islands and set back sidewalks, <br />and antique gooseneck street lamps to match those at our historic renovated train station. <br />It needs to be given an historic name. <br /> <br />Ken Guzowski has researched old Sanborn Insurance Maps going back to 1890. The most <br />interesting finding from those maps is that the road that goes up to the top of Skinner <br />Butte from 3rd and Pearl (running behind the SMJ House) was named Shelton Boulevard on the <br />1925 and 1962 maps. Then we found an old ca.1910 map of Eugene's Historic District that <br />also shows that road named Shelton Boulevard. In 1890, Dr. Shelton owned almost all of the <br />land north of the right of way in question, all the way to the Willamette River. In 1886, <br />as an owner of the Eugene Water Company, he built the first reservoir in Eugene on the <br />Butte. In 1888 he sold a small piece of land on the east summit of the Butte to the <br />University of Oregon, so they could build an observatory. At that time, Dr. Shelton <br />committed to building an improved gravel road to the summit. That road was completed in <br />1892 and we surmise that he named it Shelton Boulevard. <br /> <br />In 2003, when the first letter was sent, SMJ Associates were under the impression <br />that Dr. Shelton's name could not be used for the street name, since there was already a <br />one-block street in SW Eugene called Shelton Avenue. Further research found a great number <br />of street multiples, all with different appendages. In fact, the word "Bailey" is used <br />five times. Without using "Court or Place" multiples, we have found about 115 <br />combinations, with each name in a different area of town. <br /> <br />Dr. Shelton was a true Oregon pioneer, having arrived in this valley the same year that <br />Eugene Skinner did 1846. He practiced medicine near Monmouth and Salem before he, his wife <br />and young child moved to Eugene in1873, was one of Eugene's first physicians and also <br />owned a pharmacy. For 15 years they lived at "Mrs. Underwood's", then in 1888 he built the <br />"Castle on the Hill". He purchased nearly half of Eugene Skinner's Donation Land Claim <br />(D.L.C.), owning most of the land between the road right-of-way, in question, and the <br />river. He subdivided the land between Third and Cheshire, and between Lincoln and <br />Washington in 1886&1889. With Charles Lauer, he established the Eugene Water Co. (Eugene's <br />