Monday, August 29, 2022

John Prutsman (Linfield Class of 1957) is proud he played on the same Linfield football team (1954) as all-stars Ad Rutschman, Howard Morris and Vic Fox

 



By John Prutsman, Class of 1957
Wildcat football player
1953, 1954, 1955 and 1956,
wearing jersey #40 or #45


Linfield played its first football game in 1896.In the following 126 years, thousands of young men have put on a football jersey and stepped onto the gridiron to defend the legacy of Linfield Football.

 

Three of those players are unique. They are the only Linfield football players to have their jersey numbers retired:

 

…#32 Ad Rutschman, Class of 1954, played 1950, 1951, 1952 and 1953.

 

…#43 Howard Morris, Class of 1958, played 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1957. Died 2017.

 

…#47 Vic Fox, Class of 1958, played 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1957. Died 2020.

 

I am among the few Linfielders who played with Ad, Howard and Vic on the same team (1954), coached by Paul Durham. I was and am honored to be one of the few guys who played with all three of them. I was and am proud to be their teammate. 

What the three of them had in common was excellence as Wildcat football players. They were all-stars. And, they were all on All-American football teams and they are all enshrined in the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame.

 =AD RUTSCHMAN (Hillsboro) was a very gifted athlete and not only played both ways but punted as well. He was always the team leader and highly respected by all his teammates. He went on to coach state of Oregon high school championship teams in both football and baseball. And, Ad is the only collegiate coach to win National Championships in two sports, Football and Baseball. He is also a member of the College Football Hall of Fame.

 =HOWARD MORRIS (Central Point) was an outstanding athlete. He was Linfield “most Inspirational” football player for three consecutive years. Howard is a member of the NAIA District 2 Hall of Fame, the NAIA Coaches Hall of Fame and the NAIA National Hall of Fame. He was always a great team player and a gentleman. Never a cheap shot. A great downfield blocker.

 =VIC FOX (Cottage Grove) was an excellent tough guard.

 .....

ASIDES ABOUT MY LINFIELD FOOTBALL CAREER

My time playing a lot of football for Linfield was mostly on JV teams. In my years there was limited substitution and, because of that, we played both offense and defense. Sometimes players might play almost the entire 60 minutes of a game. In one JV game I played for 58 1/2 minutes, and the coach took me out because I looked tired. 

Several times I’ve given a speech about my Linfield football career. It is self-deprecating and humorous. A former teammate who introduced me to deliver the speech called me a “bench warmer." Ad Rutschman always introduces me as his teammate, which I prefer.

…..

John Prutsman (Portland-Lincoln), Dick Holliday (Kelso), Vern Marshall (Portland-Roosevelt) and Les Hershey (Hillsboro), all seniors, on the 1956 Linfield football team featured in the Linfield Homecoming 1956 printed program. Game was Sat., Nov. 3, 1956, College of Idaho at Linfield, Linfield won, 20-7. (Photos from Linfield Archives.) John Prutsman, ATO member, Linfield Oak Leaves 1954.












Friday, August 26, 2022

Linfield to open wine bar and learning lab (Aug. 25, 2023, N-R)


Linfield to open wine bar and learning lab

Facility will open in former Elena’s in downtown Mac

 

By Starla Pointer McMinnville N-R/News-Register 8/26/2022

Linfield University will take over the former Elena’s wine bar space at Third and Ford streets and reopen it as a wine bar and learning lab for its interdisciplinary Wine Studies program.

Students from Wine Studies and other majors will design and operate the wine bar, and those 21 and older will work there for pay or academic credit, said Tim Matz, director of the Evenstad Center for Wine Education and Domaine Serene Chair at Linfield.

“Experiential learning,” he called it, noting that this “unique learning lab” will be another asset in the program that leads students to find “meaningful jobs with a future” in the worldwide wine industry.

He said they are hoping to open the business Dec. 1, or earlier if licensing and other details are wrapped up. But it might be January, as well.

“We’ve gotten great support among the community,” Matz said, indicating the move will strengthen the relationship between town and gown as well as between Linfield and area wineries.

Elena’s, named for a motorcycle in turn named for a Russian spy, opened in June 2021 at the corner of Third and Ford streets. It quickly became a popular spot for locals and visitors.

But it closed suddenly at the beginning of February, and despite signs indicating the closure was temporary, never reopened.

Several months later, RJ Photography expanded from the rear of the building into the front, where the wine bar had been — and where the photo studio’s gallery had been prior to Elena’s.

RJ will continue to occupy the rear of the building as Linfield students open the new wine bar up front.

They will choose a new name, as well, Matz said. Several names are being discussed, he said, including “Oak & Vine on Third Street,” a play on the name of Linfield’s wine club.

The new wine bar also will serve as a venue for events, such as gathering for members of one of Linfield’s departments or an alumni activity hosted by President Miles Davis.

Matz said a student committee will be formed to develop the wine bar after classes start Monday. The committee, like other aspects of the learning lab, will include students from various majors, in addition to those in undergrad or graduate Wine Studies courses, he said.

For instance, accounting students will be involved in keeping the books; Art students will help design the look of the businesses, and will have a chance to display their work there; Music students will perform at the wine bar on Sunday afternoons.

The Linfield wine bar will be managed by Stephanie Mitchell, who is a student in the new master of science in wine business leadership program, which starts Monday.

Matz, who will help oversee the new venture, joined Linfield in September 2021. He had been in the wine industry for many years before becoming part of the academic side.

Last year, he taught some classes and helped develop curriculum, as well as starting the Oak & Vine Society wine club and working with the Wine & Spirits Educational Trust, which oversees wine education for students and professionals worldwide.

Several donors have contributed to the new wine bar/learning lab. Matz said the Wine Studies program is always seeking more support.

Linfield also is in the process of getting a winery license, which will allow students to make wine in partnership with a local producer. Matz said they currently make samples of wine, but in the future will be able to produce, bottle and sell their products.

For more information, he can be reached at 503-883-2218.

LINFIELD WINE BAR DOWNTOWN McMINNVILLE VENUE

Photos: Venue of Linfield’s downtown McMinnville wine bar at the corner of NE Third & NE Ford Streets. Address: 546 NE Third Street. Linfield students will choose the bar’s name. (Wildcatville photos 8/28/2022)





Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Linfield Football 2022: Enthused with talent



Click on photo above. It's not one photo, 
but one of four photos by Rusty Rae in a slide show. 

Linfield Football 2022: Enthused with talent

Story by Ossie Bladine, editor. Photos by Rusty Rae, photographer. McMinnville N-R/News-Register 8/23/2022. Slight edits by Wildcatville.

The 2022 Linfield football team returns the majority of the roster that went undefeated last season until a 49-24 NCAA Division III quarterfinal loss to eventual national champion Mary Hardin-Baylor.

Head coach Joseph Smith said it’s one of the deepest and veteran rosters he’s entered a season with, including three preseason All Americans, the entire starting offensive and defensive lines intact, and tons of talent at the skill positions.

But there are a couple of questions to be answered between now and Sept. 3, when the Wildcats, ranked No. 7 nationally preseason, kick things off with a road game in Montgomery, Alabama, against Huntingdon College. The biggest unknown is who will step into the quarterback role vacated by All-American Wyatt Smith, a McMinnville High School alum who was runner-up for the 2021 Gagliardi Trophy, the Division III equivalent of the Heisman.

Splitting snaps with the first team in practice are Blake Eaton, Dawson Lieurance and Michael Schutz. All three saw some playing time last year in the back-up role.

“I feel confident in all three young men,” Smith said. “They’re battling it out every day.”

The coaches plan to make a decision the Saturday before their first game, and it could be multiple guys at quarterback early in the season.

“Either collectively they’ll get it done, or one guy will step up above the others.”

Whoever is taking snaps for the ‘Cats will have a bevy of talent around him.

The wide receiver corps – “the deepest that we’ve ever had in terms of quality receivers,” said Smith — is led by all-conference first team pass catchers Colton Smith, Devon Murray and 2021 Northwest Conference Freshman of the Year Joel Valdez. The dynamic running back duo of Connor McNabb and Connor Morton will be joined by Bishop Mitchell, a transfer from Portland State University. The veteran offensive line is anchored by guard Julien Sears, a preseason first team All-American, and center Matt Metcalf, a preseason third team All-American.

Add in an “incredible group” of three tight ends, and “it’s a pretty dreamy situation to come in as a quarterback,” the coach said. “I have been using the analogy that we have a tremendous race car setup, and we just need to find the driver that can use it to its full ability.”

The Wildcats look to continue dominating on the other side of the ball. The 2021 squad ranked second nationally in quarterback sacks (3.75 per game), opponent third-down conversion rate (23.0 percent) and fourth in rushing defense (54.8 yards per game).

“Defense is going to start and end with that ferocious d-line,” Smith said.

Led by captain and all-American defensive end Travis Swanson, the line also features a handful of strong tackles, including Nick Severson, Alex Frazier, Grayson Cosier and Chase Lydig.

“It’s a very talented group that should put a lot of pressure on teams and allow the younger back row to develop,” Smith said.

The ‘Cats are looking for new leaders in the defensive secondary, having graduated cornerback Tyler Sitton, a McMinnville Grizzly alum, and safety Tyler Bergeron. A couple of all-conference first teamers, rover Caiden Biege-Wetherbee and monsterback Ben Baxter, intend to shut down opposing passing games, along with cornerbacks Des Phillips, Evan Fisette, who moved from receiver to the defense last year, and Chance Sparks – “a tremendous athlete” who will play both receiver and defensive back this season, Smith said.

Smith noted the younger players are more experienced than usual. A lost season due to the COVID pandemic meant last year’s freshman had 22 weeks of practice the previous year before suiting up for game day for the first time.

“Fundamentally and schematically, we’re so much further ahead than we normally are,” he said. “I think you’ll see that play out everywhere. The product on the field will be better everywhere.”

Depth will also be a major asset throughout the season.

“I’ve never seen this much raw skill talent here in a long time,” the coach said. “It allows you to weather some of those injury storms that come. To be able to replace a player with another elite player isn’t a gift you get at a lot of schools.”

Smith said the team is hungry and motivated, with plenty of optimism for another playoff run this year given the amount of talent returning. Linfield’s 2021 undefeated conference season was followed by a 31-28 dominating triumph over fifth-ranked Saint John’s University on the road, a game that was not as close as the score suggests. Smith said he felt the team then performed better against eventual champs Mary Hardin-Baylor than what the scoreboard totaled, and provided valuable lessons on how to take the next step.

“We measured well against the best in the country. The guys now know what that looks like,” Smith said. “They’ve been to the circus, so to speak, and seen the lions. The guys are practicing with that in mind. They know how clean their fundamentals have to be and what it takes to play at that level.”

 

 

Saturday, August 20, 2022

Linfield connection: Football field, football scoreboard and the track around the field at Dallas (Polk County, Oregon) High School

 


Photo: Judee Wisecarver (Ward) from 1956 McMinnville High School ‘Lincolian’ yearbook

Photo: Paul Ward from 1966 Dallas High School ‘The Dragon’ yearbook

Photo: Ron August from 1966 Dallas High School ‘The Dragon’ yearbook

Linfield connection: Football field, football scoreboard and the track around the field at Dallas (Polk County, Oregon) High School

What do Dallas (Oregon) High School and Linfield have in common?

Answer: Ron August and Paul and Judee Ward, all Linfield grads and all with a connection to Dallas High.

=The football field at Dallas High was named in 2021 for Linfielder Ron August (Linfield Class of 1964 died 2012), scroll down and read story from a 2012 edition of the Polk Cunty Itemizer-Observer.

=The track around August Field was named in 2022 (Sept. 9, 2022) for Linfielders Paul Ward (Linfield Class of 1959) and his late wife, Judee Ward (Linfield Class of 1959, died 2022). Their donation paid for a new track. Another donation by the Wards funded an amazing electronic scoreboard at the field. Scroll down and read two stories (one from 2008 and other from 2022) from the Polk County Itemizer-Observer.

And the stadium? It’s Gallaspy Stadium named for Mel and Bea Gallaspy, both deceased. Although the Gallaspys apparently had no Linfield connections, they certainly deserve attention here. And they get it! Scroll down to read stories.

Richard “Tuk” Hoffman -- Dallas High Class of 1968 and Linfield Class of 1972 -- explains that “Mel Gillaspy purchased new football lights for the stadium for which he was a major financial contributor for its construction. The stadium is named for Mel and his wife, Bea. The stadium was built with all volunteer labor and materials. Willamette Industries and Caterpillar “were also big donors by providing wood and materials. I remember in the summer of 1966 helping build the stadium by hammering nails there. The first football game with the new stadium was versus Tigard High to start the 1966 season. In about 2019, community donations funded installing FieldTurf. The new track was installed after that.”

:::::

 

Lasting Legacy: Dallas football field to be named after legendary coach Ron August

Polk County Itemizer-Observer June 20, 2012

DALLAS -- Betty August remembers it all like yesterday.

The nail-biting wins, the packed stands, the community support and a first -- and last, thus far -- for Dallas High: a football state title.

"The community was just rabid -- they were so hungry," August said of the town's atmosphere.

It was 1986, and at the center of it all was man, teacher and coach that has not been forgotten -- the late Ron August, Betty's husband of 50 years.

"To some of us, it was `Whew, we did it, the pressure was off,'" August recalled of the Dragons 34-8 win over Sweet Home in the Class 2A state championship game.

"Oh, it was amazing, because that was the first championship that Dallas (football) had ever had."

So when the proposal to honor Ron August, who passed away Jan. 28 at the age of 70 due to cancer, was brought to the attention to the Dallas School Board on June 11, it didn't take long to come to an agreement.

The man who dedicated 25 years of his life as a teacher and coach at Dallas will have his name live on in perhaps the most appropriate place, as the board approved the request to name the school's football field "Ron August Field."

A different time

After graduation from Linfield College -- where his football career was cut short due to a knee injury -- August began his teaching career at Dallas in 1964. He started as an assistant for both the football and track and field teams, before taking over the football program as head coach in 1970 -- and an era began.

"It's kind of hard for people to comprehend the type of support that Dallas football had," said Dyan Tallon, one of August's three daughters -- Dana and Denise, the other two. All three are DHS graduates.

"During football games, you couldn't find a place to sit, even on the visitor's side. If you came to see the game, you had to come at least two hours before, otherwise you weren't going to see it," Tallon added.

All of that support came to fruition in 1986, when Dallas -- which had recently moved down from Class 3A to 2A because of enrollment -- rolled to its first football title.

The Dragons won their final four playoff games by an average of 27.5 points per contest.

"The excellence that he demanded in terms of execution, it really translated into some great success throughout the 80's," Grant Boustead, Sr., a current DHS teacher who spent 17 years as an assistant for August, said of his former colleague.

"Once you develop a program that has success year after year, then it becomes a thing of community pride. And our community supported our football program and all our athletes through that time period... We packed the place for 15 years or so. It was the place to be on Friday nights."

`He lived and breathed football'

August demanded success -- but only because his own effort ensured it.

"Coaches, they have a passion for their sports," Betty August said. "Some of us that aren't as competitive, we think that it's just a game, it's fun to play, fun to do well, and you should do as best as you can on the court or the field or wherever you are.

"But coaches, they have this passion and they want the very best for their players. They want to prepare them to be at their absolute most."

That's what her husband did every day.

Whether it was his meticulous scouting reports, hours spent watching game tape, or even time spent preparing his own coaches, August made sure his teams were ready come Friday night.

"The day of the VCR -- we never watched TV then, because Dad was coming home and he was reviewing film," Tallon recalled with a laugh.

"And then Dad would do his scouting reports, and we would take turns entering in (the computer) what we needed in order to make it print, and we would print it for like the whole weekend.

"We had a certain time that we had to enter it by to make sure that the playbook was ready for the Sunday night coaches' meeting."

August spent time preparing off the field too, in an area that built the foundation of trust for his teams.

"He was the kind of person that just established great relationships with kids," Boustead said.

"Through the relationships that he built, he really got the kids to buy into his program. Every kid was valued and that really made the program successful, and he did the same thing with the coaches."

Tallon said it wasn't uncommon for players to come over for dinner, advice, or even stay with her family if things weren't going well in their own lives.

"He just took the extra time for the kids -- those kids that he saw headed down the wrong path in life, he would pick them out and say, `Look, you have some choices, you can either take this aggression that you have and you can come out with us and use it on the football field or you can keep making the bad choices that you're making.'"

Life-long coach

August compiled a record of 135-60 during his 19 years as head coach at Dallas, including three league titles. In 1988, the Dragons reached the title game again, where they fell to Philomath.

August moved on to become the head coach at McKay after that, staying for seven seasons before retiring from teaching and coaching in 1996 due to health reasons.

He didn't stay retired long.

"Pitiful," Betty August said with a chuckle, referring to his return to the game just a few months later, as he began his 12-year tenure as an assistant coach for the Linfield College football program.

Ron August

"He felt it was a mistake three days after he retired."

In 2004, Ron August was part of one more championship when Linfield captured the NCAA Division III title.

"There's only one thing that can compare (to the 1986 state title) and that's the national championship that we experienced in 2004," Betty August said.

"How can we be so lucky to have both? It was wonderful."

After stepping down from Linfield in 2007, August -- a member of both the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame as well as the DHS Athletics Hall of Fame -- continued to teach on the football field, volunteering as an assistant football coach for McKay, Santiam Christian and in 2011, he coached Dallas' special teams.

Leaving a legacy

The naming of the facility process -- for most -- is new in Dallas athletics history. The only other athletic facility bearing a name is the football stadium, titled Gallaspy Stadium after former Pedee Mill owner Mel Gallaspy, who was instrumental in its construction in 1965.

"Well, when you go year after year and the thought doesn't even enter anyone's mind to name a facility or a field after someone, and when someone like Ron, who had built this program to the level of prominence that it had -- to me, it was a no-brainer to honor the man that really brought that strong tradition to our community," said Boustead, a member of the proposal committee.

A ceremony unveliing the naming -- which has not been finalized in terms of where Ron August Field will appear -- will be held this coming football season at halftime of Dallas' homecoming football game against Woodburn Oct. 5.

Betty August now resides in Salem, where she and Ron lived since 1991.

But she's adamant that Dallas -- where she and her family spent 27 years -- is her home.

"It's just so unbelievable -- you just don't realize that something like this would ever happen to your loved one," August said of the naming.

"To have it come to fruition and to know that the townspeople loved your loved one, and to give him this honor -- it's so overwhelming."

RON AUGUST 1941-2012

Football coaching stops:

Dallas High 1964-1988 (head coach from 1970-1988); McKay High (head coach) 1989-1995; Linfield College (assistant) 1996-2007; Volunteered as an assistant at McKay, Santiam Christian and Dallas (2007-2011).

NOTABLE NUMBERS

135-60 -- August's head coaching mark at Dallas, the program's record for all-time wins.

25 -Years he spent at Dallas as a teacher and coach, which also included a stint as an assistant track and field coach.

16 -- Consecutive playoff appearances for August's teams of Dallas and McKay, where he totaled a career win-loss record of 183-75.

:::::

 

Dallas High School names track honoring supporters Paul and Judee Ward

 

By Steve Brandon Polk County Itemizer-Observer June 8, 2022

 

A special night is only three months away for a couple that has been very special to Dallas High athletics.

On Sept. 9, when Dallas plays host to McKay in football, the school will make this an official name: Paul and Judee Ward Track.

Having gained school board approval, the athletic department and Dallas supporters will show their appreciation for the Wards by naming the track in their honor.

There’s a long, long list of things the Wards have done for the school and its athletes over the years.

“There was nothing they didn’t do,” said Kathy Voves, one of those spearheading the track name decision and planning for Sept. 9.

Paul Ward came to Dallas as the head track coach and, while serving in that role, did numerous other tasks for the Dragons. He coached football as the head man, as a varsity assistant and as the junior varsity coach. He also has volunteered for Kids, Inc., and broadcast Dallas football games on radio and television.

Wife Judee has been a central and regular figure at Dallas sports events, as well, helping in a variety of ways.

The Wards have supported fundraisers, supplying crab and fish for meals, and helped sponsor benefit golf tournaments, with Judee planning and coordinating meals.

“Paul and Judee have dedicated their whole life to the kids in Dallas and to Dallas athletics,” Voves said. “Anytime anything needs to be done, they always step up.”

The Wards have helped the Dallas Booster Club and been key to the success of major projects, such as track improvements, a scoreboard and a baseball pitching machine.

The words “Paul and Judee Ward Track” will go in one of the lanes on the high school track, and a bronze plaque with their photo will be placed on an elevated bench at the north end of the track.

On Sept. 9, the festivities will begin at 5:30 p.m., with a social time and snacks and drinks in the cafeteria. A handful of people will speak about the Wards, and an open mike will allow others to comment on the Wards’ impact.

The dedication will take place during halftime, with more speakers.

 

::::

 Scoreboard donation an all-around winner: The sale of Paul and Judee Ward's boat is Dallas' gain.


Polk County Itemizer-Observer July 17, 2008

 

DALLAS, Oregon -- Longtime Dallas residents Paul and Judee Ward recently donated about $100,000 to help replace the high school's aging scoreboard at Gallaspy Field.

The generous gesture can be viewed as a win-win situation because the school gets to replace a scoreboard that's clearly past its prime and the Wards get a significant tax break with the Internal Revenue Service.

Upon closer inspection, though, the move could be called a win-win-win-win situation.

First of all, it's likely no one will enjoy the new scoreboard more than Paul Ward, a former DHS coach who now serves as a commentator for radio and television broadcasts of Dallas football games.

"The thing I like is that it'll upgrade football and it'll upgrade track meets," Paul Ward said. "It helps the public, and it helps me because I get to watch it. Where the scoreboard is now, you have to stick your head out of the window (of the press box) to see it. Now, we'll be able to see it. You should have some home-field advantages."

And the money for the gift came from the sale of an 83-foot commercial fishing vessel -- the Grumpy J -- that will not be missed.

"It was becoming a bigger headache every year with all the restrictions and requirements they put you through," Paul Ward said. "They got a good deal on the boat. I got a good deal because it's out of my hair, and I got way more than I paid for it."

The new scoreboard will be similar to the one at Linfield's Maxwell Field. It will have a screen capable of showing video (but not in-game replays) and various statistics. It will display the usual information -- score, down, etc., -- and will be topped by a fire-breathing rendition of Dexter the Dragon.

For track and field, the board is capable of showing places, names and times. The school, though, will have to come up with an additional $5,000-$10,000 for an automated timing system to make the scoreboard fully functional.

"We knew this was something that's been needed for a long time," Judee Ward said. "It's really evident during the track season. Basically, all the other schools in our league have scoreboards that show times and everything. This is going to be modern technology at its best. It's going to be exciting. Go Dragons go."

The new scoreboard will be situated in the southeast corner of the field rather than the southwest, which will make it easier to see from the home side of the field.

Athletic director Grant Boustead said the installation will begin in late August. It's unknown whether the new scoreboard will be ready for the Aug. 29 season opener against Springfield.

The old scoreboard, installed sometime in the early 1980s, will remain in place until the new one is operational.

"Obviously, their generosity is just amazing," Boustead said of the Wards. "But they've been longtime devoted Dallas backers so it isn't surprising they would step up and make this kind of contribution. We depend a lot on people like the Wards when we have big needs the school district cannot cover."

And the Wards were happy to trade in the boat named "J" for Judee (who isn't really grumpy) for a new scoreboard. But they are a bit miffed the new owners painted it blue instead of the black and orange (Dallas colors) they favored.

"Paul's heart is in it, and mine is too," Judee Ward said of the couple's ties to Dallas High School. "Why donate it when you're dead? Having been in the teaching field, I can tell you two years after you're gone, nobody knows who you are."

Beatrice Lillian Gallaspy

Salem Statesman-Journal; January 22, 1981

DALLAS – Beatrice Lillian Gallaspy, 78, of 348 W. Ellendale Ave., died Tuesday in the Dallas Nursing Home.

They married April 23, 1927.

Born in Bell Center Wisc., she grew up in Fresno, Calif., She later moved to Klamath Falls and in 1947 to Salem, here her husband purchased Arrow Mils.

They came to Dallas in 1949 and bought the L&L Planing Mill which later was moved to Pedee and became the Pedee Lumber Co.

She and her husband. Melvin, established the Bernice L. Gallaspy Foundation.

Survivors besides her husband include a daughter, Ann, Scotts Mills; brothers Justin Anderson, Fresno, and Gene Anderson, Monmouth; and sister Elizabeth Stockdale, Fresno.

Services will be 10am Saturday in the Assembly of God Church under the direction of AAsum mortuary. Internment in Twin Oaks Memorial Garden. The family suggests contributions to the Drift Creek Mennonite Camp.

 

FROM FIND-A-GRAVE

Beatrice Lillian Gallaspy

Birth Date:           28 Sep 1901

Birth Place:          Bell Center, Crawford County, Wisconsin

Death Date:          20 Jan 1981

Death Place:         Polk County, Oregon

Cemetery:             Restlawn Memory Gardens

Burial:                   West Salem, Polk County, Oregon

Spouse:                  Melvin George Gallaspy

 

 LUMBERMAN GALLASPY DEAD AT 79

Salem Statesman-Journal Wed., August 12, 1981

DALLAS, Oregon –Dallas lumberman and philanthropist Melvin G. Gallaspy, 550 SW River Drive, died Monday at age 79 in St. Vincent Hospital in Portland.

Born in Chopin, Louisiana, he came to this area in 1947 and bought an interest in Arrow Mills, Salem. IN 1949 he bought the Dallas Planing Mill, changing the name to Pedee Lumber Co. after moving it to Pedee. He sold the mill to the Ostrom Lumber Co., in 1979.

Known as “Mr. Donor,” by Dallas citizens, he helped finance church parking lots, rest home meals, and football field improvements. He was instrumental in building the Dallas football stadium, which was named for him. Earnings from the fund will be used for scholarships for Dallas High graduates.

He created the $100,000 Beatrice K. Gallaspy Foundation in honor of his wife, Bea, who died in January.

He received the Dallas Samaritan award in 1975, and in 1980 was named Dallas First Citizen of the Year.

 

FROM FIND-A-GRAVE

Melvin George Gallaspy

Birth Date:   11 Jul 1902

Birth Place:  Mansfield, DeSoto Parish, Louisiana

Death Date:  10 Aug 1981

Death Place: Washington County, Oregon

Cemetery:     Restlawn Memory Gardens

Burial:           West Salem, Polk County, Oregon

Spouse:         Beatrice Linnian Gallaspy

 

ANN GALLASPY, DAUGHTER OF MEL and BEATRICE GALLASPY

Salem Statesman-Journal, April 19-20, 2013.

 Scotts Mills lost one of its most colorful and generous hearted residents when Ann Gallaspy passed from this world at her home November 18, 2012.

Ann, the only child of Melvin G. Gallaspy and his wife Beatrice L. Gallaspy (nee Anderson) was born April 17, 1935 in Klamath Falls, Oregon. She had a privileged upbringing in pre and post- World War II Oregon as the daughter of a successful timber man. She displayed early talents in music and art.

Following her youth and teen years in Pedee, Oregon Ann matriculated at Arizona State University where she obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. Her career in the field of fashion and design took her to the whirl of New York and Chicago in the 50's and 60's. Her jobs ran the gamut from modeling to fashion merchandising to textile design.

Ann returned to Oregon in the early 70's and gravitated to the emerging creative, artistic, and counter cultural community in Silverton and Scotts Mills where she lovingly became known by various sobriquets including "Abiqua Annie". Her local contemporaries and lifelong friends included John Seltz, "the Yieldo Bandido" and "Abiqua Bill" who both predeceased her. At various times during this period she also became a beloved caretaker, confidant or mentor to a number of young people who thrived under her influence including Annabelle Spotted Eagle and Sinaloa Brier. At other times Ann also provided a home and comfort for adults who needed a safe, sober or healing environment.

Ann's devotion to the peace movement and deep interest in Native American culture brought her to become acquainted with Austin Two Moons, an elder and spiritual leader of the Northern Cheyenne Nation who became, perhaps, the most influential teacher in her life. She devoted much energy, time, and financial support to Two Moons' "Peace through Unity Foundation" and the creation of a memorial monument at the Little Bighorn Battle Field to encourage peace among people of all races. Her relationship with Austin Two Moons, his wife Hilda Hart Two Moons, and their descendants became so meaningful to Ann that she came to consider herself an adopted sister and auntie in their band. She was never happier than when she was surrounded at her home in the Scotts Mills hills by members of the extended Two Moons' family who visited from Rosebud County, Montana.

Ann became widely known in the area for her giving ceremonies and practices. She bestowed her largesse not only on friends but on disadvantaged individuals she encountered in her travels. Many have furniture, blankets, quilts, linens or cookware in their homes as evidence of Ann's benevolence. Many received lovely garments Ann specially selected with her impeccable eye for fine fabric, design, and color.

In her later years Ann's generosity reached an apex when she single handedly endowed and assembled an entire children's library collection consisting of more than 4,000 books and DVDs. This collection is located within the Dr. John Woodenlegs Memorial Library on the Chief Dull Knife College campus in Lame Deer Montana. Ann dedicated this collection known as the Two Moons Children's Collection as a memorial to Mr. and Mrs. Two Moons who preceded her in death and who in life shared Ann's desire to expose children living on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation to works of Native American literature and art. Ann would have wanted any contributions in her memory to be directed to ongoing funding of this special collection.

Ann's survivors include her first cousin Dorothy Malkie and her daughter Kathleen Malkie both of West Virginia

A memorial gathering honoring Ann's passage on "Grandmother Earth" will be held at Ann's home Sunday, April 21 at 2 pm. If you require directions, please telephone 1-503-888-3194 or 503-873-7277. Bring a song, a verse, a photo or a special memory to share in Ann's honor. A potluck meal will follow.


SCHOLARSHIPS FUNDED BY THE GALLASPYS

Based on stories in the May 14, 1980. Salem Capital Journal and the May 14, 1980, Oregon Statesman of Salem

Melvin Gallaspy is donating $100,000 in honor of his wife, Beatrice L. Gallaspy. His wife has been ill and in a Dallas nursing home for some time. The money will be deposited in to an account at the Oregon Bank said Superintendent Gordon Kunke of the Dallas School District.

A trust fund has been established to provide two four-year scholarships each year for graduating Dallas High School seniors.

This year’s scholarships will be somewhat less than future grants since they will be based on about six months’ interest rather than a full year, he said.

He expects the recipients will receive quarterly payments for the term in which they are in school, but that has not been formerly decided.

Recipients will be chosen on the basis of scholarship, citizenship, respect for law and order and a desired to continue on to college.

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1966 'The Dragon' yearbook of Dallas High School had these photos and this information about the school's new stadium, which would be named for Mel and Bea Gillaspy: "NEW COVERED GRANDSTAND is scheduled to shelter cheering fans during the coming 1966-67 athletic season."