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Alvin T. Smith House

Alvin T. Smith House
Alvin T. Smith House 1.jpg
Front of house in 1934
Location Forest Grove, Oregon, USA
Coordinates 45°30′15″N 123°6′14″W / 45.50417°N 123.10389°W / 45.50417; -123.10389Coordinates: 45°30′15″N 123°6′14″W / 45.50417°N 123.10389°W / 45.50417; -123.10389
Built 1854-1856
Architectural style Greek Revival style
NRHP Reference # 74001721
Added to NRHP November 8, 1974

The Alvin T. Smith House is a two-story home on Elm Street in Forest Grove, Oregon, United States. Completed in 1856, it is the second oldest building in the city and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. A Greek Revival style house, it was built by pioneer Alvin T. Smith beginning in 1854.

Alvin Smith settled on a 643 acres (260 ha) farm on the Tualatin Plains south of what became West Tuality Plains in 1841. He and his wife were the first permanent Euro-American settlers in the area that would later become Forest Grove. An earlier cabin on the property was destroyed in a flood, and their second cabin later became a post office. In 1854, he and his wife Abigail began the construction of a new home. Alvin was a trained carpenter and did the work himself. Construction finished in 1856, and is the second oldest wood framed building in Forest Grove after Old College Hall at Pacific University. Abigail died in 1858, with Alvin continuing to live in the home with his second wife Jane until 1870. The couple moved to downtown Forest Grove, but continued to own the property.

Alvin died in 1888, and Jane leased the house until around 1920 when she died. The next owner sold the estate to the Zurcher family circa 1940. Alvin T. Smith House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 8, 1974. The house was abandoned around 1990.

In 2002, the Friends of Historic Forest Grove began plans to purchase the home and restore it. The group worked with the Oregon Historic Preservation Office to purchase the property. In 2005, a methamphetamine lab was removed from the basement and the house decontaminated. In March 2005, the group purchased the home for $75,000 after raising $175,000, with some of the funds raised through a calendar featuring nude members at the house. Long term plans call for turning the property into a center for learning about the cultural heritage of the area.


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