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Mission Mill Museum

Thomas Kay Woolen Mill
SalemORMissionMill6.JPG
Thomas Kay Woolen Mill from the rear, showing the dye house
Willamette Heritage Center is located in Salem OR
Willamette Heritage Center
Location Salem, Oregon
Coordinates 44°56′6″N 123°1′37″W / 44.93500°N 123.02694°W / 44.93500; -123.02694Coordinates: 44°56′6″N 123°1′37″W / 44.93500°N 123.02694°W / 44.93500; -123.02694
Built 1889
Architect Walter D. Pugh
NRHP Reference # 73001579
Added to NRHP May 8, 1973

Willamette Heritage Center is a museum in Salem, Oregon, United States. The 5-acre site features several structures listed on the National Register of Historic Places including the Thomas Kay woolen mill, the Jason Lee House, Methodist Parsonage, John D. Boon House and the Pleasant Grove (Condit) Church. The houses and church were relocated to the mill site. The Center also includes a research library and archives of Marion County history.

The Center was created in 2010 from the merger of the Mission Mill Museum Association (est. 1964) and the adjacent Marion County Historical Society (est. 1950).

The Thomas Kay Woolen Mill was started in 1889, by Thomas Lister Kay, whose descendants eventually founded Pendleton Woolen Mills. The workforce of 50 labored 60-hour weeks. In 1895, a fire destroyed the mill. Ground was broken on a new mill structure on December 20, 1895 in the same location. This building, designed by architect W.D. Pugh, is the brick structure that stands today. the building opened to the public on May 15, 1896 to speeches,demonstrations and music.

The mill was operated by four generations of Kay family members. Thomas Lister Kay died in 1900 and his son Thomas B. Kay took over as president and served until his own death in 1931. Thomas B. Kay's son Ercel took over for his father, and Ercel's son Tom Kay took over for him.

The mill announced its closure in 1959, and all operations ceased by 1962.

Visitors can tour the mill buildings with displays of original 19th and 20th century machinery and photos about industrial wool processing.

The houses and church have been restored and furnished to a mid 19th-century appearance. The Jason Lee House features a special exhibit about early Oregon during the time of the Methodist Mission.

The museum includes a water power interpretive exhibit by Portland General Electric. The exhibit demonstrates how the mill was run using the water from Mill Creek.


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