A Report on the Second Season's
Excavations at Waiilatpu
1948 Report, Part 3: Framing
THOMAS R. GARTH
Published in
Oregon Historical Quarterly June, 1948.
Volume XLIX, Number 2, pages 117-136.
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Table of Contents 1948 Report
Although there is considerable evidence as to
the construction of the floors, most of the walls were worn down
to floor level or below, so that information as to the construction
of the upper part of the house is meager. More than probably a frame
was buried in the adobe walls with posts (studs) at intervals of
4 feet by means of which the roof was tied in with the rest of the
house. The header-stretcher method of laying up the brick facilitated
the burying of posts in the wall in this manner. One of Whitman's
associates, Rev. H. H. Spalding, says that the house was, "timber
fastened."10 Although
I have been unable to find the exact meaning for this term, it would
seem to imply that there was framework which fastened the roof and
flooring together. Burying a frame in the walls was, besides, the
most common method of adobe construction in the West, and other
buildings at the mission were so constructed.11
Archeological evidence of such a buried frame occurred in the wall
just north of the doorway between room C and the kitchen (E) and
again 6 1/2 feet to the south along the same wall, where another
door led to the outside. The wall in this area was higher than usual
(close to 12 inches). In the first instance, in the center of the
wall there were the charred remains of a post with charred joists
coming into it from either side. In the second case, the charred
joists came from the west to the center of the wall. Possibly such
posts were only buried in the walls so that door casings could be
attached and would occur only adjacent to doorways. However, it
is much more likely that they were buried at intervals throughout
the walls whether in door areas or not.
The appearance of the charred joists here gives
us an inkling as to the height of the floors themselves. Assuming
the joists to be two by sixes, as they were in some cases, this
would put the floors at a height of approximately 17 inches above
the ground. Thus there would have been ample space for the Osborn
family to hide under the floor, as they did during the massacre.
There were breather holes in the adobe walls below floor level,
about 12 inches by 4 inches in size, according to Mrs. Nancy Osborn
Jacobs.12 Buried
in the southeast corner of the east wing of the building was a charred
3-inch-diameter corner post flanked by a similar post 4 feet away
in the south wall and a 3-inch diameter post hole 4 feet away in
the east wall. Here is our most conclusive evidence of a framework
buried in the walls. These posts were apparently charred at about
the floor level, i.e., 14 to 18 inches above the base of the walls.
In Plate II you will note the adobe-brick lugs coming out from the
walls at intervals of 2 1/2 to 3 feet. These lugs, which were usually
two bricks high, must have supported a horizontal timber (sleeper)
laid next to the wall to support the floor joists which were probably
tenoned or notched to fit into it. Whitman used a heterogeneous
collection of timbers for floor joists. As mentioned previously,
some were sawed or square-hewed 2 by 6 pine timbers. Most, however,
were rounded logs of cottonwood (and some alder?) which were hewed
to a flat surface on the upper face.13
These were called puncheons. T. J. Farnham, who visited the mission
in 1839 at the time the Mission House was being constructed, wrote
as follows:
[Dr. Whitman] giving orders to others to yoke
their oxen, get the axes,
and go into the forest for the lower sleepers of the new mission
house.... The doctor returned near night with his timber, one
elm
[alder?] and a number of quaking-asp [cottonwood?] sticks; and
appeared gratified that he had been able to find the requisite
number of
sufficient size to support his floor.... Mr. Monger [sic] and
a Sandwich
Islander were laying the floors, making the doors, etc. The lumber
used
was a very superior quality of yellow pine plank, which Dr. Whitman
had cut with a whipsaw among the blue mountains, fifteen miles
distant.14
The sleepers referred to were no doubt the heavy
timbers which rested adjacent to the wall on the adobe lugs.
The joists in rooms B, C, and D ran the 18-foot
width of the house and were placed every 2 feet. They were supported
by three parallel sleepers, one on the east side of the room, a
second on the west side, and a third in the center. Adobe bricks
spaced from 4 to 6 feet apart supported the central sleeper.
The joists in the pantry, kitchen, room G, and
the schoolroom ran the long-way of the building (east-west). In
the schoolroom (H) the 2 by 6 joists were spaced 3 feet 4 inches
apart with their east end buried in the wall or resting on a sleeper.
The three center joists were supported by posts where they abutted
the chimney in the west end of the room. (See
Figure 4.) The space between joists seems
excessive and must have been resorted to because of a lumber shortage,
The full one-inch thickness of the plank flooring must have helped
prevent the floors from being too springy. A central sleeper ran
crosswise of the joists, it in turn being supported by a post resting
on the granite footing mentioned previously.
There was no evidence of a floor in rooms I and
K, though possibly the room in the southeast end of the building
was floored, or partially so, if it is the new room referred to
in accounts of the massacre. According to Spalding it was to be
a cook room, probably for use in summer to keep from heating the
main part of the house.15
Rooms I and K, one of which was a hen-house and the other a storehouse
or wood-house very probably, may well have had only dirt floors.16
Next: Part 4
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Endnotes
10Spalding, in Richardson,
Whitman Mission, 150.
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11T. R. Garth, "Early Architecture in
the Northwest," Pacific Northwest Quarterly, XXXVIII (1947),
224-27.
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12 Nancy O. Jacobs, "Reminiscences of
Josiah Osborn and His journey to the Pacific Coast and Life at the
Whitman Mission," MS, Whitman College.
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13 Of 18 charred joists analyzed 10
proved to be black cottonwood and 8 were ponderosa pine. Of 3 sleepers
identified, 2 were ponderosa pine and one was cottonwood. We are
indebted to Professor Harvey D. Erickson of the College of Forestry
at the University of Washington for the identifications.
Back
14 T. J. Farnham, Travels in the
Great Western Prairies, in R. G. Thwaites, Early Western
Travels, XXVIII (Cleveland, 1906), 333-37.
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15 41st, Congress, 3rd Session, Executive
Document No. 37, 27 ff.
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16 The inventory (Richardson, op. cit.,
151) mentions an "Outkitchen with Store room above 20 x 24." The
20-foot width as well as the location of the description following
an enumeration of items in the Indian Room of the Mission House
might lead one to the conclusion that the outkitchen was part of
the Mission House, i.e., that rooms I and K had been reconverted
into an outkitchen. Although this is a possibility, the greatest
weight of evidence points to the First House, a building 75 feet
to the south, as being the outkitchen referred to in the inventory.
Although this building was actually 30 by 36 feet, Spalding was
often inaccurate as to the dimensions he quotes. Two years after
the massacre it would be surprising if he could still accurately
enumerate the dimensions of all buildings at the Whitman Mission,
which he had only visited from time to time, his own mission being
near present-day Lewiston, Idaho. Besides, in 1847 the First House
may have been little used except as a storehouse and outkitchen
in summer (this function is mentioned in letters), and so not well
remembered by Spalding and others. If the outkitchen referred to
in the inventory had been in rooms I and K, there would not have
been much space for a storeroom above- as there was only a low attic
here. The First House, on the contrary, had a half-story above the
main part of the house. We found no evidence of a floor in rooms
I and K, whereas the inventory lists elaborate flooring and joists
for the outkitchen as well as a good fireplace, all of which were
to be found in the First House.
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