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Saturday, April 29, 2023

Remembering Bosco and Milligan

 

You are probably too late to buy the grand, 138-year old High Victorian Italianate residence on NW Hoyt St., even if you were willing to pay more than the $1.125 million asking price.

 The well-preserved architectural gem is one of Portland’s last grand Italianate houses, many of which flourished in the city’s most elegant turn-of-the-century neighborhoods.  Portland’s wet weather and development trends eventually spelled doom for these carefully-crafted wooden marvels.

 This house is notable aside from its architectural charm and its lengthy home for a pioneer Portland butcher turned stockman, Joseph Bergman.  It was also the last home of Ben Milligan and Jerry Bosco, two of Portland’s early architectural preservation activists and artifact collectors.

 

From the late 1950s to their deaths in the late 1980s, Bosco and Milligan bought old houses and restored them in Southeast Portland, and spent countless hours retrieving more than 20,000 architectural artifacts from houses and buildings being torn down during those years.

 One of their last real estate purchases included the badly-deteriorated, two-story West’s Block at 701 SE  Grand Ave.   Built in 1883 as a store with housing on the second floor, the building had devolved to a strip club on the ground floor and uninhabitable space above a hundred years later.

 Thanks to a bequest in their wills and long, hard work from many friends, the West Block eventually was restored as the Architectural Heritage Center, which is owned by the Bosco-Milligan Foundation.  The center now houses a small fraction of their artifact collection, including dozens of historic pieces of stained glass.  The building also houses exhibits and offers lectures aimed at Portland’s architectural history and preservation.

 Philip Austin knew Milligan and Bosco during their collecting days and their final years at the Hoyt Street house.  “I was in there a lot, especially after they died,” he said.  “When I was working on cleaning out the house they had two of the bedrooms for storage, a front bedroom was the trunk room full of old trunks full of stuff, and a back bedroom had shelving with boxes filled with things.  In the basement were stain-glass windows and other stuff.  They had put in some ceiling medallions that they made and installed in the front parlors.

 Austin has looked at the photographs in the recent realty listings.  “It has been upgraded a lot since they were there,” he says.  While the interior shows many tasteful 21st Century changes, the exterior has been beautifully preserved. 

 As well it should have.  Having been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1983, any changes to the exterior would have been carefully regulated.

 ----Fred Leeson

Join Building on History’s email list by writing “add me” to fredleeson@hotmail.com

 


1 comment:

  1. JackinPort tried to enter this comment but had some sort of difficulty:
    I am very familiar with this house. I lived right behind it on Glisan St. for 13 years before I moved to the house in Beaumont that you remember. I knew the Hoyt St house then as the "Metzger House", though, not Bergman?
    When I bought in '97, mine was an 1886 Victorian "fixer" that I spent 11 years restoring. The Hoyt St house and mine were most likely among the very first structures built west of NW 21st. The style of the Merzger(Bergman) house reminded me of San Francisco's many slanted-bay window Italianate row houses. There were more like it in early Portland, but our ever expanding downtown gobbled up most of these over time. An historic photograph I saw from a balloon revealed many Italianate (and Gothic) houses that were later built-over with larger commercial or apartment developments. As far as I know, this is the only remaining Italianate house left in Portland. I would be happy to be proven otherwise!

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