Lee, Zak, and Lois Hyslin, 8285 SW Garden Home Road

The Hyslin property on Garden Home Road at SW 83rd Avenue resembles “old Garden Home.” According to County records, this large home was built in 1930, although the family suspects it might have been earlier.

Zachary and Lee Hyslin have lived there most of their lives with their mother Lois Hyslin. Their paternal grandmother, Catherine Hyslin, also lived there in the 1940s through the 1970s. Catherine’s husband and the grandfather, Thor Hyslin, is mentioned in this story. Click here to read their father Richard Hyslin’s obituary from Texas.

Grandparents Thor, from Norway, and Catherine Hyslin were the second owners of the property. Thor’s father was a physician who died at age 57. Thor is remembered to have served in the Postal Service on the rail lines, not in Garden Home. He told the children he had to wear a service gun with that position. He worked other jobs and was an avid golfer. Catherine attended Oregon State College in Corvallis, majoring in music performance.

The father, Richard Hyslin, moved to Texas in about 1967 where he accepted a position as a professor at Pan American College, now University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley. Serving as Chair of the Art Department for 13 years, he was a recognized artist who exhibited his ceramics and sculpture nationally. Lois, now retired, has been a dental hygienist.

Lee has been a mechanical engineer and Zak a software engineer.

Zak, (as he calls himself) and Lee remember a wonderful childhood of adventure and lots of kids for all the free time games. They saw pheasants all about and loved catching the tadpoles and crawdads and garter snakes to scare each other. They climbed the cedar trees and hunted golf balls from the Portland Golf Club to sell back to the players. Whiffle ball and baseball were played in the front yard. Neighboring children taught them how to pull up the strong apple tree sprouts to poke into dropped apples and sling them down the road.

Click here to see a class photo and Dick Vonada’s version of the BB gun wars.

The Hyslins were able to look down the road and see the Portland Golf Club’s annual 4th of July fireworks and presentations, north of their property a block or two, with fewer houses and trees than now. Zak and Lee also liked earning money as caddies at the Golf Club, especially carrying two bags, and earning twice as much. The bags were heavy and a challenge to do a good job. Baseball cards and Nerf footballs, the fun goes on.

The large property, 0.7 acres, contains various fruit trees such as Royal Anne cherries, King apples, and more.

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March 2023 News

In this edition: The Search for Cora, Spring flowers, record snow fall, new officers, and In Memoriam.

Welcome to our website about historic Garden Home. In the People and Places pages, you’ll find well over two hundred stories, and over two thousand photos of vintage Garden Home and residents attending our events. To receive the free newsletter and email Updates, contact us at GardenHomeHistory@gmail.com or call Marie Pacella at 503-244-5758 or Elaine Shreve at 503-246-5879.

Upcoming events

The search for CoraThe Search for Cora: Monday, May 8th at 6:30 PM at the Garden Home Recreation Center, Room 9, presented by Andy Shreve. The surprising and tragic tale uncovered while searching for lost relatives. The Board of Directors will be meeting from 5 to 6:15 PM (all are welcome).

Spring has come!

Send us a couple photos of the blooming plants in your yard for our next UPDATE. Hope you are well and looking forward to some nice weather. That February snowstorm set records! Reminds me of the Whitney’s (now the Old Market Pub) flocked Christmas trees.

Daffodils on SW 87th Ave

Daffodils on SW 87th Ave

Springtime daffodils

Springtime daffodils

February 2023 snow fall

February 2023 snow fall

February 2023 record snow fall

February 2023 record snow fall

Whitney's Cannery - Leona Whitney and CHEER UP IT MUST BE COLDER IN ALASKA sign 1969

Whitney’s Cannery – Leona Whitney and CHEER UP IT MUST BE COLDER IN ALASKA sign 1969

Whitney's Cannery - Flocked Christmas trees - Leona Whitney 1970

Whitney’s Cannery – Flocked Christmas trees – Leona Whitney 1970

We have some changes in our officers for our Garden Home History Project.

Mickey Mistler Lindsay is our new Chairperson, and Esta Mapes continues (thankfully) as our Vice-Chair. Marie Pacella will continue to keep up our 500 subscribers mailing list and send out our UPDATES and Gazettes. Marie will be orienting Susan Houseman to the Treasurer’s role. Elaine Shreve will continue as Editor, doing interviews and publications. Interested to interview or write? Email: GardenHomeHistory@gmail.com

In Memoriam

Frank Lesage: He and his wife Joanne raised their family in Garden Home, living on SW 87th Ave. for over 50 years. Obituary.

Nancy Tamborra Donner: Nancy was very active in the early Garden Home community and lived up the hill on Garden Home Road. Her very interesting story is on our website. Obituary.

Thomas J. Lekas: The Lekas family shared their Century Home, with story on our website. Obituary.

Kevin Freeman: This three-time equestrian Olympian lived on the eastern section of Mayo Street with his family. Debbie McKiernan Long fondly recalls her times with the horses and this family. Obituary.

Doc Hickman: Doc’s wife Linda called to tell us that Doc had died in February, 2023, (no obituary). Doc’s story on our website is one of my favorites, full of Garden Home history…and fun! And the big photo of the kids and the dog is my favorite.

Get Involved

Our Board of Directors continues their monthly meetings. Call to attend. Current subjects include displays in the Library and bulletin board, Century Homes program (we have some 39 Century Homes in Garden Home), Historic Garden Home street signs, new businesses, our newsletters, program planning with the Garden Home Library and more! More Garden Home History walking Tours. We welcome new volunteers to our committees; let us know your interest. Call Mickey at 503-805-5518 or Esta at 503-246-5758.

John Pacella, Susan and Stan Houseman, Jan Fredrickson, Kevin Mistler March 2022 crop

John Pacella, Susan and Stan Houseman, Jan Fredrickson, Kevin Mistler March 2022

Sharon Vedder, Esta Mapes, Elaine Shreve, Marie Pacella March 2022 crop

Sharon Vedder, Esta Mapes, Elaine Shreve, Marie Pacella March 2022

Historic Garden Home street sign

Historic Garden Home street sign

Historic Garden Home street signs: We currently have over 40 of the Historic Garden Home street sign toppers in our community. Click here to view photos of the signs and for information about sponsoring a sign.

Our generous donors permit us to replace the Historic Garden Home street signs once for signs that disappear.

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Kevin J. Freeman obituary

Kevin J. Freeman

Kevin J. Freeman

October 21, 1941 to March 10, 2023

The equestrian world lost one of its most distinguished luminaries March 10, as three-time Olympian Kevin J. Freeman passed away peacefully, surrounded by his loving family, in a Portland, Ore. hospital.

Kevin, 81, represented the United States at three Olympic games and the Pan American Games, and was also a successful businessman and coach and mentor to equestrians around the world. Kevin’s greatest legacy, however, is that of the large and loving family he and his wife Barrie created and nurtured during their 52-year marriage, including four children, six grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

Born in 1941 and raised in Portland, Kevin spent many of his summers at his parent’s farm in Molalla. He attended St. Thomas More Catholic School in Portland and then graduated from Lincoln High School, where he met his future wife, Barrie Hallinan. He went on to earn his undergraduate degree from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and his MBA from Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. Kevin and Barrie, who were best friends in high school, eventually married and raised their three sons (Eric, Peter, and Kevin) and daughter (Wendy) at their Portland home, Clodomir Farm.

Kevin and Barrie enjoyed meeting up regularly with their large family to share meals and a laugh, and he was always available if his children, family, or friends needed an encouraging word or any kind of help. He loved playing jokes on his children, with his mischievous side showing through as he taught them to put a cup of water above a door for maximum dousing during indoor water fights and lined them up on Christmas morning, by age, making them wait until they nearly burst before opening presents. A rabid sports fan, Kevin often attended Portland Trail Blazer games, and he and Barrie loved watching Gonzaga University basketball games (their son Kevin graduated from Gonzaga). He’d also have rousing basketball games with his children and neighborhood kids and parents.

Kevin’s many storied equestrian accomplishments include winning a gold medal as part of the U.S. team that competed at the 1963 Pan-American Games in Sao Paulo, Brazil, where he also won an individual silver medal. He helped the U.S. team win silver medals in the 1964, 1968, and 1972 Olympic Games, and in 1964, he was the U.S. National Three-Day Event Champion and won the Olympic Trials in Gladstone, New Jersey. At the 1968 Olympics, Kevin demonstrated his remarkable equestrian skills, riding Chalan, whom he’d ridden only once before. Kevin capped off his Olympic career at the 1972 games, finishing 5th individually and leading the American contingent to a team silver as the highest-placed U.S. rider. He had one of only three clear rounds (no faults) in the treacherous cross-country phase, riding one of his longtime equine partners, Good Mixture.

Kevin also excelled in the equestrian disciplines of Steeplechase and Show Jumping. Showing his true excellence as an athlete, he placed third in the Maryland Hunt Cup, considered one of the most grueling steeplechase courses in the world, and also won the 1968 Iroquois Steeplechase in Tennessee, the Pennsylvania Hunt Cup in 1969, and the New Jersey Hunt Cup in 1970. He then turned his attention to the sport of Show Jumping, where he competed and won at the highest levels across North America, including at the illustrious Spruce Meadows and Thunderbird show parks.

When not competing, you’d often find him coaching students, whom he carefully guided through their equestrian careers. Kevin delighted in sharing his knowledge with the hundreds of horses and riders he trained over the last 50 years at Clodomir Farm. He also hosted the Freeman Farm Horse Trials at his family’s Molalla farm for several years, attracting competitors from around the country.

An all-around athlete, Kevin was a starter and varsity athlete for the 1961-62 Cornell University men’s polo team and an avid skier. When he wasn’t riding, you could find Freeman schussing the slopes at Mt. Hood and Mt. Bachelor and feeding his voracious appetite for reading and Barrie’s chocolate chip cookies!

Kevin was never one to boast, but his achievements didn’t go unnoticed. He was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1991 and into the United States Eventing Association Hall of Fame in 2009 along with his 1972 Olympics mount, Good Mixture.

Kevin’s love of family also was apparent in his highly successful business career, as he worked closely with his father, Percy, and his two brothers, Michael and Perk, to run J.A. Freeman and Son, a farm-implement manufacturing company that was based out of Portland for more than 100 years. When the family sold the business to Allied Systems Company in 2004, he and his two brothers continued working together, creating the Freeman Group, a commercial real estate company that he helped run until his death.

Kevin’s loss will be deeply felt by his family, who’ll lovingly remember him, including his wife, Barrie; his four children, Eric Freeman (and wife Stephanie) of Portland; Peter Freeman (and wife Anna) of Beaverton; Kevin of Christchurch, Barbados; and Wendy Freeman Gallo (and husband Edgar) of Montgomery, Texas; his brother Perk Freeman; sister Laurie Freeman; and his six grandchildren, two great-grandchildren, and numerous cousins, nieces, nephews, and dear friends. Kevin was preceded in death by his brother Michael Freeman and his parents, Percy and Rosemary O’Donnell Freeman of Portland.

Family and friends are invited to a memorial service for Kevin on March 22 at 10 am at St. Mary’s Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, followed by a reception. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Kevin’s name to the United States Equestrian Team or to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

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Thomas J. Lekas obituary

September 20, 1930 to February 23, 2023

Thomas J. Lekas, 92, peacefully passed away Thursday, Feb. 23, 2023 in Vancouver, Wash.

He is survived by his family including his beloved wife, Catherine “Cat Bird;” children, James Lekas (Holly), Janet Chapman (Dave), George Lekas (Jennifer), Leah Kravas (Demetri); grandchildren, Sam and Angela Chapman, Andrew and Lauren, JJ and Rachael, Ryan Chiotti (Erica), Robin Hackett (Matthew), Ragan Hemenway (Blake) and Ellen Grose (Nolan); and great-grandchildren, Riley and Tanner, Audrey, and Lily. Tom was preceded in death by his parents, James and Assimina Lekas; his aunt, Irene Milon; brothers, Ernest and Andrew Lekas; son, John Lekas, and his first wife, Ann Strowger.
A funeral will be held at 11 a.m., Friday, March 3, 2023, at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral. Remembrances in lieu of flowers may be sent to Doernbecher Children’s Hospital or Camp Agape, Portland.

[Editor: Read about the Lekas Century Home.]

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Nancy Tamborra Donner obituary

Nancy Donner, Nov 8 2017

January 6, 1929 to December 21, 2022

On Dec. 21, 2022, Nancy P. Donner passed away peacefully, at her daughter’s home in Camas, Wash., surrounded by her family at 93.

Nancy lived in the Garden Home area for 50 years and was very active in her community. She was known and loved by many.

She is survived by her daughter, Nancy (Brian) McCarl; son, Larry (Jian) Donner; daughter, Suzanne (Jeff) Adams; and eight grandchildren. She was predeceased by her son, William and her daughter, Madilyn.

There will be a celebration of life at 2 p.m., Saturday, March 18, 2023, at Multnomah Presbyterian Church, 7555 S.W. 45th Ave., Portland, OR.

[Editor: Read our story about Nancy.]

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