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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Frank Evans Lesage obituary

August 8, 1925 to January 22, 2023

Frank Evans Lesage, a 40-year employee of The Oregonian Publishing Co. who left a lasting imprint as the longtime personnel director, passed away Jan. 22, 2023, from natural causes in hospice care in Portland. He was 97.

Frank was born Aug. 8, 1925, in Pittsfield, Mass., to Alaric P. and Blanche Lesage. He moved to Holden, Mass., as a child and briefly attended Holden High School. He graduated early from St. John’s High School in Worcester, Mass., and joined the U.S. Navy in 1944. He served on a PT boat before his discharge in 1946.

He earned an associate degree in pre-law in 1948 at Worcester Junior College, where he played baseball and sang in the glee club. Seeking new adventures, he drove across the country and enrolled at the University of Portland. He graduated in 1950 with a bachelor’s degree in business administration.

Frank married Joanne Barthel, whom he’d known since childhood, Sept. 4, 1954, in Westminster, Mass. They returned to Oregon and settled in the Garden Home area in unincorporated Washington County and raised six children there. Frank and Joanne were active members of St. Cecilia Catholic parish in Beaverton, volunteering for many duties.
He was hired as a circulation clerk at The Oregon Journal in 1949, then began work at The Oregonian in 1951 as a Circulation district manager. He moved into sales, first in Classified Advertising in 1953, then in Retail Advertising in 1957, specializing in restaurant ads. He transitioned to personnel in 1965 and was named the company’s first full-time personnel director a year later. He served in that capacity until his retirement in 1991. Among his many accomplishments were pushing for increased diversity among the newspaper’s hundreds of employees and helping orchestrate the merging of the staffs of The Oregonian and The Oregon Journal in 1982, which resulted in the largest newsgathering organization on the West Coast.

Frank was known for his woodworking skills, which he often put to use making toys for his kids; his ever-present tobacco pipe; his skepticism of modern technology (he wrote only on a manual typewriter); and for proudly maintaining his New England accent and his devotion to the Boston Red Sox. He was a longtime member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks and of the Order of the Antelope. He relished the Order of the Antelope’s annual treks to the Hart Mountain wildlife refuge.

He maintained an active lifestyle in retirement. He spent many hours in his backyard workshop, tended his vegetables and flowers, and did charity work. He was a volunteer in the Society of St. Vincent de Paul’s food pantry in Beaverton for many years. Frank also was a driving force behind Save the PT Boat Inc., a Portland-based nonprofit that has restored a derelict World War II craft, PT658, and turned it into a museum piece.
Frank and Joanne lived in the home they bought in 1954 – making several additions and renovations as the family grew – until 2022, when they moved to The Stafford retirement community in Lake Oswego. Frank spent his final days under excellent care at La Bella Vila hospice home in Southwest Portland.

Survivors include his loving wife of 68 years, Joanne; his children, Lisa Lesage (Jim Brown) of Bend, Pete (Ann) of Tigard, Paul (Noreen) of Lake Oswego, Nanette Robinson (Jim) of Gladstone, Mike of Gladstone, and Matt (Tammy) of Portland; nine grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.

Funeral Mass will be at 11 a.m., Thursday, Feb. 16, 2023, at St. Cecilia Catholic Church in Beaverton. Burial will be in Mt. Calvary Catholic Cemetery. Donations to Save the PT Boat Inc. or the St. Vincent de Paul Beaverton food pantry are requested in lieu of flowers.

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March 2023 UPDATE – Garden Home History Email

Hello to our Garden Home History Friends, do take care of yourselves and each other. Thank you for your generous donations, your nice comments, and hopefully, your good intentions to share your Garden Home memories with us! If you wish to receive the printed Gazette (3x a year) in addition to your email Gazette, reply with your mailing address.

We will have our Annual Meeting next Monday evening, March 13, 4:30 to about 6:00 pm. Election of officers, Annual Report from the Co-Chairs Elaine Shreve and Esta Mapes and the Treasurer’s Summary from Marie Pacella. The meeting will be at the 3-story black building at 6600 SW 92nd, Suite 200 on the second floor, the beautiful office of our new Board member Mickey Mistler Lindsay. This is across 92nd from the Scholls Ferry Automotive. Plenty of parking. We plan to have our April 10 meeting and presentation at the Garden Home Recreation Center.

Jan Fredrickson and Kevin Mistler stamping the mailer

Jan Fredrickson and Kevin Mistler stamping the mailer

Get Involved

We welcome new volunteers to our committees; let us know your interest. Call Elaine 503-246-5879, or Esta 503-246-5758.

Read more about Garden Home with hundreds of photos and stories at GardenHomeHistory.com. We love hearing your memories about Garden Home! Call us: Elaine Shreve at 503-246-5879 or Esta Mapes at 503-246-5758 or Stan Houseman at 503-679-3691. To unsubscribe, reply to GardenHomeHistory@gmail.com with “UNSUBSCRIBE” in the subject line.

Stay safe and well, from all of our dedicated Board of Directors: Esta Mapes, Sharon Vedder, John and Marie Pacella, Stan and Susan Houseman, Mickey Lindsay, Jan Fredrickson, Kevin Mistler, and Elaine Shreve. Tom Shreve is our webmaster.

– Elaine

Elaine Shreve

Elaine Shreve

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Firlock Lane

Historic directional markers at SW 78th and the Fanno Creek Trail, at the Fredrickson Wormwood Manor

Historic directional markers at SW 78th and the Fanno Creek Trail, at the Fredrickson Wormwood Manor

Firlock Lane (now SW 78th Avenue) was a major street in Garden Home, especially after 1908 when the Oregon Electric trains came. Firlock Lane ran from Garden Home Road north to the railroad tracks, where the Firlock Station shed stood next to the tracks. This was the original entry to the nine-hole Portland Golf Club until the current clubhouse was built on SW Scholls Ferry in 1928. The Aaron Frank farm was located across the tracks from the Firlock Station where they were able to load their show horses on the train for events in California or even Madison Square Garden in New York.

Louise Cook Jones list of residents

Louise Cook Jones has developed this list of the residents who lived on Firlock Lane in the early and mid 1900s. Many of these families were well-known in Garden Home, including the Poutala family who created and sold Firlock paint. Louise’s parents were Ernest and Melba Cook.

Here’s the names of the residents of Firlock Lane / 78th Avenue, as best we remember – each line is one house, the numbers refer to sequential homeowners:

On the West side of the street, beginning at Garden Home Road, moving toward dead end:

Vick and Ellen Bell (built house)
1. Mr. and Mrs. John Vermuel (built house) 3. John and Leah Vantzelfden, 4. Ernest and Melba Cook 5. woman who worked at PSU 6. The Tufts Family
1. Mr. and Mrs. Clark (owned land) 2. Mr. and Mrs. John Vermuel (built house) 3. The Tuft Family
1. Mr. and Mrs. Vermuel (owned land) 2. Phil and Marie Mistler (built house)
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wood
Carlo and Iris Poutala
Mr. and Mrs. Hess
Mr. and Mrs. Ganguine
The Haden family
The George family
Mr. and Mrs. Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Fredrickson
1. Bobbie Henderson (secretary Garden Home School) 2. Patty Jo James R.N.
1. The Stark family 2. The Pleasant family

On the East side of the street, beginning at GH Road:
Bill and Fama Partlow
1. Jim and Yvonne Partlow 2. Mr. and Mrs. Kickbush
1. Mel and Betts Hare 2. Steve Hare
Mr. and Mrs. Vermillion
1. Bill and Fama Partlow (before they built new house) 2. Karen McGuire
Mr. and Mrs. Watts
1. The Cates Family 2. The Hilldom Family
1. Mr. and Mrs. Shed 2. Vicky Shed
The Edwards Family
1. The King Family 2. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dardis

 

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CENTURY HOMES program

Carol Kochenderfer and Stan Houseman with a CENTURY HOME certificate

Carol Kochenderfer and Stan Houseman with a CENTURY HOME certificate

Century Home plaque on Kaplan Miner home

PROOF OF AGE: To be eligible the house or building must be 100 years of age or older. Original records attesting to the age of the building and/or the date as listed on the Washington County Assessment and Taxation Report will be considered proof of age for the home or building.

CONDITION AND APPEARANCE: Remodeling, additions, maintenance or changes prior to the date the house is designated a Century Home are acceptable to the extent the appearance of the house represents the period during which it was built. Having the installation of the plaque in no way restricts any future changes the owner(s) may wish to make to the building.

INSTALLATION OF CERTIFICATES and/or PLAQUE: Century Home program members from the Garden Home History Project wish to show our appreciation to you, the current homeowner(s), by acknowledging your home or building is a CENTURY HOME.
Installing the Certificate of Recognition and/or Plaque, if desired, provides an opportunity to invite family, friends or neighbors, to an event planned by the homeowner. If that is the case, please let us know in advance. Also, we request that the framed Certificate and/or the brass Plaque remain with the home.

DONATION: Join us in this recognition by becoming a member of our Century Home’s program for a small fee of $10. You will receive a framed certificate and future information helpful to homeowners of these homes. Donors have created a small fund to assist with costs if desired.

To participate or if you have questions, contact us at:
Stanley E Houseman – Cell: 503-697-3691
Sharon Vedder – Cell: 503-828-8827
Email: GardenHomeHistory@gmail.com

Current designated CENTURY HOMES:

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Kochenderfer CENTURY HOME designation

Carol Kochenderfer and Stan Houseman with a CENTURY HOME certificate

Carol Kochenderfer and Stan Houseman with a CENTURY HOME certificate

Kochenderfer house

Kochenderfer house

Carol with Godwin sisters, Jerry and Janene

Carol with Godwin sisters, Jerry and Janene

We are honored to have about 30 homes built over 100 years ago here in Garden Home. These homes help tell our history. Stan Houseman and Sharon Vedder will be sending out letters to these home addresses. If your home was built over 100 years ago, write to GardenHomeHistory@gmail.com or call Stan at 503-679-3691 or Sharon at 503-828-8827.

Carol Kochenderfer enjoys living in this 1920 home of William and Mary Steele Godwin at 7765 SW 87th Ave. After the Godwins moved here in the 1930s, Bill dug the basement with a shovel to put in a sawdust burning furnace and clothes line for drying clothes (the granddaughters tell us that he brewed beer down there also). Stan placed the plaque denoting the 100 year anniversary beside the main door. He also holding the Century Certificate which will be offered to all the 100 year homes. Our board of Directors enjoyed the event. By special invitation, two of Jack Godwin’s daughters, Jerri and Janene, came early for an opportunity to see inside the house where their grand parents had lived and where they had often visited, eaten, and played as grandchildren.

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December 2022 UPDATE – Garden Home History Email

Hello to our Garden Home History Friends, Happy Holidays to you all. Do take care of yourselves and each other. Thank you for your generous donations, your nice comments, and hopefully, your good intentions to share your Garden Home memories with us! If you wish to receive the printed Gazette (3x a year) in addition to your email Gazette, reply with your mailing address.

Remember!

Remember the Big Snow of 1969 and the flocked Christmas trees sold at Whitney’s Cannery (now the site of the Old Market Brew Pub).

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 - winter 1969

Whitney’s Cannery – winter 1969

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

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

Whitney's Cannery - Flocked Christmas trees - Leona Whitney 1968

Whitney’s Cannery – Flocked Christmas trees – Leona Whitney 1968

Discover Garden Home!

Many homes in Garden Home are decorated for this holiday season. If there’s a home with great decorations near you, send us a photo!

2022 Xmas train SW Alden St east of SW 80th

2022 Xmas train SW Alden St east of SW 80th

2022 Santa's sled on SW 84th south of SW Garden Home Rd

2022 Santa’s sled on SW 84th south of SW Garden Home Rd

In Memoriam: Larry Monk

Larry served as Pastor for the Garden Home Community Methodist Church in the 1970s. Their children Danny, David, and Jeannie attended Garden Home School. Larry wrote an article about the Garden Home After-School Care Association here on our website. Read his full obituary.

Linda and Larry Monk, 2013. Larry was pastor at Garden Home Methodist Church in the 1970s.

In Memoriam: Dorothy Johnson Stevens

Dorothy was one of our most famous residents. She has been very generous with her photos and stories for our website. Her son, Peter Papadakos, has sent her obituary from Florida.

1945 Dorothy Johnson in front of Gust Johnnson's gas station, FDR death

1945 Dorothy Johnson in front of Gust Johnnson’s gas station, FDR death.
Courtesy Dorothy Johnson. See post.

Dorothy waving at street sign (now SW 88th Ave)

Dorothy Johnson and father Gust Johnson

Dorothy Johnson winning Miss Oregon 1955

Dorothy Johnson winning Miss Oregon 1955, Astorian Budget photo.
Courtesy Dorothy Johnson. See post.

Dorothy Johnson and Pat Boone, 1958

Dorothy Johnson Stevens and Pat Boone – 2017

Reader Feedback

We appreciate the feedback we receive from you, our readers. For example, we received an email from Gary Jacquemin remembering when he took piano lessons from Mrs. Fogelquist at Fogelbo.

I’ll never forget my anticipation each week on the day which I road my bike down Garden Home Road to that very beautiful home where Mrs Fogelquist taught piano lessons!
With great anticipation, I’d park my bike behind her home, and upon knocking on her door, I was warmly welcomed into her house. Without hesitation, I would open my backpack, and arrange my music sheets. I’d attempt to play the music assignments for the week, and if she was satisfied, embark upon a trial performance of next week’s assignment. This period of time lasted about 3 years, as I recall, and those days will always be remembered fondly as my introduction to the remarkable sensation of being able to make music, even at my early years, and has remained with now as I practice and enjoy the music! I’m forever grateful for those years past!

– Gary Jacquemin

Get Involved

Our Board of Directors continues their monthly meetings, second Mondays at 4:15 in our homes. Call to attend. Current subjects include Fanno Creek Trail History Walks, 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! We welcome new volunteers to our committees; let us know your interest. Call Elaine 503-246-5879, or Esta 503-246-5758.

Read more about Garden Home with hundreds of photos and stories at GardenHomeHistory.com. We love hearing your memories about Garden Home! Call us: Elaine Shreve at 503-246-5879 or Esta Mapes at 503-246-5758 or Stan Houseman at 503-679-3691. To unsubscribe, reply to GardenHomeHistory@gmail.com with “UNSUBSCRIBE” in the subject line.

Stay safe and well, from all of our dedicated Board of Directors: Esta Mapes, Sharon Vedder, John and Marie Pacella, Stan and Susan Houseman, Mickey Lindsay, Jan Fredrickson, Kevin Mistler, and Elaine Shreve. Tom Shreve is our webmaster.

– Elaine

Elaine Shreve

Elaine Shreve

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Dorothy Mae Johnson (Papadakos) (White) Stevens obituary

Dorothy Johnson Stevens

Dorothy Johnson Stevens

Ormond Beach, FL – Dorothy Mae Stevens of Daytona Beach, FL passed away on April 7, 2022, in view of her beloved Atlantic Ocean at the age of 85. Born in 1936, Dorothy Mae was the youngest of two daughters of Borghild and Gustaf Johnson of Superior, Wisconsin. When she was 5, the family headed west on the Lewis and Clark Trail to Oregon in a two-door Ford pickup truck. She would say this was their modern version of a covered wagon. In Garden Home, Oregon Gust took over a Texaco Gas Station where Dorothy Mae grew up pumping gas while her mother ran the office and taught second grade.

Her modeling and beauty career began in 8th grade when she became a Junior model for Jantzen swimsuits. In her junior year at Beaverton High School, she was elected Spring Reign Queen and shortly after graduation she was chosen Miss Beaverton 1955 and went on to win the 1955 Miss Oregon Pageant. She was chaperoned by her mother at the 1956 Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, notable as the first year the pageant was broadcast live on national television; the first year Bert Parks was emcee; and the first year Parks sang his iconic song, “There She is, Miss America”. In the Miss America Talent Competition, Dorothy Mae performed Lady Macbeth’s “Sleepwalking Scene” from William Shakespeare’s play Macbeth, Hers was the only Talent performance to be televised and would help her win First Runner-Up to Miss America, the best finish for an Oregon contestant until Katie Harman won Miss America in 2002.

Dorothy Mae would say that her proudest achievement was being named “Miss Leatherneck” by the US Marine Corps in 1956 after she traveled promoting the Marines. To this day she remains the only Miss Leatherneck in the Corps’ 246 year history.

The Miss America Scholarship Program enabled Dorothy Mae to study at the America Academy of Dramatic Arts in NYC which she left after one year to pursue movie offers in Hollywood. Her film credits include “The Joker is Wild” (1957), “Bernardine” (1957, Pat Boone’s first Hollywood film), “Summer Love” (1958), “Life Begins at 17” (1958), “The Littlest Hobo” (1958) and “The Flying Fontaines” (1959). Her TV credits included regular appearances on the “Bob Cummings Show” and “Bat Masterson” with Gene Barry. In March 1958, Dorothy Mae and her mother accompanied Conrad Hilton to Cuba for the opening of the Havana Hilton Hotel just four months before Castro came to power.

In 1959 Dorothy Mae met her future husband Peter James Papadakos, founder of Gyrodyne Helicopter Company on Long Island, NY with whom she had three children: Dorothy Jean, Peter and Athena. In 1969, Dorothy Mae and her children relocated to Reno, Nevada where she married Dr. Paul L. White, an Obstetrician/Gynecologist and Emergency Room physician who co-founded Planned Parenthood of Northern Nevada. She and Paul welcomed her fourth child, Andrew. Her 3rd husband, George Stevens, a retired Marine of Grand Prairie, TX passed away in 2002 and Dorothy Mae returned to Florida where she was active as a nurse practitioner and senior ombudsman while still answering movie fan mail well into her 80’s.

Dorothy Mae is survived by her children Dorothy Jean Papadakos (Tracy), Peter P. Papadakos (Barbara), Athena P. Papadakos (Scott) and Andrew J. White and grandchildren Alexander (Suzanne), Mitchell, Morgan and Maxfield. A private family service was held on April 15 in Florida with committal to follow in Oregon.

Donations in Dorothy Mae’s name can be made to the American Cancer Society.

[Editor: Dorothy was one of our most famous residents. She has been very generous with her photos and stories for our website. Her son, Peter Papadakos, has sent this obituary from Florida. Read Dorothy’s story published on our website.]

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Larry Monk obituary

Larry Monk

Larry Monk, 2013

March 2, 1933 to October 11, 2022

Larry, age 89, died peacefully in bed next to his wife of 52 years.

Larry graduated from Willamette University in 1955 and from Drew University Seminary in 1958. Larry was a minister in the United Methodist Church from 1959-1997; he served congregations all over Oregon.

Larry had courage and integrity; he showed friendship and kindness to all he encountered. He lived his values and was a positive force serving as a role model of how to live as a good human being. Larry received a lifesaving donated kidney from his sister Lenore in 1981; he cared for this gift for the next 41 years. Larry refused to worry about things he couldn’t control and always believed the best outcome was going to happen.

Larry is survived by his wife, Linda; sisters, Lois Welch and Lenore Monk; eight children, Cheryl Gertz (Ken), Daryl Monk (Julie), Tanya Mounts (Brent), Laurie Fuglee, Jeannie Monk (Tim), Daniel Monk-Kowalsky, David Kowalsky (Cindy) and Casey Christopher (Julie); 18 grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.

[Editor: Larry served as Pastor for the Garden Home Community Methodist Church in the 1970s. Their children Danny, David, and Jeannie attended Garden Home School. Larry wrote an article about the Garden Home After-School Care Association here on our website.]

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