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In Essentials, Unity - In Non-Essentials, Liberty - In All Things, Charity

Leedy Grange #339
835 NW Saltzman Rd.
Portland, Oregon

mailing address:
PO Box 91152
Portland, OR 97291

Leedy 1908

Leedy Grange

meets on the second Saturday of each month.

Noon: potluck lunch, open to prospective new members

1 pm: Business Meeting, members only

Rental Information

Membership information

 

Shortcake Social June 20-21

and Historical Photo Exhibit too...

Family Fun at the Grange!

Leedy Grange's popular Strawberry Shortcake Social and Historical Photo Exhibit returns for our second year! Strawberry shortcake will be offered in the dining room with luscious berries from Townsend Farms, Bob’s Red Mill biscuits and real whipped cream from Alpenrose—a local food lover’s delight! Community volunteers will join Grange members to serve shortcakes and lemonade. To volunteer, call or email Virginia Bruce, 503-803-1813.

Cornell RoadPhotos from the Cedar Mill History book will be on display in the main hall, with many of them enlarged courtesy of Portland Vital Signs, a company owned by one of the sons of the book’s co-author, Nancy Olson. Longtime Cedar Mill residents are especially invited to attend—we’d love to talk to you if you have any old photos of your own that you can share.

Proceeds from the FUNraiser, will go to renovate the floors in the building. Built in the early 1900s for the Modern Woodmen, it was purchased by the Grange in 1913. It was renovated in the 1930s, and has been maintained since then, but the floors need quite a bit of work before we can have dances again. Work on the floor is scheduled to begin in late June, after the Social.

The little gray building on Saltzman, just north of Cornell, was the center of social life in early Cedar Mill. Declining membership and aging members has led to the building mostly being used by others who rent its facilities, until a few new members joined and got things going again.

Like Leedy, many Granges around the country have found themselves surrounded by urban development. There are not many nearby farmers, who made up the traditional Grange membership. Moving into the 21st century, support for the local food movement—farmers’ markets, local suppliers, home gardenering and food preservation—can be a way to make the Grange relevant in an urban setting. If you’re interested in local food, joining the Grange can be a way to learn and get involved. Contact Virginia Bruce with any questions or to volunteer: email me or call 503-803-1813

 

 

Links

Oregon State Grange website:
www.orgrange.org

National Grange website:
www.nationalgrange.org/