08 Nov From Sacred Church to Horror Film Location to Lovely Home: The story of 100 6th Street
Ashland’s first Catholic Church, 1889 to 1959
Family Life Bible Church, 1963 to 2014
Horror film location, 2014
Now a fully renovated, lovely residence
Here are stories from the life of one building in Ashland’s Railroad District, with glimpses into some human lives that have intersected that building.
Ashland’s First Catholic Church
The booming gold-mining town of Jacksonville was home to the first Catholic Church in Southern Oregon, dedicated in 1858. At that time, no religious group had yet built a church in Ashland, where the population was fewer than 300 people.
(photo courtesy of Conaway and Ross)
By 1889, there were five church buildings in Ashland. That’s the year the Catholic Church became the sixth, located in the Railroad District at the corner of 6th and C Streets. According to the Ashland Tidings of August 23, 1889, “There will be services in the new Catholic Church in Ashland next Sunday at 10 a.m., Rev. Father Noel officiating.” The church opened with a membership of about 97 men, women and children.
The original name of the church was Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary, which changed about 1915 to its current name, Our Lady of the Mountain.
Because the Catholic priest in Jacksonville had to serve all of Southern Oregon, masses at the new Ashland church were few and far between – only seven in the first full year of the church building. Ashland Catholics finally got their own priest in 1899, ten years after the church was built.
The congregation grew through the decades and a new, larger Catholic Church was built on Hillview Drive in 1959. The historic steeple bell and Stations of the Cross from the 6th Street church building moved there along with the congregation.
(“This image is part of the Stories of Southern Oregon Collection in the Southern Oregon University Hannon Library digital archives and made available by Southern Oregon University Hannon Library.”)
Pentecostal Church
The 6th Street church building got new life in 1963, when the Family Life Bible Church purchased it. Virginia Carol Hudson told me she moved to 6th Street 27 years ago, when the church building across the street from her housed the Family Life Bible Church. Though the congregation was very small, she enjoyed hearing, while sitting in her yard, their rousing Pentecostal singing each time a church revival meeting was held.
The Pentecostal church moved out in early 2014. After being filled with worshipers for 120 years, the sad little church building now sat empty.
Horror Movie Location
Then for two days during August 2014, it was suddenly filled with people filming suspenseful, bloody scenes for a horror/thriller independent movie!
That’s a very different kind of energy from a century filled with songs of praise, the joys of new beginnings and the tears of losing loved ones. How did the old church become a film location?
Director and producer Brad Douglas needed a church scene for his movie Besetment. He couldn’t find the right location in Bend or in the tiny central Oregon town of Mitchell, the two towns where he was filming. Virginia Carol Hudson, the Wigmaster for the film, told him “There’s an empty church across the street from my house. That is your location, right there.” Across the street from her house turned out to be the empty church at 100 6th Street in Ashland.
Actress Marlyn Mason
(photo from Besetment website)
I interviewed Marlyn Mason, one of the lead actors in the film. Here is how her acting was praised in a review of Besetment at the website morbidlybeautiful.com. “I first want to bow down to Marlyn Mason, who plays Milly, because she is so incredibly captivating and terrifying – everything you need in a horror movie performance. This woman was incredible, and I was terrified and amazed by her in the same breath.”
Born in 1940, Mason became a professional actor as a teenager. The website IMDB lists 113 television and movie acting credits in her long career! One highlight was her opportunity to act – and sing – with Elvis Presley in his second to last film, The Trouble with Girls.
(photo courtesy of Marlyn Mason)
I asked Marlyn why she moved from Los Angeles to the Rogue Valley. She replied that when she was in her early 50s, first her agent died and then her car died. Other agents she spoke with told her variations of the same story: “We don’t have work for an older actress.”
“Dead agent, dead career”
Depressed, she thought to herself: “dead agent, dead career.” Then she had a slightly more uplifting pep talk with herself. “If I’m going to be poor, I want to be poor where it’s beautiful.” As it turned out, a lifelong friend she had known since elementary school lived in Medford, and offered Marlyn a place to rent if she was interested.
She moved to Medford and found the beauty she was seeking, but she did not find a “dead career.” Quite the contrary. She is finding new career highlights. She recently won the Best Actress award at the Breckenridge Film Festival for her role in the feature-length movie Senior Love Triangle. And the day after I spoke with her, she was flying to New York to attend the Syracuse International Film Festival.
Mason has felt blessed to find talented Southern Oregon directors to work with, such as Ray Nomoto Robison. She acted in his short film noir called An Affair Remains, which showed at the 2019 Ashland Independent Film Festival, and she plans to make a follow-up with him.
The Wigmaster
Now back to the empty church at 100 6th Street – and movie “blood.” I also had the pleasure of interviewing Virginia Carol Hudson. She was Wigmaster and hair stylist for the Besetment thriller, which was filmed at the empty church across the street from her house. Hudson has had quite a career. For 18 years she worked as a principal wig maker at Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Now she divides her time between smaller theaters (she will work two shows during the Cabaret Theater’s 2020 season) and private clients of her Wigs by Design business.
According to Hudson, filming of Besetment left its mark in the house. A horror movie requires lots of (fake) blood to be spattered, right? So the floor got its share, which the moviemakers left when they left. Remember this when I describe the renovation process next.
A Change of Owners
(photo by Peter Finkle)
Now back to the house at 100 6th Street. If you walk or drive by the corner of 6th and C Streets now, you will see a beautiful residence – that looks like a church! Greg Conaway and Cory Ross have tastefully transformed the small church building and grounds.
The couple’s renovation won a well-deserved 2016 Historic Preservation Award given by the Ashland Historic Commission. Here’s how it happened.
In autumn of 2013, Ross was riding her bicycle on 6th Street and saw the old church for sale. The building stands out partly because the original church was designed with elements of the Gothic Revival style, as can be seen in the windows lining both sides of the house. She thought to herself, “Someone needs to save those windows!”
She and Conaway called realtor Patie Millen, toured the inside of the church, were intrigued, and started discussing the potential. By December, it was theirs.
(photo courtesy of Conway and Ross)
Alice’s Restaurant?
Ross and Conaway already lived in a house they liked, so they invited friends and neighbors to an ice cream social at the church to brainstorm ideas for what to do with it. People proposed a dance studio, a music venue, a yoga studio, and more. Of the suggestions Ross told me, this one is my favorite: Open a food place called “Alice’s Restaurant” at the church. After all, Arlo Guthrie wrote his famous 1967 18-minute story-song after staying overnight at his friend and restaurateur Alice’s home, which had formerly been a church.
This song is called “Alice’s Restaurant.”
It’s about Alice, and the
restaurant, but “Alice’s Restaurant” is not the name of the restaurant,
that’s just the name of the song.
That’s why I call the song “Alice’s Restaurant.”
(Excerpt from lyrics by Arlo Guthrie)
(photo by Peter Finkle)
Renovation and Seismic Retrofit
In the end, Ross and Conaway decided to renovate the 125-year-old building and live in it themselves. They hired James Stiritz, owner of Dragonfly Construction, and the team at On Point Construction, with help from many others. The first challenge was to stabilize the structure. The seismic retrofit started with pouring a new steel-reinforced concrete foundation for the church. Then they stabilized the bowing walls that support the soaring ceiling. The solution was to tie them together with one-inch-thick steel rods. The old walls were also anchored to the foundation and the roof. The final effect is solid but subtle.
Conaway and Ross chose to keep the church interior, with its spaciousness and high ceiling, intact for their main living space – an open living room, dining room and kitchen. A 16′ by 16′ addition was built at the rear of the church building for the master bedroom. The Ashland Historic Commission wrote that “This new addition blends seamlessly with the original volume in design, detail and quality as if C.W. Ayres [who built the original 1889 church] had been on site overseeing each step of the construction, saw and hammer in hand.”
(photo from 2013 or 2014, courtesy of Conaway and Ross)
(photo by Peter Finkle)
The Historic Commission added that “Ben Trieger [actually Jay Treiger] rebuilt and restored all the original windows, making them functional, including the huge and beautiful arch head windows that provide such a significant and classic architectural feature.”
Remember the floor? When the church’s pink carpet had been removed, all were happy to find a wood floor underneath, made of fir. During the renovation, refinishing parts of the fir floor proved to be a challenge, as there were spots that appeared to be blood stains soaked into the wood. Now that we know the history of the building, we know the origin of those “blood” stains. (In case you forgot from the section above, think horror movie, then think fake blood spattering all over the floor.) Despite the challenges, the fir floor was beautifully refinished.
The Steeple, the Bats and the Bell
As he described renovating the house and 1889 steeple, Conaway told me, “It wasn’t a project, it was an adventure.” Why? Because he found bats in the belfry, ivy vines up to ¾” thick inside the walls, 1880s glass brandy bottles next to cobalt blue Bromo Seltzer bottles in the crawl space, hidden windows behind the choir loft, and even an old wood-burning stove under the floor.
(photo courtesy of Conaway and Ross)
The original church had an open steeple, which Conaway and Ross painstakingly restored in 2015. Most likely some time between 1912 and 1915, the church added slats to the open steeple to keep rain out of the bell tower, but the slats made the space a perfect home for bats. When Conaway went up to start removing the steeple slats, three bats just three feet away from him slept through his hammering.
Through the decades, they left lots of bat guano there. Conaway removed 30 heavy bags of bat guano (perhaps 700 pounds in all) from the steeple! The bats have now resettled in the renovated steeple, but in a much smaller space above the new bell. They eat lots of insects, including mosquitos, so they are handy to have in the neighborhood.
As part of their dedication to a true historic renovation, Conaway and Ross found an old bell for the steeple. The bell was made in the 1870s and used to ring at a church in Illinois.
(photo by Peter Finkle)
With a high, heavy bell, the rope was so hard to pull that Ross applied her sailing skills. She and Conaway set up a series of pulleys to make it a little easier to pull the rope and ring the bell. You might hear it ringing through the neighborhood from time to time. Neighborhood kids are invited over to ring the bell on their birthdays – one ring for each year they have lived. But over the age of 20, people only get one ring for each decade!
Building Community
Building community is important to both Cory Ross and Greg Conaway. In terms of “animal community,” their garden has become an official Pollinator Garden. In terms of “human community,” in addition to the delights of neighborhood bell ringing, they hold occasional house concerts in their historic home (which has excellent acoustics). The lovingly renovated church-to-home is beautiful both outside and inside, a historic treasure for our town.
Janet Dolan
Posted at 10:13h, 05 SeptemberI attend the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship at corner of “C” and 4th, but never noticed this church just two blocks away. Now that I know that it has been renovated as a private residence, I will definitely take notice! Thanks for all the photos and history!
Janet
Debra Aguilar
Posted at 18:23h, 16 AugustI attended this church in the early sixty for 12 years. I was only 4 when my grandma bought a double lot on the corner of 7th and bee with 2 homes on it. We walked to church 3 times a week. The services were long, but we have lots of fun and amazing memories that were made in the little church on the corner of 6th and C.
Allan Kinney
Posted at 13:05h, 12 NovemberI grew up catty-corner from the Catholic Church during the late 50’s to early 60’s. The church is a big part of my childhood memories. And when I see stained glass windows I often remember the simple, but beautiful, stained glass of the church.
Kim Bankston
Posted at 12:19h, 11 NovemberI was the pastor of this church from June 1989 until June 1995. The white paint , red trim, mauve carpet and pews were all part of our contribution to the historic church. When we first arrived there in Ashland the walls were slat wall , chicken wire, and plaster, which had crumbled away in several places.
Peter Finkle
Posted at 08:23h, 12 NovemberPastor Kim,
Thank you for your contribution to the history of this building. I am glad Cory and Greg have a photo of the church with the pews, white paint and carpet, before they renovated the building. If you would like to send me a couple photos taken during a church service or event during your time there, you can email them to me at walkashland@ashlandhome.net
Donna Wright
Posted at 19:54h, 09 NovemberLove this article!
Peter Finkle
Posted at 10:47h, 10 NovemberThank you, Donna!
Sugar
Posted at 07:44h, 09 NovemberThe church/home, just like its newest owners, is beautiful inside and out. Thank you for this wonderful article!
Peter Finkle
Posted at 09:09h, 09 NovemberYou are welcome. This article provided me with both the pleasure of learning through historical research, and the pleasure of learning through personal interviews. My goal is to share both those streams of pleasure with my readers.
Esther Auerbach
Posted at 06:35h, 09 NovemberThis is a beautifully presented history lesson. Thank you Peter!
Peter Finkle
Posted at 09:14h, 09 NovemberYou are welcome. History is most meaningful when it feels “alive.” I hope to create a bit of that aliveness with my articles.
Gregg Torrey
Posted at 20:29h, 08 NovemberPlease be aware Hillview was not Hillview till after 1959. It was Peachy I lived at 843 Hillview. That property was bought in 1951 for 17,000 and divided and divided and now worth over a million. As so goes the story of Ashland, so does the history of the the area of (upper, above Sisq. blvd) Walker st. to Park st. The building of the Presbyterian church on Walker st from downtown Ashland. The unearthing of Indian artifacts on upper Hillview across from the catholic church. So much history, thanks for the stories of Ashland. Gregg class of 68
Peter Finkle
Posted at 09:15h, 09 NovemberGregg, thank you for the detailed comments. Can you tell me more about the unearthing of Indian artifacts across from the Catholic Church?
Elaine Yates
Posted at 17:51h, 08 NovemberReally enjoy your posts. I am relatively new to the area (3 years) and have been a lover of old building and of history. I spend many happy hours wandering the streets of Ashland. Look forward to your next post!
Elaine
Peter Finkle
Posted at 09:21h, 09 NovemberThank you, Elaine. As I write (and take photos), I am trying to balance historical understanding with “fun facts” with current beauty, such as gardens and yard art. And best of all, in my opinion, slice-of-life stories told by Ashland people.
Joe Peterson
Posted at 14:45h, 08 NovemberVery nice job Peter!
Peter Finkle
Posted at 18:53h, 08 NovemberThank you, Joe.