It’s hard to imagine the City of Ashland without Siskiyou Boulevard lined by shops, the public library, the university and stately homes. Until 1888, Ashland’s streets were narrow and crooked, and Siskiyou Boulevard did not exist.
An ambitious Ashland orchardist, A. C. Helm, and his California investor, R. A. Bowman, needed a road to develop Tolman Sulfur Springs four miles south of town. Their proposal for The Boulevard, as it was known for 50 years, gained City Council support and public cooperation, although some called it “this awful boulevard” and the “street to nowhere.”
One landowner, E. E. Miner, refused to give up his property for less than $1,200. When the courts awarded $200, Miner took his case to the Oregon Supreme Court, and when that failed, he tried unsuccessfully to replace City Council members in the 1888 elections. When Miner finally accepted the original $200 payment, work began on The Boulevard.
Perhaps in 1888 The Boulevard went too far out of town, and perhaps Tolman Springs did not warrant the effort, but now the straight, wide, and long boulevard serves Ashland well.
Source: Dews, Edmund, “Ballots and The Boulevard: The Centennial of Ashland's Showcase Street,” Table Rock Sentinel, May/June 1989, v. 9, no. 3, pp. 12-19.
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Siskiyou Boulevard Results from Sulfur Springs Development
Episode
2697
Date