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Echo: The Sound of History
Seven
families settled in the valley near Clugston Creek in 1899. Not long
after, a post office was established. It was named Echo for the echoing
sounds created by the sawmills in the valley. The town consisted of a
two-room school-house, Tessman’s General Store, a grange hall, a
livery stable, a dance hall made of knotty pine and a few homes. This
area also was the first to claim bragging rights for the first telephone
exchange in the Colville area. Mail came to town three times a week.
Besides the mills, farming was the main occupation in Echo Valley.
(Information from Blanche Estep, Clark Hedrick and Clara Onstine)
The school hosted typical pioneer students who created some stories that
are still remembered today. The Hass children were unfamiliar with the
English language and at each recess when the other children got up to
play they put on their hats and coats and thought it was time to go
home. The clever teacher solved the problem by hanging their coats out
of reach. Another story was of the Hedrick’s mule. This faithful
animal carried all four of the Hedrick brothers to school from their
ranch in the hills above Clungston Cr. Then along came sister Margaret
but there was still room for her, she rode the "Rumble Seat."
(Alpha Naff, The Last Bell)
Unfortunately in August 1929 during a dance at the grange hall a fire
started and burned the entire town. It was never re-built, but former
town residents still meet every summer for an annual picnic. (need to
confirm) |
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Frontier
Lifestyle |
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The
Crack Echo Nine
Echo may still be
remembered for their local baseball team. The center of the
community was a ballpark and the team, "The Crack Echo
Nine," challenged every team they could. Hubert Knapp
remembers, "Every community had a little ball team. We did
here too. I played with Echo: we played in the same league with
Colville. In fact Colville never did beat us. We were pretty
lucky. But all of that was after the early days when they really
had ball games that were blood and thunder. They had a big
grandstand …it was shaped like a ‘V’. It would be loaded,
packed, jammed tight with people all around the foul lines, way
out into the field. There was no other recreation. We didn’t
have automobiles. There wasn’t everybody going someplace
everyday as there is now." |
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