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Classification: Historic Contributing
Historic Name: Breyman Brothers Block
Current Name: Bike Peddler/McEwen Photo
Year of Construction: 1904/1940s/1960s
Legal Description: 073W27AB8200; Salem from Lots 7,
Block 33 (See also 188 Commercial, same owner, Lot 8300)
Owner(s): Evan Boise, et al
180 Commercial St., NE
Salem, Or 97301
Description: This two-story building, constructed
in 1904, was remodeled in the late 1940s to its current stucco
finished Modern style appearance. The second-floor fenestration
of the west elevation has four bays with each bay containing
two large one-over-one, double-hung wood sash windows. The
building to the north was remodeled at the same time to have
the same exterior appearance.
The ground-floor facade has an umbrella-type awnings arching
out over the sidewalk. The ground floor storefronts incorporate
recessed entrances with tile floors and tile bulkheads (c.1940s),
and newer display windows and transoms that have aluminum
sash (c.1960s).
This building retains sufficient historic fabric and design
to describe the 1940s. The changes to the storefront are typical
of the area and do not significantly diminish the integrity
of the structure. This building contributes to the historic
character of the downtown district.
History and Significance: This building replaced three
buildings from the 1870s and was constructed c.1904 as retail
spaces and offices and to be part of the "Breyman Block".
The so-called "Breyman Block" of brick featured
four bays of paired windows on the second floor with a corbelled
cornice and stepped parapet with an upper edge that was slightly
shorter than the adjoining Breyman Brothers block to the north.
Retail shops occupied the ground floor with offices on the
second floor. Both Breyman buildings remained relatively unchanged
until the late 1940s when the Breyman/Boise family had the
exterior of both buildings completely updated and modernized.
All decorative ornamentation was stripped away and replaced
with a smooth sleek wall (except for three indented narrow
horizontal bands above the second-floor windows), evocative
of the then-popular International style of architecture. This
sudden transformation, which catapulted the buildings into
the mid-twentieth century, unified their appearance. The exterior
appearance of both buildings, which has changed little since
mid-century, reflects this waning era of downtown commercial
business and of efforts to revive it in the mid-1900s.
Werner and Eugene Breyman contributed to the commercial development
of several communities in the Willamette Valley, including
Amity, Lafayette, Portland, and Salem. Natives of Bockenem,
Hanover, Germany, Werner and Eugene Breyman immigrated to
the United States (Wisconsin) in 1846 and 1853, respectively.
Werner traveled overland to Oregon Country from Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, in 1850; Eugene departed Wisconsin, in 1855 by
way of the Isthmus of Panama. In 1856 the two brothers formed
a partnership and undertook numerous business ventures over
the next half century. They operated a general merchandise
store in Lafayette, Oregon, and at a crossroads that became
the nucleus of Amity. They brought their mercantile acumen
to Salem in 1863-64, opening a store first in the Moore block
at the northwest corner of Commercial and State streets and,
in 1874, in the Breyman Brothers, or "White Corner,"
building. Their business was said to be the largest retail
and wholesale general merchandise store in Oregon outside
Portland. The brothers retired from merchandising in 1880
and turned to real estate development and the loan business.
Over the next two decades, Werner and Eugene Breyman owned
and developed Midland and Rosedale additions to Salem, and
had financial interests in the Sunnyside, Eastland, and Boise
additions in Portland. Additionally, they held stock in several
regional banks. Both men were long-time members of the Masonic
fraternity. The family homes of both Breyman brothers were
centers of social life in Salem in the 1800s.
Descendants of the two Breyman families continued their involvement
in Salems business community for over a century and
a half. Werner and Isabella Watt Breyman, who were married
in the early 1850s, raised three (of a total of seven) children
who lived to adulthood: Anna Prael (of Portland), Elva Brown,
and Ada Eldredge (resident of Manila). Eugene and Margaret
E. Skaife Breyman raised three daughters: Lena M. Snedecor
(of Birmingham, Alabama), Minnie L. Boise, and Jessie A. McNary.
Each of the Breyman children appeared to have acquired 1/6
of an interest in the Breyman brothers property at the
corner of Commercial and Court streets. Lucille and Reuben
Breyman Boise became intimately associated with the Breyman
brothers' property by the late 1940s. Reuben Breyman Boise
was the son of Reuben P. Boise who had been a newspaperman
at the Salem Oregon Statesman and at the Tacoma, Washington,
Daily News, as well as being a Salem realtor and financier.
Reuben Breyman Boise was also the grandson of Reuben P. Boise,
an 1850 Oregon pioneer, circuit judge, and Chief Justice of
the Oregon Supreme Court. In the year 2000, this property
remains under Boise family ownership.
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