Cyrus Horse Camp: Difference between revisions

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{{Orchard Infobox
{{Orchard Infobox
|name=Cyrus Horse Camp
|name=Cyrus Horse Camp
|location=CRNG, OCHOCO NF
|location=CRNG, Ochoco NF
|tree_count=11
|species_breakdown=11 apple
|variety_count=2
|lat=44.447441727272725
|lon=-121.10242399999998
}}
}}
== History ==
The Cyrus Horse Camp orchard is located on the site of the '''1882-1883 homestead of Enoch and Mary Cyrus'''. The site was '''listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 26, 2015''' as part of the "Settlement and Abandonment of the Crooked River Grasslands, 1868-1937" Multiple Property Submission.


The '''Cyrus Horse Camp''' orchard contains 11 documented heritage fruit trees.
=== The Cyrus Family ===
'''Enoch Cyrus''' (1844-1916) and his wife '''Mary Sutherlin Cyrus''' moved from Linn County, Oregon to the Gray Butte area in 1882, where they claimed a homestead in Skull Hollow. In 1883, the family moved to a 160-acre homestead near a good spring at the base of Gray Butte. At that time, the landscape was grassland with an aspen grove, and no junipers in sight.


== Trees ==
In 1882, the Gray Butte country was so sparsely settled that Mrs. Mary Cyrus later recalled that for their first seven months on the place, '''she didn't see another woman'''. But within a few years, they built a two-story, four-bedroom house here and farmed about 500 acres with their five sons and two daughters.
 
'''Enoch Cyrus''' was a remarkably innovative farmer:
* Introduced '''barbed-wire fences''' to this part of Central Oregon
* Pioneered a strain of hard winter wheat known as '''"Cyrus Wheat"'''
* Innovated new machines for harvesting grain, including a reaper-binder
 
The Cyruses typically ran '''1,500-3,000 head of sheep''', planted huge vegetable gardens, and kept orchards of apples, crabapples, peaches, and pears. Only apples survive today, including Yellow Transparents and several varieties of red fall apples.
 
=== Later History ===
In 1900, Enoch and Mary left the Gray Butte ranch and became homesteaders again in the Cloverdale area between Redmond and Sisters, where they practiced irrigated farming using water from what is now Wychus Creek and launched a new crop for Central Oregon—seed potatoes. In the heyday of potato farming in Deschutes and Jefferson Counties (1940-1975), the Cyrus spud cellars around Cloverdale were a prime source of seed potatoes.
 
After his parents moved, their youngest son '''Warren Dean Cyrus''' (W.D. Cyrus) ran the Gray Butte place (with time out for land-speculating in Florida after 1910), and eventually sold it to the Relocation/Marginal Lands program in '''1934'''. The buildings were razed by the '''Resettlement Administration in 1936'''.
 
USFS records show W.D. Cyrus was formally assigned ownership of the property from his parents Enoch Cyrus in '''1911'''. At the same time, brother Omar Cyrus was assigned land to the west. In total, five different sites associated with the Cyrus family have been recorded within a roughly one-square-mile area: the [[Cyrus|Cyrus Orchard]] (site 06070500509), the W.D. Cyrus Homestead (site 06070500508, just southwest of the orchard), the Omar and Hattie Cyrus Homestead (site 06070500179, about a half mile southwest), this site (the Enoch Cyrus homestead), and the [[Cyrus Barn]].
 
According to Duane Ecker's 2001 field notes, the orchard contained 11 apple trees and 8 prune trees (5 needing pruning). All were pruned in 2001, with notes that juniper trees needed removal.
 
Today the site serves as a popular campsite and meeting place for riders, administered by the Crooked River National Grasslands in collaboration with local saddle clubs.
 
''Sources: Oregon Historic Site Record (National Register of Historic Places); Jefferson County Historical Society "The Agate" Spring 2015; Duane Ecker field notes 2001''
 
=== Primary Sources ===
The following historical documents are available:
* [[:File:Oregon Historic Site Record - Enoch Cyrus Homestead.pdf|National Register of Historic Places record]]
* [[:File:CRNG Apple Orchard Legacy Notes 2001 Duane Ecker.pdf|Duane Ecker field notes (2001)]]
* [[:File:Homestead Orchards in Central Oregon - The Agate Spring 2015.pdf|Jefferson County Historical Society article (2015)]]
* [[:File:Enoch Cyrus Orchard Map 2012.pdf|Orchard map (2012)]]


=== Fair Condition (2) ===
== Orchard Map ==
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 26|Tree #26]] - UAF5
{{#ask: [[Has orchard::Cyrus Horse Camp]] [[Has coordinates::+]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 35|Tree #35]] - Red Astrachan
|?Has coordinates
|?Has field tag
|?Has condition
|format=leaflet
|height=400px
|width=100%
|zoom=15
|scrollwheelzoom=off
}}


=== Poor Condition (6) ===
== Trees ==
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 27|Tree #27]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 30|Tree #30]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 31|Tree #31]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 32|Tree #32]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 33|Tree #33]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 34|Tree #34]] - Red Astrachan


=== Dead Condition (3) ===
{{Orchard tree list|orchard=Cyrus Horse Camp}}
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 28|Tree #28]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 29|Tree #29]]
* [[Cyrus Horse Camp Tree 36|Tree #36]]


== Varieties ==
== Varieties ==
* [[Red Astrachan]]
* [[Red Astrachan]]
* [[UAF5]]
* [[UAF5]]
== Historical Documents ==
* [[Media:Duane_Ecker_CRNG_Legacy_Notes_2001.pdf|Duane Ecker Field Notes (2001)]]
* [[Media:National_Register_Enoch_Cyrus_Homestead.pdf|National Register Historic Site Record]]
* [[Media:Cyrus_Orchards_Tree_List_2012.pdf|Tree List (2012)]]
* [[Media:Enoch_Cyrus_Orchard_Map_2012.pdf|Hand-drawn Map (2012)]]
* [[Media:Homestead_Orchards_Central_Oregon_Agate_2015.pdf|"The Agate" Article (2015)]]
''See also: [[Document Archive]]''
== Maps ==
[[File:Enoch_Cyrus_Orchard_Map_GoogEarth.pdf|thumb|600px|Spatial map with imagery]]
== Related Orchards ==
'''Cyrus Family Orchards'''
The Cyrus orchards were established by members of the Cyrus family. This site was the original 1882 homestead of Enoch and Mary Cyrus. Five different Cyrus family sites have been recorded within a roughly one-square-mile area.
* [[Cyrus]] — Omer Cyrus orchard (site 509), ~½ mile west
* [[Cyrus Barn]] — Omer Cyrus barn orchard, ~⅓ mile northwest of the main orchard
* [[Hattie Cyrus|Omar and Hattie Cyrus Homestead]] (site 06070500179) — ~½ mile southwest of the orchard


[[Category:Orchards]]
[[Category:Orchards]]
[[Category:Orchards with Unique Trees]]
[[Category:Crooked River National Grassland]]
[[Category:Crooked River National Grassland]]

Latest revision as of 20:03, 7 February 2026

Cyrus Horse Camp
Location CRNG, Ochoco NF
Tree Count 11
Species 11 apple
Varieties 3 identified

History

The Cyrus Horse Camp orchard is located on the site of the 1882-1883 homestead of Enoch and Mary Cyrus. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 26, 2015 as part of the "Settlement and Abandonment of the Crooked River Grasslands, 1868-1937" Multiple Property Submission.

The Cyrus Family

Enoch Cyrus (1844-1916) and his wife Mary Sutherlin Cyrus moved from Linn County, Oregon to the Gray Butte area in 1882, where they claimed a homestead in Skull Hollow. In 1883, the family moved to a 160-acre homestead near a good spring at the base of Gray Butte. At that time, the landscape was grassland with an aspen grove, and no junipers in sight.

In 1882, the Gray Butte country was so sparsely settled that Mrs. Mary Cyrus later recalled that for their first seven months on the place, she didn't see another woman. But within a few years, they built a two-story, four-bedroom house here and farmed about 500 acres with their five sons and two daughters.

Enoch Cyrus was a remarkably innovative farmer:

  • Introduced barbed-wire fences to this part of Central Oregon
  • Pioneered a strain of hard winter wheat known as "Cyrus Wheat"
  • Innovated new machines for harvesting grain, including a reaper-binder

The Cyruses typically ran 1,500-3,000 head of sheep, planted huge vegetable gardens, and kept orchards of apples, crabapples, peaches, and pears. Only apples survive today, including Yellow Transparents and several varieties of red fall apples.

Later History

In 1900, Enoch and Mary left the Gray Butte ranch and became homesteaders again in the Cloverdale area between Redmond and Sisters, where they practiced irrigated farming using water from what is now Wychus Creek and launched a new crop for Central Oregon—seed potatoes. In the heyday of potato farming in Deschutes and Jefferson Counties (1940-1975), the Cyrus spud cellars around Cloverdale were a prime source of seed potatoes.

After his parents moved, their youngest son Warren Dean Cyrus (W.D. Cyrus) ran the Gray Butte place (with time out for land-speculating in Florida after 1910), and eventually sold it to the Relocation/Marginal Lands program in 1934. The buildings were razed by the Resettlement Administration in 1936.

USFS records show W.D. Cyrus was formally assigned ownership of the property from his parents Enoch Cyrus in 1911. At the same time, brother Omar Cyrus was assigned land to the west. In total, five different sites associated with the Cyrus family have been recorded within a roughly one-square-mile area: the Cyrus Orchard (site 06070500509), the W.D. Cyrus Homestead (site 06070500508, just southwest of the orchard), the Omar and Hattie Cyrus Homestead (site 06070500179, about a half mile southwest), this site (the Enoch Cyrus homestead), and the Cyrus Barn.

According to Duane Ecker's 2001 field notes, the orchard contained 11 apple trees and 8 prune trees (5 needing pruning). All were pruned in 2001, with notes that juniper trees needed removal.

Today the site serves as a popular campsite and meeting place for riders, administered by the Crooked River National Grasslands in collaboration with local saddle clubs.

Sources: Oregon Historic Site Record (National Register of Historic Places); Jefferson County Historical Society "The Agate" Spring 2015; Duane Ecker field notes 2001

Primary Sources

The following historical documents are available:

Orchard Map

Loading map...

Trees

Varieties

Historical Documents

See also: Document Archive

Maps

File:Enoch Cyrus Orchard Map GoogEarth.pdf

Cyrus Family Orchards

The Cyrus orchards were established by members of the Cyrus family. This site was the original 1882 homestead of Enoch and Mary Cyrus. Five different Cyrus family sites have been recorded within a roughly one-square-mile area.