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Keil
and his followers had set up a successful settlement at Bethel,
Missouri, and in 1853 sent a scouting party across the Oregon Trail
to the Northwest to find a location for another settlement; an outgrowth
of the Bethel community. Those scouts chose a site at Willapa Bay,
Washington, which proved to be too remote and wet for developing a
self-sufficient agricultural community. After a discouraging and soggy
winter on Willapa Bay, Keil traveled to Portland to search for a new
western location. In 1856 Keil purchased the George White donation land
claim on the Pudding
Cooperative effort, industry, and unquestioned obedience to the dictates of the astute Dr. Keil, led to the rapid growth of the Colony. By the end on 1867 with the arrival of the last wagon train from Bethel the settlement numbered some 600 souls. These pioneers built their own homes, shops and mills on the 18,000 acres of land acquired by Keil with communal funds. They were independent, self sustaining and content. Good music, delicious food and friendliness combined with a love of God, brought them happiness unmatched elsewhere in the West of that day.
Although
the Colony lifestyle required a measure of isolation from the world, it
needed proximity to markets to survive and Dr. Keil always welcomed
“outsiders” to Aurora. With the construction of a hotel, Aurora
became a rest-stop for the stage route along the
Dr. Keil continued as the undisputed leader of the Colonists personal lives and finances until his sudden death in 1877. Left without a strong leader, the Colonists finally dissolved their organization and each member received a fair share of the total property and holdings. Dissolution became final in 1883 and Aurora’s businesses and industries became privately owned, many of them operated by former Colony members and their descendents.
Time
has erased many major Colony structures. The Colony Church was razed, as
was Keil’s Das Gross Hous, the largest Colony home. The coming of
Highway 99E in 1933 and the building of a new Mill
You can learn more about Aurora and its history by visiting the Old Aurora Colony Museum.
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