| dhanens profile
Basil
Dhanens
compiled
by Columbian staff in 1989
That Hazel
Dell once almost was named Basilville is a tribute to a Belgian
boy who arrived in this country broke and rose to become the most
influential person in the community just north of Vancouver.
Basil Dhanens
landed in New York City June 10, 1913, a frightened 9-year-old orphan
boy who could not speak a word of English. He traveled across country
alone and arrived at Portland's Union Station six days later with
" a dollar and a half, six inches of hard sausage, a piece
of black bread and a bar of hard chocolate in my pocket."
The boy
stayed with relatives in Portland, then moved with them to a Vancouver
farm where he milked cows in the morning and spent afternoons trying
to find a job. His first work was picking up nuts, bolts and washers
at the SP&S railroad maintenance shop on 39th Street.
He graduated
to a lathe and learned the machinist's trade. On April 1, 1923,
Dhanens started one of Hazel Dell's first businesses in a simple
wooden building on the northeast corner of Pacific Highway (now
Hazel Dell Avenue) and Poor Farm Road (now 78th Street). He called
it Basil's Garage.
By the
late 1920s, Dhanens had moved his shop to the southeast corner of
what is now the intersection of 78th Street and Highway 99. He sold
and serviced Ford automobiles and farm equipment. In an attached
machine shop, he built his own biplane, which he flew in the early
1930s, taking off and landing on a strip adjacent to his business.
Over the
years, Dhanens built a regional reputation as an amateur weatherman
with his own weather station, which featured a 50-foot tower. He
went on the radio at noon each day with five minutes of weather
information.
Dhanens
also drilled a 170-foot well on his property and ran a one-man water
department, supplying water to nearby homes and across Highway 99
to the Totem Pole restaurant and service station. He operated the
water department until the late 1950s, when the Clark County PUD
took it over.
Dhanens
had such a great effect on the growth of Hazel Dell that local businessmen
at one time wanted to change the name to Basilville. However, Dhanens
declined the honor, with thanks.
Dhanens
died in 1972 at age 77.
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