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Furford Cranberry Museum in Grayland showcases community history

If you are attending the Cranberry Harvest Festival, an additional must-see is the Furford Cranberry Museum in Grayland, just five minutes down SR105 from the Grayland Community Hall. The museum is located at 2395 State Route 105, approximately a mile and a half south of County Line Road.

This gem showcases the history of cranberry farming on the South Beach. Currently open seven days a week from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., admission is by donation. All proceeds go toward maintenance of and improvements to the museum, as well as additions of items for display.

Furford picker showpiece

The museum’s showpiece is the Furford Picker/Pruner, an invention of long-time Grayland resident, Julius Furford, who passed away in 1999 at the age of 91. In addition to the Furford Picker/Pruner, the museum features other early cranberry harvesting implements and processing equipment.

Active in his two-man manufacturing plant right up until his death, Furford invented the machine that picks the red-ripe berries in the fall while pruning the vines at the same time. Built one at a time since he perfected his first machine in 1957 and, made to last, the pickers are still used extensively in this area, as well as across the country and in Canada. Some machines that are 40 or more years old are still actively productive in the industry.

In addition, the collection includes items that represent other facets of the community’s past, including historical displays of items related to logging, fishing and family life.

New owners

Aberdeen residents, Chuck and Gwen Tjernberg, purchased the Furford property in late December of 2010. The sale included equipment, patents, patterns and diagrams for the Furford cranberry picker/pruner, which had not been produced for several years. Tjernberg starting producing replacement parts for the famous machine in early 2012 and by that fall, started producing picker/pruners.

Museum revived

Gwen Tjernberg took on the museum project, filling the space with items the couple collected and many donated or on loan from David Furford. The museum opened again in the fall of 2012.

Museum history

Constructed in 1933 by members of the local Finnish community, the museum building was originally a social hall until World War II. During the war years, the Grayland Cranberry Growers Association used the building to dehydrate berries for shipment to servicemen overseas.

In 1946, the Ocean Spray Cranberries Cooperative, which was formed in 1930 on the East Coast, bought out the Grayland Association and constructed a second building closer to the highway. Both continued in use to dehydrate berries until that operation was moved in the early 1950s to the cooperative’s current plant that was constructed in 1946 on SR105 in Markham.

In 1956, Julius Furford purchased the property from Ocean Spray and converted the front building to a machine shop where he began production of his Furford Cranberry Picker/Pruner.

Because he wanted to chronicle and preserve the history of cranberry production in the Grayland area and the development of his picker/pruner, in 1986, Furford decided to convert the back building. where he had stored his collection of early cranberry farming-related equipment and tools, into a museum.

The facility officially opened on Aug. 30 of that year and kept sporadic hours of operation until 1994, when Furford’s health began to deteriorate, and he decided to shut it down.

In the fall of 1999, with Furford’s blessing, his son David and five others formed a non-profit corporation with the intent of making the dream of a cranberry museum that could be open year-round a reality.

Julius died on December 8 of that year, but was well aware of and pleased with the efforts of the Association to revive his dream.

The museum remained open Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays for the next several years, until it could no longer support itself and the association dissolved.

Today Furford’s dream of a cranberry museum “…for the people, especially kids…” is once again alive and thriving under the watchful eye of the Tjernberg family.