Hours:
Monday-Thursday, 11am-11pm
Friday & Saturday, 11am-midnight
Sunday, 11am-10pm

Happy Hour:
Daily, 3-6pm & 9pm-close

Call in your order: (541) 345-4905

Order Online

Online ordering button for pickup only
Delivery also available: Uber Eats and DoorDash

We are happy to serve large groups! Walk-ins are welcome, but please call in advance when possible.

About High Street Brewery & Café

Porches, Patios and History Repainted

The first microbrewery in Eugene since the days of Prohibition, the High Street Brewery & Café is housed in a renovated early 20th-century house complete with a backyard beer garden where ales are enjoyed under the shade of fir, ash, hawthorn and tulip trees in the summer and around a fire pit in winter.

Though tiny, the basement brewery is mighty, with our brewer churning out McMenamins favorites as well as High Street originals. Be warned: these limited-release brews don't last long once the word gets out.

After a fire burned through the roof in May 2021 (thankfully, no one was hurt), the pub closed for repairs and rejuvenation – and what a rejuvenation it was! The same comfortable vibe is still here, but there’s now seating upstairs and captivating new artwork that explores the building’s history. As beloved original manager Jenny Gomez once said, High Street has a “unique clientele – from Dead Heads to hockey players, librarians to lawyers, tree planters to students. I couldn’t ask for a better mix of customers.” Everyone is welcome!

High Street Brewery & Café allows pets on our front patio only.

Menus

Menu  Beverage

Call in your order: (541) 345-4905

Order Online

Online ordering button for pickup only
Delivery also available: Uber Eats and DoorDash

We offer Northwest-style pub fare that incorporates the freshest seasonal ingredients from local and regional growers and producers.We make everything onsite, including soups and more. Seasonal specials round out our menus – ask your server for details.

Gluten-free buns available! These light, crisp, locally made products are available for an additional charge with hamburgers and sandwiches – just ask your server. Please note: Although the bun is gluten-free, our kitchens are not.

History

Welcome Back: It’s a High Street Homecoming!

The same comfortable vibe is still here, along with new features, including artwork that celebrates the people and events that have made High Street so remarkable. As its beloved original manager Jenny Gomez said, it has “unique clientele– from the Dead Heads to the hockey team, the librarians to the tree planters, the lawyers to the students. I couldn’t ask for a better mix of customers.” 
 
This old, bungalow-style house was probably built in 1910, the same year of the German-language newspapers found in its walls during a renovation project. The Yoders, a German-Swiss family, were early residents of the place by the 1910s. Myrna Yoder, one of the McMenamins artists, who has painted some of the panels and the fun, evocative figures and details adorning this pub, has always felt an affinity for the place. Now she’s thinking perhaps there’s a familial connection, too.
 
In the fall of 1988, Jenny Gomez, then manager of McMenamins Lighthouse Brewpub in Lincoln City, transferred to Eugene to become the first manager of the High Street Brewery & Café, the city’s first post-Prohibition brewery. She quickly became the heart and soul of the place. When she’d get off work, Jenny would sit out back and have a glass of wine. And literally every person would talk to her about all that was going on in their lives, and then go grab their table. She was a great listener, gave great advice.
 
Among Jenny’s first customers back in 1988 was an affable soul named Wally. It was a homecoming of sorts. The tall, friendly man had been a regular at the Lighthouse until a new job brought him to Eugene. Coming back to the High Street house was also a homecoming in another sense for Wally. In the mid ‘60s, when the place was still a residence, he had lived upstairs! He said the place was more or less a flop house by that time. Wally took over the north half of the second floor from two friends who had been living there during the previous year. They were “sometime students” who were among the earliest of Eugene’s then small hippie culture– local pioneers with recreational marijuana and LSD experimentation and had direct connections to the best “chemists” down in San Francisco, including Stanley Owsley, the Grateful Dead’s personal acid dispenser. 
 
Of his High Street days, Wally remembered the beauty and completeness of seeing sunrises through the apple tree that still grows out back and sunsets through a cherry tree that stood in the front yard. He also recalls music was a constant part of life there. He and friends listened to lots of folk and jazz records. “Once every hour,” he recalled, “there was a music eruption.”
  
Music and Grateful connections continued at High Street after McMenamins reinterpreted the place as a pub. The vintage Bay-Area concert posters and funky artistic meanderings painted on the walls allude to that, but it goes deeper. Dave Young, who worked at High Street for a number of years, was part of the great Eugene band called the Palace Meat Market. Young and the band opened for the Dead when they played at Eugene (legend has it that Owsley was at the show dressed in a Santa suit giving away some trippy presents). High Street was packed with Dead Heads afterwards… same result during Country Fair each summer.
 
Another local musician who, with his band mates, achieved superstardom, was a High Street pubster. Dan Schmid, bass player for the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, quit the band and worked at High Street for about six years. He rejoined just as the swing thing was starting to generate a lot of interest in the 1990s and helped the Daddies lead the wave. In between tours, when the Daddies returned home to Eugene, Dan stopped in to see friends at High Street.
 
Robert Kyr was a superstar in another musical realm, who frequented High Street. In September 1990, Robert came to University of Oregon School of Music to teach, compose and perform, as well as commune and gather with other musicians, performers, and artists. By 1995, Robert began coming to High Street on a regular basis to copy by hand his new compositions onto music sheets. He’d show up every night at 10pm and stay to closing (1am). He often was the last customer to leave. He called them his “Midnight Shifts.”
 
“Music has one of the most important roles in healing and connections,” says Robert. And he notes that McMenamins High Street is helping this process by “providing a comfortable, perfect setting to gather together and have conversations, enjoy music, generate creative activity, and help bring peace to the world.”
 
One other longtime superstar of High Street is Hanns Anderson. He has been crafting fabulous brews for more than two decades, down in the subterranean basement facility. “I do feel like a prairie dog. There’s that little walk you do, where you go up three of the stairs, and you can just see the patio and the feet of the people on the deck. You kind of stand up straight and look around, just like a little prairie dog, like every brewer’s ever done that’s worked here. And I’ve caught myself doing it too... And then you go back down your little hole.”
 
Cheers!

High Street Art


 

Oregon Country Fair – by Eona Skelton

For decades, hundreds of creative souls have gathered once a year along the Long Tom River in Veneta, 13 miles from Eugene, to celebrate art, life, and music in the woods. The delightful patrons of High Street slowly become more witchy and interesting as the time of the Fair approaches.

Right to left: Mike and Brian McMenamin share libations inside the dragon with High Street manager Jenny Gomez and her right hand, April Highsmith, then manager of McMenamins East 19th Pub. Beneath the shade of the apple tree, Dan Schmid of the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies plays his bass, which he did many times on the back porch during the 20 years he worked on and off at High Street. To Dan's right sits Joe Cotter and Kolieha Bush, excellent and accomplished artists whose work enriches both the Fair and McMenamins’ many properties. They are watched over by Lyle Hehn's High Street “Eye,” resurrected from the fire. Down underground the black rabbit relaxes between current High Street brewmaster Hanns Anderson and longtime brewer from the past, Steve van Rossem.



 

Dan Schmid – by Eona Skelton

The spiritual experience of drink, music, a warm fire and good friends on the back patio of High Street Brewery & Cafe, a McMenamins’ retreat for 35 years in Eugene. Left to right: Dan Schmid, musician, all-around nice guy, bass player for the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, and employee at High Street for many years, coming and going between gigs. Trumpet in hand, sits Dana Heitman and next to him the expressive lead singer of the Daddies, Steve Perry. Idly strumming his guitar sits Black Francis aka Frank Black, former Eugene resident, Pixies front man and friend of Dan’s, who played bass with Frank on and off stage. Enjoying glasses of Black Rabbit Red sits Jenny Gomez, beloved longtime manager of High Street and supporter of the rock-and-roll life of Dan and other musicians, and April Highsmith her support and friend.



 

The Dairy and the Dead – by Cleo Hehn

Ruby dons a skull mask to dance with her skeletal friends as the Grateful Dead ride the Furthur Bus into psychedelic oblivion.

In 1972, Springfield’s own Ken Kesey asked the Grateful Dead to play a benefit show for his brother’s dairy, the Springfield Creamery (now nationally known for Nancy’s Yogurt). With Merry Pranksters Kesey and Ken Babbs as emcees, the show rocked what would become the grounds for the Oregon Country Fair in Veneta. Because a long-unreleased documentary about the show was named Sunshine Daydream, the sun from the High Street Pub’s logo peers at the scene from the upper right-hand corner of the painting. Cleo Hehn’s father, Paul Hehn, designed this original logo.

Over the following years, the Dead returned to the area several times, playing Autzen Stadium into the early 1990s, when thousands of fans would flood Eugene and the High Street Pub.

Speaking of floods, every year, Veneta’s fairgrounds flood, and the original Furthur bus was recently excavated from a swamp. Thus, the Springfield Dairy and two pyramids from McMenamins Elks Temple in Tacoma, Washington, float in magenta-soaked subconscious waters. The pyramids also refer to The Egyptian Book of the Dead, where the Grateful Dead take their name. Steal Your Face looms in the starry sky above the band as their music makes metallic electricity that resurrects the dancing dead.
 

High Street Brews Magic in Low Places – by Cleo Hehn

Hanns Anderson, current brewer at High Street, and former brewer Steve van Rossem smile proudly beside a giant pint of McMenamins beer. Inside the brew, Jen Kent, brewer from the Thompson Pub in Salem, reenacts the belly dance she performed at the memorial service for beloved High Street manager Jenny Gomez. Hanns and Steve wear T-shirts bearing portraits of Jenny.

Two hoses from painted fermenters twist hops-snakes into Celtic knots. Behind Hanns, a subtle quilt pattern references his Grandma Betty’s Quilted IPA; behind Steve, a recreation of J.R.R. Tolkein’s map of Middle Earth alludes to Steve’s Hobbit’s Habit Brown Ale. High Street’s brewery is located in the basement, so all this magic swirls at the bottom of the stairs and below the bricks.

At the culmination of Jen’s magical dance, she blows stardust into the scene—or are these Jenny’s ashes? (Aren’t we all made of stardust, anyway?)



 

Peaceful Place – by Lillian Ripley

Robert Kyr is a gifted and prolific composer and music professor at the University of Oregon School of Music. For a long period, he came to High Street Café in the evenings and stayed until closing at 1am, transcribing and transforming his vision into music. He has written over one hundred compositions including symphonies inspired by the themes of world peace, human rights and harmony including On the Nature of Peace, Songs of the Soul, Waging Peace, and Ah Nagasaki: Ashes into Light (a choral symphony commissioned by the Nagasaki Peace Museum in Japan). In this painting by artist Ripley, Kyr has the world in his hands as music swirls in the air, brought from a messenger white dove – world peace almost within grasp.



 

The Fall of the Apple – by Lillian Ripley

Apples fall. Thanks to gravity, this is an inherent trait of our reality and thanks to Newton this is well understood. Additionally, God himself warned of the apple! (At least according to medieval monks and other biblical illuminators.) And yet despite echoed warnings across time, there were still those patrons that sat beneath the apple tree at High Street and cried to the Heavens (and complained to their waiters) that apples fell upon them. Because there are no surviving images of those apple struck patrons, the artist has substituted their visages with that of Steve Perry of Cherry Poppin’ Daddies. “He seems to be a man of good humor and his face is excellently expressive,” said the artist. 



 

Music Eruption – by Lyle Hehn

Wally was a regular customer at the High Street Cafe in the 1990s. He also lived upstairs when it was a rental house in the 1960s. He described the times in the old house in his own peculiar way: “Once every hour, there was a music eruption.”

Here is a music eruption that occurred about two thirds of the way through the 1960s, an era that many experienced mainly through their black-and-white television sets. In between all the handsome cowboys, tough cops and doctor dramas, a number of programs simply showed neatly dressed teenagers dancing to whatever 40 songs were allowed onto their transistor radios at the time.

But the advent of color television took us all to the cusp of a major cultural transition, and serpentine sounds went out over the AM radios and exposed the kids to their own outdated fashion sense. The strange new music encouraged them to eat of the forbidden pharmaceutical fruits, exposing them to their own unhipness. Their eyes lit up with revelation. Soon our televisions showed people dancing in space, singing “We’ve got to get ourselves back to the Garden.”



 

White Bird House – by Lyle Hehn

The voice on the radio said to leave your cares behind. But now the wallpaper in your brain is getting wavy and small animals are dancing in circles. White birds appear more and more frequently in repeating patterns, until they create an opening into another Universe. A sentient White Bird House rides in on clouds of serenity, offering assistance. And just as when you are talking with other people or with animals, you may address either eye.



 

Jenny Gomez – by Myrna Yoder

When McMenamins started out there were just a handful of pubs. When there were employee parties, there would only be about 75 to 100 people and everyone knew everyone. Jenny’s era began in those times. She started by managing the Lighthouse Brewpub in Lincoln City and then moved to be the first manager at High Street in Eugene. She would be the manager there until 2014, when she passed away.

My journey painting for McMenamins started in 1991, so I was part of the company early on. My then boyfriend managed the Lighthouse and the Thompson in Salem. Eugene was close so I saw a lot of Jenny. I have very fond memories of her, as it seems, does everyone.

My main objective when creating this painting was to capture the essence of who Jenny was, how she made people feel and how she is in my memories.

In the painting she sits in the back of High Street on a sunny day surrounded by her favorite flowers, drinking a glass of Black Rabbit Red, and yes, having a cigarette. On the roof behind her Charles Mingus plays songs from his album Mingus, Mingus, Mingus (one of her favorite albums to play while getting ready to open the pub in the morning.)

Jenny, we miss you, but we know your spirit still has an influence on the High Street Pub.
 

*Image pending* 

Circle of Friends Cosmic Dance – by Myrna Yoder

The people make the place. The regulars and the employees are the real heart of the High Street Pub.
There have been so many people that have become part of the legacy of that old home. They have been the ones to make the place truly a place to gather with family and friends. I tried to capture in spirit, that special thing that happens when people come together in this special place. While I have based the portraits on real people from a group of friends that have been meeting together at High Street for many years, they really are, for me, representations of all those who have come and spent time communing with each other at McMenamins.

  • Hours:
    Monday-Thursday, 11am-11pm
    Friday & Saturday, 11am-midnight
    Sunday, 11am-10pm

    Happy Hour:
    Daily, 3-6pm & 9pm-close

    Call in your order: (541) 345-4905

    Order Online

    Online ordering button for pickup only
    Delivery also available: Uber Eats and DoorDash

    We are happy to serve large groups! Walk-ins are welcome, but please call in advance when possible.

    Upcoming Events

    see all events
    Happy Birthday, High Street!
    Saturday, November 16
    Passport Day
    Sunday, November 17
    Happy 39th Birthday, Terminator!
    Tuesday, November 19
    Repeal Day - Celebrating the End of Prohibition
    Thursday, December 05

    Porches, Patios and History Repainted

    The first microbrewery in Eugene since the days of Prohibition, the High Street Brewery & Café is housed in a renovated early 20th-century house complete with a backyard beer garden where ales are enjoyed under the shade of fir, ash, hawthorn and tulip trees in the summer and around a fire pit in winter.

    Though tiny, the basement brewery is mighty, with our brewer churning out McMenamins favorites as well as High Street originals. Be warned: these limited-release brews don't last long once the word gets out.

    After a fire burned through the roof in May 2021 (thankfully, no one was hurt), the pub closed for repairs and rejuvenation – and what a rejuvenation it was! The same comfortable vibe is still here, but there’s now seating upstairs and captivating new artwork that explores the building’s history. As beloved original manager Jenny Gomez once said, High Street has a “unique clientele – from Dead Heads to hockey players, librarians to lawyers, tree planters to students. I couldn’t ask for a better mix of customers.” Everyone is welcome!

    High Street Brewery & Café allows pets on our front patio only.

  • Menus

    Menu  Beverage

    Call in your order: (541) 345-4905

    Order Online

    Online ordering button for pickup only
    Delivery also available: Uber Eats and DoorDash

    We offer Northwest-style pub fare that incorporates the freshest seasonal ingredients from local and regional growers and producers.We make everything onsite, including soups and more. Seasonal specials round out our menus – ask your server for details.

    Gluten-free buns available! These light, crisp, locally made products are available for an additional charge with hamburgers and sandwiches – just ask your server. Please note: Although the bun is gluten-free, our kitchens are not.

  • Welcome Back: It’s a High Street Homecoming!

    The same comfortable vibe is still here, along with new features, including artwork that celebrates the people and events that have made High Street so remarkable. As its beloved original manager Jenny Gomez said, it has “unique clientele– from the Dead Heads to the hockey team, the librarians to the tree planters, the lawyers to the students. I couldn’t ask for a better mix of customers.” 
     
    This old, bungalow-style house was probably built in 1910, the same year of the German-language newspapers found in its walls during a renovation project. The Yoders, a German-Swiss family, were early residents of the place by the 1910s. Myrna Yoder, one of the McMenamins artists, who has painted some of the panels and the fun, evocative figures and details adorning this pub, has always felt an affinity for the place. Now she’s thinking perhaps there’s a familial connection, too.
     
    In the fall of 1988, Jenny Gomez, then manager of McMenamins Lighthouse Brewpub in Lincoln City, transferred to Eugene to become the first manager of the High Street Brewery & Café, the city’s first post-Prohibition brewery. She quickly became the heart and soul of the place. When she’d get off work, Jenny would sit out back and have a glass of wine. And literally every person would talk to her about all that was going on in their lives, and then go grab their table. She was a great listener, gave great advice.
     
    Among Jenny’s first customers back in 1988 was an affable soul named Wally. It was a homecoming of sorts. The tall, friendly man had been a regular at the Lighthouse until a new job brought him to Eugene. Coming back to the High Street house was also a homecoming in another sense for Wally. In the mid ‘60s, when the place was still a residence, he had lived upstairs! He said the place was more or less a flop house by that time. Wally took over the north half of the second floor from two friends who had been living there during the previous year. They were “sometime students” who were among the earliest of Eugene’s then small hippie culture– local pioneers with recreational marijuana and LSD experimentation and had direct connections to the best “chemists” down in San Francisco, including Stanley Owsley, the Grateful Dead’s personal acid dispenser. 
     
    Of his High Street days, Wally remembered the beauty and completeness of seeing sunrises through the apple tree that still grows out back and sunsets through a cherry tree that stood in the front yard. He also recalls music was a constant part of life there. He and friends listened to lots of folk and jazz records. “Once every hour,” he recalled, “there was a music eruption.”
      
    Music and Grateful connections continued at High Street after McMenamins reinterpreted the place as a pub. The vintage Bay-Area concert posters and funky artistic meanderings painted on the walls allude to that, but it goes deeper. Dave Young, who worked at High Street for a number of years, was part of the great Eugene band called the Palace Meat Market. Young and the band opened for the Dead when they played at Eugene (legend has it that Owsley was at the show dressed in a Santa suit giving away some trippy presents). High Street was packed with Dead Heads afterwards… same result during Country Fair each summer.
     
    Another local musician who, with his band mates, achieved superstardom, was a High Street pubster. Dan Schmid, bass player for the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, quit the band and worked at High Street for about six years. He rejoined just as the swing thing was starting to generate a lot of interest in the 1990s and helped the Daddies lead the wave. In between tours, when the Daddies returned home to Eugene, Dan stopped in to see friends at High Street.
     
    Robert Kyr was a superstar in another musical realm, who frequented High Street. In September 1990, Robert came to University of Oregon School of Music to teach, compose and perform, as well as commune and gather with other musicians, performers, and artists. By 1995, Robert began coming to High Street on a regular basis to copy by hand his new compositions onto music sheets. He’d show up every night at 10pm and stay to closing (1am). He often was the last customer to leave. He called them his “Midnight Shifts.”
     
    “Music has one of the most important roles in healing and connections,” says Robert. And he notes that McMenamins High Street is helping this process by “providing a comfortable, perfect setting to gather together and have conversations, enjoy music, generate creative activity, and help bring peace to the world.”
     
    One other longtime superstar of High Street is Hanns Anderson. He has been crafting fabulous brews for more than two decades, down in the subterranean basement facility. “I do feel like a prairie dog. There’s that little walk you do, where you go up three of the stairs, and you can just see the patio and the feet of the people on the deck. You kind of stand up straight and look around, just like a little prairie dog, like every brewer’s ever done that’s worked here. And I’ve caught myself doing it too... And then you go back down your little hole.”
     
    Cheers!
  • High Street Art


     

    Oregon Country Fair – by Eona Skelton

    For decades, hundreds of creative souls have gathered once a year along the Long Tom River in Veneta, 13 miles from Eugene, to celebrate art, life, and music in the woods. The delightful patrons of High Street slowly become more witchy and interesting as the time of the Fair approaches.

    Right to left: Mike and Brian McMenamin share libations inside the dragon with High Street manager Jenny Gomez and her right hand, April Highsmith, then manager of McMenamins East 19th Pub. Beneath the shade of the apple tree, Dan Schmid of the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies plays his bass, which he did many times on the back porch during the 20 years he worked on and off at High Street. To Dan's right sits Joe Cotter and Kolieha Bush, excellent and accomplished artists whose work enriches both the Fair and McMenamins’ many properties. They are watched over by Lyle Hehn's High Street “Eye,” resurrected from the fire. Down underground the black rabbit relaxes between current High Street brewmaster Hanns Anderson and longtime brewer from the past, Steve van Rossem.



     

    Dan Schmid – by Eona Skelton

    The spiritual experience of drink, music, a warm fire and good friends on the back patio of High Street Brewery & Cafe, a McMenamins’ retreat for 35 years in Eugene. Left to right: Dan Schmid, musician, all-around nice guy, bass player for the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, and employee at High Street for many years, coming and going between gigs. Trumpet in hand, sits Dana Heitman and next to him the expressive lead singer of the Daddies, Steve Perry. Idly strumming his guitar sits Black Francis aka Frank Black, former Eugene resident, Pixies front man and friend of Dan’s, who played bass with Frank on and off stage. Enjoying glasses of Black Rabbit Red sits Jenny Gomez, beloved longtime manager of High Street and supporter of the rock-and-roll life of Dan and other musicians, and April Highsmith her support and friend.



     

    The Dairy and the Dead – by Cleo Hehn

    Ruby dons a skull mask to dance with her skeletal friends as the Grateful Dead ride the Furthur Bus into psychedelic oblivion.

    In 1972, Springfield’s own Ken Kesey asked the Grateful Dead to play a benefit show for his brother’s dairy, the Springfield Creamery (now nationally known for Nancy’s Yogurt). With Merry Pranksters Kesey and Ken Babbs as emcees, the show rocked what would become the grounds for the Oregon Country Fair in Veneta. Because a long-unreleased documentary about the show was named Sunshine Daydream, the sun from the High Street Pub’s logo peers at the scene from the upper right-hand corner of the painting. Cleo Hehn’s father, Paul Hehn, designed this original logo.

    Over the following years, the Dead returned to the area several times, playing Autzen Stadium into the early 1990s, when thousands of fans would flood Eugene and the High Street Pub.

    Speaking of floods, every year, Veneta’s fairgrounds flood, and the original Furthur bus was recently excavated from a swamp. Thus, the Springfield Dairy and two pyramids from McMenamins Elks Temple in Tacoma, Washington, float in magenta-soaked subconscious waters. The pyramids also refer to The Egyptian Book of the Dead, where the Grateful Dead take their name. Steal Your Face looms in the starry sky above the band as their music makes metallic electricity that resurrects the dancing dead.
     

    High Street Brews Magic in Low Places – by Cleo Hehn

    Hanns Anderson, current brewer at High Street, and former brewer Steve van Rossem smile proudly beside a giant pint of McMenamins beer. Inside the brew, Jen Kent, brewer from the Thompson Pub in Salem, reenacts the belly dance she performed at the memorial service for beloved High Street manager Jenny Gomez. Hanns and Steve wear T-shirts bearing portraits of Jenny.

    Two hoses from painted fermenters twist hops-snakes into Celtic knots. Behind Hanns, a subtle quilt pattern references his Grandma Betty’s Quilted IPA; behind Steve, a recreation of J.R.R. Tolkein’s map of Middle Earth alludes to Steve’s Hobbit’s Habit Brown Ale. High Street’s brewery is located in the basement, so all this magic swirls at the bottom of the stairs and below the bricks.

    At the culmination of Jen’s magical dance, she blows stardust into the scene—or are these Jenny’s ashes? (Aren’t we all made of stardust, anyway?)



     

    Peaceful Place – by Lillian Ripley

    Robert Kyr is a gifted and prolific composer and music professor at the University of Oregon School of Music. For a long period, he came to High Street Café in the evenings and stayed until closing at 1am, transcribing and transforming his vision into music. He has written over one hundred compositions including symphonies inspired by the themes of world peace, human rights and harmony including On the Nature of Peace, Songs of the Soul, Waging Peace, and Ah Nagasaki: Ashes into Light (a choral symphony commissioned by the Nagasaki Peace Museum in Japan). In this painting by artist Ripley, Kyr has the world in his hands as music swirls in the air, brought from a messenger white dove – world peace almost within grasp.



     

    The Fall of the Apple – by Lillian Ripley

    Apples fall. Thanks to gravity, this is an inherent trait of our reality and thanks to Newton this is well understood. Additionally, God himself warned of the apple! (At least according to medieval monks and other biblical illuminators.) And yet despite echoed warnings across time, there were still those patrons that sat beneath the apple tree at High Street and cried to the Heavens (and complained to their waiters) that apples fell upon them. Because there are no surviving images of those apple struck patrons, the artist has substituted their visages with that of Steve Perry of Cherry Poppin’ Daddies. “He seems to be a man of good humor and his face is excellently expressive,” said the artist. 



     

    Music Eruption – by Lyle Hehn

    Wally was a regular customer at the High Street Cafe in the 1990s. He also lived upstairs when it was a rental house in the 1960s. He described the times in the old house in his own peculiar way: “Once every hour, there was a music eruption.”

    Here is a music eruption that occurred about two thirds of the way through the 1960s, an era that many experienced mainly through their black-and-white television sets. In between all the handsome cowboys, tough cops and doctor dramas, a number of programs simply showed neatly dressed teenagers dancing to whatever 40 songs were allowed onto their transistor radios at the time.

    But the advent of color television took us all to the cusp of a major cultural transition, and serpentine sounds went out over the AM radios and exposed the kids to their own outdated fashion sense. The strange new music encouraged them to eat of the forbidden pharmaceutical fruits, exposing them to their own unhipness. Their eyes lit up with revelation. Soon our televisions showed people dancing in space, singing “We’ve got to get ourselves back to the Garden.”



     

    White Bird House – by Lyle Hehn

    The voice on the radio said to leave your cares behind. But now the wallpaper in your brain is getting wavy and small animals are dancing in circles. White birds appear more and more frequently in repeating patterns, until they create an opening into another Universe. A sentient White Bird House rides in on clouds of serenity, offering assistance. And just as when you are talking with other people or with animals, you may address either eye.



     

    Jenny Gomez – by Myrna Yoder

    When McMenamins started out there were just a handful of pubs. When there were employee parties, there would only be about 75 to 100 people and everyone knew everyone. Jenny’s era began in those times. She started by managing the Lighthouse Brewpub in Lincoln City and then moved to be the first manager at High Street in Eugene. She would be the manager there until 2014, when she passed away.

    My journey painting for McMenamins started in 1991, so I was part of the company early on. My then boyfriend managed the Lighthouse and the Thompson in Salem. Eugene was close so I saw a lot of Jenny. I have very fond memories of her, as it seems, does everyone.

    My main objective when creating this painting was to capture the essence of who Jenny was, how she made people feel and how she is in my memories.

    In the painting she sits in the back of High Street on a sunny day surrounded by her favorite flowers, drinking a glass of Black Rabbit Red, and yes, having a cigarette. On the roof behind her Charles Mingus plays songs from his album Mingus, Mingus, Mingus (one of her favorite albums to play while getting ready to open the pub in the morning.)

    Jenny, we miss you, but we know your spirit still has an influence on the High Street Pub.
     

    *Image pending* 

    Circle of Friends Cosmic Dance – by Myrna Yoder

    The people make the place. The regulars and the employees are the real heart of the High Street Pub.
    There have been so many people that have become part of the legacy of that old home. They have been the ones to make the place truly a place to gather with family and friends. I tried to capture in spirit, that special thing that happens when people come together in this special place. While I have based the portraits on real people from a group of friends that have been meeting together at High Street for many years, they really are, for me, representations of all those who have come and spent time communing with each other at McMenamins.

@mcmenamins