Jury’s Out On Aurora, Oregon Jail

This is the Aurora, Oregon jail, located just behind Aurora’s city hall. Passing by, you might not give it a second thought. Like what’s the big deal about an old gray building no longer being used? That is, unless you start asking questions. Any building this old must have a story. Like who built it? And if the walls could talk, what kinds of things would you learn?

Aurora, Oregon’s Old Jail

The door of this jail remains open, in more ways than one…and it’s also smaller than you might guess. Once inside, it seems tiny. And it is, about the size of a large garden shed.

It features a decorative exterior, three individual cells and a narrow corridor to enter and exit. Three bumps above the entry make for a classy flourish on a building meant to lock people inside. Imagine spending a night in this jail…not as a willing visitor, but as someone held against your will. No privacy. No way out.

With no insulation, comfort was clearly not a consideration. That’s one good reason jails are sometimes referred to as “the cooler.” Those bars over the windows stress what was far more important.

Aurora Oregon Jail Window With Bars
Aurora, Oregon Old Jail Window

Looking around, rust on the interior walls indicate a century of Oregon weather, each season adding another faint layer. Exposed metal rebar is randomly visible through the concrete, underscoring how time and the elements can soften even the toughest material, sometimes even a hardened criminal. A single toilet with zero privacy sits in full view for all and the extra heavy steel door ensures you don’t leave.

Aurora Oregon Jail Interior
Aurora, Oregon’s Jail Interior

Jails strike legitimate fear in many of us. They’re a place virtually no one wants to go.
So what’s the story behind this place…and was it really so bad?

Jailhouse Rocked
But this jail’s story takes an unexpected turn…because Aurora’s old jail, the place that once struck fear, more recently has had an appointment with the wrecking ball. With the walls themselves closing in on those four walls, it’s ironic that this once threatening place is now itself threatened.

The Threat
That’s because in August 2024, an Aurora committee met to determine if the deteriorating structure was too far gone to keep. A consensus determined the old building wasn’t feasible to move, so the decision was made to take it down. A plan was devised to save the door, the bars, one cell and take the rest down. That discussion didn’t choose complete erasure, but selective preservation. There’s something sincere in that compromise, yet something sad about it, too. A door alongside photos in a display case can show what a jail looked like. But this century old structure is the real deal.

Aurora Oregon Jail Interior
Aurora, Oregon’s Jail Interior

Closing The Door
Remembering Aurora’s past, including structures like this, gives a truer perspective of Aurora long ago. And once it’s gone, it’s gone. Then, there’s no way to experience the reality of just how truly small this jail was, what it felt like to be inside and how confining the sensation. That’s when once living history turns into photographs and fading memories. It’s curious how the century old jail sits steps away from Oregon’s first historic district designation, yet the jail itself was never included. History, it seems, is in the eye of the beholder.

True Mystery
For starters, a little digging reveals the Aurora, Oregon jail is older than anyone thought. That’s because one old newspaper clipping from 1893 leaves this tantalizing clue:

“Ground has been leased and the contract let for the building of a city jail…C. Zimmerman being the contractor. Work will commence on the building in a few days, weather permitting. The council deserves much credit for the prompt action taken in this matter.” That phrase “prompt action” hints the town of Aurora needed a jail sooner, rather than later. Aurora’s apparent jail builder, Christian Zimmerman, was a longtime Aurora resident. Assuming he built the jail when referenced, in 1893 Mr. Zimmerman was then 55 years old.  

The Inmates
As with any old building, history leaves clues and here are a few. Dramatic stories survive in old newspapers. We even know a few things about some of the prisoners held here, though years apart. They include a chicken thief and two men traveling through town after burglarizing a neighboring community.

Aurora Lawman Eyes Trouble
Among the earliest records is from 1921, when two men aboard a local freight train stopped in Aurora one Saturday morning, while the train loaded water for the train’s steam engine. Aurora’s own Marshal George Fry recognized them as the pair he helped arrest in Woodburn a few days earlier, taking them immediately to the Aurora jail. Marshal Fry’s instincts were correct that the men were escapees and he returned the two men to the Oregon City jail, where the fugitives had escaped on a charge of burglarizing a home between the two towns.  

From the Henhouse to the Hoosegow
Another Aurora jailbird was held in 1935 on a charge of stealing chickens. He was given a bail of $250, then lodged here when he wasn’t able to pay. That alleged poultry pilferer had been found guilty on a morals charge the year before, leading to him to spend 30 days in the jail. Yet he was eventually cleared of the chicken thievery charge by a grand jury, a few months after his later arrest.

What to do with a jail like this is often considered settled. But in this case, not yet. It seems the term ‘doing time’ cuts a little differently for jails. That’s because when it comes to this century old building, there’s no firm agreement yet on what the appropriate sentence is. But first, why does it even matter? Some might say it’s an old building….Time to make room for something new and relevant.

Determining the fate of a historical building with a mindset of ‘newer is better’ misses the entire point, especially in this town itself older than the state of Oregon, with a historic district and a stream of events celebrating Aurora’s early origins. And given Aurora’s small size, even seemingly minor decisions like what to do with an old jail, get inflated.

Why It Matters
Aurora’s old jail matters for at least three reasons: History, identity, and stewardship. History shows how the community operated. Identity says something about how Aurora sees itself now. Stewardship shows Aurora’s priorities.

Possible Reprieve
The old Aurora jail still stands and that’s really the story for now. Between the 2024 deliberations by town leaders and the wrecking ball, the jail is receiving at least a temporary reprieve. That’s because a 2025 town meeting underscored the consideration being given by Aurora’s leaders for the old jail, even inviting input from the Aurora Colony Historical Society, an institution that truly knows the importance of Aurora history. It’s been said that those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it. And by all appearances, Aurora’s leaders remain open to dealing with their town’s past…even if it’s an old jail.

Ideas have ranged from preservation to tourism use to partial reconstruction—but no final direction has been set. As a possible tourist attraction, visitors taking photos around the jail, then posting them on social media could be another unique way to help promote Aurora.What some may see as a town’s delay in deciding the fate of this old jail is frustrating. For others, it’s a chance to get it right, with a real shot at resolving an issue deferred for decades. Sometimes a town’s monetary balance sheet is exceeded by its ample historic ‘balance sheet,’ of less tangible assets. Beauty, history, education and even an old jail can provide benefits in addition to monetary considerations.

Aurora’s jail and cemeteries have something in common, because their presence makes a statement about the treatment given to those that each facility holds. Here’s a related story about one Aurora, Oregon hero to remember with that video below.

So for now at least, the door to Aurora, Oregon’s old jail remains open…both literally and figuratively.

Doing Time
whether the jail’s future ultimately involves preservation, adaptive re-use, relocation, documentation, or demolition, its story will always be part of Aurora’s history.

So what’s lost when a place like this disappears—not a cathedral, not a battlefield, just a one-room jail behind a small-town city hall? Maybe just the fact that something happened here, against this wall, beneath a scalloped roofline someone once thought worth the extra concrete. So after an initial vote for demolition, the historic Aurora jail remains. For now.

Aurora Oregon Old Jail Door
Aurora, Oregon’s Old Jail Door

The Slammer
A salvaged jail door shows you what a jail door looked like. Yet you won’t know what it felt and sounded like, while closing on those being held under the force of law

Aurora Oregon Jail, Aurora Oregon History, Aurora Oregon
Aurora, Oregon’s Old Jail Reimagined

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