As a native New Yorker and longtime Bay Area resident, Tish Bayer didn’t know much at all about the history of east Clark County when she moved to Washougal with her husband, John, in 2005 after retiring from a long career as a development professional for nonprofit organizations.
She’s learned a lot since then, especially after joining the Two Rivers Heritage Museum’s board of directors in 2022.
“It’s nice to be involved with the (museum),” said Bayer, who took over for Jim Cobb as board president earlier this year. “I really enjoy spending time with the volunteers; I love to sit and just listen to them. I see so much (here) from my growing-up years in my mother’s home. She would be amazed; I mean, this sewing machine (from the 1920s) was something that she had. And I just enjoy the area.”
Bayer and the rest of the volunteers are looking forward to Saturday, March 5, when the museum will reopen to the public for the first time in 2023. “I think it’s going to be better than last year. Every year has to be better (than the one before),” said volunteer Ivar Godtlibsen. “Between the donations and the grants and the tour (income), we’re doing OK financially. We’re surviving. This past year was good; we came out in the ‘plus’ and were able to bank some money. We’re hoping to get it back to where we were (before the pandemic), and even better than we were before.”
Volunteers ‘prepared and ready’ for visitors after being ‘blindsided’ in 2022
Museum volunteers were “blindsided” by the influx of visitors they received from the American Empress riverboat’s east Clark County tours last summer, according to volunteer Richard Johnson.