The Shirk Ranch complex included seven historic buildings and five other contributing structures plus two separate contributing sites, the ranch dump area and a grave. Most of the ranch buildings were constructed during two periods. The first phase was in the early 1880s and then a second surge of building around 1910. The ranch building constructed in the 1880s included the original ranch house (today, only a stone fireplace is left standing), the oldest part of the
blacksmith shop, and a small stone-clad shed which has collapsed. Around 1910, Shirk added a number of other buildings. These include the existing main house, two
bunkhouses, a barn, a wood shed, a
root cellar, an
outhouse, a
chicken coop/animal shed, a
water tower, two
wells, original fences, and the hand-dug irrigation system. All of these buildings are wood-frame structures covered either in horizontal weatherboard or vertical wood planking with wood-shingle roofing. All of the buildings were painted at one time. The main house was painted white. All the other buildings were painted red. The historic district has fourteen contributing elements. They include the main house, two bunkhouses, a blacksmith shop, a wood shed, an outhouse, a chicken coop/animal shed, a water tower, two wells, original fences, and the hand-dug irrigation system. All of these historic elements are part of the main ranch complex which covers . There are two additional contributing elements, a dump area and a grave site, located on two small non-contiguous parcels of land west of the main ranch complex. Together the three sites comprise a historic district. • The main residence was built around 1910. It is located at the north end of the ranch compound, facing south. It is a two-story I-shaped structure, wide and long. It is a wood-frame structure with
shiplap siding. It rests on a stone foundation and has a
gable roof. It has six-over-six double-hung
sash windows with simple molding frames. The house has a large front porch with hand-carved support posts. There are covered porches on the other three sides as well. The house was originally painted white. The interior was finished with plaster, simple trim and molding, and paneled doors. The first floor has four main rooms and two large pantries. The front door opens to a central hallway and a stairs leading to the second floor. There are two large bedrooms at the front of the house, one on either side of the central hallway. The hallway leads to a large living room in the center of the house. The living room is long and wide. The living room is connected to the kitchen which has two adjoining pantries. The second floor has three large rooms, two bedrooms at the front of the house and a large family room above the living room and kitchen. There is no second floor above the pantries. There have been no major structural alterations or additions made to the house. The house was used as a bunkhouse for ranch hands into the 1980s. • The first bunkhouse is a one-story building with a footprint of by . It is located west of the main house, facing south. It has a wood-frame structure with a stone foundation, plank floor, and a gable roof. It has horizontal
weatherboard siding with corner boards. The doors are centered on the north and south ends of the building, each flanked by a small square window. • The second bunkhouse is a one-story building with a footprint of by . It is located west of the first bunkhouse, facing south. It is a wood-frame structure on a stone foundation with a plank floor and gable roof. It has vertical
board and batten siding with corner boards. There are vertical paneled doors on south and east sides each flanked by a small square window. • The center section of the blacksmith shop was built in 1880s. The shop was expanded on both ends around 1910. It is located approximately southeast of the main house. It is a one-story structure measuring by . It is a wood-frame building on a stone foundation with board and batten siding and a gable roof. There is a shed-roof attachment that extends the structure by on the south side. The shop has large double doors on the east side and a vertical plank door on the west side. There is a small window on the south side of the building. • The wood shed was built about 1910. It is located on the western edge of the compound. It is an L-shaped structure. The building is by with a dirt floor, board and batten siding, and asymmetric gable covered with a
galvanized metal roof. There are two separate doors on the east side and a third door on south side. • The chicken coop/animal shed is a one-story building measuring by . It is located north of the main house, facing south. It is a wood-frame structure made of rough sawn horizontal planking on the north side and vertical board and batten siding on the south side. It has two interior rooms, dirt floors, and a sheet metal shed roof. The door and several small windows are located on the east side. • The outhouse is wood-frame structure with a gable roof. It is now located at the northwest corner of the compound. However, it was customary to relocate outhouses periodically so its location probably changed a number of times while it was in use at the ranch. It has shiplap siding with corner boards. It has a vertical plank door on north side. • The two-story water tower was built around 1910. It is located approximately northeast of the main house. It has a square footprint. It has a low-pitch
hip roof with shiplap siding with rubble stone covering the lower exterior walls. The stone walls have partially collapsed due to severe structural settlement. There are two doors on east elevation, one on the first floor and the other above it on the second floor. Inside, there is an enclosed diameter galvanized metal water tank housed on the second floor. The tank is supported by floor boards laid over log joists supported by log posts. • There are two wells on the property. The main well is located approximately east of the water tower. It is constructed of native stone and mortar with a square wooden cover. The well's water level is normally about below ground level. The second well is located south of the main house near the corral. The well is approximately in diameter. It is rock lined and has a wooden cover. This is probably the original ranch well. • There is an extensive system of juniper post corrals and board fences around the ranch complex. There are also historic split rail and willow fences along with modern steel post fences. Most of the fences have been repaired with various materials making them hard to attribute to a specific time period. • The ranch irrigation system is quite extensive and includes both historic and modern elements. The most obvious historic irrigation structure is the earthen dam north and east of the ranch complex. The dam begins as a low earth-berm just north of the ranch's perimeter fence. It gradually grows to a height of at a point east of the main ranch area. The dam is faced with hand-placed stones on the south side to re-enforce the earthen structure. The dam opens to a fenced pond south of the main ranch. A series of ditches once channeled the water throughout the meadow lands south and east of the ranch compound. • The ranch
dump site is located on a separate parcel of land, approximately southwest of the main ranch complex. It contains a wide variety of used materials including domestic artifacts, fencing material, wagon parts, pieces of machinery, a tractor, and an automobile. Because these items help place the ranch operations in context over time, the dump site has historic value. • There is a grave marker approximately northwest of main house. It is located on a knoll overlooking the valley and the ranch. It is a separate part of the historic district, covering less than . The headstone is inscribed: "Here lies Bill Vickers and J. Gruenke, Shot August 14, 1887". The details regarding the circumstances of these men's deaths are unknown. File:Shirk Ranch, Lake County, Oregon (Main House)2.jpg|* Main house File:Shirk Ranch, Lake County, Oregon (Bunkhouse).jpg|* Bunkhouse #2 File:Shirk Ranch, Lake County, Oregon (Blacksmith Shop).jpg|* Blacksmith shop File:Shirk Ranch, Lake County, Oregon (Water Tower).jpg|* Water tower The remaining historic structures are in such poor condition the Bureau of Land Management listed them as non-contributing elements when the Shirk Ranch site was nominated for the National Register of Historic Places. They include a caved-in root cellar, a collapsed barn, the remains of a rock-clad shed, and an old ranch house ruin. • The root cellar was constructed about 1910. It is located west of the main house, between the first bunkhouse and the woodshed. It is dug into ground with a footprint of approximately by . It is accessed by wooden stairway. Boards are nailed to ten below ground level posts to keep earth out of the cellar. The roof has a heavy 1og ridge pole with simple lumber planking covered with earth. By 1985, the roof had already collapsed. • The barn was probably built around 1910. Its ruins are located approximately 550 feet southwest of the main house. The barn was wide and long. By 1985, the barn was partially collapsed and had no roof left. The remaining structure included vertical plank walls fixed to large juniper posts which only remained at the north end of the building. The structure originally had
mortise and tenon joints to hold up the loft. There was a large door opening at the end that was still standing. • The stone-clad shed was built in the 1880s. It is located at the southwest corner of the site, some distance from the other historic structures. It was a one-story structure, measuring by . It was constructed with common lumber sheathed with dry-stacked stones. The door on the east side was framed with rough-cut lumber and juniper posts. The shed had no windows. In 1985, the shed was in very poor condition with the exterior stone wall partially collapsed. • The ruins of the original 1881 ranch house are located approximately west of the main house. In 1985, the only remaining part of the original house was the ruin of a stone fireplace. All that remained was a number of large stones that formed the hearth and walls of the fireplace encased with dry-stacked rubble. There is only one non-historic structure on the site, an animal feed lot located at the southern end of the ranch complex. It was built in 1980 for modern ranch operations at the site. While it does not have any historic significance, the Bureau of Land Management has decided not to remove the structure since it is isolated from all of the contributing historic structures. == Location ==