| Henry Pittock |  | | Born | March 1, 1896 | | Birth place | England | | Died | January 28, 1919 | | in | Portland, Oregon | | Circumstances | | Occupation | Newspaper publisher Business tycoon | | Spouse | Georgiana Burton Pittock | | Religious belief(s) | Episcopalian | | Net worth | $8 Million estate, 1919 | | Notable credit(s) | Longtime publisher, The Oregonian | Henry Lewis Pittock (March 1, 1836 - January 28, 1919) was an Oregon (USA) pioneer, newspaper editor and publisher, and wood and paper magnate, active in Republican politics and Portland, Oregon civic affairs, and an avid outdoorsman and adventurer. He is frequently referred to as the founder of The Oregonian, although it was published as a struggling weekly before he reestablished it as the state's preeminent daily newspaper. March 1 is the 60th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (61st in leap years). ...
Year 1896 (MDCCCXCVI) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display calendar). ...
Motto: (French for God and my right) Anthem: God Save the King/Queen Capital London (de facto) Largest city London Official language(s) English (de facto) Unification - by Athelstan AD 927 Area - Total 130,395 km² (1st in UK) 50,346 sq mi Population - 2006 est. ...
January 28 is the 28th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1919 (MCMXIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar). ...
Nickname: City of Roses, Stumptown, Bridgetown, PDX Location in Multnomah County and the state of Oregon Coordinates: Country United States State Oregon County Multnomah County Incorporated February 8, 1851 Mayor Tom Potter Area - City 376. ...
Official language(s) None Capital Salem Largest city Portland Area Ranked 9th - Total 98,466 sq mi (255,026 km²) - Width 260 miles (420 km) - Length 360 miles (580 km) - % water 2. ...
The word Episcopal is derived from the Greek επισκοπος epískopos, which literally means overseer; the word however is used in religious terms to mean bishop. ...
March 1 is the 60th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (61st in leap years). ...
Year 1836 (MDCCCXXXVI) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian Calendar (or a leap year starting on Wednesday of the 12-day slower Julian calendar). ...
January 28 is the 28th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1919 (MCMXIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar). ...
Official language(s) None Capital Salem Largest city Portland Area Ranked 9th - Total 98,466 sq mi (255,026 km²) - Width 260 miles (420 km) - Length 360 miles (580 km) - % water 2. ...
The Republican Party is one of the two major political parties in the United States two-party system, the other one being the Democratic Party. ...
Nickname: City of Roses, Stumptown, Bridgetown, PDX Location in Multnomah County and the state of Oregon Coordinates: Country United States State Oregon County Multnomah County Incorporated February 8, 1851 Mayor Tom Potter Area - City 376. ...
October 2, 2004 edition. ...
Early life
Born in England, the son of Frederick and Susanna Bonner Pittock, Henry grew up from the age of four in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where his father had moved the family and established a printing business. The third of eight children, he attended public schools and apprenticed in his father's print shop from the age of twelve. He left home at seventeen with his brother, Robert, and inspired by frontier adventure stories, joined two other families to emigrate to the West. He is reported to have made most of the journey barefoot. [1] Motto: (French for God and my right) Anthem: God Save the King/Queen Capital London (de facto) Largest city London Official language(s) English (de facto) Unification - by Athelstan AD 927 Area - Total 130,395 km² (1st in UK) 50,346 sq mi Population - 2006 est. ...
Nickname: Steel City, Iron City, City of Champions, City of Bridges, City of Colleges, P-Burgh, The Burgh Motto: Benigno Numine Location in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania Coordinates: Country United States State Pennsylvania County Allegheny County Founded 1758 Mayor Luke Ravenstahl (D) Area - City 151. ...
Arriving destitute in the Oregon Territory in October, 1853, he was rebuffed in his attempts to become a printer for the Oregon Spectator in Oregon City, the first and at the time largest newspaper published in the territory. Declining the only job he had been offered, that of a bartender, he finally found work as a typesetter for Thomas J. Dryer, founding editor and publisher of the weekly Oregonian in Portland, who provided him board and room as his only remuneration. The accommodations were meager, consisting of a space below the front counter where Pittock could spread some blankets.[2] After six months on that basis, he was granted a salary of US$900 a year. Over the next six years, Pittock was receiving a growing partnership interest in the paper in lieu of a salary Dryer, paying more attention to politics than his business, was frequently unable to pay. Pittock assumed the duties of manager and editor the newspaper. Municipal Elevator in Oregon City Oregon City is the first city in the United States incorporated west of the Rockies. ...
Thomas Jefferson Dryer (1808-1879) born in 1808. ...
An avid outdoorsman and adventurer, Pittock is credited to have been the first to ascend the summit of Mount Hood, on July 11, 1857, although his employer, Dryer, made a disputed prior claim.[3] Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in northern Oregon, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. ...
July 11 is the 192nd day (193rd in leap years) of the year in the Gregorian Calendar, with 173 days remaining. ...
1857 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ...
Pittock married Georgiana Martin Burton, the daughter of a flour mill owner, in 1860. The couple had five children and lived in a small house on a block of land now known as the "Pittock Block" that he purchased for $300 in 1856.
Oregonian publisher and editor In 1861, the newly elected President Lincoln rewarded Dryer for his work on the campaign in Oregon with a political appointment in the new administration.[4] Dryer turned over the debt-ridden Oregonian to Pittock as compensation for remaining unpaid salary and agreement to assume the paper's sizable financial obligations. Pittock began daily publication of the Morning Oregonian on 4 February 1861 on a new steam-powered press he had purchased for the expanded enterprise. Competition with the three other daily newspapers in Portland was fierce, and at least two of the rivals, the Times and the Advertiser appeared to have a better chance of success than that of the Oregonian.[5] To gain an edge, Pittock organized at considerable cost an elaborate system to obtaining news about the Civil War ahead of his competitors. The nearest existing telegraph lines ended in Yreka, California, so Pittock arranged for pony express and and stagecoach relays of wire dispatches which arrived in Portland days ahead of news in rival papers who relied on reports to arrive by steamer from San Francisco. Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 â April 15, 1865) was an American politician elected from Illinois as the 16th President of the United States (1861 to 1865), and the first president from the Republican Party. ...
February 4 is the 35th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ...
1861 is a common year starting on Tuesday. ...
Yreka is the county seat of Siskiyou County, California. ...
Pony Express statue in St. ...
Both the telegraph and Pittock's competitiveness would play a part a few years later when President Lincoln was assassinated in a story related by the son of the Western Union telegraph operator in an oral history recorded by the Federal Writers Project. The telegrapher had been befriended by Pittock, and when news came across the wire of the assassination, the young man concealed it from the other papers until the Oregonian had published the news as a "scoop."[6] Pittock addressed the fiscal problems of the paper by requiring cash payment for subscriptions, and implemented a vigorous collection effort for accounts Dryer had allowed to become delinquent. Ultimately, Pittock not only was able to bring stability to the Oregonian, but dominance in the Portland newspaper market. He was quick to invest heavily in new equipment and production procedures to stay ahead of the competition, sometimes dangerously stretching available capital. [7]. Longtime Oregonian editor Harvey Scott claimed Pittock had promised him a half interest in the Oregonian in 1877, only to learn later that it went instead to wealthy U.S. Senator Henry Winslow Corbett for a much needed infusion of cash. Scott would ultimately purchase shares in the paper, and had a long intermittent tenure on its staff, leaving for a time to work for the rival Portland Bulletin. Although they were able to maintain a working relationship afterward, it was forever strained by what Scott viewed as a serious betrayal. The bitterness would extend for generations between the two men's heirs, occasionally exhibiting itself in management disputes at the paper.[8] The United States Senate is the upper house of the U.S. Congress, smaller than the United States House of Representatives. ...
It was one of several famous Pittock "feuds." Another involved onetime Oregonian employee, and later City councilman, Will H. Daly. Long a political nemesis, Daly enraged Pittock by implicating him in a scheme to provide a water service to his palacial home at considerable taxpayer expense. Although the resulting scandal soon died down, Pittock continued relentlessly to discredit Daly, and ultimately succeeded in ending his political career, branding him as a socialist, through publication of documents obtained by burglary.[9]
Builds a financial empire In 1866 he was a partner in the first paper mill in the Northwest, at Oregon City, and later a second mill there and another at Camas, Washington. The mills supplied newsprint to the Oregonian and the Portland Evening Telegram Pittock established in 1877 and, the expanded and widely distributed Sunday Oregonian. Beginning in 1884 new presses were bought that raised printing capacity to 12,000 copies an hour and, later, to 24,000 copies an hour. The paper mills would grow into a thriving company, eventually becoming part of the giant Georgia Pacific company.[10][11] The Telegram building in Portland is one of the city's two remaining historic newspaper buildings.[12] Camas is located at (45. ...
Georgia-Pacific LLC. is an American pulp and paper company based in Atlanta, Georgia, and is one of the worlds leading manufacturers and distributors of tissue, pulp, paper, packaging, building products and related chemicals. ...
Pittock's business interests would soon grow to include investments in Portland banks, real estate, transportation, and logging and lumbering. In 1909 he began construction of a 22-room Renaissance revival mansion on forty-six acres of woodland, now a public-owned landmark known as the Pittock Mansion. The "Pittock block," still extant in downtown Portland, where he and his family had lived since 1856, had become valuable downtown property, and he leased it in 1912 for more than $8.3 million. The Northwestern Bank Building, at the corner of 6th and Morrison streets in Portland, was headquarters to the institution he founded with his son-in-law and paper mill partner, Frederick Leadbetter,[13] and now houses a Wells Fargo Bank branch, and twelve stories of commercial offices. He served as its president until his death, and it survived him until it fell to a bank run in 1927. [14] The Pittock Mansion The Pittock Mansion is a French Renaissance château in Portland, Oregon originally built as a private home for The Oregonian publisher Henry Pittock and his wife, Georgia. ...
Wells Fargo NYSE: WFC is a financial services company in the United States, with consumer finance subsidiaries doing business in Canada, the Northern Mariana Islands and the Caribbean. ...
Later life and legacy Having briefly lost control of the paper during the 1870s, and narrowly escaping bankruptcy during the depression of 1877,[15] Pittock contintued to manage his newspaper, maintaining long hours in his office until days before his death in Portland. Stricken with grippe, he is reported to have had himself carried to an east bay window of his mansion, to look once more at the vista across the city where he had made and broken careers, and amassed a fortune. The next night, January 28, 1919, he died leaving the largest estate which had yet been probated in Oregon, valued at $7,894,778.33.[8] Negatively stained flu virions. ...
Unwilling to yield control of his newspaper even in death, he had provided in his will for a majority of the shares of Oregonian stock to be held by two trustees, with "full and complete authority" to run the paper for 20 years.[8] On dissolution of the trust, its shares were divided amongst Pittock's heirs, and for a time was managed by a board of two representatives of the Pittock family, and one representing the Scotts.[16] The arrangement eventually gave way to the Oregonian, "crown jewel" of the Pittock empire, being sold to a succession of national newspaper chains. Pittock was among the first inductees in the Oregon Newspaper Hall of Fame, at the same time as his longtime editor, Harvey W. Scott, when it was established in 1979.[17][18]
References - ^ Johnson, Patrick (2006). Walk through some of Portland's history (HTML). Oregon.com. Portland, Oregon: Oregon.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-27.
- ^ Duin, Steve (December 4, 2000). 150 roiling years of delivering the news (HTML). The Oregonian. Portland, Oregon: Oregonian Publishing. Reprinted in OregonLive. Advance Internet.. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- ^ Cascade Mountains (HTML). Mid-Columbia History. The Dalles, Oregon: Gorge.net citing Fred H. McNeil, Mount Hood. (2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-24.
- ^ Oregon Biographies: Thomas Jefferson Dryer (HTML). Oregon History Project. Oregon Historical Society (2002). Retrieved on 2006-12-24.
- ^ Scott, H. W. (1890). The Press (HTML). History of Portland, Oregon. Syracuse, New York: D. Mason & Co. Reprinted in Access Genealogy. AccessGenealogy.com.. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- ^ Sherbert, A. C. (1939). Interview: Ross M. Plummer (HTML). American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1940. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. Retrieved on 2006-12-24.
- ^ "Pittock, Henry Lewis." American National Biography. (2004) Oxford University Press. Reprinted in Biographies Plus Illustrated, H. W. Wilson. [1] Retrieved 2006-12-23
- ^ a b c Portland Saga (HTML). Time (Online). New York City: Time Warner (Octboer 3, 1938). Retrieved on 2009-12-23.
- ^ Terry, John, citing Robert D. Johnston, Oregon Historical Quarterly, Fall, 1998. "Oregon's Trails: Important labor leader fails to garner credit he's due" (Newspaper), The Oregonian, Portland, Oregon: Oregonian Publishing, July 24, 2005, pp. A21.
- ^ Camas and the blue lily (1883) (HTML). Clark County (Official website). Vancounver, Washington: Clark County Public Information and Outreach (2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-24.
- ^ Appendix (PDF). 2005 Population and Economic Handbook. Vancouver, Washington: Clark County Department of Assessment & GIS (2005). Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- ^ Hot off the press -- inside the Telegram building (PDF). Architectural Heritage Center Quarterly News and Notes. Portland, Oregon: Bosco-Milligan Foundation (Fall, 2002). Retrieved on 2006-12-24.
- ^ Frederick W. Leadbetter (HTML). History. Vancouver, Washington: Columbian.com (2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-24.
- ^ Moore, Mark (July 4, 2006). Financial Institutions (HTML). PdxHistory.com. Portland, Oregon: Mark Moore. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- ^ Flores, Trudy; Sarah Griffith (2002). Photograph notes: Portrait of Henry Pittock with Two Babies (HTML). Oregon History Project. Portland, Oregon: Oregon Historical Society. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- ^ Twins and Trusts (HTML). Time (Online). New York City: Time Warner (February 13, 1939). Retrieved on 2006-12-12.
- ^ Newspaper Hall of Fame Finds Home (HTML). Homepage News Archive. Eugene, Oregon: University of Oregon (2005). Retrieved on 2006-12-26.
- ^ Newspaper Hall of Fame (HTML). Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association (Official Website). Portland, Oregon: ONPA (2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
 | Pioneer History of Oregon (1806 - 1890) | | Topics | Oregon Country · Oregon Treaty · Oregon missionaries · Executive Committee · Oregon Trail · Oregon boundary dispute · Pacific Fur Company · Hudson's Bay Company HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
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December 24 is the 358th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (359th in leap years). ...
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December 23 is the 357th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (358th in leap years). ...
HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
2009 (MMIX) will be a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
December 23 is the 357th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (358th in leap years). ...
HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
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December 24 is the 358th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (359th in leap years). ...
PDF is an abbreviation with several meanings: Portable Document Format Post-doctoral fellowship Probability density function There also is an electronic design automation company named PDF Solutions. ...
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December 23 is the 357th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (358th in leap years). ...
PDF is an abbreviation with several meanings: Portable Document Format Post-doctoral fellowship Probability density function There also is an electronic design automation company named PDF Solutions. ...
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December 24 is the 358th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (359th in leap years). ...
HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
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December 24 is the 358th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (359th in leap years). ...
HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
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December 23 is the 357th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (358th in leap years). ...
HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
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December 23 is the 357th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (358th in leap years). ...
HTML, short for HyperText Markup Language, is the predominant markup language for the creation of web pages. ...
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December 12 is the 346th day (347th in leap years) of the year in the Gregorian calendar, with 19 days remaining. ...
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State seal of Oregon. ...
Landscape in Oregon Country, by Charles Marion Russell Map of Oregon Country Oregon Country was a region of western North America that originally consisted of the land north of 42°N latitude, south of 54°40N latitude, and west of the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. ...
Map of the lands in dispute The Treaty with Great Britain, in Regard to Limits Westward of the Rocky Mountains, also known as the Oregon Treaty or Treaty of Washington, is a bilateral treaty between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the United States that was signed...
Jason Lee The Oregon missionaries were collectively the religious-minded pioneers who settled in the Oregon Country of North America starting in the 1830s with the intent of coverting local Native Americans to Christianity. ...
An Executive Committee was the title of a three-person committee which served as the executive Branch of the Provisional Government of the Oregon Territory. ...
The Ox Team or the Old Oregon Trail 1852-1906 by Ezra Meeker. ...
The most used slogan in this time, the slogan that president Polk was known for was Fifty-Four Forty or War! This refers to the important boundary line in the Oregon regin of the United States. ...
The Pacific Fur Company was founded June 23, 1810, in New York City. ...
The Hudsons Bay Company (HBC; Compagnie de la Baie dHudson in French) is the oldest commercial corporation in North America and is one of the oldest in the world. ...
| | Events | Champoeg Meetings · Treaty of 1818 · Russo-American Treaty · Donation Land Claim Act · Whitman massacre The Champoeg Meetings in Oregon Country were the first attempts at governing in the Pacific Northwest by United States European-American pioneers. ...
The Convention respecting fisheries, boundary, and the restoration of slaves between the United States and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, also known as the London Convention, Anglo-American Convention of 1818, Convention of 1818, or simply the Treaty of 1818, was a treaty signed in 1818 between...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
The Donation Land Claim Act of 1850, sometimes known just as the Donation Land Act, was a historic law passed by the Congress of the United States intended to promote homestead settlement in the Oregon Territory in the Pacific Northwest (comprising the present-day states of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho). ...
Marcus Whitman The Whitman massacre (also known as the Walla Walla massacre and the Whitman Incident) was the murder in the Oregon Country on November 29, 1847 of U.S. missionaries Dr. Marcus Whitman and his wife Narcissa, along with twelve others, by Cayuse and Umatilla Indians. ...
| | Places | Fort Astoria · Oregon Mission · Fort Vancouver · Champoeg, Oregon · Willamette Stone · Barlow Road · Whitman Mission Fort Astoria was the Pacific Fur Companys primary fur trading post in the Northwest, and was the first permanent U.S. settlement on the Pacific coast. ...
Oregon Mission (1831-1846) began as an effort by the Methodist Episcopal Church to convert the native Indians of the far west to Christianity. ...
Fort Vancouver Fort Vancouver was a 19th century fur trading outpost along the Columbia River that served as the headquarters of the Hudsons Bay Company in the Oregon Country. ...
Champoeg, Oregon Champoeg, pronounced sham_POO_ee (SAMPA /ʃæm. ...
The Willamette Stones location is now commemorated by a circular marker and plaque. ...
The Barlow Road was the last overland segment of the Oregon Trail before reaching the Willamette Valley. ...
Whitman Mission National Historic Site is a United States National Historic Site located just west of Walla Walla, Washington, at the site of the massacre of the family of Dr. Marcus Whitman by the Cayuse on November 29, 1847. ...
| | People | George Abernethy · Sam Barlow · Tabitha Brown · Abigail Scott Duniway · Philip Foster · Peter French · Joseph Gale · William Gilpin · David Hill · Jason Lee · Asa Lovejoy · John McLoughlin · Joseph Meek · Ezra Meeker · John Minto · Joel Palmer · Sager orphans · Henry H. Spalding · Marcus Whitman · Narcissa Whitman · Ewing Young George Abernethy (1807 - 1877) was a U.S. businessman. ...
Samuel Kimbrough Barlow (b. ...
Tabitha Moffatt Brown (May 1, 1780 â May 4, 1858) was a pioneer emigrant that traveled the Oregon Trail, and assisted in the founding of Tualatin Academy that would grow to become Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon. ...
Abigail Scott Duniway (October 22, 1834 _ October 11, 1915) was born Abigail Jane Scott near Groveland, Illinois, to John Tucker Scott and Anne Roelofson. ...
Philip Foster (January 29, 1805âMarch 17, 1884) was one of the first settlers in Oregon, United States. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Joseph Gale (1807-1881) was an American pioneer, trapper, and politican who contributed to the early settlment of the Oregon Country. ...
William Gilpin William Gilpin (October 4, 1813–1894) was a 19th century U.S. explorer, politician, land speculator, and futurist writer about the American West. ...
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Jason Lee (NSHC statue) Jason Lee (June 28, 1803 – March 12, 1845) an American missionary and pioneer, was born on a farm near Stanstead, Quebec. ...
Asa Lawrence Lovejoy (born 1808 in Massachusetts, died 1882) was an Oregon pioneer and one of the founders of the city of Portland, Oregon. ...
John McLoughlin (NSHC statue) Dr. John McLoughlin (pronounced mc-lock-lin, October 19, 1784 – September 3, 1857), the Father of Oregon, was a fur trader and early settler in the Oregon Country in the Pacific Northwest. ...
Joseph Lafayette Meek (1810–1875) was born in Washington County, Virginia, near the Cumberland Gap. ...
Meeker in Kearney, Nebraska, ca. ...
John Minto (October 10, 1822 - 1915) was an American pioneer born in Wylam, England. ...
General Joel Palmer, October 4, 1810 (Ontario, Canada) â June 9, 1881 (Dayton, Oregon), was an Oregon pioneer, author of a popular immigrant guidebook, co-founder of Dayton, Oregon, a controversial Indian Affairs administrator, and a popular Oregon politician. ...
Please wikify (format) this article as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style. ...
Henry Harmon Spalding (1803 - 1874), and his wife Eliza Hart Spalding were prominent Presbyterian missionaries and educators working primarily with the Nez Perce in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. ...
Marcus Whitman Narcissa Whitman Marcus Whitman (September 4, 1802âNovember 29, 1847) was an American physician and missionary in the Oregon Country. ...
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| | Oregon History | Native Peoples History · History to 1806 · Pioneer History · Modern History Official language(s) None Capital Salem Largest city Portland Area Ranked 9th - Total 98,466 sq mi (255,026 km²) - Width 260 miles (420 km) - Length 360 miles (580 km) - % water 2. ...
Oregon Pioneer History (1806 to 1890) is the time in the European History of Oregon when pioneers and mountain men traveled west to explore and settle the lands west of the Rocky Mountains and north of California. ...
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