Portland got its name when Asa Lovejoy and Francis Pettygrove flipped a coin in 1845. Lovejoy was from Massachusetts and he wanted to name the new settlement Boston. Pettygrove was from Maine and wanted to name the new town Portland. Pettygrove won the coin toss two out of three times and the rest as they say is history.
Oregon got its nickname as the Beaver State because beaver trappers in Oregon would trap beavers and skin them for their fur to make fur hats, which was the trend back then.
Prized for its fur, the beaver was over-trapped by early settlers and eliminated from much of its original range. Through proper management and partial protection, the beaver has been reestablished in watercourses throughout the state and remains an important economic asset. The beaver has been referred to as "nature's engineer," and its dam-building activities are important to natural water flow and erosion control. Oregon is known as the "Beaver State" and Oregon State University's athletic teams are called the "Beavers."
In 1847 the Lowell Ames family first filed donation land claims for land that would eventually become Sweet Home, Oregon. The father, his six sons and one daughter, Sweet Home's first settlers, each took out property claims. Ames Creek, which runs through the center of Sweet Home was named after the family.
About that time, a group of Mormons on a wagon train, hoping to escape persecution, homesteaded the current downtown Sweet Home area. They built a settlement which they called Pilgrim's Camp near the present-day bridge over Ames Creek on Long Street. They would soon move elsewhere.
The East Linn Museum on the corner of Long and Main Streets (US Hyw. 20) is housed in a former Mormon church.
In 1852, a second wagon train came to the area. New families that settled in the community included the Pickens, Russells and Gillilands.
Oregon comes from the name given by the local native Americans to the Columbia River.
While its origin is uncertain and disputed, it seems to be of Algonquian origin. Other theories include French and Portuguese origins.
searched lots and no one seems to know, found these,
After two or three centuries of fable and myth, the name Oregon, itself doubtful in its meaning, came into use with an origin as baffling to modern research as the earlier myths and fictions.
The earliest known use of the name "Oregon" was in a 1765 petition by Major Robert Rogers to the Kingdom of Great Britain. The petition referred to Ouragon and asked for money to finance an expedition in search of the Northwest Passage
oergon got its name in one part of Oregon that the pioneers thought of.
it doesnt seem write but, they were having a baby when the woman thought of it.
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Once all of the Gold in California had been found, miners migrated north only to find
all of the ore gone.
see 2 green aliens had a baby who was named bob and he took a green dump and made the grass green and that's how the grass is green. and his name is Oregon so we honor him.
It is the overland route to Oregon.
Portland is the name of major cities in Maine and in Oregon. However, it is not the name of the capital in either of those states (the capitals are: Augusta, Maine and Salem, Oregon). No state in the U.S. has Portland as its capital.
There is a Portland, Oregon and a Portland, Maine.
Portland Oregon is 176 miles from Bend Oregon.
No , University of Oregon is located in Eugene, Oregon. In Portland, Portland State University is located.
It is 19.5 miles from Hillsboro Oregon to Portland Oregon.
It is 323 miles from Enterprise Oregon to Portland Oregon.
It is 153 miles from Yachats Oregon to Portland Oregon.
Molalla Oregon is 32 miles from Portland Oregon.
Beaverton, Oregon is 8.5 miles from Portland, Oregon.
It is 41.1 miles from Portland Oregon to McMinnville Oregon.
Portland, Oregon Portland, Oregon
From Dallas, Texas to Portland, Oregon is 2128 miles From Dallas, Oregon to Portland, Oregon is 61.4 miles