Oregon City
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Whether the
route taken was by water or by land, the final destination for most
overlanders was Oregon City on the Willamette River. They didn't
all come to Oregon City to settle within city limits, rather, Oregon
City became more of a symbolic site. Men left their families at
Oregon City while they searched for a place to call home. Oregon
City had the only judicial court and land office in the western
United States. The emigrants arrived by the dozens. Some arrived
needing food, shelter, and clothing; while others made it across
in grand style with two or three wagons and plenty of livestock.
By 1845, Oregon City had grown into a town of nearly one thousand
people. The town had a Methodist Church, a Catholic chapel, two
grist mills with a sawmill at each, four stores, two taverns, a
hatter, a tanner, a physician, three lawyers, a printing office
and newspaper, a lathe machine and a good brickyard. There were
plenty of carpenters and masons employed.
Oregon City
is also the town in which two men, Amos Lovejoy and Francis Pettygrove
flipped a coin to decide what the new city north of them would be
called. This city was where the Willamette flowed into the Columbia
river. Each man wanted to name the city after his hometown back
East. Amos wanted the town to be called Boston (Massachusetts) while
Francis wanted it to be called Portland (Maine). Pettygrove was
the winner of the coin toss, hence, the city of Portland was established,
becoming a suburb of Oregon City.
One mystery
still remains and that is the origin of the name "Oregon" which
is what Oregon City is named after. The British, French, and Spanish
all had interests in this northwest country and the name Oregon
was possibly derived from a mixture or blend from all three of these
nations' languages. The earliest written account of the name Oregon
comes from the English Army officer Major Roberts in 1765. He assumes
the Columbia River to be the Ouragon or Ourigan River. So whether
the name is derived from the Spanish words oregano, oreja, and orejon
or from the French word Aragon the fact remains that we now refer
to it as Oregon.
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Last modified on:
January 31, 2004
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