ABANDON ALL HOPE, YE WHO ENTER HERE


Early female physicians of Oregon

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https://archive.org/stream/transactionsann03penngoog/transactionsann03penngoog_djvu.txt http://www.offbeatoregon.com/H1008c_west-coasts-first-woman-doctor-Bethenia-Owen.html https://www.tillamookheadlightherald.com/community_paid/offbeat-oregon-asahel-bush-crossed-swords-with-oregon-s-first-woman-doctor-and-lost/article_77d92ab0-229d-11ea-9c84-23981ba680f2.html http://www.oregonpioneers.com/WomenDoctors_NW.pdf

Category:Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania alumni

University of Oregon Medical School Category:Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania alumni

University of Oregon Medical School

https://archive.org/stream/transactionsann03penngoog/transactionsann03penngoog_djvu.txt

Oregon. Alice Hall-Chapman, M.D. Class of 1886. (1900)

The number of physicians in practice in this State is not known. There is no reliable list; the Secretary of the State does not know. There is said to be one doctor for every 350 persons, and 60 women physicians. Of the women 35 are in Portland, which has 80,000 inhabitants of the 350,000 in the State. It should be remembered that Oregon has an area nearly twice as great as that of all the New England States. There are few institutions having medical offices. So far as I can learn only one woman physician has ever been appointed to a public office. Dr. Davidson, of our own school, was for a short time assistant physician to the State Insane Asylum. The appointment is a political one, and a change in administration deprived her of the position. The State Medical Society, meeting once a year, admits women members. In 1892, Dr. Mae Whitney Cardwell was elected treasurer of the society and has held the office ever since. None of the local societies has ever admitted women. Application has been made to the

Portland society several times, but in each instance the applicant has been kindly advised to withdraw her name before its presentation to the society, and has always followed the advice, on the assurance that she could not possibly be elected. Five years ago a woman graduate of the medical department of the State University earned the appointment of interne to the hospital; this position depends on the class standing during the entire course. Public announcement was made of the award, but the appointee was privately advised by her professors not to accept the position; as there never had been a woman interne before she would find it very uncomfortable. She followed the advice, which, it may be said, fairly represents the sentiment of the State in regard to advancement generally.

Until recently women physicians have not had a good name, particularly in Portland. Some of the earlier practitioners did a notoriously irregular and criminal practice and gave a bad reputation to the profession for women. (to whom is she referring?) It has been lived down in large part, however, by the later comers who have maintained a high standard of life and practice. Their persistent effort has had its effect; in general, the woman physician now stands on her own merits; she is well spoken of, and she has a good share of the desirable practice. All through the State the practice is of a very general character. There are specialists, of course, but only one in the State who confines himself to his line of nervous diseases. Men and women take whatever comes to them. Some of the younger women are beginning to operate as they have opportunity, and some of the best of the younger men in Portland give them valuable aid. In the country towns the men treat the women in the profession with marked fairness and courtesy. Five graduates of our own school have settled in Oregon, but no one of them has won distinction. One went as a nurse to Manila, sent by the Woman's Emergency Corps. But most of the women physicians are graduates of one of the two Oregon schools. In addition, there are worthy representatives of the leading schools for women in the country. Dr. Mary Thompson was the first woman to practice in Oregon. She is a native of New York. She read medicine in Illinois and took lectures in Cincinnati, but never graduated. She opened an office in Portland thirty-four years ago, and practised eighteen years. She gained a large practice and retired with the respect of the community and of most of the profession. At seventy-five she is still an active and vigorous woman. She deserves not only the credit due the pioneer but the esteem which work of high character always merits.

New York, U.S., Town Clerks' Registers of Men Who Served in the Civil War, ca 1861-1865 Enlisted 1861

Mustered out 1863 https://civilwarintheeast.com/us-regiments-batteries/new-york-infantry/16th-new-york/

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Photographers mentioned vis-a-vis Imogen Cunningham

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Other women artists/architects/musicians

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Bob Larson RR Revival

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http://www.gazettetimes.com/news/local/reviving-the-railroad/article_5c12a4ea-f5a2-56eb-906c-a819b52f3d3b.html

Take a Number

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  Not done

1. South Wasco County High School, per User talk:Tedder#South Wasco County High School Valfontis (talk) 22:48, 23 December 2010 (UTC)

2. Talk:Caulk boots Valfontis (talk) 13:55, 20 January 2011 (UTC)

3. Hermiston, Oregon Valfontis (talk) 15:27, 11 February 2011 (UTC)

4. Hope Abbey Valfontis (talk) 15:27, 11 February 2011 (UTC)

5+ Roy, USCGC Fir (WLM-212), Laurelhurst. Valfontis (talk) 18:27, 5 March 2011 (UTC)

6. Edgar M. Lazarus--add Teague info

7. Scan legislator bios for AM

Curtis Irish

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Copyrighted public artwork?

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Trestle Creek Lund Park Brice/Bryce Creek

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Tourism schmourism

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Museums and other points of interest-->Tourism

Example

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Communal societies in Oregon

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Border towns

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Pioneer builder, Villard Hall, Shelton-McMurphey, covered bridges, etc.

Possible P.O. closures

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Articles

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N. L. Butler?

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One of the founders of the Oregon Herald What is his full name? Nehemiah. Info on N. L.:

1842-1925 Graduate of Willamette. Judge and lawyer in Monmouth/Dallas area. Ran for U.S. Congress in 1886? Against Binger Hermann? Firm Clark & Butler. Board of Regents of UO, State Normal School (WOU), OSU. State Rep. 16th session (1891), Oregon Senator for 18th & 19th session (1893 & 1895). Possible confusion with N. H. Butler? (Newton H. b. 1837)

Sources on N. L.
  • [1]
    • "N. L. Butler is a hold-over Senator from Polk county, whose residence is at Monmouth; he was elected to the Senate four years ago on the Democratic ticket, and represented his county both in the 1893 and '95 Legislatures."
  • [2]
  • Butler, Oregon, named for him
  • [3]
  • [4]
  • [5]
  • [6]
  • [7]
  • [8]
  • [9]
  • [10]
  • [11]
  • [12]
  • [13]
    • "N. L. Butler, one of the proprietors of the Oregon Herald, was a young man, a recent graduate from Willamette University. His father, J. B. V. Butler, came to Oregon in 1849, settled at Oregon City, and in 1850 moved to Portland and ran a store here. J. B. V. Butler put up over 5,000 to buy the plant of the Oregon Herald. The plant of the Oregon Herald was sold at public auction and bought by H. L. Pittock.
  • [14]
  • [15]
  • [16]
  • [17]
  • Father Joseph Bradley Varnum Butler, 1809-1879
  • Nehemiah!
  • More on Joseph B. V. Butler (helped found Eola.
  • Dallas Cemetery

Dad's boat

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To-do is to be

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Northeastern Polk County

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Write
Expand
Pics
  • Campbell Hall, etc. at WOU
  • NRHPs in Monmouth
  • Ellendale, Oregon, find plat map hand-drawn map (in Polk County Hist. Society journal?), pics in Salem Library collection of boarding house--still there?
  • Upload pic of Rickreall p.o., take more house pics

Marion County

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  • Tabernacle in Turner
  • Church in Jefferson
  • Church and Gothic revival house in Marion

Yamhill County

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  • Buena Vista

To be is to do

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How to embed an NRHP infobox

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Mosby Creek Bridge
 
Coordinates43°46′42″N 123°00′17″W / 43.77833°N 123.00472°W / 43.77833; -123.00472
Characteristics
DesignCovered, Howe truss
Total length90 feet (27 m)
Width13.5 feet (4.1 m)
Clearance above12.3 feet (3.7 m)
History
Constructed byWalter and Miller Sorenson
Construction end1920
Closed1979
Mosby Creek Bridge
 
 
Nearest cityCottage Grove, Oregon
Coordinates43°46′42″N 123°0′17″W / 43.77833°N 123.00472°W / 43.77833; -123.00472
Area0.1 acres (0.04 ha)
Built1920
Architectural styleHowe Truss
MPSOregon Covered Bridges TR
NRHP reference No.79002083[10]
Added to NRHPNovember 29, 1979
Location
 

{{Infobox NRHP | name = | nrhp_type = | image = | alt = | caption = | locmapin = | map_alt = | map_caption = | lat_degrees = | lat_minutes = | lat_seconds = | lat_direction = | long_degrees = | long_minutes = | long_seconds = | long_direction = | location = | built = | architect = | architecture = | added = | designated_nrhp_type = | visitation_num = | visitation_year = | refnum = | mpsub = }}

http://www2.elkman.net/nrhp/infobox.php

"The building that is now Santiam Correctional Institution was constructed in 1946 and used as an annex to the Oregon State Hospital for mental health patients. In 1960 the building was acquired by Fairview Home and given the name Frederic Prigg Cottage.

In 1977 Prigg Cottage opened as a minimum custody pre-release center to ease overcrowded conditions at Oregon State Penitentiary, Oregon State Correctional Institution and Oregon Women's Correctional Center. During the 1980's, Prigg Cottage evolved into CDRC (Corrections Division Release Center), DCRC (Department of Corrections Release Center), and finally, in 1990 became Santiam Correctional Institution (SCI). For efficiency SCI and MCCF were administratively joined in 1992 under the management of one superintendent.

The prison complex sits on a 12-acre parcel with nine acres inside the perimeter fence."[31]

Stations on the Oregon Pacific

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Pics "The aimless and bankrupt enterprise was acquired by the Southern Pacific in 1890..."

Investors

Stations

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East??
  • Spicer [33]
  • Tallman
  • Rowland
West??

Merged with Valley and Siletz?

(tracks torn up before Airlie) (1929)

Yaquina, Seal Rock, etc.

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  • History of Benton County, Oregon 1885, includes what is now Lincoln County--Newport, Yaquina, Oneatta, Oysterville, Seal Illahe, Toledo, Caledonia, Elk City, Pioneer City--and biographies too.
  • SP Yaquina Branch formerly the OPRR (also info about Spruce Pro. Div. line from Yaquina to Newport.

Polk Co. historic houses

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What happened to the I.L. Patterson House?

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In Eola Hills "Eola Road"/"Salem-Dallas Highway"/Highway 22

Lived in Eola

Others

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Mormon sugar and timber interests in Oregon

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  1. Wife one, kids: Bertha, Anna, Homer, Laura, Flora, Vida, William, Joseph, Lila, David*,[35] Leroy*, Royal*
  2. Wife two (Ellen), kids: Living (!), Emma, George, Jesse, Ellen, Norrah, Spence, Marriner, Marie
  3. Wife three, kid: Albert

*Partners in Oregon-American

RR foo

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  • David Eccles fun, from RR book pg 51-52.
  • CW Nibley, pg 56-59
    • purchased Grande Ronde Lumber Company, Perry, Oregon, 1902. high price, borrowed $250k from Zion Bank in SLC. Partners FS Murphy, George Stoddard, more in the top echelon of church. Perry mill moved to Pondosa (15 mi E of Telocaset), renamed Grande Ronde Pine Company and run by Stoddards 1927-1931. Bought by Truman Collins in 1931. Pondosa named for Ponderosa (Yellow Pine), pg 82. (per OGN--it was a brand of Ponderosa lumber)
    • 1903: established Hilgard Lumber Company, Mecham Lumber Company, partners were sons: JF Nibley and Merrill Nibley (Hilgard, Oregon ?)
    • 1907: Nibley-Mimnaugh Lumber Company in wallowa county, partner non-mormon JH Mimnaugh. Did better than the 1903 mills due to Mimnaugh and 1908 extension to OR&N railroad connection to Joseph. Bought by Bowman-Hicks from Kansas City in 1924. pg 56-59. geared locomotives up to 10% grades, 18 miles out of Wallowa. pg64.
  • Not mormon but from the book.
    • "The Wilcox Lumber Company and its successor, the Masters-Ewoldt Lumber Company, built spur lines off the OR&N in order to ship their Ladd Canyon timber to La Grande, from 1910 until they closed in 1918." pg64. Also reffed to "Timberman, Nov. 1912 and Dec. 1913", no more info given for that ref.
    • George Palmer Lumber Company 1903-1924, largest in Grande Ronde valley. Some operations in Looking Glass Creek. (Katr--need to dab from Lookingglass, Oregon) 300 men employed, shipped 15 carloads (150k BF of lumber) daily. Late 1910, Howard Creek from Vincent, Oregon to "haul logs from the Promise-Grossman area". "Camp Five", 250 employees + roundhouse somewhere in this area. Four geared engines + largest geared locomotive, 100-ton Shay. Treefellers: Norwegian/Swede; Finns cut trees to log length; RR maint crew Bulgarian. Whole company sold to Bowman-Hicks in 1923 (who also bought Nibley-Mimnaugh in 1924!). pg 64-67.
    • Main B-H operation moved to Wallowa around 1923, logging camp Maxwell, Oregon with post office "was more of a town than other temporary logging camps." RR from Maxwell to Wallowa, RR lines removed in 1934 and became roads. pg67
    • Mt. Emily Timber Company in Wisconsin busy buying land SW of La Grande from 1912 on. 20 years later was Mt. Emily Lumber Company, built sugar mill near Nibley's then-defunct sugar factory near La Grande. Built RR from OWR&N at Hilgard to Five Points Creek. Early 1930s built spur line up Whiskey Creek, then Hilgard->Grande Ronde River->Blue Mountains->mouth of Camas Creek. "The Mt. Emily main camp was established about halfway along this route and still exists today as a church camp," Camp Elkanah. Last Mt. Emily RR 1936 by Morrison and Knudson from Boise, used as combined truck->rail->mill haul. 1937: 30 mi railroad, 75mi truck roads, 20 trucks, 3 locomotices. Bought Oregon White Pine Lumber Company in 1938. Used railroad until 1955, then merged with Valsetz Lumber Company ("of western oregon") in 1957. pg67-70
    • Grande Ronde Pine Company- moved in 1928 to Pondosa; Big Creek and Telocaset Railroad Company built RR from there to Union Pacific's line on Telocaset. pg71. Company was bought by Boise Cascade in 1959, mill abandoned, tracks ripped out. Was last common carrier (rail?) constructed in Union County. pg71-72.
    • Vincent, Oregon named for Vincent Palmer, VP of George Palmer Lumber Company. pg 81.
    • Maxwell, Oregon named for "western manager" of Bowman-Hicks Lumber Company. pg81. (with a snarky remark that the only memorial they are likely to get is alongside a highway- heh)

Notes on J.(Jed) L. Washburn

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Old Dead Guy, Originally from Duluth, Minnesota, Awfully Busy:

"JL Washburn was a prominent Duluth attorney who was the resident director of the Duluth Teachers College (now UMD)."

Marion County

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The Comprehensive Plan previously identified several communities that do not satisfy any of the new definitions of an unincorporated community because they had too few commercial, industrial, and public uses (North Santiam, Pratum, Shaw, Talbot, Waconda, West Stayton), no residential use (Central Howell, North Howell, Drake's Crossing, Hopmere, Norton's Corner, Brooks Interchange, North Jefferson Interchange, Santiam Interchange, Talbot Interchange, Lone Pine), or it was not an exception area (St. Louis).

(Little) Lost Bird

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Communities discussions

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Grrr. The computer ate my links. Follow up on usage of county templates, re: non-existent ghost towns are OK to have in tl but communities that formerly were independent but absorbed into larger city are not. Develop a guideline, perhaps a WP:OREMOS for things the group has agreed on, like our policy on Notable residents sections.

Indian agency sources

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List of Joel Palmer treaties

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Unratified

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  • Agreement with the Rogue River, 1853 (unratified)
  • Treaty with the Oregon Coast Tribes, 1855 per WHOL
    • Alcea band of Tillamooks (Alsea)
    • Yah-quo-nah band of Tillamooks (Yaquina)
    • Seletsa band of Tillamooks (Siletz)
    • Ne-a-ches-na band of Tillamooks (Salmon River)
    • Sin-slau Tribe (Siuslaw)
    • Umpqua Tribe
    • Kowes Bay Tribe (Coos Bay)
    • Quans-sake-nah, Klen-nah-hah, and Ko-ah-mas-e-ton Bands of the Nas-o-mah or Coquille Tribe
    • Ko-se-e-chah Band of Too-too-to-neys (Tutuni)
    • Se-qua-chee Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Too-too-to-ney Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Chitco Tribe (Chetco)
    • Yah-shute Band of Too-too-to-neys
    • Whis-to-natin Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Cos-sa-to-ny Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Chet-less-ing-ton Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Port Orford Band of Too-too-to-neys
    • Eukie-chee Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Kus-so-to-ny Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Kler-it-la-tel Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Te-cha-quot Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Mack-a-no-tin Band of the Too-too-to-neys
    • Cah-toch, Chin-chen-ten-tah-ta, Whiston, and Klen-hos-tun Bands of the Coquilles

Other Oregon treaties

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Text of termination proclamation

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[39] Pursuant to the authority vested in me by section 13 of the act of August 13, 1954 (68 Stat. 724), I, Fred A. Seaton, Secretary of the Interior, do hereby proclaim that:

1. On and after August 13, 1956, the tribes, bands, groups, or communities of Indians located west of the Cascade Mountains in Oregon, including the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community, Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, Alsea, Applegate Creek, Calapooya, Chaftan, Chempho, Chetco, Chetlessington, Chinook, Clackamas, Clatskanie, Clatsop, Clowwewalla, Coos, Cow Creek, Euchees (Euchre Creek?), Galic Creek (Galice Creek?), Grave (Grave Creek?), Joshua, Karok, Kathlamet, Kusotony, Kwatami or Sixes, Lakmiut, Long Tom Creek, Lower Coquille, Lower Umpqua, Maddy, Mackanotin, Mary's River, Multnomah, Munsel Creek, Naltunnetunne, Nehalem, Nestucca, Northern Molalla, Port Orford, Pudding River, Rogue River, Salmon River, Santiam, Scoton, Shasta, Shasta Costa, Siletz, Siuslaw, Skiloot, Southern Molalla, Takelma, Tillamook, Tolowa, Tualatin, Tututui, Upper Coquille, Upper Umpqua, Willamette Tumwater, Yamhill, Yaquina, and Yoncalla, and the individual members thereof, shall not be entitled to any of the services performed by the United States for Indians because of their status as Indians.

Public Law 715 (Western Oregon Judgement Fund)

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[40] Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of the Interior, hereafter referred to as the "Secretary", is hereby authorized and directed to prepare separate rolls of the Indians of the blood of the Molel or Molallalas Tribe of Oregon and of the Confederated Bands of the Umpqua Tribe of Indians and the Calappoias residing in the Umpqua Valley, and of the Tillamook, Coquille, Tootootoney, and Chetco Tribes of Oregon, living on the date of this Act. Applications for enrollment shall be filed within one year of the date of approval of this Act. The determination of the Secretary of the eligibility of an applicant for enrollment shall be final and conclusive. No person shall be entitled to be enrolled on more than one roll.

Reservations

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[41]

Grande Ronde Reserve.

Occupied by Kalapuya, Clakamas, Cow Creek, Lakmint, Mary's Run, Molala, Nestucca, Rogue River, Santiam, Shasta, Tumwater, Umqua, Wapato, and Yamhill; area, 40 ¾ square miles; treaties of January 20, 1855, and December 31, 1855.

Siletz (originally known as Coast) Reserve

Occupied by Alsea, Coquille, Kusan, Kwatami, Rogue River, Skoton, Shasta, Sainstkea, Siuslaw, Tututin, Umpqua, and thirteen others; established by unratified treaty, August 11, 1855, and acts of March 3, 1875 (18 Stat., 446), and August 15, 1894 (28 Stat., 323).

Malheur Reserve
Umatilla Reserve

Occupied by Cayuse, Umatilla, and Wallawalla tribes; area, 124 ¾ square miles; established by treaty June 9, 1855, and acts of August 5, 1882 (22 Stat., 297), March 3, 1885 (23 Stat., 341), and section 8, October 17, 1888 (25 Stat., 559).

Wallowa Valley Reserve

The above diagram is intended to show a proposed reservation for the roaming Nez Percé Indians in the Wallowa Valley, in the State of Oregon. Said proposed reservation is indicated on the diagram by red lines, and is described as follows, viz:

Commencing at the right bank of the mouth of Grande Ronde River; thence up Snake River to a point due east of the southeast corner of township No. 1, south of the base line of the surveys in Oregon, in range No. 46 east of the Willamette meridian; thence from said point due west to the West Fork of the Wallowa River; thence down said West Fork to its junction with the Wallowa River; thence down said river to its confluence with the Grande Ronde River; thence down the last-named river to the place of beginning.

Source for names

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From The Indian Tribes of North America by John R. Swanton

Need to remember this

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More Povey Bros

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http://www.upcalbany.net/Identity-Our-Story.html

Clatsop-Nehalem Confederated Tribes of Oregon, petitioning for federal recognition--notable?

To be committed to memory

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Template:Coord#Coordinate parameters "|source:gnis"

Good stuff, not a RS

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http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hartsookballfamily/Independence_Oregon.htm

School project boilerplate sandbox

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{{EducationalAssignment}}

Welcome

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Hello and welcome to Wikipedia! It appears you are participating in a class project. We encourage you to read our instructions for students. Your instructor may wish to add your class to our list of school and university projects and s/he may want to read these instructions for teachers. For more help about school projects using Wikipedia, see our classroom coordination project.

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We hope you like it here and encourage you to stay even after your school assignment is finished! Katr67 (talk) 18:35, 12 December 2008 (UTC)

Japan-Oregon sister cities

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Why don't people write things in their own words?

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User:Dan_D._Ric#Handy_collection_of_internal_links.2C_templates_and_boilerplate

Unlogged blurb

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  You have recently made changes to Wikipedia. If you are User:Katr67 please log in before you make any more edits. Edits by anonymous IP are often treated as vandalism. Please help us avoid this mistake by logging in. Thank you.

Linkspam?

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Linksearch/*.boundless.uoregon.edu

Funny Afd quote

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"God is gracious -- Wikipedia demands notability. Pastordavid (talk) 13:11, 5 June 2008 (UTC)"

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  • www.foooregon.com
    • www.glenwoodoregon.com
    • www.goshenoregon.com
    • www.leaburgoregon.com
    • etc.

Spammers

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Stand By Me filming locations

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Fire

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1992 Overview

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August 4, 1992-roughly August 10, 10,000 acres, wildland urban interface, 4 homes lost, 500 homes threatened, sources contradict--lightning(wrong)/human caused, Valley of Rogue State Park, check R-G, Mail Trib, Oregonian, have clippings?, $8 million, photos=???

1999 Overview

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http://www.nifc.gov/fire_info/fire_summaries/summary_1999.htm

Monument, Oregon

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July 1999, <24 hours, 1 crew, ODF, $$?, lightning

Wimer Fire

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August 4, 1999-???, BLM, Wimer Ranch, NV, Cedarville, CA, 1 crew for first 24? 48? hours, photos=yes

August ?, 1999-Sept. ?, 40720 Acres, 4-5 fires (Pigeon, Lookout*, Bucks, ?, ?), Homes lost none, threatened ?, interface issues, natural (lightning?), Pacific Crest Trail, Plumas NF, Quincy, CA, Feather River Valley, check Sac Bee, etc. have clippings?, ???$ lots and lots, crews? lots, photos=yes

PE&E, etc.

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Personalized boilerplate Spam Message

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Please be cautious when adding external links to Wikipedia. Though the links you're adding appear to be "useful", note that Wikipedia is not a mere directory of links nor should it be used for advertising or promotion. Inappropriate links include (but are not limited to) links to personal web sites, links to web sites with which you are affiliated, and links that exist to attract visitors to a web site or promote a product. Even if the links aren't "promotional" per se, your editing pattern that consists of only adding external links to articles is the behavior of a spammer, by Wikipedia's definition. This is a friendly reminder to read up on the policy--often people who edit this way get reported at WikiProject Spam. See the external links guideline and spam policies for further explanations of links that are considered appropriate. We would prefer that users add content, not links. It's best to use such links as citations instead. See the welcome page to learn more about Wikipedia. Thanks! ~~~~

Looks like Anvil Media failed to take Durova's advice

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  • anvilmedia.blogspot.com/2007_07_01_anvilmedia_archive.html

President of Anvil Media doesn't take his own advice

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http://maps.google.com/maps?q=1320+Edgewater+NW&sourceid=navclient-ff&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGGL,GGGL:2006-35,GGGL:en&um=1&sa=N&tab=wl

OCF and Poultry Building @ State Fair

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"Magnates" Cfd

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2007_April_24#Magnates

So that's what IAR means

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http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Jimbo_Wales&diff=prev&oldid=196505930

Interesting old Vfd

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Wikipedia:Votes_for_deletion/Oregon_Legislative_Councels_opinion_on_gay_marriage

Linkfarm

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Eugene's Butt-Ugly Architecture

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http://www2.eugeneweekly.com/2001/12_13_01/coverstory.html

The Wilder Apartments/Emerald Apartments

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http://www.puc.state.or.us/OPRD/HCD/docs/courier_206.2.pdf

http://www.rootsweb.com/~orpionpr/Lincoln.html

Architectural Heritage Center

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http://www.visitahc.org/

150-year old farms

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http://www.oregoncitynewsonline.com/sustainable/story.php?story_id=120249666832948600

Brown House

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http://www.freewebs.com/brownhouse/ Charles and Martha Brown House, Stayton

OSH preservation effort

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http://www.preservehistoricsalem.com/ Preserve Historic Salem

Search for "Oregon" on National Trust website

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Funny essays

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Historic Markers

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George Gay/Joseph Gervais S-J story

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Historic large wildfires in Oregon

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http://egov.oregon.gov/ODF/FIRE/Historic_Fires_In_Oregon.shtml

Hist. Arch.

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http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/HWY/GEOENVIRONMENTAL/architecture1.shtml has good info on Salem RR depot

Valsetz article

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http://www.thecreswellchronicle.com/news/story.cfm?story_no=1275

NRHP

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http://www.deschutes.org/historic/Redmond/Odemhouse.htm

Maud Williamson/Hopewell sources

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Oregon Nursery Company sources

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http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Oregon+Nursery+Company%22+-wikipedia&btnG=Search

Klamath Res info

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http://www.ohs.org/education/oregonhistory/historical_records/dspDocument.cfm?doc_ID=15347AA0-B351-E368-CD251775B837AE3F

Ghost towns ref

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Varney, Philip. Ghost Towns of the Pacific Northwest: Your Guide to Ghost Towns, Mining Camps, and Historic Forts of Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia. The title says it all. The ghostly and not-so-ghostly sites in Oregon are Forts Clatsop and Stevens, Boyd, Dufur (there is a fine tavern in Dufur, by the way), Friend, Shaniko, Wasco, Moro, Antelope, Mayville, Lonerock, Hardman, Richmond, Bourne, Granite, Flora, Grass Valley, Whitney, Sumpter, Jacksonville, Golden, Kerby, Sterlingville, and Buncom. Directions and a short description of each site are given and there are many nice photos. For public libraries. Bibliography and index. 160 p. 8.5 x 11. Voyageur Press, 2005. ISBN: 0896585921 (Pb)

http://www.splintercat.org/LookoutMountain/LookoutHistory1.html Lookout Mountain, mentions Barlow, Palmer "Fremont Road"? and Wasco County towns S of Dalles...

929.3600 The Life and Times of a Ghost Town Friend. Oregon Wm. A. Brown 1970 Wm. A.Brown 1970 Reference

Ellis F. Lawrence resources

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Quote from above "Some of Lawrence's early buildings include the Whitman College Conservatory of Music in Walla Walla, Washington, and several Portland, Oregon, buildings, including the Washington High School Gymnasium, the Albina Branch Library, the Peter Kerr House, and the Paul C. Murphy House. Lawrence also designed seventeen buildings on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene as well as the general campus layout. During his career, Lawrence designed over 500 buildings; a survey in 1993 reported that 260 buildings he designed were still standing."

Great Metaphorical Significance or why Random Capitalization only works for the Etiquette Grrls

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Treed cats

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Copy of EncMstr's blurb from User:AlexNewArtBot/OregonList as of 06-13-2007

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This is a list of articles generated by rules for the bot at user:AlexNewArtBot suggests might be related to Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon topics.

The list is a starting point for determining which articles are part of WikiProject Oregon. Project members determine whether articles should be a part of the project or not. The coordination for investigating articles on this list is at Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Oregon#Sign_me_up.21. After making a determination, alter the entries—deleting entries alters the list numbering. Striking out checked articles is sufficient. Some may wish to give reasoning for rejecting an article.

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Rants

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If I see that one more "town" is "nestled" in anything, anywhere, I'll scream. Katr67 05:45, 29 June 2006 (UTC)

Cities are platted. Not "planted" or "plotted" or any other such thing. Plats are also different from "plans". Think before you edit! Katr67 21:49, 14 July 2006 (UTC)

Please please please use: Show preview instead of making multiple edits to the same article. If you're worried about losing your work, copy and save it to a Word doc or something similar (the Wiki markup will still work if you need to use your saved copy). Multiple edits make it hard to track changes and clutter up the page history. OK, so it bumps up your edit count. And? Oh, and BTW, also please please please write good edit summaries! Katr67 18:39, 1 August 2006 (UTC)

If you mention "grammar" in your edit summary, be sure to spell it right. :) Katr67 17:06, 10 December 2006 (UTC)

Grammar corner

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  • renown (Renown is a noun. Renowned is an adjective. Things can be "world-renowned" but not "world renown".)
Similarly: iced tea, canned vegetables, stained glass, first-come-first-served, old-fashioned, etc.
(Not "ice tea", "can vegetables", "stain glass", "first come first serve", "old fashion", etc.)
Darn that Pacific Northwest dialect, anyway.
  • BTW, it is "supposed to", not "suppose to". [42]
  • Your=possessive; You're=contraction of "you are" [43]
  • Loose (adjective)=not tight; lose (verb)=cease to have [44]
Been there, done that, bought the t-shirt...
Though sometimes intentionally misused for poetic effect, one does not "wonder off". [46]
  • When there is a change of leadership, one "hands over the reins" to someone else, or they might "take the reins". The phrase refers to reins, as in what one uses to steer a horse. If you must use this cliché, please don't use the word "reigns", even though I could see why you might think that makes sense. Please. [47]
  • "Everyday" (one word, adjective) means commonplace or ordinary, "every day" (two words, adjectival phrase) means something that happens daily or "each day". Almost every song title with the word "everyday" in it is wrong. Rock stars don't employ copy editors. Be warned. [48]

Peeves

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  • "Based out of"
  • "Centered around"
  • "Serviced" vs. "Served" You may "service" a car, and there is a *ahem* procedure wherein a stud "services" a mare, thus when the word "service" is used in connection with humans it is either business marketing jargon-creep and/or adding an unintended snicker-worthy sexual dimension to the transaction. "I was serviced by the the waiter." Oh were you now? Lucky you! I hope you left a good tip. See: UO Style Guide and When Bad Grammar Happens to Good People. Notwithstanding sports like tennis, except for the above-mentioned situations, you can't go wrong if you remember that "serve" is a verb, and "service" is a noun.
  • "Rich history" Almost as bad as "nestled". Is there any other kind of history? Does anyone admit that the history of something is "poor", "thin" or "dull"?
  • Postal abbreviations in the body of articles.

Do be do be do

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Oregon State Hospital +cat mental hospitals (link to Kesey, Cuckoo's Nest (filmed there)) already linked to Richard Brautigan. 4 July 2006 (UTC)

Write articles on the Eugene band Snakepit (punk band), and Oregon musician Mike Johnson. 12 July 2006

List of capitals in the United States - fact check Oregon entry

List of Indian reservations in Oregon - finish sorting all this out 20 July 2006

Help make Oregon State Capitol as pretty as featured article Michigan State Capitol. 21 July 2006

  Try to find something about my ancestor, Louis Alexander Lezotte (Louis Lizote or Louis Lisote), being awarded the Badge of Military Merit that isn't original research. 7 August 2006 "He had enlisted...as a private in Captain Gilbert's Company, Hazen's Regiment during the winter of 1777 and served at White Plains and at the taking of Cornwallis. He was also a private in Captain Olivier's 3rd Company and was honorably discharged...in June 1783." From a history of Chazy, New York. 1 October 2006

I can't believe there isn't an article on the floaty pen! Surely if snow globe can have an article, then so can the floaty pen! 8 August 2006

Expand Write article on nuclear weapons transport the White Train aka "Death Train", which protesters once successfully stopped in Oregon using non-violent civil disobedience in the 1980s, since nobody remembers this. 15 August 2006

Write anExpand article on Carpenter Gothic and/or add content to the Gothic Revival architecture article about gothic residences (since it's heavy on the churches and stuff). It looks like this and the gable-front-and-wing, less elaborate sort they used to build in Oregon is also known as a "Western Farmhouse". Examples abound. I even have photos. Hurray for center gables! Another link. 18 August 2006

I just learned about the United States Army Air Service "Spruce Squadrons" here. I think they need an article. 1 October 2006

Something on the Lovejoy Columns by Tom Stefopoulos. (See Pearl District, Portland, Oregon). 16 October 2006

Wagon Train of 1843/Great Migration (of 1943). [49] [50] 20 October 2006

Santa, Idaho [51] 24 October 2006

Holy Cow! There is not an article on the Bad Livers. Must rectify... 1 November 2006

Povey Brothers Art Glass Works, aka Povey Brothers, aka Povey Brothers Studio. In churches all over Oregon. Also at the University of Oregon. 7 December 2006 Includes this: Image:ORSCcourtroomstainedglass.JPG per [52] and at Deepwood Estate per [53]. 10 December 2006 First Christian Church in Eugene (misspelled "Pevy" Brothers on their page [54]

  1. ^ Cached website
  2. ^ Cached image
  3. ^ Harrison Brunk
  4. ^ Image
  5. ^ http://www.salemhistory.net/places/old_city_hall.htm
  6. ^ http://www.smjhouse.org/architect.shtml
  7. ^ http://www.ous.edu/about/polipro/files/Board%20Policies%2011-05.pdf
  8. ^ image
  9. ^ http://www.co.lincoln.or.us/publicworks/fisher_bridge.html
  10. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13.