Oregon Gifts of Comfort and Joy ~ Kathy Matthews |
Oregon City is now a city next to Portland, Oregon. But, back in the 1850's, Oregon City was where you landed at the end of your 2,000 mile cross country Oregon Trail journey. It is, in fact, where some of my pioneer ancestors landed. They later settled in Yoncalla and Drain, in southern Oregon.
When this postcard was made, some sixty years later, Oregon City was a prospering place to live. Shown above is a mill with neatly organized logs on the Willamette River, with a steam ship trying to navigate past those darn logs.
The Willamette River has its beginning with four different forks. The North Fork begins at Waldo Lake and merges into the Middle Fork above Oakridge. The South Fork begins at Cougar Reservoir on the McKenzie River. The final fork of the Willamette is the Coast Fork, and it begins in Cottage Grove. The Willamette flows through Eugene to Portland, and then merges with the mighty Columbia. The Columbia River eventually flows into the Pacific Ocean at Astoria.
I copied and pasted a brief summary of the route of the Willamette below from the website Online Highways.com:
For more info on the Willamette River and Oregon City, here are a few links to check out:
Wikipedia: The Willamette River
The Oregon Encylopedia: The Willamette River
Oregon Gifts of Comfort and Joy ~ Kathy Matthews |
Have a wonderful Friday!
At Oregon Gifts of Comfort and Joy, if you miss a day, you miss a lot! All material on this post is copyrighted and not for use without my permission ...Please click here to go to my home page and see what is happening in Mayberry today. |
7 comments:
Great card! My sister in law used to live near Portland. She often sent us BEAUTIFUL pictures of the area. I'd love to visit one day.
Thanks, Aimee. One thing that Oregon has (especially the Willamette Valley) is beauty!
I have been to beautiful Oregon several times now that my middle granddaughter moved out there. It is just wonderful country.
This is a wonderful post - excellent information about the river!
I love old postcards that show details of how things once were. This card is very nice. Love all your research to go with it.
All those logs! I've never seen anything like that. Interesting and beautiful at the same time.
Fun!
Post a Comment