Oregon |
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| State of Oregon | |
| Map of the United States with Oregon highlighted |
Oregon ( ORR-ih-ghən, -gon) is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is a part of the Western U.S., with the Columbia River delineating much of Oregon's northern boundary with Washington, while the Snake River delineates much of its eastern boundary with Idaho. The 42° north parallel delineates the southern boundary with California and Nevada. The western boundary is formed by the Pacific Ocean.
Oregon has been home to many indigenous nations for thousands of years. The first European traders, explorers, and settlers began exploring what is now Oregon's Pacific coast in the early to mid-16th century. As early as 1564, the Spanish began sending vessels northeast from the Philippines, riding the Kuroshio Current in a sweeping circular route across the northern part of the Pacific. In 1592, Juan de Fuca undertook detailed mapping and studies of ocean currents in the Pacific Northwest, including the Oregon coast as well as the strait now bearing his name. The Lewis and Clark Expedition traversed Oregon in the early 19th century, and the first permanent European settlements in Oregon were established soon afterward by trappers and fur traders. The United States received joint occupation rights to the region from the United Kingdom through the Treaty of 1818. The Oregon Treaty of 1846 formally brought Oregon under American sovereignty, and the Oregon Territory was created two years later. Oregon was admitted to the United States on February 14, 1859, becoming the 33rd state.
Today, with 4.2 million people over 98,000 square miles (250,000 km2), Oregon is the ninth-largest and 27th-most populous U.S. state. The capital, Salem, is the third-most populous city in Oregon, with 175,535 residents. Portland, with 652,503, ranks as the 26th among U.S. cities. The Portland metropolitan area, which includes neighboring counties in Washington, is the 26th largest metro area in the nation, with a population of 2,512,859. Oregon is also one of the most geographically diverse states in the U.S., marked by volcanoes, abundant bodies of water, dense evergreen and mixed forests, as well as high deserts and semi-arid shrublands. At 11,249 feet (3,429 m), Mount Hood is the state's highest point. Oregon's only national park, Crater Lake National Park, comprises the caldera surrounding Crater Lake, the deepest lake in the U.S. The state is also home to the single largest organism in the world, Armillaria ostoyae, a fungus that runs beneath 2,200 acres (8.9 km2) of the Malheur National Forest. (Full article...)
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The Kiger Mustang is a substrain of Mustang horse located in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Oregon. Originally feral horses with specific conformation traits discovered in 1977, the name also applies to their bred-in-captivity progeny. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) administers two herd management areas for Kiger Mustangs in the Burns District— Kiger and Riddle Mountain, in the Steens Mountain area. DNA testing has shown that Kiger Mustangs are descended largely from Spanish horses brought to North America in the 17th century, a bloodline thought to have largely disappeared from mustang herds before the Kiger horses were found. Kiger Mustangs are most often dun in color, although they are found in other solid colors. Compact and well-muscled in appearance, their coloration and phenotype make them some of the most desired by private buyers when horses are removed from the feral herds. The BLM rounds up the horses from the two herd management areas every three to four years, and auctions excess horses to the public, returning horses to public lands that meet the desired coloration and phenotype and sometimes exchanging horses between the two herds to maintain genetic diversity. Horses in private ownership may be registered in several breed associations, the largest and oldest being the Kiger Mesteño Association, established in 1988.
Reuben Patrick Boise (June 9, 1819 – April 10, 1907) was an American attorney, judge and politician in the Oregon Territory and the early years of the state of Oregon. A native of Massachusetts, he immigrated to Oregon in 1850, where he would twice serve on the Oregon Supreme Court for a total of 16 years, with three stints as chief justice. He served during both the territorial period and after statehood. Early in his legal career, he worked as a district attorney. A Democrat, Boise was a member of the Oregon Constitutional Convention in 1857, served in the Territorial Legislature, and helped to codify the laws of the Oregon Territory. He also served as a circuit court judge, and was a trustee at several colleges. In addition to his legal career, he was proponent of education and served on the boards of several schools in the Willamette Valley. Educated at Williams College, he was twice married to women from Massachusetts, and had a total of five children.
- December 1, 1969, TriMet replaces Rose City Transit as the provider of mass transit service in Portland.
- December 4, 1850, The Oregonian, now the oldest continuously published newspaper on the West Coast, is founded.
- December 8, 1876, A. Luelling becomes the first mayor of the city of Hillsboro, located in the Tualatin Valley.
- December 12, 1893, former Congressman George K. Shiel dies after a breaking his neck in a fall.
- December 14, 1871, Oregon Senator George Henry Williams begins tenure as United States Attorney General.
- December 21, 1936, Oregon's first female governor, Barbara Roberts, is born in Corvallis.
- December 28, 1978, United Airlines Flight 173 crashed in Portland killing ten onboard the DC-8 aircraft.
- December 29, 1855, a fire destroyed the Territorial Capitol building.
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- ... that a president of the Oregon Senate crawled along a ledge of the State Capitol to access an unsecured window of the absent governor's office to place bills on his desk?
- ... that the Oregon Garden obtained the Gordon House because of a misunderstanding?
- ... that during World War I, Roy W. Ritner was elected unopposed to the Oregon State Senate while serving with the American Red Cross in France?
- ... that Warren Truitt served as a legislator in Oregon and a judge in Alaska in the 19th century, and as both a legislator and a judge in Idaho in the 20th?
- ... that Oregon state senator William Kuykendall was a physician who founded the first hospital in Eugene, Oregon?
- ... that the bishop of Oregon's residence in Portland once had a private chapel, a ballroom, and a wine cellar?
- ... that LaVonne Griffin-Valade, the Oregon Secretary of State, has published four crime fiction novels?
- ... that Cathy Whims has opened several restaurants in Portland, Oregon, including the Nostrana, which has been described as "Portland's capital of the Negroni"?
The following are images from various Oregon-related articles on Wikipedia.
Mount Hood, a dormant stratovolcano, reflected in the waters of Mirror Lake. At 11,249 feet (3,429 m), Mount Hood is the highest mountain in Oregon and the fourth-highest in the Cascade Range. It is considered an active volcano, but no major eruptive events have been catalogued since systematic record keeping began in the 1820s.
Main topics
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- See also: Good articles relating to Oregon
| This is a list of recognized content, updated weekly by JL-Bot (talk · contribs) (typically on Saturdays). There is no need to edit the list yourself. If an article is missing from the list, make sure it is tagged (e.g. {{WikiProject Oregon}}) or categorized correctly and wait for the next update. See WP:RECOG for configuration options. |
Featured articles
Featured lists
Good articles
- Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
- 1938–39 Oregon Webfoots men's basketball team
- 2022 World Athletics Championships – Women's 400 metres hurdles
- Alcoholic beverages in Oregon
- Pokey Allen
- Allow Me (Portland, Oregon)
- Marisa Anderson
- Rebecca Anderson
- Angkor I
- Animal House
- Cole Anthony
- Debby Applegate
- Arleta Library Bakery & Cafe
- Ashland, Oregon
- Astoria Riverfront Trolley
- The Awesome Adventures of Captain Spirit
- Axial Seamount
- Mount Bachelor
- Florence Merriam Bailey
- Mount Bailey (Oregon)
- Bailey's Taproom
- Lola Baldwin
- Barlow Road
- Beaverton Transit Center
- Belknap Crater
- Bell Tower (University of Portland)
- Bernstein's Bagels
- Temple Beth Israel (Eugene, Oregon)
- Bipartisan Cafe
- Bistro Agnes
- Bit House Saloon
- Black Butte (Oregon)
- Black Crater
- LeGarrette Blount
- Blue Lake Crater
- Bluehour
- Blueplate Lunch Counter and Soda Fountain
- Reuben P. Boise
- Bolivia Carmichaels
- La Bonita
- Boxer Ramen
- Bridgeoporus
- Bridges Cafe
- Cameron Brink
- Brix Tavern
- Broken Top
- Burns, Oregon
- Robert Lee Burns
- Burnside Burn
- Byways Cafe
- Cannabis in Oregon
- Canterbury Castle (Portland, Oregon)
- Celilo Falls
- William W. Chapman
- Cheese & Crack Snack Shop
- Mei-Ann Chen
- Cherry Poppin' Daddies
- Chiming Fountain
- Chinook Indian Nation
- Cline Buttes
- Clinton Street Theater
- Coraline's Curious Cat Trail
- Cornelius Pass Road
- Thomas R. Cornelius
- Country Bill's
- Crater Lake
- Cricket Cafe
- Ryan Crouser
- Davis Street Tavern
- Days Gone
- De Noche (restaurant)
- Matthew Deady
- Frank Dekum
- Delta Cafe
- Dewey–Stassen debate
- Diamond Peak (Oregon)
- Dime Store (Portland, Oregon)
- Dinolandia
- Director Park
- The Dougy Center
- The Dream (sculpture)
- Ecclesia Athletic Association
- Huw Edwards (conductor)
- Jack Ely
- Douglas Engelbart
- Esparza's
- Flawless Shade
- Fountain for Company H
- Frank E. Beach Memorial Fountain
- Harriet Frank Jr.
- Frequent Express
- Fuller's Coffee Shop
- Jacques Gershkovitch
- Gladstone, Oregon
- Glenn & Viola Walters Cultural Arts Center
- Neil Goldschmidt
- Gordon House (Silverton, Oregon)
- Grande Ronde River
- Gray-tailed vole
- Matt Groening
- Gypsy Restaurant and Velvet Lounge
- Hall/Nimbus station
- Hallie Ford Museum of Art
- Hart Lake (Oregon)
- Hatfield Government Center station
- Mark Hatfield
- David Hattner
- Hayrick Butte
- Henry Higgins Boiled Bagels
- Hillsboro Transit Center
- Hillsboro Civic Center
- Fern Hobbs
- Hobo's
- Hogg Rock
- J. Lister Holmes
- Holocene (Portland, Oregon)
- The Holy Modal Rounders
- Holy Trinity Barbecue
- Mount Hood
- Hoodoo Butte
- Horse rings in Portland, Oregon
- Hotel Rose
- Clarence Chesterfield Howerton
- Robert Deniston Hume
- Imperial Bottle Shop & Taproom
- Interstate 405 (Oregon)
- Mount Jefferson (Oregon)
- Joe Brown's Carmel Corn
- John Day Fossil Beds National Monument
- Joseph Schwantner: New Morning for the World; Nicolas Flagello: The Passion of Martin Luther King
- KPXG-TV
- KVDO-TV
- Kalapuya brunnea
- KATU
- Keller Fountain Park
- Carson Kelly
- Kiger mustang
- Klamath River
- KRCW-TV
- Kvinneakt
- La Carreta Mexican Restaurant
- Liberty Bell (Portland, Oregon)
- Life Is Strange 2
- Life Is Strange: Before the Storm
- Life Is Strange (video game)
- The Liquor Store
- Little Applegate River
- Asa Lovejoy
- Lovejoy Columns
- Lutz Tavern
- MAX Blue Line
- MAX Green Line
- MAX Light Rail
- Mall/SW 4th Ave and Mall/SW 5th Ave stations
- Manzanita tornado
- March for Our Lives Portland
- March for Science Portland
- Maritime fur trade
- Mark O. Hatfield Library
- Marsh shrew
- Mary's Club
- Masia (restaurant)
- Mount McLoughlin
- Charles L. McNary
- Metrovino
- MidCity SmashedBurger
- Misfits Bar and Lounge
- MLS Cup 2018
- Moda Center
- Jason Moore (Wikipedia editor)
- Morchella populiphila
- Morchella tridentina
- Alex Morgan
- My Father's Place (Portland, Oregon)
- My Life in Orange
- NS Line
- New Albion
- Stella Nickell
- No Vacancy Lounge
- North Bank Depot Buildings
- Northwest Championship
- Nostrana (restaurant)
- Not My Presidents Day
- NuScale Power
- OR-7
- Olallie Butte
- Orchestral Works by Tomas Svoboda
- USS Oregon (BB-3)
- CSS Oregon
- Oregon Civic Justice Center
- Oregon Ducks track and field
- Oregon Iron Company
- Oregon Route 120
- Oregon State Hospital
- Oregon Supreme Court
- 2021 Oregon Tech strike
- The Oregon Trail (1971 video game)
- The Oregon Trail (1985 video game)
- Oregon and California Railroad Revested Lands
- Oregon wine
- Orenco station (TriMet)
- The Original Dinerant
- Oui Presse
- Overlook Park station
- PDX671
- Packy mural
- Joel Palmer
- Papi Chulo's
- Paranoid Park (film)
- The Parish
- Jiggs Parrott
- Ralph Patt
- Norma Paulus
- Sandra Peabody
- Pearl Tavern
- Pelican Butte
- People's Bike Library of Portland
- Petersen Rock Garden
- Tom Peterson
- Pied Cow Coffeehouse
- Pioneer Courthouse Square Christmas tree
- Pioneer Square stations (TriMet)
- Sybil Plumlee
- Pod (sculpture)
- Poison Waters
- Polybius (urban legend)
- Portland Aerial Tram
- Portland Airport station
- Portland Center Stage
- Portland City Hall (Oregon)
- 2017 Portland train attack
- Potato
- Powell Butte
- Katherine Ann Power
- Provisional Government of Oregon
- Provisional Legislature of Oregon
- The Queen's Head (Portland, Oregon)
- The Quest (Portland, Oregon)
- 1985 Rajneeshee assassination plot
- Megan Rapinoe
- Rebirth (sculpture)
- Red Cap Garage
- The Register-Guard
- Republic Cafe and Ming Lounge
- Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals
- Rimsky-Korsakoffee House
- Rocky Butte
- Roman Candle (Portland, Oregon)
- Roseland Theater
- Roses in Portland, Oregon
- The Roxy (Portland, Oregon)
- Brandon Roy
- SE Bybee Blvd station
- Sand Mountain Volcanic Field
- Raemer Schreiber
- Tar Schwammel
- Shanghai Tunnel Bar
- Shemanski Fountain
- Shut Up and Eat
- Siletzia
- Sissy Bar (Portland, Oregon)
- Alek Skarlatos
- Skyline Restaurant
- Snake River
- Soaring Stones
- South Park Blocks
- Southeast Grind
- Spella Caffè
- Spirit of the American Range
- Spruce Production Division
- 2021 St. Charles Bend strike
- Ralph Stackpole
- Starky's
- Statue of Harvey W. Scott
- Statue of Vera Katz
- Robert C. Stebbins
- Suillus quiescens
- Don Summers
- Billy Sunday
- Theodore Roosevelt Memorial (Portland, Oregon)
- Mount Thielsen
- Third Eye Shoppe
- This England (album)
- Three Fingered Jack
- Three Sisters Tavern
- Tin Shed Garden Cafe
- Tomorrow Theater
- Thomas H. Tongue
- Touchet Formation
- Tragic Lovers
- Trogloraptor
- Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge
- Tualatin station
- Tuber oregonense
- U.S. Route 730
- U.S. Route 197
- U.S. Route 199
- Unforgiven (2004)
- Unicorn Bake Shop
- United States National Bank Building
- United States Senate Select Committee on Improper Activities in Labor and Management
- The Valley Library
- Waller Hall
- Kermit Washington
- Mount Washington (Oregon)
- Wayne Lyman Morse United States Courthouse
- Weed the People
- Cathy Whims
- Willamette University College of Law
- Willow Creek Transit Center
- Wilsonville, Oregon
- Al Wistert
- Women's March on Portland
- Woodstock Library
- Woodstock Mural
- XLB (Portland, Oregon)
- Yale Union Laundry Building
- Yamsay Mountain
- Minoru Yasui
- Yasui v. United States
Featured pictures
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Abigail Scott Duniway registering to vote
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Chief Joseph by Edward Sheriff Curtis
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Fredmeyer edit 1
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Hayden Bridge
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Mount Hood reflected in Mirror Lake, Oregon
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Oregon Convention Center Dusk 1 (edit)
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Oregon state coat of arms (illustrated, 1876)
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Portland Night panorama
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Portland panorama3
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Portland, Oregon, in 1898 - Herbert A. Hale
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WillametteRvrPano edit
Featured portals
Picture of the day pictures
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Fredmeyer edit 1
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Hayden Bridge
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Mount Hood reflected in Mirror Lake, Oregon
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Oregon Convention Center Dusk 1 (edit)
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Oregon state coat of arms (illustrated, 1876)
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Portland Night panorama
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Portland panorama3
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Rogue River Oregon USA
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WillametteRvrPano edit
Featured topics
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Oregon Native Americans in Oregon Oregon's Most Endangered Places Professional wrestling in Oregon Science and technology in Oregon
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- Nickname: The Beaver State
- Capital city: Salem
- Largest city: Portland
- Governor: Tina Kotek (D)
- Total area: 255,026 km²
- Population (2020 census): 4,237,256
- Date admitted to the Union: February 14, 1859
- Form of Government: Federalist
- Senators: Ron Wyden (D), Jeff Merkley (D)
- Representatives: Suzanne Bonamici (D), Cliff Bentz (R), Maxine Dexter (D), Val Hoyle (D), Janelle Bynum (D), Andrea Salinas (D)
State symbols:
- Oregon
- United States
- U.S. states
- United States regions
- Current Featured Article (or other Featured content) candidates:
- Portland, Oregon, in 1898 (Featured picture candidate)
- Undergoing Peer review:
- To Improve to Featured Standard: Oregon
- Current Good Article Nominees:
- To Improve and Nominate at WP:GOOD:
- To Expand: History of Oregon, Government of Oregon
- To Clean Up: WikiProject Oregon Cleanup listing
- Review Recent Changes: See WikiProject Oregon recent changes list
- To Merge: See Wikipedia:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Oregon#Merge proposals
- To Split:
- To Destub:
- To Deorphan:
- To Create: High priority list, Portland Business Alliance, John Kitzhaber resignation, Women's Protective Division (formerly Women's Auxiliary to the Police Department for the Protection of Girls)
- To Create from Redirects: See Category:Redirect-Class Oregon articles (use caution)
- To De-Redlink:
- Lists to De-Redlink:
- Lists to Complete:
- Wanted Pics/Graphics: Requested photos
- To add coordinates to articles in Category:Oregon articles missing geocoordinate data
- Wanted New Pics:
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