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Buildings and
Improvements from 1886 to 1889
The year 1886 was marked by a great increase
in buildings and improvements, some of which were of great
extent, as will be seen by the following list: Morrison
Street bridge (commenced), two hundred thousand dollars;
Albina Terminal works, seven hundred and fifty thousand
dollars; the new medical college, thirty-five thousand
dollars; the reduction works in East Portland, fifty
thousand dollars; Reed's five-story brick building on Third
street, between Washington and Stark, ninety-five thousand
dollars; the United Carriage, Baggage and Transportation
Co.'s barn, twenty-five thousand dollars; the four-story
brick stable on Second street between Stark and Washington,
twenty-seven thousand dollars; vessels built or improved,
sixty-eight thousand five hundred dollars. The stone church
of the Presbyterians was projected at a cost of one hundred
thousand dollars. The grand total of all improvements
actually made, reached one million nine hundred and
eighty-nine thousand one hundred and ninety-one dollars.
The year 1887 witnessed a steady expansion in building and
improvements. Among the most important were the following:
The Abington Building, on Third street, between Stark and
Washington, sixty-five thousand dollars; the five-story
building west of the Portland Savings bank; the residence of
Levi White on Nineteenth street, forty-five thousand
dollars; The Armory, on Tenth and B streets, forty thousand
dollars; W. S. Ladd's brick building at the foot of Morrison
street, sixty-five thousand dollars; improvements on the
Oregonian building, by H. L. Pittock, eighteen thousand
dollars; the four-story brick building of C. H. Dodd, on the
corner of First and A streets, seventy-seven thousand
dollars; the building of the Cyclorama Co., on Pine street,
between Third and Fourth, sixty thousand dollars; the
Portland Bridge, two hundred thousand dollars; on the
railroad bridge there was spent one hundred and seventy-five
thousand dollars. The cable car line up to the heights was
begun. The streets were improved to the value of one hundred
and ninety-seven thousand eight hundred and thirty-five
dollars. The total improvements of the year are summarized
as follows: -In the city, one million fifty-four thousand
one hundred and seventy-nine dollars; on Portland Heights,
sixty thousand dollars; in Fast Portland, one hundred and
ninety-five thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; in
Albina, six hundred and twelve thousand nine hundred and
ninety-nine dollars and fifty cents; on Mount Tabor, sixty
thousand dollars; making a grand total of two million seven
hundred and eighty-four thousand and twenty-four dollars.
During 1888 all former improvements were far exceeded. Many
large buildings of the most permanent character, and
improvements which would be a credit to any great city were
brought to completion or undertaken. The following is a list
of the principal works: The Exposition Building, on
Fourteenth and B, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars; on
the First Presbyterian church, sixty thousand dollars; the
Jewish Synagogue, sixty-five thousand dollars; the railroad
bridge (finished), four hundred thousand dollars;
improvements by the water committee, two hundred and forty
thousand dollars; buildings in Portland (not otherwise
named), one million eight hundred thousand dollars;
improvements on the streets of Portland, three hundred and
twelve thousand five hundred dollars; Fast Portland and
Sunnyside, three hundred and nineteen thousand three hundred
and eighty-eight dollars; at Oswego, five hundred thousand
dollars; at Albina, one hundred and eighty-one thousand six
hundred and ninety-five dollars; on the street railways,
fifty thousand dollars; on Portland Heights, forty thousand
dollar; on Mount Tabor, thirty thousand dollars; at Sellwood,
twelve thousand dollars; at Milwaukie, seven thousand three
hundred dollars. This shows a total of three million five
hundred and twenty-two thousand six hundred and thirty-nine
dollars.
It is noticeable by the foregoing that many of these
improvements were made outside of the city limits, in some
cases from three to six miles distant. The propriety of
including them among the improvements of Portland arises
from the fact that they were undertaken and completed by
Portland capital and were in fact the growth of the city
itself - illustrating how Portland has completely
overstepped what were once called "the natural limits of the
city," between the circle of hills and the bending course of
the Willamette. The improvements of 1889, reaching a value
of about five million dollars are fully mentioned elsewhere,
and need not be enumerated here.
These statistics as given in the foregoing pages, while
probably not without error, are nevertheless the best now to
be had, and give approximately a correct idea of business
operations and the growth of the place. By examination it
will be seen that the development of Portland, as of all new
cities, has been, as it were, by wave motions, the flood now
rising and now falling again, but nevertheless at each new
turn reaching a much higher point. Much of this oscillating
movement has been due to the peculiar circumstances of the
city and to the opening of the country by public works. In
the very earliest days the first movement was due to the
coming of ships loaded with goods for the use of the rural
population of the Willamette Valley. Portland as a 'shipping
point and post of supply made a secure beginning. After it
had become thus established it did the business for the
farming community surrounding in a regular and steady
fashion without much increase except as the growth of the
tributary country demanded. During the early sixties,
however, a new and promising field was opened for her
merchants and navigation companies by the discovery of
precious metals in Eastern Oregon and Idaho. With the
development of the mines, and to quite an extent also with
the settlement of Eastern Oregon and Washington and their
occupation by cattle dealers and cattle raisers, . Portland
gained largely in business and trade. The steady growth
resulting from this development was not greatly accelerated
until in 1867-68 plans for opening the country by means of
railroad were brought to completion, and ground was actually
broken for a line to California. With the prospect of
railroad connection with the rest of the world, the
speculative imagination of the people of Portland was
excited, and almost extravagant dreams of great immediate
growth and wealth were indulged by even the most steady and
conservative. Property increased greatly in value and
improvements were stimulated. The early railroad days of
Oregon were, however, beset with difficulties, as will be
seen in a following chapter, although, producing much real
growth, did not ultimate so hopefully as was by many
anticipated. Ben Holladay showed an unexpected weakness and
incapacity in managing his roads, and as his bonds declined
and the general expectation of failure was felt, depression
was experienced in all parts of the State. When a few years
later occurred the great business collapse in the United
States, which began with the failure of J. Cooke & Co. and
the Northern Pacific Railroad Co., Portland was left to the
simple cultivation of her domestic commerce, and inflated
prices and expectations had to be abandoned. With the
passage, however, of the California and of the Oregon
Central railroads into the hands of the German bondholders,
and a better system of management thereby introduced,
business revived once more and Portland found herself
obliged to add to her accommodations to meet the incoming
tide of immigration and the increased flood of business.
Independent commerce with the East and with Europe having
sprung up stimulated very largely the production of grain in
the Willamette Valley and also in Eastern Oregon and
Washington, so that there was a steady increase in the
amount of treasure received into the country and in the
volume of business transacted at Portland. Exports of wool,
lumber and salmon also figured largely to swell the volume
of trade. With the year 1880 and those succeeding,
prospects, and at length the realization, of a through line
from Portland to the East, produced a greater volume of
trade and raised higher expectations than had previously
been known. Portland began to assume a truly metropolitan
appearance. Activity in real estate and in building, and an
expansion of all kinds was everywhere noticeable. All went
well, until the O. R. & N. road and the Northern Pacific had
been so far completed as to make a through line to New York,
and Villard and the Oregon and Trans-continental railroad
having gone beyond their means, suffered a reverse, and in
their ruin involved also many of the citizens of Portland.
For a time the people of our city seemed discouraged, nor
did they quite realize the immense importance to them of
railroad connection with all parts of the Northwest.
Gradually, however, they began to see the ease with which
they might connect themselves with all parts of Oregon and
Washington and command the wholesale business of this
region; and how they might even more stimulate the
agricultural and mining interests of this whole region.
Gathering up these lines of business they began to push
vigorously and in a short time were at the head of the
commercial, mining, manufacturing and banking interests of
the whole section. As a result of this active policy
business began to pour in, in an almost overwhelming flood,
through the thoroughfares, the docks, the commercial houses
and the banks of our city. Real estate rose greatly in
value; addition after addition being added to our city;
suburban towns began to spring up; manufacturers began to
press in for a location, and capitalists found themselves
obliged to erect buildings as rapidly as materials and labor
could be obtained. A generous public spirit began to be felt
and a general desire for public buildings which would do
credit to the city was expressed. By public enterprise, such
buildings as that of the Northwestern Industrial Exposition
and the grand Hotel Portland were constructed. Men of wealth
saw that the situation warranted the construction of the
very best and most permanent houses. Fine churches were also
erected. Street car lines were multiplied. Electric railways
and motor lines to the suburbs and other points near were
built with astonishing rapidity. With the passing out of the
year 1889, the greatest amount of capital of any season has
been spent in improvements, and there is every indication of
a still greater expenditure in the coming year.
Portland has now reached the point where she has comfortable
communication with all parts of the territory which she is
to serve. Her growth is now but the result of the growth of
Oregon and Washington. What yet remains to be seen is a
perfect opening of the Columbia river from its mouth to the
British line, and the improvement of the tributaries of this
magnificent stream, so that not only by rail but by water,
every village and farm may be brought into close connection
with our city, and may be supplied from her warehouses and
shops.
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