To define her position in more particular terms, she is
located in latitude forty-five degrees and thirty minutes
north; longitude one hundred and twenty-two degrees and
twenty-seven minutes west on the left bank of the Willamette
River, twelve miles below the Falls of that stream at Oregon
City, and ten miles above its confluence with the Columbia.
It is one hundred and ten miles from the city by the
Willamette and Columbia Rivers to the debouchure of the
latter stream into the Pacific. As for distance to other
well known points, it is about seven hundred miles to San
Francisco by water, six hundred by rail; to the Cascades of
the Columbia it is sixty miles; to the Dalles, ninety miles;
to Walla Walla, two hundred and forty-five miles; to Spokane
Falls, three hundred and seventy; to Lewiston, three hundred
and fifty; to Salt Lake City, nine hundred; to Helena,
Montana, seven hundred and fifty; to Chicago, two thousand
four hundred; to New York, three thousand three hundred. On
the north to Olympia by rail it is one hundred and twenty
miles; to Tacoma, one hundred and fifty; to Seattle, one
hundred and eighty; to Port Townsend, two hundred and fifty;
to Victoria, three hundred; to Vancouver, B. C., four
hundred; to Sitka, nine hundred; On the south to Salem, the
capital of Oregon, it is fifty miles; to Eugene City, the
site of the State University, one hundred and twenty-five;
to Roseburgh, in the Umpqua Valley, two hundred; to
Jacksonville, in Rogue River Valley, three hundred.
Portland sits at the mouth of the Willamette Valley, and
practically at the mouth of the Columbia Basin. To pass from
San Francisco by rail to Puget Sound, or vice versa, one
must go by Portland. To pass by water from the sea coast to
the Inland Empire, as the Columbia Basin is sometimes
termed, one must pass Portland. Take a map, make Portland a
center, and draw from this center lines along the natural
gaps and depressions to other parts of the Pacific
Northwest, and there will be formed a circle of which these
lines are approximately the radii.
Topographically considered Portland is laid out by nature on
a scale commensurate with the geographical environment of
which she is the center. All along the south bank of the
Columbia, and the west bank of the Willamette, from the
ocean for more than one hundred miles, even to the Falls of
the Willamette at Oregon City, there is a range of low
mountains or hills, lying almost the entire distance against
the waters of these rivers and in many places jutting upon
them in a heads and escarpments. These highlands, for fifty
miles of their distance from the sea, are the broken
terminals of the Coast Mountains, laid open by the flow of
the Columbia. For the remainder of their extent they break
down into lower elevations, known as the Scappoose Hills, or
still further south, as the Portland Hills. They are an
older formation, containing much of sandstone and Andesite,
and are in many cases wholly lacking the basaltic covering
which is well nigh universal in this northwestern region. At
the mouth of the Willamette one finds a delta, which on the
south, is embraced by the arm of the river that was formerly
called in the Indian language by the liquid name of
Multnomah. From
this water, now termed Willamette Slough, which separates
the largest of the islands of the delta from the main land,
the hills rise abruptly, with but a narrow strip of alluvial
soil unfit for building. Following up this slough to its
point of departure from the main river, the hills still
impend upon the west, their natural abruptness being much
emphasized by the dense growth of evergreen forests whose
unbroken wall of tops add some hundreds of feet to their
apparent altitude. At a point ten miles from the mouth of
the Willamette, however, one finds a great bend in the
river, which now comes directly from the south, whereas,
hitherto one found it flowing from the southeast. Here has
been formed the site of Portland.
By the casting up of alluvium against the foot of the hills,
and the formation of the river bank at some distance
eastward, shallow lagoons have been formed, which during
seasons of flood are united with the general flow of the
river making a continuous body of water. Here are Balch's,
Guild's and Couch's Lakes. From the shore of the latter, as
well as from the banks of the river, the land rises at an
easy gradient, reaching at a distance of half a mile from
the river a plateau one hundred feet above the level of the
water. At a distance of about a mile from the river, the
plateau joins abruptly the chain of hills, which here lift
their fronts sharply six hundred feet above the Willamette.
From Couch's Lake on the north to the end of the sloping
plateau on the south, where the impending hills again
approach the river, and terminate the prospect, it is a
distance of two and one-half miles. It is nowhere above a
mile wide. It is moreover cleft by a small stream coming
from the west-Tanner Creek-which throws one portion of the
site of the city toward the south, with rounded surface,
against the foot of the southern bosses of the hill chains,
and the other portion toward the north with various
undulations, against the northern and more retrogradient
peaks. The cleft, however, is not deep, nor abrupt, and
gives a delightful and expressive variation to the face of
the site. This, then, is the topography of the city-a gentle
slope, rising up from the river and lake to the hills a mile
back, within the elbow of the river, and under the shelter
of the highlands. The plat slopes north-east, and embraces
somewhat less than three square miles in area. It is cozy,
protected from the southern storm, sufficiently well watered
to be green the year around, and is constantly fanned by the
breezes of the river.
But while this formed the limits of the original city, the
additions have spread far beyond these bounds, and
manifestly if the city is to grow it must overflow, as it
has already done far beyond its two or three square miles.
The surface of the surrounding region, far from forbidding
such extension, is favorable and inviting to it. It has
recently been recognized that the outlying hills are most
advantageous for residence. They rise up in separate spurs
and are steep and abrupt, having all the appearance of
having been cut into their present form by the erosion of
sea waves, as was undoubtedly the case when the general
level of Oregon was so much depressed in remote times, as to
allow the flow of ocean water over the entire surface of the
Willamette Valley. There may be reckoned at least six of
these prominences. Beginning on the north back of Couch's
Lake, we have Willamette Heights; next south are King's
Heights, overlooking the City Park. South of this across the
deep canyon of Tanner Creek is Carter's Hill, which was the
first to be called Portland Heights. Next in order is
Robinson's Hill, succeeded by Marquam's Hill, upon which is
located the addition sometimes called Portland Homestead. To
close the view are the South Portland Heights. There are
upon all these high ands many knobs and knolls, separated
from one another by small ravines all of which make back and
disappear at length in the solid body of the chain. The
elevation attained by these heights is from six hundred to
eight hundred feet. But they roll upward and finally
culminate in a commanding ridge whose eastern terminus rises
highest of all and is named Mt. Zion, over 1,000 feet in
altitude. It looks eastward across the river. The western
extension of the same ridge, Humphrey's Mountain, commands
the prospect toward the Tualatin plains and the Coast
Mountains. These heights, having an infinite variety of
surface, with innumerable networks of ravines, afford an
almost countless variety of sitely building spots. An
exposure facing any sun or wind may be obtained and in the
deeper depressions locations sheltered from all the storms
may be readily found. South and east of Tanner Creek canyon,
the heights, including Mt. Zion and Humphrey's Mountain,
with their skirts and flanks, compose a region of about six
square miles. North and west of the canyon, the ridge is
some three miles broad, and extends parallel with the river
indefinitely. Ten square miles are within easy reach of the
city. Still south of the heights proper the chain of hills
continue, although, it breaks down to a much lower altitude,
and form a rolling plateau two miles broad, by four or five
in length. This makes a region extraordinarily sightly and
sunny, and while not so much diversified as the heights, it
is much more easily reduced to form and use-indeed not
betraying by contour its elevation, but presenting the
appearance of an undulating plain. It is easily accessible
to the city, and will one day be a portion of it.
From the highest points of all the elevations named the
scenery is unrivaled. They command the prospect of the
Willamette River, its winding and silvery way to its delta
and union with the Columbia; and for many miles a connected
view of that greater stream and its path from the heart of
the Cascade Mountains and the chasm in their walls out of
which it proceeds. There are also embraced wide strips of
meadow land, plains, illimitable forests, buttes and
romantic hills; the vanishing wall of the Cascade Mountains,
with Hood, St. Helens, Rainier, Adams, Jefferson, all being
volcanic peaks covered with perpetual snow, in unobstructed
view. Seldom is there such a combination of water, valley,
hill and mountain scenery to be embraced in one prospect.
All in all there are twenty-five (or a much larger number if
necessary) square miles of land ready for the use of
Portland on the west side of the Willamette.
But this is exclusive of the east side, which by many is
deemed the fairer of the two. Its surface is totally
different, from that which has just been considered, since
it is not at all mountainous, and little broken. It is, on
the other hand, an imperial plain, with long easy slopes,
wide expanses, and but occasional elevations. Beginning six
miles below Portland on the east bank of the river one finds
at St. Johns the first highland, north of which are river
bottoms and illuvial plains subject to the overflow of the
Columbia. This elevation rises sharply one hundred feet
above the river and making a slow ascent gains another
hundred feet of altitude before reaching its maximum. Its
slopes are long and sweeping, maintaining their elevation
with more or less regularity up to Albina nearly opposite
Portland. Back some distance from the river the plain rises
again fifty feet, or possibly in some places one hundred
feet more, to a continuous ridge, a bank of ancient washed
gravel, brought down in long ages past by torrents from the
Cascade Mountains, and here deposited while yet the sea
rolled in. The gravel ridge once attained, the surface
steadily falls to seek the level of the Columbia on the
farther side. Highland, Piedmont, Columbia Heights, and
other names significant of the elevated region are bestowed
upon various portions of this gravel ridge. From Albina
southward the surface sinks by small degrees, broken here
and there by ravines, until at the site of East Portland,
three profound chasms or gulches, unite to form an illuvial
bottom, making easy ingress from the river, but a bad water
front. The first of these on the north is Sullivan's Gulch,
fifty feet deep and two hundred yards across; its bed a
morass. It is down this cleft that the O. R. & N. R. R.
finds a passage from the plain to the river level. Next
south is Asylum Gulch, leading back to a powerful spring
which leaps from under the plain behind, giving birth to a
stream of water sufficient for the supply of the water,
works of East Portland. A mile south of this is Stephens
Gulch, bearing off another clear stream, of many times the
volume of the foregoing, which also springs bodily from the
ground. It is by this depression that the O. & C. R. R.
passes out of the city. South of the mouth of Stephens
Gulch, the ground once more rises, gaining an altitude about
the same as that of Albina, and it is called Brookland. On
the obverse slope, however, it sinks to a considerable vale.
The strip of alluvium in front of East
Portland, at the mouth of the gulches, is but a few hundred
paces across, and thence the surface rises easily, nowhere
attaining an elevation of more than one hundred feet, and
develops into a plain with many variations of surface
leading out three miles further to Mt. Tabor. This is a
solitary hill seven hundred feet in height with a commanding
front and long approaches. Its slopes are most inviting for
residence property, the soil is congenial to gardens and
orchard trees, and its rocks of basalt give birth to a
multitude of delicious springs. It is in truth a reservoir
of water, as are the hills on the west. East of Mt. Tabor
the plains extend for many miles with an occasional little
butte or ridge; and to the south the surface rolls away in a
woody expanse with frequent hills which break down at length
on the margin of the Clackamas, a half score of miles
distant. Comprehensively, therefore, the east side of the
river opposite Portland is a plain-with undulations and a
few hills-eight or ten miles long, and as many wide. The
site of Portland may therefore be briefly described as a
sloping plateau within the elbow of the Willamette,
surrounded by hills, opposite a great undulating plain. This
situation is unsurpassed for a great city.
The Willamette river, immediately above the city, spread out
in shallows and enlarged by alluvial islands, is there above
half a mile wide. Obstructed, however, by the high point of
Brookland, and thrown from the east to the west shore, it
rapidly narrows, being but fourteen hundred feet across at
Morrison street, near the center of the city. Thrown again
from the solid bank of the plat on which the city stands to
the east shore, striking a mile further down upon the
elevated plains of East Portland, below the gulches, it is
forced into one strong deep channel, wearing the face of the
upland into an almost perpendicular bluff fifty feet
high-the formation exposed being lacustrine clay, over-lying
a mixture of coarse sand and washed gravel. At this point
the river is but eight hundred feet across. It thence
expands slightly; still wearing the Albina shore, as its
course is deflected westward; swelling at Swan Island to as
great a width as at Ross Island. The depth of water at Ross
Island is but nine feet. Below this obstruction the depth
rapidly increases, reaching sixty feet off the lower wharves
of the city, near the railroad bridge. At Swan Island the
narrow channel hugging the east shore gives a depth of
twenty-six feet which is frequently doubled by the vast rise
of the Columbia in the summer.
Natural Advantages
The term "advantages" is relative, being always used with
reference to the purpose in view. The advantages of a city
relate to its adaptation to the uses of commerce,
manufacturing and residence. Under the head of commerce,
facility for both water and land communication is to be
regarded, together with the extent and variety of
commodities available for exchange. Under manufacturing
advantages, power, labor, and availability of raw material,
fall into the account. As to residence one must consider
salubrity, beauty of natural surroundings and contiguity to
his business operations, together with social, educational
and religious privileges.
The geographical position of Portland, which has already
been described, gives her superior advantages as a
commercial center. That will be a commanding commercial
point which readily effects exchanges of commodities and
equates supply and demand. Chicago is a center of lumber
trade, controlling this great branch of business throughout
the Lake basin and the Mississippi valley, for the reason
that she can most readily reach the lumber manufacturing
districts of Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Canada, and
can keep in supply millions of feet of seasoned and assorted
lumber, ready for the greatest number of places in the
surrounding regions. Her control of this trade is sometimes
spoken of as due to the superior enterprise of her
merchants. But this is true only in a secondary degree. From
the circumstance of her geographical position there is a
greater number of builders and others who can more easily
find at her yards the lumber they desire, than at any other
city. They find the quickest and cheapest route between them
and the sawmills, to lead through Chicago. If they can save
a few hours time and a few dollars in money upon every bill,
they are certain to send to Chicago. The extent of
patronage, the rapidity of their sales, the speedy return of
their money and the consequent large margins of profit,
enable the Chicago dealers to enlarge their stock and to
supply still more quickly and satisfactorily all the needs
of their customers, and by this to attract more and more
business, and finally to under-sell the smaller and less
equipped houses of even distant cities. In like manner from
her proximity to the grain fields, and from her shipping
facilities, she largely controls the wheat business; in like
manner she is a center for market and sale of the beef and
pork of the Mississippi valley.