Morrison street, into which
enters the bridge-way from across the
Willamette, begins with the Esmond Hotel of
five stories, on the north, and W. S. Ladd's
five story brick, on the south. The St.
Charles Hotel stands on the south side, and
on First street handsome brick blocks
appear-except that on the southeast corner,
apparently as a relic of ancient
architecture, remains the old wooden, clapp-boarded
two story Occidental Hotel. The street
continuing westward is of a very uneven
character. Fine three and four story brick
and wooden houses, alternate with one story
fish and fruit stalls and coffee houses. On
Fifth street, however, the block devoted to
the U. S. Custom House and Postoffice is
found, and the building itself, of
bluish-gray Bellingham Bay sandstone, two
stories and a half in height, surmounted by
a dome of glass, is massive and handsome.
Its spacious dimensions and fine proportions
are much enhanced in appearance by its
position on the brow of the incline, which
having been carefully cut and sodded
presents a banked and terrace-like front as
much as ten feet above the level at the
crossing of Fifth street and Morrison. By
its wide walks, its green turf and its
slight adornment of exotic trees, it
possesses an entirety and pose, or repose,
and a perspective of its own. It is in truth
a very satisfactory and admirable building,
well representing the benign way of the
central government.
Immediately west, massive and enormous,
occupying a full block of brick resting on a
stone foundation, seven stories in height,
with a multitude of bow windows, is the
special pride of the city. This is the Hotel
Portland, just completed at a cost of
$750,000. This sum was raised by
subscriptions, and in a peculiar sense the
building belongs to the people. The
structure was begun in 1883, during the
great "boom" consequent upon the building of
the O. R. & N. R. R., and the completion of
the Northern Pacific. Upon the collapse in
the stock of the Oregon & Transcontinental,
soon after, work was suspended and the
foundation was left destitute and almost
unprotected, and was called for a time the "Villard
Ruins." It was a lonely pile, useful chiefly
to the circus and theatrical manager as a
fine wall for sticking flaming posters, and
a kind of gloomy horror was attached to it
from its having been in the course of time
the scene of a mysterious murder. The
absolute necessity of a hotel fit for the
accommodation of the tourist travel to
Portland, was earnestly and unremittingly
pressed upon the attention of the citizens
by the leading papers, and was recognized by
the capitalists of the city. Fortunately no
outside party was found willing to finish
the work, and the people themselves took it
into their own hands, thereby rearing
something of which they feel proud.
Arrangements were completed and the building
begun in 1888. The pile now finished
presents two hundred feet solid upon both
Morrison and Yamhill streets. Facing Sixth
street it embraces a deep court and in the
angles of the roof rise its turrets. The
roof is steep, of slate, with a multitude of
dormer windows, and is relieved of
uniformity by massive brick chimneys. The
prospect from aloft is commanding, affording
a certain openness and airiness not realized
even from the Heights. If one were disposed
to be critical, he might raise the question
whether the smooth and narrow curls of
frieze and cornice quite satisfied the
expectations raised by the massive and
rugged rock-work of the foundation, and he
might be so unreasonable as to wish that a
breadth of one hundred feet lay all about
the structure, for lawn and drive-way, for
trees and fountains, and that he might have
larger foreground to see the hotel. But in
this last particular, he would be clearly
allowing a taste for the spacious premises
of the sea-shore hotel to dominate the
warmer spaces of city walls, or perhaps be
anticipating the next great structure of the
kind, to be placed on some rock-bound tract
as that of Jacob Kamm's on Twelfth street.
In truth one finds himself here in the midst
of large buildings, for on the block north
of the hotel is the grand new Opera House of
Judge Marquam.
South of the hotel, very much embowered in
trees, is the quiet edifice of the church of
our Father belonging to the Unitarian
Society, whose pulpit has been occupied from
the first by Rev. T. L. Eliot, who has ever
been prominent in works of progress and
humanity. Following Morrison street out to
Tenth through much shade of maple trees, and
just completed but not costly edifices, one
runs upon the new circle of churches. Here
is the old Tabernacle built previously to
accommodate the great audiences that
assembled to listen to the preaching of Mrs.
Hampton. Since that time it has been in
constant use for mass meetings of the
religious societies and temperance folks.
The building itself is simply a square box,
something like a barn, with windows only in
the hip roof. Looking one block down to
Alder street, on the opposite side, one sees
the great stone church of the Presbyterians,
recently finished at a cost of more than
$100,000. The tall spire is most imposing,
and the gothic window and roof is of
excellent effect. The work is exceedingly
fine, in block built bluish gray sandstone
and blue stained mortar. South, and on
Taylor street, is the Grace Methodist
Church building, partly of stone. On Main
street, still on 10th, is the Jewish
Synagogue, of wood, in gothic style, but
with front finish in the Moorish. Passing
northward on 9th street, to the
neighbor-hood of Clay, one finds the
edifice' of the Second Presbyterian or
Calvary Church, in some respects the
handsomest, most graceful and attractive of
any in the city. The interior finish,
vaulted and . in white, or inspiration, tint
is very delightful. At the end of Morrison
street is the magnificent High School
building, accommodating, graceful and
convenient.
Sweeping out to the hills with occasional
vacant lots, or blocks, but built for the
most part with houses of great uniformity of
excellence, although not so magnificent or
occupying so much space as in the north end,
this portion of the city with churches and
school buildings, is the most substantial
center of the residences. Some are costly.
The umbrage from the shade trees, mainly of
maple, is deep and in places too heavy, the
pointed poplars ever bending this way or
that, in the breezes, and in selected
localities elms and box elder vary the
artistic ornamentation. On the lawns,
evergreens cut exceedingly prim, " make and
mar" the beauty of the scene. As is common
to weak and suffering humanity, the idea
that to attain beauty a plant or tree must
either be bloated or shorn out of its
natural form, has here, as elsewhere free
course. Passing down the hill on Jefferson
street, back to the river, one discovers the
palatial seat of W. S. Ladd and J. N. Dolph,
with those of James Steel and Senator
Corbett and Henry Failing, so near as to
seem to belong to the locality. South of
Yamhill street, on the river front, there
are no notable buildings, and out to South
Portland, while the city is fairly well
built, there is nothing striking, unless it
be the iron works, as far as the Marquam
gulch, notable for big bridges. South
Portland, on a romantic high level embossed
upon the angle of the hills, which here
round off in strangely retrousse
points, circles about its fine school
houses, and has many ambitious homes and
cottages. There is a peculiar air of thrift
and neatness about this quarter which speaks
volumes for the future.
Of East Portland, great in the future, a
word should be said. The front is repellent,
being built largely over a lowland and the
gulches. The buildings are yet largely of
wood, and the streets are likewise of cheap
material, and usually in ill repair. But
"casting an eye of pity on this first front
of the place one finds the further streets
nicely improved, a large number of neat
cottages and some few handsome houses, good
school buildings and a number of home-like
churches. The lay of the land is very fine,
that portion on the north, known as Holladay
Addition, being exceptionally high and
handsome.. Toward Mt. Tabor, for nearly
three miles, the surface is rolling,
excellent for building, and is laid off in
an indefinite number of additions and parks.
Sage real estate dealers insist that this
plain will in time be the most dense portion
of the city of Portland. Extending to the
eastward half way toward the mount is
Sunnyside, a small place, situated directly
on the Mount Tabor Motor Line. As for motor
lines this section is gridironed with them,
and from the preparations made by
capitalists for the accommodation of
population, this basin has the right to look
up. But Tabor itself is handsomely improved
and delightfully still, with an atmosphere
at the summit of the most healing and
balsamic purity. South of East Portland is
Brookland, a fine ridge looking down on the
deep Willamette and Ross Island. Farther
south are Sellwood and Willsburg. Back from
the river on a tract of rolling land is
Waverly.
With proper improvement the east side of the
river has the greatest possibilities and
when Portland needs the space of
Philadelphia, can furnish sixty square miles
for her use. It is as vet crude-with much
that is fine-not being wholly out of its
swaddling clothes.
The cemeteries, to close our view as ends
the brief scene of life, are located on the
east side of the river, or on the hills to
the south. The oldest now used is Lone Fir,
one mile east of the Willamette. The
significance of the name is from a solitary.
fir tree of large dimensions overlooking the
grounds. The company, incorporating for
purposes of sepulture, was organized in
1866, and the sight was then far removed and
very quiet. Some forty acres are set off and
the tract is well improved. It is for the
most part thickly set with graves, and
proper monuments commemorate those laid here
to rest.
A number of the stones, shafts, vaults and
ornaments are costly. But once so quiet in
its thickets, the place has now become
crowded by the residence portion of East
Portland, a much frequented high-way being
on one side, and the Mt. Tabor Motor line,
with frequent trains on the other. St.
Mary's Cemetery (Catholic) lies across the
way north, but is no longer used.
In 1882, a large and beautiful cemetery was
provided, and a company organized, embracing
the most wealthy men in the city, ex-Senator
H. W. Corbett and W. S. Ladd being of the
number. The site chosen was on the hilltops,
four miles south of the city, above the
macadam road. The grounds extend to the east
of the eminence where there is a perfect
view. The spot is now, as it ever will be,
peaceful, near the sky, and if the departed
still care for the beauties of earth,
affording them the best that Portland can
give. By special provision the grounds are
to be tastefully and even elaborately
improved; nothing unsightly or uncouth to be
allowed, and the graves of those whose
friends are absent still to be kept green
and adorned with flowers. It is a graceful
feeling of the human heart that would make a
little border land between this world and
the unseen, and in this place cemented to
this purpose by the people of Portland, are
found all the elements appertaining to this
interest. To the same interests are the
other cemeteries, Greenwood (Masonic) west
of Riverview; the new Jewish cemetery on the
Boone Ferry road, four miles south; the
Ohavi Sholem and the B'nai B'rith cemeteries
lie one-half mile further.
From this brief view of our city, indicating
opulence and prosperity it is not to be
inferred that the career of Portland has all
been easy and plain sailing. Aside from the
envy of other cities, great calamities, the
casualties of nature, or the carelessness or
destructiveness of man, have not been
unknown.
Water has a double chance in the city,
coming down the Willamette in the winter,
and up the Willamette from, or rather backed
up by the Columbia, in the summer. The
winter freshets are seldom at all
troublesome. Even the most violent floods
seldom raising the river more than
twenty-five feet above low water mark-the
water rushing swiftly by to fall into the
Columbia, which rarely rises during the
winter, or early spring, its sources then
being ice-bound. In 1861, the time of the
great flood, which carried away old Champoeg
near French Prairie, and many houses and
other buildings along the Willamette, gave
our city a slight reminder, taking away
Lownsdale's wharf and perhaps other
structures. This flood was repeated in 1890.
The main trouble came from logs and great
drift shooting by, endangering bridges,
ferries and their cables, and causing
steamers to skip hither and yonder. Some of
the small crafts have suffered at such
times, being sunk, or compelled, as in one
case at least, to jump over a log to avoid
being rocked and perhaps upset. It is only
rarely, however, that any difficulty occurs,
and by proper precautions all may be
avoided. The rise of the Columbia, while not
so violent, is much more of an occasion. It
often brings our river up twenty feet and
sometimes as much as twenty-nine above
lowest water. It is not the turbid Columbia
water, but the clear blue fluid of the
Willamette, yet when the rise is very rapid
the current is sometimes thrown back, making
the water run slowly up stream. In old
times, before the lower part of the city was
raised to its present level, the rise of the
Columbia was looked for with great anxiety.
If a flood was reported on the way, the
lower stories of the warehouses, the cellars
of the stores, and even the lower stories of
the houses in the north end were hastily
cleared of goods. As the water rose into the
streets, as it did a number of times, the
lower city was abandoned by business. The
steamers came up to the upper docks, and
temporary walks for the accommodation of
pedestrians were made of planks on trestles.
The Nicholson pavement became a great care,
for it showed a disposition to rise and,
float off, and to be kept in place had to be
freighted down with rocks. The R. R. depots
became useless and the cars stopped tip
town. While the people of the north end were
in the throes of such a disorder, like mice
threatened with inundation, the south siders
looked on with none too much commiseration,
deeming it a just recompense for going to
the swamps below town, in preference to the
highlands on the south. In 1876 the flood
was particularly high, and stood for weeks.
It was deemed useless to trifle any longer,
and the grade was raised to a point above
danger, and the streets paved with Belgian
blocks. The city is not yet rid of the
trouble, however, for although the water
seldom conies up to the streets at high
times, the cellars are filled, leaving them
foul and noisome with dirt, and the refuse
of dead water as the flood subsides, and the
sewers are rendered useless. This breeds an
infinite amount of malaria, throws a
multitude of bad odors into the dwelling
houses and streets, and works vast injury to
the health of the population. A dyke of
masonry should be extended across the entire
river front, excluding the water, and the
sewers within should be kept clear by a
system of steam pumps. In no other way can
the trouble be removed. As population
increases and the wastage is multiplied this
will become imperative.