During 1863 a long step
toward improvement was the organization of
the Portland and Milwaukie macadamized road,
with A, B. Richardson as president, Henry
Failing secretary, and W. S. Ladd treasurer
of the Board of Directors. The shipping
lists of the steamers show large exports of
treasure, one hundred thousand dollars. two
hundred and forty thousand dollars, and even
seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars
being reported for single steamers. Six
thousand to seven thousand boxes of apples
were also reported at a single shipment. The
old side wheel river steamer John H.
Couch for many years so familiar a
figure on the lower Columbia, was launched
this year. The principal building was that
of the Presbyterian church, at the corner of
Third and Washington streets. The laying of
the corner stone Avas observed with due
ceremony, Rev. P.S. Caffrey officiating,
assisted by Reverends Pearne and Cornelius.
A new school-house of the congregation of
Beth Israel, was opened this year. The
arrival of thirty-six thousand pounds of
wire for the Oregon and California telegraph
line showed the interest in telegraphic
communication with the outside world. The
assessed valuation of property was three
million two hundred and twenty-six thousand
two hundred and sixty dollars. The day of
independence was observed with great
ceremony this year, the United States
Military Department, under Brigadier General
Alvord, from Vancouver, and the Fire
Department and other societies of Portland
uniting their efforts to make an imposing
parade, while the evening was made
resplendent with fireworks. To the country
people who thronged the city this was new
and imposing, and the imagination of none
had yet extended to so lofty a flight as the
illumination of the snow-capped mountains,
as in recent years, to close the display. A
spirited address by Hon. Amory Holbrook, in
a time when the scream of the eagle meant
something more than lifeless platitudes,
added to the inspiration of the hour. The
capitulation of Vicksburg was also
celebrated a short time afterwards by a
torchlight procession. There was no lack of
patriotism in those days.
In 1864 much expansion was noticed. Grading
and draining of the streets was largely
undertaken. The Presbyterian church was
finished at a cost of twenty thousand
dollars and was called the finest structure
in the State. The Catholic church was
improved to an extent of two thousand
dollars. J.. L. Parrish erected a
three-story brick building, fifty by one
hundred feet, on the corner of Front and
Washington streets. A house was built by the
city for the Columbia Engine Company No. 3,
on Washington street, at a cost of six
thousand dollars. The lot cost two thousand
dollars. Two new hotels, the What Cheer
House and the new Columbian, were built, and
older ones such as Arrigoni's, the Western,
the Howard House, the Pioneer and Temperance
House were improved. A considerable number
of stores and dwelling houses were also put
up. The greatest improvement, however, was
the O. S. N. Company's dock on the water
front between Pine and Ash streets. It was
necessitated by the increasing traffic with
Idaho and the upper Columbia. There was not
hitherto a dock to accomodate vessels at all
stages of the water. This new wharf was
accordingly built with two stories, the
upper being fifteen feet above the other.
The lower wharf was two hundred and fifty
feet long by one hundred and sixty wide; the
upper, two hundred by one hundred and
twenty, thus occupying the entire front of
one block. For this work there were used
sixty thousand feet of piles and timber,
five hundred thousand feet of sawed plank,
fifty tons of iron, two hundred and
twenty-five thousand shingles, two thousand
eight hundred perch of rock, and six hundred
barrels of cement. The work was completed
from plans of J. W. Brazee and supervised by
John D' Orsay. The cost was fifty thousand
dollars. The wharf and buildings of Couch
and Flanders, in the northern part of the
city were improved, bringing their value up
to forty thousand dollars. The river front
was not then as now a continuous series of
docks, and these structures made an even
more striking appearance than later ones far
more pretentious and valuable. In order to
prevent delay and vexation in the arrival of
ocean vessels, a call was made for money to
deepen the channel of the lower Willamette,
and was met by double the sum named. The
improvements were soon undertaken with great
vigor. Five thousand dollars were spent in
grading and improving the public square
between Third and Fourth streets on Main.
With the general leveling of the
irregularities of the surface of the city
and the removal of stumps more effort was
made to adorn the streets and door yards
with trees and shrubbery, and to make
handsome lawns. The surroundings of the city
were, however, still wild, and the shattered
forests seemed excessively rude, having no
more the grace and stateliness of nature,
and having not yet given away altogether to
the reign of art.
The population was now five thousand eight
hundred and nineteen; there were one
thousand and seventy-eight frame buildings,
fifteen one-story, thirty-seven two-story
and seven three-story brick buildings-one
thousand one hundred and thirty-seven of all
kinds.
There were seven wharves in the city;
Abernethy's, at the foot of Yamhill street;
Carter's, at the foot of Alder; Knott's, on
Water, between Taylor and Salmon; Pioneer at
the foot of Washington, owned by Coffin &
Abrams; Vaughn's, at the foot of Morrison;
the O. S. N. wharf, between Ash and Pine
streets, and the Portland wharf of Couch &
Flanders, in North Portland, at the foot of
C and D.
There were thirty-eight dealers in dry goods
and general merchandise, thirteen grocers,
ten meat markets, four dealers in produce
and provisions, three drug stores, fifteen
physicians, four dentists, twenty-eight
attorneys, three book-sellers, thirteen
hotels.
The hotels were for the most part on Front
street, showing the as yet comparative
cheapness of land along this thoroughfare.
There were the Mansion House, 'at 143 Front
street; the Farmer's House, 169 Front
street; What Cheer House, 126, 128 and 130
Front street; The Union Hotel, 131 Front
street; The Shakspeare House, 25 Front
street; The Franklin House on Front near
Vine; The Howard House, No. 5 North Front;
The New York Hotel, No. 17 North Front; the
Pioneer and Temperance House on the corner
of Front and Washington; The Western Hotel,
at 13 and 15 Morrison street: the Miner's
Home, at the corner of First and Taylor.
As dealers in hardware may be named J. R.
Foster & Co., E. J. Northrup and G. W.
Vaughn, doing business between Taylor and
Salmon, on Front street, and H. W. Corbett
and Henry Failing at the present site of the
business of Corbett, Failing & Co., on
Front, at the corner of Oak. There were also
three houses engaged in the furniture
business-Lowenstein & Co., at 138 First
street; Hurgren & Shindler, at 97 First
street, and W. F. Wilcox, at 207 Front
street. The real estate agents, now
omnipresent and legion, were represented by
the single firm of Parrish & Holman.
Plumbers were represented by a single name,
C. H. Myers, 110 First street. Hatters had
but one name, A. J. Butler at 72 Front
street, while saddlers had four, J. B.
Congle, 88 Front street; H. Kingsley &Reese,
100 First street; Wm. Kern, 228 Front
street, and S. Sherlock & Co. 52 Front
street. There were as many as eight livery
stables-those of Bennett & White, at 116
Second street; M. Patton, on Salmon near
Front; R. E. Wiley, corner First and Taylor;
Sherry Ross, 165 First street; N. Gray, on
Front near Clay; W. R. Hill, on the corner
of Front and Market; R. J. Ladd, at 31
Washington, and L. P. W. Quimby, at 63
Second street. There seems to have been a
demand for transfer business and numbers of
draymen or companies had a license for
express work. Many of them, however, were
simply delivery wagons. There were forty-six
places for the sale of liquor. The
photographers were W. W. Davis, at 99 First
street; Hack & Dobson, at 107 1/2 Front
street; B. H. Hendee, at the corner of
Washington and Front, and A. B. Woodard &
Co., at No. 5 Morrison street. The printers
had three firms, R. D. Austin, at 27
Washington street; William D. Carter, at 73
Front street, and A. G. Walling, at No. 5
Washington street. S. J. McCormick published
the Oregon Almanac, 105 Front street; H. L.
Pittock, The Oregonian, at No. 5
Washington. The Pacific Christian
Advocate was published at No. 5.
Washington by the Methodist Church, and the
Evening Tribune at 27 Washington
street by VanCleave & Ward.
There were salt depots on Front street, a
soap factory operated by W. L. Higgins, on
Front street near Clay, and a turpentine
manufactory by T. A. Wood & Co., near the
same site. Carson & Porter, at 208 Front
street, and J. P. Walker, at 230 Front
Street, foot of Jefferson operated sash and
door factories.
The total exports of 1864 reached eight
millions seventy-nine thousand six hundred
and thirty-one dollars. It is to be
remembered, however, that the most of this
was gold dust from Idaho, and the price of
produce was far in excess of that at
present.
During 1865 a steady forward movement was
felt. Some of the streets were macadamized,
and some were laid with Nicholson pavement.
A factory for furnishing staves, heads and
hoops ready to be set up into barrels, for
the Sandwich Island trade, was established
in North Portland. The court house on Fourth
and Salmon streets, a handsome building of
somewhat massive proportions, two stories in
height with dome, and built of brick and
stone, was erected at a cost of seventy-five
thousand dollars. A public school-house was
erected on Harrison street, at a cost of
seven thousand dollars. The old Central
public school on Sixth street, between
Morrison and Yamhill, was until this time
the only building to accommodate the
thousand or more ' children of school age.
There were, however, other educational
institutions in the city; as St. Mary's
Academy, on Fourth street, between Mill and
Market, with an attendance of one hundred
and fifty pupils; St. Joseph's day school,
at the corner of Third and Oak streets, with
one hundred pupils; Portland Academy and
Female Seminary, on Seventh street, between
Jefferson and Columbia, having one hundred
and fifty pupils; the Beth Israel school, at
the corner of Sixth and Oak with sixty-five
pupils; a private school by Miss M. A.
Hodgson, a lady of culture from
Massachusetts and now long known as an
educator in our State, and a Commercial
Academy in the Parrish building on Front
street. For a further and fully connected
account of schools from the first the reader
is referred to the special chapter on
schools.
Of brick buildings made in 1865, Cahn & Co's,
at 37 Front street, extending to First;
Wilberg's two-story building on Front
street; Moffett's on Front, and that of
Wakefield, Glenn and others on Front, were
the most prominent and represented a
considerable outlay of money. Cree's
building at the corner of Stark and Front,
built in 1862, may be mentioned, A broom
factory, a match factory, the Willamette
Iron Works, and the First National Bank were
established this year. To these may be added
Vaughn's flour mill on Front and Main
streets, an expensive and imposing building,
costing about fifty thousand dollars. About
thirty-five thousand dollars was spent on
street improvements.
The total value of exports was seven
millions six hundred and six thousand five
hundred and twenty-four dollars, the most of
it being gold dust. To form commercial
communication with San Francisco, there were
two lines of ocean steamers, one running the
Sierra Nevada and the Oregon,
and the other the Orizaba and the
Pacific. Of these the Orizaba was
the largest, registering fourteen hundred
tons. To Victoria the Active was run under
the command of Captain Thorn. There were
sailing vessels also to San Francisco, some
of which were later run to the Sandwich
Islands. These were the bark Jane A.
Falkenberg, of six hundred tons; the
bark H. W. Almy of six hundred tons;
the bark Almatia, of seven hundred
tons; the bark W. B. Scranton, of
seven hundred tons; the bark, Samuel
Merrit, of five hundred and fifty tons;
the bark Live Yankee, of seven
hundred tons. To the Sandwich Islands, also,
there were then running the barks A. A.
Aldridge, of four hundred tons, and the
Comet, seven hundred tons.
Of the steamboat lines on the river there
were now in operation the following three:
The Oregon Steam Navigation Company, running
to Astoria the J. H. Couch, with fare
at $6.00 and the freight at $6.00 per ton;
to Monticello, the Cowlitz or the
Rescue, fare $3.00 and freight $4.00; to
the Dalles, the New World, Wilson G. Hunt,
the Cascade, Julia, Oneonta, Idaho
and Iris, with fare at $6.00 and
freight at $15; above the Dalles, the
steamers Owyhee, Spray, Okanagon,
Webfoot, Yakima, Tenino and Nez
Perces Chief, with fare to Lewiston at
$22.00 and freight at $60.00 per ton. These
were the palmy days of river travel, the
steamers being crowded and a small fortune
being made at every trip. The People's
Transportation Company confined itself to
the Willamette and ran the Senator
and Rival below Oregon City and the
Fanny Patton and others above the
falls. The independent steamer Fanny
Troup ran to Vancouver, and on the
Willamette above Canemah there were the
Union and the Echo. The
Willamette Steam Navigation Company, still
another line, ran the Alert and the
Active on the Willamette. These
Willamette crafts, having no competition
from railroads, also did a fair business.
The population of Portland in 1865 was six
thousand and sixty-eight. The occupations
represented are illustrated by the following
list: Of apothecaries, four; architects and
civil engineers, four; assayers, three;
auctioneers, three; bankers, four; billiard
rooms, six; bakers, two; contractors and
builders, seven; brokers, eight; butchers,
seventeen; dentists, three; restaurants,
five; hotels, sixteen; insurance agents,
three; lawyers, twenty-three; livery
stables, seven; manufactures, sixty-three;
photographers, five; physicians and
surgeons, fifteen; plumbers, two; real
estate agents, three; retail dealers in
merchandise, one hundred and thirty-three;
retail liquor dealers, one hundred and five;
theatre, one; wholesale merchants,
thirty-nine; wholesale liquor dealers,
twelve. There was assayed gold dust valued
at two million nine hundred. and thirty-four
thousand one hundred and sixty-seven
dollars. These are the figures of a busy
little city. The number of voters was one
thousand seven hundred and twenty-three.
During 1866 numerous brick buildings were
erected, the most prominent among them being
the block of the O. S. N. Co., adjacent to
their wharf at the foot of Pine and Ash
streets, and the structure of Charles M.
Carter on First and Alder streets. By the
Oregon Herald the latter was called one
of the finest buildings in the State and
equal to the elegant buildings of San
Francisco.