Going down the slow hill
once more one finds that B street heads, to
speak in the manner of the mountaineer, in a
stony canyon, whose natural roughness has
been aggravated by gravel-diggers. Out of
this rises, or did rise King's Creek, a
stream of most delicious water, which has
now been consigned to more than Tartarean
gloom in a sewer. In a cleft on. the left,
which is soft and leafy with trees
overhanging, and cool with the shade of some
immense firs, begins an inviting path,
gently rising, leading between two banks
more or less bestrewn with leaves and ornate
with fern fronds, maiden-hair, wood-brakes,
wild shrubs and fox-tails. Trees of fir,
cedar, dogwood, maple and willow lean over
the way; logs lie above across the ravine
from one side to the other, and upon them
have been laid rustic walks.
The city has other parks-a whole string of
them from end to end, but some individual of
pomological ideas was intrusted with the
work of improving them, and set out trees in
lines geometrically straight like an. apple
orchard, making the park blocks almost
offensive to a man of sensitive nature. The
City park was, however, saved from any such
errors. It contains forty acres and was
bought as much as ten years ago from A. M.
King at the then high price of $1,000 per
acre. Lying on the hillside, with gulch and
steep brow, and looking like all the other
hills surrounding, the people of the city
felt no vast interest in the place, and it
was difficult to gain any appropriation to
improve the same. If $50,000 had been
secured at once it is likely that the whole
thing would have been grubbed and levelled
and set out to poplar trees in straight
rows. But having only about enough means to
employ a keeper, the city took no such
disastrous steps, and the gardener was left
to make the place as attractive as possible
by his personal labors. Very wisely he
decided not to dig up the trees but to
simply clear away the rubbish and to let the
native shrubbery and the wild-wood still
grow. Following along in this line it was
soon demonstrated what a wealth of beauty
had already been lavished upon the spot.
Little firs, clumps of crooked vine maples,
clean-boiled dogwoods, endless bunches of
the scarlet flowered currant that flames in
the early spring, and many others such as
our suns and showers nourish, were left to
their first estate, and were only relieved
of the rubbish of years. The roads which
have been built from B street and from
Jefferson street, must of necessity wind
along the hill and thus be as curving as the
hill points themselves. As time has gone the
ground has been turfed, the roadways
terraced above; hothouses and plats of
flowers added; pumps, a seal-tub, a bear
pit, cages for panthers, and a deer-park
have also been supplied.
Coming around in front of the hill one
discovers Portland. One sees now that he has
not as yet seen it at all. From the river it
is not the city but the back-ground that
appears. From the hill-fronts he looks down
over the place. To get a full, unobstructed
sweep, let him ascend the heights still back
of the park and stand on the tree-shagged
knob of King's mountain. While on the
subject of parks, it may be suggested, that
forty acres is very small for anything
really fine. Let six hundred be added to if.
A good piece of land along the river, or
perhaps Ross Island; and a square mile or
two on the East side should also be secured
before values become too exorbitant.
In coming back from the park, one sees on
the south side of B street a large wooden
building, covering two blocks, 400x200 feet.
It is that of the North Pacific Industrial
Exposition. It was erected by the people of
Portland in 1888, at a cost of $150,000. Its
first opening in 1889, from September 26 to
October 26, was a great success, people
coming in for attendance from all parts of
the Northwest. The exhibit was good, the
music excellent, furnished by special
contract with Liberati, of New York, and the
receipts were so large as to assure the
success of the undertaking henceforth. From
the time of the organization of the
Mechanic's Fair on the old Market block it
has been the custom of the people of the
surrounding towns and country to come to
Portland at the time of the exposition, and
the transportation lines have favored them
with reduced fares. This has made Portland a
sort of Mecca for the whole Northwest; and
is unquestionably the best sort of policy
for her to pursue a liberal spirit of
general good feeling inviting communication
and friendship. The following is a good
description of the building: The exposition
building is a mammoth structure of brick,
iron, glass and fir. It is certainly the
largest edifice on the Pacific Coast, and
competent judges, who have visited
exposition buildings throughout the United
States declare it to be superior for the
purposes for which it was erected to any
they have seen. It is 400 feet long by 200
feet deep and covers two full blocks.
Practically it is three stories high, the
floor of the central portion or music hall
being thirty feet lower than those of the
two large wings, while a gallery forty feet
wide extends throughout the entire building.
With the galleries the building has a floor
space of 143,000 square feet, and, after
deducting aisles of ample width; can
accommodate 250 exhibitors with 200 square
feet each. The general plan of the main
floors and galleries has been made so that
all pushing and crowding may be avoided, and
exhibitors may have spaces that can be seen
by the greatest number of visitors.
The officers' quarters, ladies' parlor and
gentlemen's smoking room are on the main
floor in the front part of the building,
while the musicians' room and dining room
are in the rear portion. The interior is
lighted by large windows on every side of
the building, and by suitably located
skylights. Under the main floor is ample
room for storage. The boilers, engines and
dynamos are separated some feet from the
building and enclosed in a stone, iron and
brick structure.
The right wing of the building, which is
200x150 feet, with a gallery 40 feet wide,
is intended chiefly for exhibits of
machinery. Main lines of shafting may be
attached to the outside row of the gallery
supports and so arranged that exhibitors can
belt to almost any space in the entire hall.
Steam pipes run under the floor and are so
situated as to be easily tapped by
exhibitors of engines and machinery
requiring steam. Suitable arrangements are
also made for exhibitors of pumps,
electric-motors and other exhibits that
require special facilities.
The central portion of the Exposition
building was originally intended to be used
permanently as a garden, with tropical
plants, caged wild animals, and birds of
rare plumage, but the possibilities of the
uses to which this central portion could be
put, led the management to temporarily at
least, abandon the " garden " idea, and make
of it a music hall. The rough plank floor on
which it was intended to lay from twelve to
eighteen inches of soil, has been covered
with a toe and top nailed, best quality wood
floor, and when waxed, as it will be, will
make one of the finest floors in the country
for promenade concert purposes. Two
galleries, each sixteen feet wide, extend
the entire length of either side. These are
roomy, and have a seating capacity of 1,000.
From every part of these galleries a full
view of the stage can be had. The stage of
this music hall is set in an elegantly
painted grotto, and is surrounded almost
entirely by a semi-circular sounding board
which serves to intensify the magnificent
acoustic properties of the hall. Behind this
grotto is a magnificent landscape painting,
executed by an eminent artist from Munich.
The scene is typically representative of
some of the garden spots of the North
Pacific Coast, and is spread upon a canvas
100x85 feet. The roof of this hall, or
garden, is of glass supported by eleven
semi-circular arches of iron and fir. The
diameter of each being 100 feet. The floors
of the two wings of the Exposition building
lead directly on to the galleries of the
music hall. The entire seating capacity of
this hall is between 5,000 and 6,000
persons.
The dimensions of the general exhibit hall
are the same as those of the machinery hall,
150x200 feet, with a gallery forty feet
wide, extending throughout. The entire
building is lit with the Brush system of arc
lights and the Swan system of incandescent
lights. For an art gallery a space 75 feet
long and 35 feet wide has been enclosed in
the front gallery of the general exhibit
hall. A wall space of 4,600 square feet is
afforded by this enclosure.
On the whole this exposition building is one
of the most notable features of the city.
Coming down B street one finds himself again
in the North End, but above the area of mean
buildings. He strikes the center of the
great wholesale houses, and there are few
finer anywhere. It is a region of brick
blocks, three to five stories in height, of
massive iron fronts and deep cornices. The
shore is here lined with wharves. It must be
said, however, that for the water front
there remains much improvement. It looks, at
present rather crude and backdoorish. Time
will be when the beautiful limestone of
Southern Oregon, or some other kind of rock,
will be used to build substantial docks or
moles from one end of the city to the other,
and the wharf fronts and roofs will be
carried to a height of seven stories. Our
docks at present are all two-story to accord
with the rise of water of twenty feet in
June. The coal bunkers and the railroad
bridge across the Willamette give a deep
emphasis to the scenery here. The latter is
of iron, completed in 1887, at a cost of
nearly $1,000,000, and is double, for both
the car track and a roadway. It connects on
the west by a viaduct with Third street.
Passing from Couch's and Star's tracts to
Lownsdale's one reaches the region of retail
houses, banks, offices, halls, hotels and
churches. The streets are paved with Belgian
block, basaltic stones cut in brick shape,
making a durable roadway, but as the weather
surfaces grow smooth, very severe on horses,
sometimes giving them heavy falls. The
buildings here are massive, elegant, of
three to five stories, and kept reasonably
clean. Many are set with turrets or small
towers, and occupy for the most part five or
six streets, and nearly half a mile along
the river front.
To strangers there is nothing more
attractive than the Chinese quarter. This
comprises about three blocks on Second
street, Alder being their cross street. The
buildings which they occupy are mainly of
solid brick, put up in the first place
largely by Americans, but on long leases to
the Chinese merchants and have been fixed
over according to their convenience and
ideas of beauty. They are intensely oriental
in their general air, with piazzas of curved
roofs, highly ornamented with yellow, white
and vermillion paint, , and paper globes and
gewgaws. Red paper inscribed with characters
in black serve as signs, and are pasted
numerously over doors and windows. On gala
days the entire area is lit up by lanterns,
or gaily ornamented with paper, and thin,
peevish tones of their flutes and fiddles,
and the falsetto twang of their gongs,
making a noise, exceptionally flat and weak,
lacking even in energy of tone, which is
kept up with monotonous persistency. If the
Chinese heart is as devoid of sentiment as
their music would indicate, it must be quite
barren. But as if to contradict such a
conclusion the long rows of flowers of gaudy
hue, and in the spring time their basins or
vases of early blooming lilies should be
observed.
The main fact to notice is their presence,
and Portland's tolerance of them. They are
not a particularly desirable people and are
subject to the usual criticisms and
strictures that apply to man in his natural
state, but it has not been found necessary
to expel them, and it is acknowledged by
thinking people that the work they perform
so well-laundrying, housework, wood-cutting,
clearing up land and railroad
construction-is no detriment but makes work
of a more desirable and better rewarded kind
for the American. Also to those who believe
that the race which claims the more
enlightenment owes fraternal care to those
inferior, either in attainment or
opportunity, it seems odious to deny an
equal chance in our city.
The middle portion of the city has been
spoken of as the place of churches, the
large Catholic Cathedral built of brick, and
surmounted by a tower with a fine chime of
bells, erected on Third and Stark streets;
the old Presbyterian Church on Third and
Washington; the Baptist on Fourth and Alder;
the Congregational on Second and Jefferson;
the First Methodist Church on Third and
Taylor; and Trinity Church on Sixth and B
would justify the remark. In truth, however,
the area of churches is moving back. Already
the roar of business, the pressure of other
buildings and the centres of the residence
quarters, have moved the church area more
than half a dozen streets westward. This is
all the more to be desired since, as is
usual, business buildings of a very inferior
sort have been made to occupy the cheaper
ground just back of the main grand
mercantile houses. Some of the church
edifices have therefore found themselves
almost submerged in a drift-wood of mean,
wooden shanties, devoted to occupations
highly offensive to religious feeling.
It will be unnecessary to name here the fine
business buildings of this central portion,
since they are spoken of elsewhere. Some of
them will, however, necessarily be noticed.
Ladd & Tilton's bank, a very tasteful two
story brick and stone structure with fluted
column decoration, and carved frieze and
cornice, has for many years been noticeable
on the corner of First and Stark streets. It
was in its time a stately building, and is
still attractive, but is now towered over by
the heavier and taller- erections of later
years. It has for a long time afforded rooms
on its upper floor for the uses of the
Portland Library Association. With great
public spirit Mr. W. S. Ladd has furnished
this space free of rent. On the east side of
First street, coming on Washington, stands
the massive stone and brick building of the
First National Bank. It is finished with
full columns in Doric style, and its heavy
plate glass windows, and its finely inlaid
floor of varicolored stones and marble give
the structure on a whole a look of
costliness and magnificence not exceeded by
any in the city. Following out Washington to
Second, one of the largest and handsomest of
all appears, being the Commercial National
Bank of four stories; adjoining this is a
very handsome five story building of pressed
brick. This is indeed the quarter of the
finest structures, ending in the Abington,
on Third street, of five stories.
Alder street next beginning with the
five-story Gilman house, labors under the
disadvantage of leading through the Chinese
quarter, and not until Third street is
reached does it emerge into splendor. There,
however, appears the Masonic Temple, built
about twelve years ago. Although but three
stories in height, its great amplitude of
reach causes it to rise above all else in
the vicinity. It is constructed of stone
with Corinthian columns set upon the walls
and dividing the stories.