FootNote
The new kid on the block, FootNote is known for digitizing historical
documents... many of which are genealogical gems. With naturalizations,
city directories, war records, newspapers, town records, etc... this new
kid is quickly being recognized as an alternative to Ancestry.
While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is
here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate
for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting
ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!
"Between Portland and
Astoria, one steamer, much smaller than the
boats of today, made three trips each week
and did all the job towing on the Columbia
below Rainier. On the same route now two
large boats ply regularly on alternate days,
and over forty tugs and smaller steamers are
engaged in towing and general work. "
The valuation of property reached twelve
million two hundred and ninety-one thousand
three hundred and fifty dollars. Wheat and
flour exports were estimated at a value of
about three million dollars. The population
was estimated at nineteen thousand one
hundred and twenty-eight, but this was
undoubtedly an over-estimate, as two years
later it was found to be but a little over
seventeen thousand. The statistics which we
have given of population have been taken
from the directories of the consecutive
years, and it is probable that owing to the
excess of adults, too high proportion of
total population to names was assumed.
During 1879 improvements still increased,
reaching a value of one million one hundred
and sixty-two thousand and seven hundred
dollars; consisting of two hundred and
seventy-six dwellings, sixteen brick blocks,
fifty-eight stores, eight hotels, six docks
and warehouses, fourteen shops and stables,
two schools, two planing mills, one brewery
and the Mechanics' Pavilion. The buildings
of a value exceeding ten thousand dollars
may be named as follows: The Union block, by
Corbett & Failing, eighty-six thousand
dollars; the Esmond Hotel, at the corner of
Front and Morrison, by Coulter & Church,
forty-five thousand dollars; a block of
eight residences on Second and Mill streets
by S. G. Reed, forty thousand dollars; the
Park school house, on Jefferson street
between East and West Park, twenty-nine
thousand dollars; a brick block on the
corner of Front and B streets by Klosterman
Bros., at thirty-five thousand dollars; a
residence by C. H. Lewis, on the corner of
Nineteenth and G streets, thirty-five
thousand dollars; the residence of H. D.
Green at the head of B street, twenty-eight
thousand dollars; the brewery of George
Herrall, on Water street, near Harrison,
twenty-five thousand dollars; a wharf
between Taylor and Salmon streets by J. F.
Jones, twenty-five thousand dollars; the
three story brick building on the corner of
Front and Columbia streets by Peter Manciet,
eighteen thousand five hundred dollars; the
new Harrison Street School house, eighteen
thousand dollars; a brick block by John
Shade, fifteen thousand dollars; the
Mechanics' Pavilion; on the block between
Second and Third and Clay and Market,
sixteen thousand five hundred dollars; a
brick block by H. McKinnell, on Second
street between Salmon and Main, thirteen
thousand dollars; a residence by Samuel D.
Smith, on Twelfth between Yamhill and
Taylor, ten thousand dollars; a residence by
M. W. Fechheimer on the corner of West Park
and Montgomery, fourteen thousand dollars; a
residence by J. W. Whalley, corner of West
Park and Harrison, ten thousand dollars; a
brick block by Mrs. Mark A. King, on the
corner, of Third and Alder; a brick block by
Dr. R. Glisan, on the corner of Second and
Ash, thirteen thousand dollars; a brick
block by Chinese merchants on the corner of
Second and Alder, twenty thousand dollars; a
brick block on the corner of Front and Ash
by N. Lambert, H. L. Hoyt and J. W. Cook,
twenty-four thousand five hundred dollars; a
brick block by Fleischner & Hirsch, on First
and B streets, sixteen thousand seven
hundred; the residence of J. C. Carson, on
the corner of Nineteenth and J streets, ten
thousand dollars; tracks for switches and
round house of the Western Oregon Railroad,
ten thousand dollars; Park school house
twenty-nine thousand dollars; and there was
spent on the Catholic Cathedral ten thousand
dollars more in completion. Many residences
and minor business houses of a value of five
thousand dollars to eight thousand dollars
were also erected. It was during this year
that the palatial residences in the
northwestern portion of the city began to be
erected, converting what was once a
dilapidated forest overgrown with brush and
wild vines, into one of the most handsome
and sightly portions of the city.
The grain fleet entering the river numbered
about ninety vessels; this was exclusive of
the regular coasters. The steamers
registering in the Portland district were
sixty, with a total capacity of twenty-seven
thousand five 'hundred and ninety-seven
tons. The steamers Oriflamme and
John L. Stephens had now disappeared,
having been broken up. There were thirteen
sailing vessels with a total capacity of six
thousand one hundred and four tons. The
export of wheat reached upwards of two
million centals, valued at over five million
dollars. Shipments of wool reached seven
million pounds. The catch of salmon was
three hundred and twenty-five thousand
cases. The gross valuation of property was
thirteen million one hundred and forty-three
thousand four hundred and twenty-five
dollars.
The prospects of growth and business in 1880
were bright, and stimulated not only
activity in real estate movements, but in
business also. The uncertain and depressing
railroad management of Ben Holladay had
given away to the more business like and
careful regime of the German Company, and
plans for the O. R. & N. Railway and for the
speedy completion of the Northern Pacific
were taking definite and public form. Sales
of real estate were considerable, although
uncertainty as to the location of the
terminal works of the transcontinental line,
now expected to be made in North Portland,
now in South Portland, and again in Fast
Portland, gave a strongly speculative
character to this line of trade.
Improvements extended uniformly in all
portions of the city from the river bank to
the city limits, and even beyond them. There
were erected thirteen brick blocks and
stores; thirty frame blocks and stores, six
docks, four manufactories, three churches,
two hotels and two hundred and two dwellings
at a gross valuation of eight hundred and
eighty-one thousand dollars. Those costing
ten thousand dollars or upwards are named as
follows: Family residence of Capt. George
Ainsworth, on the corner of Sixth and
Yamhill, fifteen thousand dollars; a
residence by the same, ten thousand dollars;
improvements to the Zeta Psi block, corner
Front and D, ten thousand dollars; the
Chinese theater, on Second street, twelve
thousand dollars; the Oregon Steam Bakery,
by Liebe & Holburg, on East Park and G,
fifteen thousand dollars; the building by
Labbe Bros., on the corner of Second and
Washington streets, eleven thousand dollars;
a brick block on Washington street between
First and Second, by Richardson & Mann, ten
thousand dollars; the three story brick
block on the corner of Second and Stark
streets. thirty-six thousand dollars; the
brick building on First street between Main
and Yamhill, ten thousand dollars; the three
story building on Third street between
Yamhill and Taylor, twelve thousand dollars;
the Nicolai House, at the corner of Third
and D streets, thirteen thousand dollars; an
addition of five hundred feet to the
Ainsworth Dock by the O. R. & N. Co., fifty
thousand dollars; an addition to the
Steamship Dock of the same company,
twenty-eight thousand dollars; an addition
to the Greenwich Dock by Capt. Flanders,
twenty thousand dollars; the Multnomah
block, at the corner of Fifth and Morrison,
by H. W. Corbett, twenty-eight thousand
dollars; the furniture factory of I. F.
Powers, twenty-five thousand dollars; a four
story residence on Sixteenth and B streets
by the Dundee Investment Company., nineteen
thousand four hundred dollars; the two story
business block on the corner of Second and E
streets by J. C. Ainsworth, thirteen
thousand dollars; the Stark street ferry
boat by Knott Bros., sixteen thousand
dollars.
In 1880 the hotels had increased to
twenty-nine. Those on Front street were the
American Exchange, The Esmond, St. Charles,
Commercial, New York and Zur Rheinpfalz. On
First street there were the California
House, the Eureka, the Globe, the Norton
House, the Clarendon, the Occidental, the
Oregon, the St. George, the St. Louis, the
Thompson House, the Metropolis, Portland and
Phoenix. On Second street there were the
DeFrance and Richmond House. On Third street
there were the Burton House, Holton House
and the Nicolai. There were besides these
thirty boarding houses, twenty-one
restaurants, nine coffee houses and three
oyster saloons. There were one hundred and
three liquor saloons and ten wholesale
liquor houses. There were twenty-four
butchers. The whole-sale grocers were seven
and the retail grocers fifty-three. The
physicians now numbered sixty-seven, the
attorneys sixty-three, and editors
thirty-four. There were seven sawmills,
three flour mills, three box factories, one
brass foundry, two soap works, one stove
manufactory, four foundries, six iron works,
four ferries plying on the river,
fifty-seven contractors and builders, three
wholesale and twenty retail dealers in dry
goods, seven dealers in crockery and
glassware, three wholesale and thirteen
retail clothiers, three wholesale and ten
retail dealers in boots and shoes, and
thirty-four commission merchants. Commerce
indicated about its previous volume. By the
United States census of 1880, the population
was found to be seventeen thousand five
hundred and seventy-eight. By the Directory
of that year it was estimated at twenty-one
thousand six hundred.
During 1881 there were spent about one
million one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars in building. The most important of
these were the following: The iron and brick
building of W. S. Ladd, at the corner of
First and Columbia, costing forty thousand
dollars; the Portland Seaman's Bethel, on
the corner of Third and D streets, under the
management of R. S. Stubbs, twelve thousand
dollars; G. W. Jones's block, on block 176
in Couch's Addition; G. W. Weidler's
residence, on the corner of L and Eighteenth
streets, costing sixteen thousand dollars;
C. P. Bacon's residence, on the same block
as above, ten thousand dollars; residence of
W. N. Wallace on Tenth and Salmon streets;
residence of Sylvester Pennoyer on the
corner of West Park and Madison streets; the
three story brick of J. C. Ainsworth on
Third and Oak streets, costing eighty-five
thousand dollars; the Cosmopolitan block of
Reed & Failing, on the corner of Second and
Stark; and the residence of J. N. Dolph on
Fifth and Jefferson, were the most prominent
structures of the year. The Columbia Dock
was built by C. H. Lewis, at the foot of N
street, at a cost of twenty-five thousand
dollars. Commercial statistics showed an
increasing volume of business. New interest
in the mines of Idaho and of Southern Oregon
began to be felt by the capitalists of
Portland, and with the prospect of railroad
connection to these points, they inaugurated
the operations which have since attained
such proportions. Manufacturing interests
began to concentrate in and about Portland.
Weidler's immense sawmill, with capacity of
one hundred and fifty thousand feet per day,
led all in the volume of business. Besides
lumber, the manufacture of furniture, of
boots and shoes, of wagons, of iron and
steel implements and machinery, and
preservation of fruit assumed appreciable
proportions.
In 1882, the extent of improvements rose to
an astonishing degree, a total of two
million nine hundred and seventy-four
thousand six hundred dollars being spent in
Portland, Fast Portland and Albina. The more
noticeable of these buildings erected were
the four-story brick structure of Dolph &
Thompson on First street, between Pine and
Ash, with dock in the rear, costing two
hundred thousand dollars; the First National
Bank building on the corner of First and
Washington, one hundred and twenty-five
thousand dollars; the three-story brick
block of Allen & Lewis on North Front
street, one hundred and twenty-five thousand
dollars; the Calvary Presbyterian Church on
the corner of Ninth and Clay streets,
thirty-six thousand dollars; the North
Pacific Manufacturing Company's plant and
improvements, fifty thousand dollars; the
Couch school house on Sixteenth street,
between K and L, thirty-five thousand
dollars; the Failing school house on First
street, between Hooker and Porter,
thirty-five thousand dollars; the railroad
docks, coal bunkers, etc., at Albina, one
hundred and eighty thousand dollars; the
residence of Bishop B. W. Morris, corner of
Nineteenth and R streets, twenty thousand
dollars; residence of R. B. Knapp, on
Sixteenth and E streets, thirty-five
thousand dollars; residence of Captain G. H.
Flanders, on the corner of F and Eighteenth
streets, forty thousand dollars. There were
many others of elegant design and finish
costing twenty thousand dollars and less.
During the year 1884 there were built.
seventy-five large dwellings, thirty-six
brick houses and blocks, and other
buildings, bringing up the total to two
hundred and eleven. For business houses
there were spent six hundred and twenty-two
thousand dollars; for residences, three
hundred and forty-nine thousand five hundred
dollars; for other improvements, seven
hundred and eleven thousand seven hundred
dollars, making a total of one million six
hundred and eighty-three thousand six
hundred dollars.
Fast Portland's improvements footed up three
hundred and forty-one thousand seven hundred
dollars, and those of Sellwood and Albina,
seventy-five thousand dollars. On street
improvements in Portland there were spent
three hundred and thirty-four thousand five
hundred and fifty-five dollars and seventeen
cents. Grace Church was erected at a cost of
two thousand five hundred dollars, on the
corner of Eleventh and Taylor streets. Pipe
organs costing about three thousand dollars
each, were placed in two churches.
During the year following there was some
decline in improvements, but as there was
also a great decrease in the cost of
materials, it was a good time to build, and
those sagacious and able took advantage of
the opportunity to erect some very handsome
and costly structures, which have given
character and tone to the appearance of the
city. Among these may be mentioned the
Portland Savings Bank, of brick, on the
southwest corner of Second and Washington
streets, at a cost of seventy-five thousand
dollars; Jacob Kamm's magnificent brick
block on Pine street, between Front and
First, eighty thousand dollars; the High
School building on Twelfth and Morrison,
sixty thousand dollars; M. F. Mulkey's brick
block on the corner of Second and Morrison,
forty thousand dollars; Weinhard's brick
brewery, fifteen thousand dollars. R. B.
Knapp's residence built this year, cost
ninety thousand dollars; Pfunder's unique
Swiss residence on Ninth and Washington, ten
thousand dollars. About two hundred
dwellings were erected at a cost of three
hundred and ninety thousand dollars.
Improvements were made in East Portland to
the value of one hundred and two thousand
nine hundred dollars, and in Albina of
twenty thousand dollars, making a grand
total of nine hundred and sixty-four
thousand four hundred dollars.
By the State census of 1885, the population
of Multnomah county was placed at
thirty-five thousand seven hundred and
thirty-two; about three-fourths of this
should be attributed to Portland.