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Oregon City Enterprise: Oregon City: October 1866 1875 [6] Oregon City Free Press: Oregon City: March 1948 October 1948 [6] Oregon Farmer: Portland: August 1858 February 1863 [6] Oregon Herald: Portland: March 1866 1871 [6] Oregon Intelligencer: Jacksonville: November 1862 1864 [6] The Oregon Journal: Portland: 1902 1982 Oregon News Budget ...
Area [4] Map Baker County: 001: Baker City: 1862: Eastern portion of Wasco County: Named in honor of Edward Dickinson Baker, who died in combat while serving as Oregon senator. 16,912: 3,068 sq mi (7,946 km 2) Benton County: 003: Corvallis: 1847: Polk County: Named for Thomas Hart Benton, senator and advocate of U.S. annexation of the Oregon ...
Superintenent of Oregon state Penitentiary killed by escaped inmate: John K. Giles: Oregon: Sentenced to life in prison but escaped: Robert Folkes: Train near Tangent: 1943-01-23: Black man convicted and executed for the murder of a white woman on a train, historical works question his guilt: Oak Grove Jane Doe: Oak Grove: 1946
Peter Courtney, the longest-serving legislator and Senate president in Oregon history, died July 16. He was 81. He was 81. Mt. Angel Police escorted a procession after the Mass to Calvary Cemetery ...
Sometimes the prewritten obituary's subject outlives its author. One example is The New York Times' obituary of Taylor, written by the newspaper's theater critic Mel Gussow, who died in 2005. [7] The 2023 obituary of Henry Kissinger featured reporting by Michael T. Kaufman, who died almost 14 years earlier in 2010. [8]
Albany (/ ˈ æ l b ə n i / AL-bə-nee) is the county seat of Linn County, [11] Oregon, and is the 11th most populous city in the state. [12] Albany is located in the Willamette Valley at the confluence of the Calapooia River and the Willamette River in both Linn and Benton counties, just east of Corvallis and south of Salem.
John Day is a city located approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Canyon City [6] in Grant County, Oregon, United States, at the intersection of U.S. Routes 26 and 395.The city was named for the nearby John Day River, which, along with Dayville, had been named for a Virginia member of the 1811 Astor Expedition, John Day. [7]
Burns is a city in and the county seat of Harney County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.According to the 2020 census, the population was 2,730.Burns and the nearby city of Hines are home to about 60 percent of the people in the sparsely populated county, by area the largest in Oregon and the ninth largest in the United States.