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Portland Daily Advertiser: Portland: May 1859 1862 suppressed [6] [34] Portland Daily Bulletin: Portland: 1870 October 1875 [6] Portland Daily Evening Tribune: Portland: January 1865 February 1865 [6] Portland Daily News: Portland: April 1859 December 1860 [34] Portland Daily Plaindealer: Portland: May 1863 [6] Portland Daily Times: Portland ...
The Stayton Mail was a weekly newspaper published in Stayton in the U.S. state of Oregon.The paper originated in 1896 [3] [4] [5] and ceased in 2022. At the time of closure, it was published by the Statesman Journal; [6] along with the nearby Silverton Appeal Tribune, and was owned by Gannett.
Stayton is a city in Marion County, Oregon, United States, located 12 miles (19 km) southeast of the state capital, Salem, on Oregon Route 22. It is south of Sublimity and east of Aumsville . Located on the North Santiam River , Stayton is a regional agricultural and light manufacturing center.
By 2018, the average daily circulation had declined to 27,859 Monday-Tuesday, Thursday and 33,815 Wednesday, with a Sunday readership of 36,323. [2] The newspaper also published The Stayton Mail of Stayton and the Appeal Tribune of Silverton [13] after purchasing both in 1990 [14] until both publications ceased in 2022. [15]
West Stayton is an unincorporated community in Marion County, Oregon, United States. It is located four miles west of Stayton , and five miles south of Aumsville . The ZIP Code is 97325.
Mill Creek is a 26-mile (42 km) tributary of the Willamette River that drains a 111-square-mile (290 km 2) area of Marion County in the U.S. state of Oregon. [4] Flowing generally west from its source south of Silver Falls State Park, it passes through the cities of Aumsville, Stayton, Sublimity, and Turner before emptying into the Willamette in Salem.
Drury Smith Stayton, an early resident of Sublimity, Oregon, purchased 41 acres of land in 1866 that would eventually come to be known as Stayton. [4] The land was purchased from James Lynch. Unbeknownst to Stayton at the time, an easement existed on Lynch's property, allowing a group from Salem to create a canal to divert water from the North ...
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