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Columbia's flagship store in downtown Portland, Oregon Nike World Headquarters near Beaverton, Oregon. Columbia Sportswear; Grenade Gloves; Keen (shoe company) LaCrosse Footwear; Nau (clothing retailer) Nike, Inc. Pendleton Woolen Mills; Portland Gear; Sock It To Me (clothing company) Hanna Andersson; Bridge & Burn; Lululemon; Under Armour
For companies headquartered in Bend, Oregon, United States. Pages in category "Companies based in Bend, Oregon" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total.
This is a list of companies based in Oregon. Oregon is the ninth largest by area and the 27th most populous of the 50 United States. The gross domestic product (GDP) of Oregon in 2010 was $168.6 billion; it is the United States's 26th wealthiest state by GDP. The state's per capita personal income in 2010 was $44,447. [1]
Tandy Leather store in Eugene, Oregon. Tandy Leather began as a family-owned leather goods company based in Fort Worth, Texas in 1919. [6] Norton Hinckley and Dave L. Tandy partnered to start the Hinckley-Tandy Leather Company and concentrated their efforts on selling sole leather and other supplies to shoe repair dealers in Texas.
Nau opened numerous retail stores across the United States (Portland, San Francisco, Chicago and others), but on May 2, 2008, Nau announced that it was ceasing operations, [7] primarily due to an inability to raise further capital. In 2008, Nau was purchased by Horny Toad, Inc. and reopened for trade in October of that year.
Also in May 1993, the company announced it would relocate the Oregon distribution center to the eastern U.S. to be closer to the majority of its customers. [14] That October, Norm Thompson selected a site in Jefferson County, West Virginia for a new 173,000-square-foot (16,100 m 2 ), $7.5 million distribution facility. [ 15 ]
The Old Mill District formerly housed two competing lumber mills. In 1916 the Shevlin-Hixon Lumber Company built a mill on the west bank of the Deschutes River and Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company built the "Mill A" complex on the east bank. [8] For the next 78 years, the mills dominated Bend's economy, pumping money and business into the town.
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