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This is a list of notable professional wrestlers and personalities that performed in the different incarnations of the Pacific Northwest Wrestling promotion from: . 1925–1992 (as Don Owen Sports)
Portland Evening Journal: Portland: 1902 1902 [35] Portland Evening Call: Portland: circa 1870 [6] Portland Evening Commercial: Portland: August 1868 [6] Portland Letter Sheet: Portland: August 1869 [6] Portland News-Telegram: Portland: 1906 The Portland Reporter: Portland: February 11, 1960 October 1, 1964 [36] Portland Sunday Welcome ...
In 1975, Portland developers Bill Naito and Sam Naito purchased the building and began converting it into a multi-level shopping center, which they named The Galleria. Opened in 1976, the Galleria was an indoor shopping arcade for dozens of small stores and restaurants, and has been described as downtown Portland's first shopping mall. [13]
The NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) and defended in its member promotion Pacific Northwest Wrestling (PNW), which promoted shows in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington, and occasionally other areas in the northwestern United States.
The Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway (SP&S; reporting mark SPS) was a railroad in the northwest United States. Incorporated in 1905, it was a joint venture by the Great Northern Railway and the Northern Pacific Railway to build a railroad along the north bank of the Columbia River .
Pages in category "Companies based in Portland, Oregon" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 207 total.
Portland Wrestling Uncut: Portland: Pete Schweitzer Roddy Piper Don Coss 2012–2014 The promotion aired on KPTV and KPDX. [82] [83] [84] West Coast Wrestling Connection: Salem: Jeff Manning Pat Kelly 2005–2016 Weekly television broadcast on KPDX-TV [85] DOA Pro Wrestling: Portland Terry Farness 2008-present Monthly show carried live on IWTV
John E. G. Povey House, Portland, Oregon, home of one of the Povey Brothers. The company was founded by David Lincoln Povey, the son of English-born stained glass window maker Joseph Povey, who immigrated to the United States in 1848 and subsequently worked in stained glass in Philadelphia, New York City, and Newark, New Jersey.