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OR 281 is known as the Hood River Highway No. 281 (see Oregon highways and routes). It is 19.01 miles (30.59 km) long and runs north–south, entirely within Hood River County . OR 281 was established in 2002 as part of Oregon's project to assign route numbers to highways that previously were not assigned.
name = Hood River OR Name used in the default map caption; image = Hood River OR - OpenStreetMap.png The default map image, without "Image:" or "File:" image1 = Hood River OR - OpenStreetMap.png An alternative map image, usually a relief map, which can be displayed via the relief or AlternativeMap parameters; top = 45.7209
The following 19 pages use this file: Cascade Locks, Oregon; Dee, Oregon; Hood River, Oregon; Hood River County, Oregon; Lenz, Hood River County, Oregon
Looking down on the town of Hood River showing the Columbia Highway winding up the east bank of Hood River, 1923. Hood River (originally called Dog River) post office was established (named by Mary Coe, who founded the city with her husband Nathaniel Coe) at the site of the present city on September 30, 1868, [9] and the city itself was incorporated in 1895. [10]
The Hood River, formerly known as Dog River, is a tributary of the Columbia River in northwestern Oregon, United States.Approximately 25 miles (40 km) long from its mouth to its farthest headwaters on the East Fork, the river descends from wilderness areas in the Cascade Range on Mount Hood and flows through the agricultural Hood River Valley to join the Columbia River in the Columbia River Gorge.
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April 13, 1992 (Mount Hood National Forest [a: Wamic to Rhododendron: Beginning with its construction by Sam Barlow in 1846, this toll road provided the first overland connection for wagons between The Dalles and Oregon City over Mount Hood, and offered a majority of Oregon Trail emigrants an alternative to the hazardous raft passage down the Columbia River from The Dalles to Fort Vancouver.