The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Portland, Oregon, United States.
19th century
- 1845 â Portland, named after Portland, Maine, was founded by two real-estate men from New England.
- 1850 â The Oregonian newspaper founded.
- 1851
- Portland incorporated.
- Hugh O'Bryant becomes mayor.
- City's first general merchandise store opens, becoming Olds & King in 1878.
- Portland Public Schools is founded.
- 1855 â Lone Fir Cemetery established.
- 1857 â Aaron Meier's mercantile store, predecessor of Meier & Frank, in business.
- 1860 â Portland Gas Light Company in operation.
- 1864 â Library Association of Portland founded.
- 1866 â Oregon Herald newspaper begins publication.
- 1868 â Population: 6,717.
- 1869 â Lincoln High School opened as Portland High School.
- 1871 â City Park established.
- 1872 â Portland Street Railway horsecars begin operating.
- 1873 - Fire.
- 1875 â Good Samaritan Hospital founded.
- 1876 â University of Oregon established.
- 1880
- Willamette University College of Medicine relocates to Portland.
- Portland Chamber of Commerce founded.
- 1881 â Unsightly beggar ordinance effected.
- 1882 â River View Cemetery established.
- 1883
- Northern Pacific Railway begins operating.
- Population: 20,000 (approx).
- 1885 â Web-Foot Cook Book published.https://archive.org/stream/webfootcookbook00port#page/n3/mode/2up
- 1886 â Oregon Staats Zeitung newspaper begins publication.
- 1887 â First Morrison Bridge, the first bridge across the Willamette River in Portland (and predecessor of the current Morrison Bridge), opens.
- 1888 â Portland Zoo established.
- 1890
- Portland Hotel in business.
- Population: 46,385.
- 1891
- The first Madison Street Bridge (predecessor of the Hawthorne Bridge) opens
- Albina and East Portland become part of city.
- Multnomah Athletic Club founded
20th century
1900sâÂÂ1940s
1950sâÂÂ1990s
- 1950 â Last city streetcar lines (of the pre-MAX and Portland Streetcar era) cease operation.
- 1951 â The Portland Hotel closes and is torn down.
- 1952 â KPTV, a UHF station initially, inaugurates television broadcasting in Portland (and Oregon).
- 1953 â KOIN-TV, city's first VHF television station, begins broadcasting.
- 1955 â Portland State College established.
- 1956
- Rose City Transit established, taking over mass transit service in Portland.
- KGW begins its television broadcasting.
- National College of Naturopathic Medicine established.
- 1957 â Metropolitan Service District (regional governmental agency) established.
- 1958
- Portland Development Commission formed.
- Last interurban streetcar lines (until MAX), to Oregon City and Bellrose, cease operating.
- Portland Zoo Railway begins operating.
- Third (and current) Morrison Bridge opens.
- 1959
- Oregon Centennial Exposition and International Trade Fair held.
- Sister city relationship established with Sapporo, Japan.
- Portland Zoo (now Oregon Zoo) moves to its current site in Washington Park.
- 1960
- Veterans Memorial Coliseum and Lloyd Center open.
- Population: 372,676; metro 881,961.
- 1961 â Portland Community College established.
- 1962
- March 15: KATU television begins broadcasting.
- April 14: Packy is born at the Portland Zoo, the first elephant born in the Western Hemisphere in 44 years.
- October 12: Windstorm, widely known as the Columbus Day Storm.
- Cinema 21 in business.
- 1964 â Christmas flood of 1964
- 1965 â Pittock Mansion (house museum) opens.
- 1967 â Portland Japanese Garden opens.
- 1968 â KJIB and KBOO radio begin broadcasting.
- 1969 â Tri-Met (Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District of Oregon) established, replacing Rose City Transit.
- 1970
- People's Food Co-op founded.
- Portland Trail Blazers of the NBA founded.
- 1971
- Powell's Books in business.
- Northwest Film Study Center established.
- World Forestry Center opens.
- 1972
- April 15: 1972 PortlandâÂÂVancouver tornado.
- First National Bank Tower built.
- Food Front Cooperative Grocery organized.
- 1973
- January 2: Neil Goldschmidt becomes mayor.
- November 15: Fremont Bridge opens.
- 1974
- Oregon Health & Science University established.
- Willamette Week newspaper begins publication.
- 1975 â Blue Sky Gallery founded.
- 1977 â Portland Transit Mall and Adventist Medical Center building open.
- 1978 â Waterfront Park opens.
- 1979 â Save the Refugees Fund (now Mercy Corps) headquartered in city.
- 1980 â Frank Ivancie becomes mayor.
- 1982
- Oregon Food Bank active.
- The Portland Building is constructed.
- Wieden & Kennedy in business.
- 1983
- U.S. Bancorp Tower built.
- Sister city relationship established with Guadalajara, Mexico.
- 1984
- Pioneer Courthouse Square opens.
- KOIN Center built.
- KKCW radio begins broadcasting.
- 1985 â Bud Clark becomes mayor.
- 1986 â MAX Light Rail begins operating.
- 1987
- Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial opens.
- Sister city relationships established with Ashkelon, Israel; and Ulsan, South Korea.
- 1988
- Oregon Brewers Festival and Waterfront Blues Festival begin.
- Sister city relationships established with Kaohsiung, Taiwan; Khabarovsk, USSR; and Suzhou, China.
- 1989 â Oregon Ballet Theatre formed.
- 1990
- Bicycle Transportation Alliance organized.
- Population: city 437,319; metro 1,523,741.
- 1991 â Sister city relationship established with Mutare, Zimbabwe.
- 1992 â First Portland Farmers Market
- 1993 â Vera Katz becomes mayor.
- 1994 â Reading Frenzy and Higgins Restaurant in business.
- 1995 â Rose Garden Arena (now Moda Center) opens.
- 1996
- JanuaryâÂÂFebruary: Willamette Valley Flood of 1996.
- City website online (approximate date).
- Earl Blumenauer becomes Oregon's 3rd congressional district representative.
- Portland Institute for Contemporary Art founded.
- 1998
- The 60-year-old Rodgers variety store chain closes its last three stores.
- Street Roots begins publication.
- 1999
- Stumptown Coffee in business.
- Urban Greenspaces Institute founded.
- 2000
- Portland Classical Chinese Garden opens.
- The Portland Mercury newspaper begins publication.
- Red and Black Cafe founded.
- Hip Mama relocates from Oakland, California to Portland.
- Dignity Village founded
21st century
- 2001
- Portland Streetcar begins operating.
- Portland International Airport terminal built.
- Portland Tribune newspaper begins publication.
- Eastbank Esplanade dedicated.
- Portland Indymedia active (approximate date).
- 2002
- Flag of Portland, Oregon design adopted.
- Willamette Industries taken over by Weyerhaeuser.
- Pear homeless youth nonprofit founded.
- 2003
- Time-Based Art Festival begins.
- Voodoo Doughnut and Park Kitchen in business.
- Sister city relationship established with Bologna, Italy.
- 2004 â Rose Garden arena bankruptcy.
- 2005
- Tom Potter becomes mayor.
- Velveteria: The Museum of Velvet Paintings established.
- 2006
- Portland Aerial Tram begins operating.
- The Meier & Frank chain is succeeded by Macy's.
- 2007
- WatershedPDX founded.
- Ace Hotel in business.
- 2008
- December: Snowstorm brings Portland's heaviest snowfall in 40 years.
- Bunk Sandwiches in business.
- 2009
- Sam Adams becomes mayor.
- July: 2009 Pacific Northwest heat wave.
- BrainSilo founded.
- 2010 â Population: city 583,776; metro 2,226,009.
- 2011
- October 6: Occupy Portland begins.
- Street Books begins operating.
- Fictional Portlandia (TV series) begins national broadcast.
- 2012
- Suzanne Bonamici becomes Oregon's 1st congressional district representative.
- Portland befriends the city of Utrecht, Netherlands.
- September 22: Oregon Rail Heritage Center museum opens.
- 2013 â Charlie Hales becomes mayor.
- 2015
- September 12: Tilikum Crossing, Portland's first new Willamette River bridge since 1973, opens to the public.
- December: Rain storm.
- 2016
- February 29: New Sellwood Bridge opens, replacing 1925 bridge.
- July 19: Biketown bicycle-sharing program is established.
- 2017 â Ted Wheeler becomes mayor.
- 2020
- Beginning in March: During the week on March 16, 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States across Oregon, 3 counties in Portland area issued directives for residents to shelter-in-place from March 23 until at least April 7.
- May 29: George Floyd protests in Portland begins.
- SeptemberâÂÂDecember: Red House eviction defense
- 2021 - JuneâÂÂJuly: 2021 Western North America heat wave
- 2025
- January 1: The government of Portland is changed from a city commission form to a mayorâÂÂcouncil type, and the Portland City Council is expanded to 12 members from five.
- January 1: Keith Wilson becomes mayor.
See also
References
Bibliography
Published in the 19th century
Published in the 20th century
1900sâÂÂ1960s
- v.2, v.3
- Sayer, James J. "Our City Councils. II. PortlandâÂÂthe Commission Plan." National Municipal Review 13 (1924): 502-7.
- Maddux, Percy. City on the Willamette: The Story of Portland, Oregon. Portland: Binford & Mort, 1952.
- 1959 ed.
- 1962 ed.
1970sâÂÂ1990s
- Paul G. Meriam. "Urban Elite in the Far West, Portland, Oregon, 1870âÂÂ1890." Arizona and the West 18 (1976): 41-52.
- Gould, Charles F. "Portland Italians, 1880âÂÂ1920." Oregon Historical Quarterly 77 (1976): 239-60.
- Paul G. Meriam. "The âÂÂOther PortlandâÂÂ: A Statistical Note on the Foreign-born, 1860âÂÂ1910." Oregon Historical Quarterly 80 (1979): 258-68.
- Toll, William. The Making of an Ethnic Middle Class: Portland Jewry over Four Generations. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982.
- Carl Abbott. Portland: Planning, Politics, and Growth in a Twentieth-Century City. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1983.
- Blackford, Mansell. "The Lost Dream: Businessmen and City Planning in Portland, Oregon, 1903âÂÂ1914." The Western Historical Quarterly 15 (1984): 39-56.
- William Toll. "Ethnicity and Stability: The Italians and Jews of South Portland, 1900âÂÂ1940." Pacific Historical Review 54 (1985): 161-90.
- E. Kimbark MacColl. Merchants, Money, and Power: The Portland Establishment, 1843âÂÂ1913. Portland: Georgian Press, 1988.
- Bigelow, William, and Norman Diamond. "Agitate, Educate, Organize: Portland, 1934." Oregon Historical Quarterly 89 (1988): 5-29.
- Horowitz, David A. "The Crusade against Chain Stores: Portland's Independent Merchants, 1928âÂÂ1935." Oregon Historical Quarterly 89 (1988): 340-68.
- Dodds, Gordon, and Craig Wollner. The Silicon Forest: High Tech in the Portland Area, 1945âÂÂ1985. Portland: Oregon Historical Society Press, 1990.
- Wollner, Craig. The City Builders: One Hundred Years of Union Carpentry in Portland, Oregon, 1883âÂÂ1983. Portland: Oregon Historical Society Press, 1990.
- Carl Abbott. "Regional City and Network City: Portland and Seattle in the Twentieth Century." Western Historical Quarterly 23 (1992): 293-322.
- Harvey, Thomas. "Portland, Oregon: Regional City in a Global Economy." Urban Geography 17 (1996): 95-114.
- William Toll. "Permanent Settlement: Japanese Families in Portland, 1920." Western Historical Quarterly 28 (1997): 19-44.
- William Toll. "Black Families and Migration to a Multiracial Society: Portland, Oregon, 1900âÂÂ1924." Journal of American Ethnic History 17 (1998): 38-70.
- Barker, Neil. "Portland's Works Progress Administration." Oregon Historical Quarterly 101 (2000): 414-41.
Published in the 21st century
- Carl Abbott. "Portland: Civic Culture and Civic Opportunity." Oregon Historical Quarterly 102 (2001): 6-21.
- Pearson, Rudy. "âÂÂA Menace to the NeighborhoodâÂÂ: Housing and African Americans in Portland, 1941âÂÂ1945." Oregon Historical Quarterly 102 (2001): 158-79.
- Rosenthal, Nicholas G. "Repositioning Indianness: Native American Organizations in Portland, Oregon, 1959âÂÂ1975." Pacific Historical Review 71 (2002): 415-38.
- Johnston, Robert. The Radical Middle Class: Populist Democracy and the Question of Capitalism in Progressive Era Portland. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003.
- ; scholarly history
External links