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168 results
  • Simeon Josephi (1849 - 1935)

    Simeon Josephi was the leader of the medical profession in Oregon for more than fifty years, from about 1880 to 1930, and he lived in …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur

    Early in January 1844, six Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur (SNDdeN) departed Antwerp aboard L'Infatigable bound for the Oregon Country. After a long journey …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • St. Mary's Academy

    St. Mary’s Academy in downtown Portland is a Roman Catholic high school directed by the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary. …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Stripping in Oregon

    Portland has more strip clubs per capita than any other city in the United States. With one strip club for every 11,826 residents, Portland far …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Tap Root, Figures that Tell Facts at Elkton

    After Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1942, most Oregonians approved of the United States' entry into the Second World War, but support was …

    Oregon History Project

  • Telegram to Governor Pennoyer

    This telegram to Oregon Governor Sylvester Pennoyer from Judge Walter Gresham warns that extending the Chinese Exclusion Act might incite violence and asks that Pennoyer …

    Oregon History Project

  • Temple Beth Israel

    Beth Israel, organized in 1858, is Portland’s oldest Jewish congregation.  The members worshipped above commercial space on Front Street before moving to this synagogue on …

    Oregon History Project

  • The General (film)

    Buster Keaton's masterpiece and one of the greatest silent movies of all time was filmed in the Cottage Grove area in the summer of 1926. …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • The Politics of Assimilation

    By 1920, the drive by eastside small businessmen for increased political power became encased in a national fear of subversive foreign influence. In 1919, the …

    Oregon History Project

  • The Portland Reporter

    A product of the third longest newspaper strike in the United States, the Portland Reporter launched in 1960 as an alternative to the Oregonian and …

    Oregon Encyclopedia