Forest Park is a municipal and public park in the
Tualatin Mountains (West Hills) west of downtown
Portland, Oregon. Stretching for more than 8 miles (13
km) on hillsides overlooking the
Willamette River, it is one of the largest
urban forest reserves in the United States. The park, a major component of a regional system of parks and trails, covers more than 5,100 acres (21
km
2) of mostly
second-growth forest with a few patches of
old growth. About 70 miles (110
km) of recreational
trails, including the Wildwood Trail segment of the city's
40 Mile Loop system, crisscross the park. As early as the 1860s civic leaders sought to create a natural preserve in the woods near Portland. Their efforts led to the creation of a municipal park commission that in 1903 hired the
Olmsted Brothers landscape architectural firm to develop a plan for Portland's parks. Acquiring land through donations, transfers from Multnomah County, and delinquent tax
foreclosures, the city eventually combined parcels totaling about 4,000 acres (1,600
ha) to create the reserve. Formally dedicated in 1948, it ranks 19th in size among parks within U.S. cities, according to
The Trust for Public Land. More than 112
bird species and 62
mammal species frequent the park and its wide variety of trees and shade-loving plants. About 40 inches (1,000
mm) of rain falls on the forest each year. Many small tributaries of the Willamette River flow northeast through the woods to pipes or
culverts under
U.S. Route 30 at the edge of the park. One of them,
Balch Creek, has a resident
trout population, and another, Miller Creek, supports sea-run species including
salmon. Threats to the park include overuse, urban traffic, encroaching development, invasive plants, and lack of maintenance money. Occasional serious crimes and more frequent minor crimes occur in the park.
Fern Hobbs (May 8, 1883
– April 10, 1964) was an
American attorney in the
U.S. state of
Oregon, and a private secretary to
Oregon Governor Oswald West. She was noted for her ambition and several accomplishments as a young woman, and became the highest-paid woman in public service in America in her mid-twenties. A native of
Nebraska, she lived there and in
Salt Lake City, Utah, before her family moved to Oregon. The family settled in
Hillsboro, with Hobbs working to help support the family before attending
Willamette University College of Law where she graduated in 1913. Hobbs made international news when Governor West sent her to implement
martial law in the small
Eastern Oregon town of
Copperfield. The event was considered a strategic coup for West, establishing the State's authority over a remote rural community and cementing his reputation as a proponent of
prohibition. Hobbs later worked for the
American Red Cross in Europe and at the
Oregon Journal newspaper. She died in Portland in 1964.
- March 3, 1849, governor Joseph Lane dissolves Provisional Government and implements government of the Oregon Territory.
- March 5, 1949, political reformer William Simon U'Ren dies at the age of 90.
- March 6, 1961, Oregon State College becomes Oregon State University.
- March 20, 1916, the Portland Rosebuds became the first U.S. based ice hockey team to play for the Stanley Cup.
- March 23, 1806, the Lewis and Clark Expedition leaves Fort Clatsop near present day Astoria.
- March 25, 1993, the "Spring Break Quake" damages the Oregon State Capitol.
- March 26, 1955, the airliner for Pan Am Flight 845/26 crashes off the Oregon Coast after leaving Portland International Airport.
- March 27, 1939, at the first NCAA basketball tournament, the Oregon Ducks win the first championship.
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