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Oregon dominated the early American Northwest because most of the newcomers to the region went there. By far the majority of them were attracted by the farmland, particularly in the Willamette Valley. They migrated to the country while relying on family and community networks of communication and support, and once in Oregon they tended to settle in clusters that kept family and community together. As discussed in Lesson 9, most of these rural households operated at some remove from the national market system. They wanted to sell their surplus crops to buyers, but tended to concern themselves with their own subsistence first. They also developed a distinctive politics that saw virtue in family men who owned a limited amount of landed property"small freeholders"rather than in the wealthy, mercantile, or working classes. These initial American settlers long remained influential in Oregon. Indeed, they helped to create a culture and a society that many believe helps to explain Oregon distinctiveness to this day. At the same time, however, another type of economic and social development was emerging in the town of Portland and around Puget Sound. Portland quickly became the leading city of the Pacific Northwest. Situated at the confluence of the Columbia and Willamette rivers, and used as a port by ocean-going vessels, its location and enterprise made it the leading commercial center north of San Francisco. Farm products from the Willamette Valley, minerals from Idaho, and wheat from around Walla Walla all flowed to market by way of Portland. While Portland grew, San Francisco capitalists discovered the forests on Puget Sound. California mines, cities, and ships required prodigious amounts of lumber, and the deep waters and forested shorelines of Puget Sound offered the most convenient place to get that commodity. At Seattle and Port Gamble and Port Ludlow and a host of other sites around the Sound, docks and sawmills appeared to deliver wood products to the ships that sailed away to San Francisco and other Pacific ports. Around Puget Sound and in Portland during the 1850s and after, one can detect the emergence of an urban and industrial economy that would eventually surpass and engulf the farm economy started in the Willamette Valley. The rural economy and society were more traditional and, being so strongly associated with pioneers, became the focus of much attention Over the long term, however, the urban and industrial economy and society were much more influential in the Pacific Northwest, forming the basis for the modern region. These will be our focus for the remainder of the course.
Here I want to describe the spatial organization of the urban and industrial Northwest during the 19th century, and in particular I wish to develop the idea of metropolis and hinterland. As part of the North American West generally, the Pacific Northwest was divided into a series of subregions or hinterlands, each of which produced extractive commodities that moved to market by way of a hierarchical series of towns and cities. For example, the Walla Walla Valley of southeastern Washington became known as farming country during the 1850s and 1860s. Grain grown there was gathered in towns like Walla Walla, which served as points of export and import for the surrounding farms. From Walla Walla, the grain was shipped to the Columbia and then downstream to Portland on river-going vessels.
Put another way, the region came to be organized around a host of towns and cities such as Portland, Victoria, Tacoma, Seattle, Spokane, and Boise. The power of each city was commensurate with the extent and wealth of its hinterland. Each town prospered as the interior region that it served, and that relied upon it, prospered. And these interiors were creations of systems of transportation. While many of the pioneer settlers of the Willamette Valley did not so much mind isolation, the majority of Euro-Americans in the region wanted to be linked up to the global market economy.
Beginning in the 1880s, however, the arrival of railroads in the region began to undermine Portland's predominance. Portland depended upon the natural transport system of rivers to bring produce and profits to it. Railroads, on the other hand, were a man-made transport system that provided an alternative to river travel. Once railway lines were completed to and through the Pacific Northwest, other cities capitalized on them to carve out their own hinterlands separate from Portland's control. Thus in the 1880s and 1890s the cities of Tacoma, Vancouver, B.C., and Seattle began to chip away at Portland's leadership on the Pacific coast, while Spokane emerged as the metropolis for what was called the "Inland Empire." As the following charts show, the arrival of the railroads also stimulated an enormous population boom, both in cities and throughout the region, beginning in the 1880s.
Portland's success was not due entirely to its fortunate location. It also benefited from astute leaders who secured the city's future in a host of ways. The city had a number of rival towns nearby, but it surpassed them when prominent businessmen established an efficient steamship service to and from San Francisco; launched the successful Oregonian newspaper to promote the town; and built a road to the west to serve the productive wheat farms there. On such foundations, Portland became the headquarters for trade and transportation throughout the Willamette River Valley, the most densely populated part of the region. When the Gold Rush in California generated a tremendous demand for foodstuffs, lumber, and other products, Portland stood ready to service that demand by shipping goods from its hinterlands, and throughout the 1850s it began to prosper. Throughout this era, Portland's conservative business leadership became well known. One west coast judge commented on the city's staid and sensible nature in 1868: "Portland will never be the centre of fashion, speculation, or thought. Do what it will, it will be a comparatively provincial place...but it will be worth more dollars per head than either London or New York, and its good citizens will sleep sounder and live longer than the San Franciscans." Once again, contrasting Oregon to California seemed to come naturally.
As extractive industries in the interior of the Pacific Northwest developed, Portland strengthened its leadership as the financial, commercial, and transportation center. For example, in the early 1860s prospectors struck gold and silver in Idaho, creating a rush to such places as the Clearwater and Boise river valleys.
As the leading city in the Northwest, Portland was certain to be linked up to transcontinental lines once they arrived in the 1880s. However, these lines ultimately undermined the city's leadership position. Its primacy had stemmed from its location near the mouths of the Columbia and Willamette rivers, where it could command the flow of almost all the products and passengers moving into and out of the region. But railroads offered an alternative to river travel that challenged Portland's "natural" advantage. They enabled cargoes and passengers to bypass the city. Moreover, they enabled cargoes and passengers to bypass one of the main disadvantages of river travelthe dangerous bar where the Columbia meets the Pacific Ocean. Between 1883 and 1893, cities to the north of Portland, on the safer, deep-water harbors of Puget Sound and the Straits of Georgia, acquired their own connections to transcontinental railroadsand by railroads to interior regions of the Northwest as well as to eastern North America. Railways served as man-made rivers, directing traffic to Tacoma, Seattle, Everett, and Vancouver, B.C. in the same way that the Columbia had funneled traffic through Portland.
Although Portland would no longer be the biggest city of the region, it long remained the most refined. From the start, founders of the city had aspired to imitate eastern cities; indeed, the city's name had been determined by a coin flip between a Massachusetts man (who wanted "Boston") and a Maine native (who won). There was an impulse to create in Portland another version of the New England town, and the city soon acquired an ample number of churches, schools, fine homes, and business blocks. It had a more reputable newspaper, livelier theatrical and musical scenes, and an urbane quality that many easterners noted with admiration. One of themSamuel Bowlesremarked in 1869: "Oregonians have builded what they have got more slowly and more wisely than the Californians; they have less...to unlearn; and they seem sure, not of organizing the first state on the Pacific coast, indeed, but of a steadily prosperous, healthy, and more onethey are in the way to be the New England of the Pacific Coast." Nobody, it must be noted, gave similar praise to Seattle in this period. Perhaps Portland's only drawback was the weather, which one visitor noted in 1865:
![]() The visitor allowed that Oregon presented travelers with many amusing things, yet he also found it difficult to laugh about them while in the state: "Such a thing as 'dry' humor in Oregon is, of course, a physical impossibility." | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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