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William D. Hare (1834-1910), state legislator and Hillsboro mayor. David Hill (1809-1850), legislator in the provisional government. Fern Hobbs (1883-1964), secretary to Oregon Governor Oswald West and involved in incident in Copperfield. John W. Shute (1840-1922), banker and namesake for Shute Park; Thomas Tongue (1912-1994), Oregon Supreme ...
David Edwards, politician who served in the Oregon House [23] Daniel Gault, educator, newspaperman, and state legislator [24] William G. Hare, politician [25] H. T. Hesse, politician [26] David Hill, pioneer and city namesake [27] Derrick Kitts, politician who served in the Oregon House [28] Shawn Lindsay, attorney and politician [29]
Wilhelm's Portland Memorial Funeral Home, Mausoleum and Crematory is a funerary establishment in the Sellwood neighborhood of southeast Portland, Oregon, United States.. Opened in 1901 as the Portland Crematorium, it is the first and oldest crematorium west of the Mississippi River, [1] and the largest privately managed indoor burial site in the Pacific Nor
Image Name Term 1 Alfred Luelling [1] [2]: December 8, 1876 – December 10, 1877 2 Charles T. Tozier [1]: December 10, 1877 – December 3, 1878 3 A. M. Collins [1]: December 3, 1878 – December 2, 1879
Theodore Thurston Geer (1851–1924), Oregon Governor Don Johnson (1926–2015), MLB pitcher John Alphonsus Murphy (1881–1935), Boxer Rebellion Medal of Honor recipient
This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 10:50 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Crystal Lake Cemetery, located in Corvallis, Benton County, Oregon, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in June 2004. [2] It is a burial ground that provides Corvallis residents with funeral and burial services.
Edward Schulmerich was born in 1863 and moved to Oregon with his family in 1869. [4] In 1906, he helped to found the Hillsboro Commercial Bank and later became the president of the bank. [4] Schulmerich built a new two-story bank building in 1911 at Second and Main streets. [4]