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Lebanon is located in northwest Oregon, southeast of Salem. The population was 19,690 at the 2020 census . Lebanon sits beside the South Santiam River on the eastern edge of the Willamette Valley , close to the Cascade Range and a 25-minute drive to either of the larger cities of Corvallis and Albany.
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; ... Lebanon station (Oregon) This page was last edited on 20 June 2016, at 20:07 (UTC). Text ...
Linn County is one of the 36 counties in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2023 census population estimates, the population was 131,496. [1] The county seat is Albany. [2] The county is named in the honor of Lewis F. Linn, [3] a U.S. Senator from Missouri who advocated the American settlement of the Oregon Country.
At a grade-separated interchange in eastern Corvallis, OR 34 leaves U.S. 20 (which heads north with Oregon Route 99W) and crosses the Willamette River into Linn County. From Corvallis to its junction with Interstate 5 east of Tangent , OR 34 is a four-lane undivided highway, with an interchange at its junction with Oregon Route 99E in Tangent.
The Louis A. Crandall House at 959 Main St. in Lebanon, Oregon was built in about 1906. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1]It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story house that is the "only example of high style American Foursquare architecture in Lebanon".
A postcard image of the original Lebanon High School. Lebanon High School was originally built in the spring of 1909 across the street from the old Santiam Academy (established 1851), at a cost of $40,000, by Mr. McChesney of Albany, Oregon, contractor, and P.C. Brown of Portland, Oregon, architect.
Interstate 5 is the second-longest freeway in Oregon, at 308 miles (496 km), and is the only Interstate to traverse the state from north to south. [4] The highway connects several of the state's largest metropolitan areas, which lie in the Rogue and Willamette valleys, [5] and passes through counties with approximately 81 percent of Oregon's population. [6]
In the U.S. state of Oregon, there are two systems for categorizing roads in the state highway system: named state highways and numbered state routes.Named highways, such as the Pacific Highway No. 1 or the North Umpqua Highway East No. 138, are primarily used internally by the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) whereas numbered routes, such as Interstate 5 (I-5), U.S. Highway 20 (US ...