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Pondosa is an unincorporated community and ghost town [2] in Union County, Oregon, United States. The town came into being in 1927, when the four Stoddard brothers of La Grande bought land in the area. [3] They moved the sawmill operations of the Grande Ronde Lumber Company in nearby Perry to the site. [3]
The following sortable table lists the 3,242 counties and county equivalents of the United States and their respective INCITS (38+31) codes. (Formerly FIPS county codes ). Table
Medical Springs was homesteaded in the nineteenth century by Dunham and Artemisia Wright, and comprised 280 acres. [2] [3] Dunham Wright was a cousin of Abraham Lincoln and an early Oregon politician, who established the area on December 4, 1868, after the discovery of hot springs there. [4]
FIPS code [3] County seat [4] Est. [4] Origin [5] Etymology [5] Population [6] Area [4] Map Baker County: 001: Baker City: 1862: Eastern portion of Wasco County: Named in honor of Edward Dickinson Baker, who died in combat while serving as Oregon senator. 16,912: 3,068 sq mi (7,946 km 2) Benton County: 003: Corvallis: 1847: Polk County
Pondosa: 1927 Union: D [153] Rajneeshpuram: 1981 1988 Wasco: B The Oregon Supreme Court closed its litigation in 1987, leaving Rajneeshpuram vacant, bankrupt, but legal within Oregon law. [154] Richmond: 1899 Wheeler: B [155] Riverview: Umatilla: A Robinette: 1898 1958 Baker: A Inundated by Brownlee Reservoir in 1958. [156] Robinsonville: 1878 ...
Union County. According to the United States Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 2,039 square miles (5,280 km 2), of which 2,037 square miles (5,280 km 2) is land and 1.9 square miles (4.9 km 2) (0.1%) is water. [4]
Use of standard codes facilitates the interchange of machine-readable data from agency to agency within the federal community and between federal offices and state and local groups. These codes are also used by some companies as a coding standard as well, especially those that must deal with federal, state and local governments for such things ...
The five-digit codes of FIPS 6-4 used the two digit FIPS state code (FIPS Publication 5-2, also withdrawn on September 2, 2008), followed by the three digits of the county code within the state or possession. County FIPS codes in the United States are usually (with a few exceptions) in the same sequence as alphabetized county names within a state.