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Starvation Creek State Park is a state park located west of Hood River, Oregon in the Columbia River Gorge. It was named Starvation Creek because a train was stopped there by snow drifts and passengers had to dig out the train. No documented starvation took place. [2] Starvation Creek has a small waterfall and a trailhead for hiking. [3]
The Columbia Gorge Discovery Center & Museum is the official interpretive center [1] and history museum about the Columbia River Gorge located on 54 acres (22 ha) in The Dalles, Oregon. [2]
Columbia Valley Railroad: UP: 1899 1907 Ilwaco Railroad: Connell Northern Railway: NP: 1909 1914 Northern Pacific Railway: Cowlitz, Chehalis and Cascade Railway: GN/ MILW/ NP/ UP: 1916 1955 N/A Curtis, Milburn and Eastern Railroad: CMER 1973 1993 N/A Eastern-Washington Railroad: UP: 1904 Spokane – Columbia River Railroad and Navigation Company
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The Gorge Amphitheatre, originally known as Champs de Brionne Music Theatre and commonly referred to as The Gorge, is an outdoor concert venue in Grant County, Washington, United States. It is situated near the Columbia River in Central Washington , nine miles (14 km) west of George .
1910 postcard showing the North Bank Bridge over the Columbia River. Burlington Northern Railroad Bridge 9.6 or BNSF Railway Bridge 9.6, [3] also known as the Columbia River Railroad Bridge, [4] is through truss railway bridge across the Columbia River, between Portland, Oregon, and Vancouver, Washington, owned and operated by BNSF Railway. [3]
SR 14 at its interchange with I-205, built in the 1970s. The first highway that traveled through the Columbia River Gorge was surveyed in 1905 at a cost of $15,000 (equivalent to $508,667 in 2025 [27]) by the state of Washington as a wagon road connecting Washougal in Clark County to Lyle in Klickitat County that was designated as secondary State Road 8. [28]