Eastern Oregon

Eastern Oregon is the eastern part of the U.S. state of Oregon. It is not an officially recognized geographic entity; thus, the boundaries of the region vary according to context. It is sometimes understood to include only the eight easternmost counties in the state; in other contexts, it includes the entire area east of the Cascade Range.[1] Cities in the basic eight-county definition include Baker City, Burns, Hermiston, Pendleton, John Day, La Grande, and Ontario. Umatilla County is home to the largest population base in Eastern Oregon; accounting for 74% of the region's population in 2016.[2] Hermiston, located in Umatilla County, is the largest city in the region. Major industries include transportation/warehousing, timber, agriculture and tourism. The main transportation corridors are I-84, U.S. Route 395, U.S. Route 97, U.S. Route 26, U.S. Route 30, and U.S. Route 20.

Eastern Oregon population according to the 8 county definition.

Compared to the climate of Western Oregon, the climate of Eastern Oregon is a drier continental climate, with much greater seasonal variations in temperature. Unlike the Willamette Valley, Eastern Oregon receives a significant amount of snow in the winter. Some parts of Eastern Oregon receive fewer than 10 inches (250 mm) of rain yearly, classifying them as deserts. This desert climate is in part due to a rain shadow effect caused by the Cascade Range. Pine and juniper forests cover 35% of Eastern Oregon, much in the mountains that include the Blue Mountains, Strawberry Mountains, Wallowa Mountains, Trout Creek Mountains, Ochoco Mountains, and Steens Mountain. Volcanic basalt flows from the Columbia River Basalt Group covered large sections of Eastern Oregon 6 to 17 million years ago. Other landforms include the Alvord Desert, Owyhee Desert, Warner Valley, Deschutes River, Owyhee River, Grande Ronde River, Joseph Canyon, The Honeycombs, and Malheur Butte.

Geography

Mountains and glacial lake in Wallowa County attract tourists to the area.
Downtown Burns

According to the Eastern Oregon Visitors Association, Eastern Oregon includes only the following eight counties: Morrow, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Grant, Baker, Harney, and Malheur.[3] Some definitions of the region are more restrictive,[4] while others include the base eight counties listed above plus several adjacent counties.[5][6] Still others include the entire area east of the Cascade Range;[7] this meaning would also include Sherman, Crook, Deschutes, Gilliam, Jefferson, Klamath, Lake, Wasco, and Wheeler counties.

The extreme eastern section of Oregon in the Snake River Valley, including the city of Ontario, is part of the Treasure Valley, which extends east to Boise, Idaho. Unlike the rest of the state, that section lies within the Mountain Time Zone. Sacajawea Peak is the region's highest mountain.

Politics

Although Oregon as a whole is generally considered a blue state, Eastern Oregon is far more conservative than the west.[8] In the 2012 presidential election, Mitt Romney received at least 60% of the vote in every county in Eastern Oregon.[9]

The political divide between the eastern and western parts of the state has led some residents of Eastern Oregon to feel that the state of Oregon, with the majority of its population and political control based in the western part of the state, has neglected the eastern part of the state, preventing it from developing along with the western part. A movement to have Eastern Oregon secede and join the United States as a 51st state was underway in 2008.[10] This movement is similar to other Northwest secession proposals such as Jefferson, Lincoln, and Cascadia.

Cities

Top 15 most populated Eastern Oregon cities (according to the 8-county definition):

Rank City Population[11] (2018) County
1 Hermiston 18,200 Umatilla
2 Pendleton 16,810 Umatilla
3 La Grande 13,340 Union
4 Ontario 11,470 Malheur
5 Baker City 9,890 Baker
6 Umatilla 7,320 Umatilla
7 Milton-Freewater 7,105 Umatilla
8 Boardman 3,690 Morrow
9 Nyssa 3,310 Malheur
10 Burns 2,830 Harney
11 Stanfield 2,185 Umatilla
12 Union 2,160 Union
13 Irrigon 1,990 Morrow
14 Enterprise 1,985 Wallowa
15 Vale 1,950 Malheur
The Hermiston Butte, in the middle of Hermiston, features hiking trails and access to the adjacent Hermiston Aquatics Center

By extending the boundary outside to include neighboring counties, Eastern Oregon would include three of the largest population centers east of the Cascade Range: Bend, Redmond, and Klamath Falls. However, these lie outside the stricter boundary.

Climate and ecology

Compared to the maritime rainforest climate of Western Oregon, which is adjacent to the Pacific Ocean, the climate of Eastern Oregon is a drier continental climate, with much greater seasonal variations in temperature. Unlike the Willamette Valley, Eastern Oregon gets a significant amount of snow in the winter. Some parts of Eastern Oregon receive fewer than 10 inches (250 mm) of rain yearly, classifying them as deserts. The driest parts are the southeast and the area near Redmond. This desert climate is in part due to a rain shadow effect caused by the Cascade Range. Pine and juniper forests cover 35% of Eastern Oregon, especially in the mountains east of Klamath Falls and in the Blue Mountains.

Freshly tilled wheat fields on western edge of wheat growing area in central Wasco County

Economy

The region's economy is primarily agricultural.[12] Timber and mining, while formerly key industries, have decreased in importance in recent years.[13] Cultural tourism, agritourism and ecotourism continue to develop.[14][15] The wheat growing region of Eastern Oregon includes the Columbia Plateau portion of northeastern Oregon, which begins with very marginal wheat fields in central Wasco County and extends east through Umatilla County. Its rich loess soils "help make the Columbia Plateau one of the premier wheat-producing regions in the world."[16] South of the wheat lands of northeast Oregon, agricultural activity is generally limited to livestock grazing except where irrigation is available. Irrigated areas are often used to produce alfalfa hay.

Recreation

From the high desert to the rugged mountainous areas of the Eagle Cap Wilderness area, Eastern Oregon has a range of outdoor recreational opportunities such as skiing, rafting, and hiking.[17]

Anthony Lakes is the largest ski resort in Eastern Oregon.[18] Spout Springs, located in the Umatilla National Forest in the Blue Mountains, is popular with families.[19] Rafting is often seasonal on the rivers that are snowpack-dependent and not dammed. The Owyhee River is an example of a desert canyon river experience. The Snake River offers boating experiences that range from a quiet drift through the desert to hair-raising thrills of class II to III+ rapids.

Transportation

The John Day River passing by Sheep Rock in the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument

Historically, the region has been relatively isolated from Western Oregon, due to the difficulty of crossing the Cascades. Early settlers floated down the Columbia River from The Dalles to reach Western Oregon. In 1845, Sam Barlow built a road around the south side of Mount Hood, which served as the final leg of the Oregon Trail. The Applegate Trail and Santiam Wagon Road were constructed soon after, connecting eastern and western Oregon in the southern and central parts of the state. In the early 20th century, Samuel Hill built the Columbia River Highway, allowing automobiles to pass through the Columbia River Gorge.

Railroads began to be important as early as 1858 with the construction of the Oregon Portage Railroad which built a 4.5-mile (7.2 km) bypass around the rapids at Cascade Locks. This was followed by the 1862 incorporation of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company whose operations included building a rail bypass from The Dalles to Celilo Falls. In 1880 these two short sections of rail were incorporated into the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company (OR&N). Shortly thereafter Henry Villard, who then controlled OR&N, moved aggressively to block entry of the then under construction Northern Pacific Railway into the Columbia Gorge.[20] In an agreement first made in March 1880 and formalized in the fall of 1880, the Northern Pacific Railway, then controlled by Frederick Billings, and the OR&N, at that time controlled by Henry Villard, agreed to divide the Columbia Plateau at the Snake River, with the Northern Pacific staying to the north and the OR&N staying to the south. Northern Pacific was not to build down the gorge into Portland, but would receive trackage rights on the tracks that OR&N was building on the south bank into Portland.[20] The first St. Paul-Portland Northern Pacific train arrived in Portland on September 12, 1883, via OR&N trackage down the Oregon side of the Columbia River from Wallula, Washington forever ending the isolation of at least the northern portion of Eastern Oregon.[20] A year later in November 1884, the Oregon Short Line was completed across southern Idaho and met the OR&N at Huntington,[20] providing rail service that essentially paralleled the Oregon Trail all the way from Omaha, Nebraska. Later the OR&N became part of the Union Pacific Railway.

The only other railroad ever built east over the Cascade Mountains was trackage that was to become part of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company, which was opened in 1926 over Willamette Pass to Klamath Falls[21] to bypass the difficult line south of Eugene to Ashland.

All-weather highways over the Cascade Mountains were not completed until the 1930s and 1940s.[22][23]

Major road routes through eastern Oregon include I-84 from Ontario to the Columbia River Gorge. The only other interstate freeway in the region is an eleven-mile (18 km) stretch of Interstate 82 that ends at the Columbia River in Umatilla. Other major east-west routes include U.S. Route 26, U.S. Route 30, U.S. Route 20 and U.S. Route 730. U.S. Route 395 is a major north-south route, passing through Pendleton, Burns, John Day, and Lakeview. Further west, U.S. Route 97 runs north and south from the California border through Klamath Falls, Bend, and Redmond to Biggs Junction on the Columbia River.

gollark: > widely used
gollark: There's no (widely used) standard saying "if you're displaying an event/contact information/whatever else, you need these tags/attributes", so you generally just have to work off site-specific classes and structure.
gollark: If you want to, say, pull a list of scheduled events from one website, that's fine, you can do that quite easily, but if you want to do it for *many* websites, it is not.
gollark: But generally speaking, what I mean is that HTML is structured, but for display and not extracting (much) general data.
gollark: Hmm, yes, that is a sensible way to get at least title/description.

See also

  • Regions of Oregon

References

  1. Davenport, T. W. (1903). "An Object Lesson in Paternalism" . Oregon Historical Quarterly. 4 (1).
  2. "Population Estimates & Reports".
  3. "Eastern Oregon Visitor's Association". Retrieved 2007-10-24.
  4. "Frommer's: Eastern Oregon". Archived from the original on 2008-08-04. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
  5. Explore Eastern Oregon. Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. Retrieved on October 26, 2007.
  6. Eastern Oregon. Guide to Oregon. Retrieved on October 26, 2007.
  7. Are Introduced Plants Common in Eastern Oregon Forests? United States Forest Service. Retrieved on October 26, 2007.
  8. Cohen, Micah (August 16, 2012). "Oregon, Sitting at the Border of Safe and In Play". FiveThirtyEight. The New York Times. Retrieved January 3, 2016. Oregon, like Wisconsin, is an ideologically polarized state. The Cascade Mountains are a convenient dividing line, politically and geographically.
  9. "US Election Atlas, Oregon 2012 Presidential Election". US Election Atlas.
  10. Wright, Phil (2008-04-25). "Group eyes Eastern Oregon as 51st state". East Oregonian. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  11. "Portland State University Annual Population Estimates".
  12. "Cattlemen Care: About Oregon's Economy". Oregon Cattlemen's Association. Archived from the original on January 13, 2016. Retrieved January 3, 2016. Agriculture and related economic activity accounts for over 12 percent of Oregon’s economy. Agricultural products lead all Oregon exports by volume and rank second by value; and agriculture creates more than 234,000 jobs in the state.
  13. Wilson, Jason (January 14, 2016). "The Oregon militia revolt recipe: timber, despair and a crippling political isolation". The Guardian. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  14. Margulis, Jennifer (July 8, 2013). "Wolf tourism in Eastern Oregon". Oregon Business. p. 3. Archived from the original on August 6, 2015. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  15. "Fishing, Hunting, Wildlife Viewing and Shellfishing in Oregon 2008". Dean Runyan Associates. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  16. Rost, Bob (2005). "Blessed with Soil and Precious Little Water". Oregon's Agricultural Progress. Oregon State University. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  17. "Eastern Oregon Find Things to See & Do". Travel Oregon. Oregon Travel Commission. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  18. The resort has three lifts that offer access to over 1500 acres of dry Eastern Oregon powder. On the Snow.
  19. On the Snow.
  20. Armbruster, Kurt (1999). Orphan Railroad: The railroad comes to Seattle, 1953-1911. Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press. pp. 63, 80. ISBN 0-87422-186-2.
  21. "Southern Pacific Railroad." Trainweb.org.
  22. Engeman, Richard H. (2005; revised and updated 2014). Subtopic : Revival Styles, Highway Alignment: 1890-1940: One Big City, Many Small Towns. The Oregon History Project. Oregon Historical Society. Retrieved on June 17, 2016.
  23. Tonsfeldt, Ward and Paul G. Claeyssens (2004; revised and updated 2014). Subtopic : Post-Industrial Years: 1970-Present: Tourism and Recreation. The Oregon History Project. Retrieved on June 17, 2016.

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