Linnton, Portland, Oregon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neighborhood representation | |
Association | Linnton Neighborhood Association |
Coalition | Neighbors West/Northwest |
Neighborhood geography | |
Area | 4.77 km² (PDF map) |
Location | Interactive map |
Demographics (2000) | |
Population | 541 (density 113/km²) |
Households | 256 (92% occupied) |
Owned | 188 (73%) |
Rented | 68 (27%) |
Size | 2.11 persons (average) |
Linnton is a Portland, Oregon neighborhood located between Forest Park and the Willamette River along U.S. Highway 30 (NW St. Helens Rd.), close to the agricultural community of Sauvie Island. It borders the neighborhoods of Northwest Industrial on the south, St. Johns and Cathedral Park via the St. Johns Bridge across the Willamette on the east, and Forest Park (with which it overlaps substantially) on the west. The neighborhood extends north somewhat beyond Portland city limits into unincorporated Multnomah County, ending at the Sauvie Island Bridge.
Contents |
[edit] History
According to Oregon Geographic Names, the Town of Linnton was platted in 1843 by Peter Burnett (later, the first governor of California) and M. M. McCarver, who named it for U.S. Senator Lewis F. Linn of Missouri. Linnton had its own post office from 1889–1975.
Linnton was incorporated as a city in 1910, but annexed by Portland 5 years later. As of 2006 there is talk of secession following a rejection by Portland Mayor Tom Potter and two other city council members of a waterfront revitalization plan over toxic industrial waste concerns.[1]
[edit] Parks
- Clark & Wilson Property - NW Germantown Rd.
- Forest Park - NW 29th Ave. & NW Upshur St. to Newberry Rd.
- Kingsley Park - NW St. Helens Rd.
- Linnton Park - NW 105th Ave. & St. Helens Rd.
[edit] Photo gallery
[edit] External links
- Guide to Linnton Neighborhood (PortlandNeighborhood.com)
- Linnton's town center dream dies in 3-2 vote (Fred Leeson, The Oregonian, August 25, 2006)