530 34th Ave. SW
Albany, Oregon 97321
U.S.A.
Company Perspectives:
Oregon Metallurgical Corporation is a leader in developing manufacturing technology and processes for the production of titanium, and is active in promoting the use of titanium in increasingly diverse aerospace, industrial, medical and consumer applications.
History of Oregon Metallurgical Corporation
Oregon Metallurgical Company, known as Oremet, is one of only two companies in the United States that produce titanium sponge, the pure form of the rare metal used to produce titanium alloys for use in manufacturing. The company also forges titanium products for aerospace, medical, electronics, and other applications. Although nearly half of the company's sales in 1996 were for commercial or military aerospace applications, Oremet also was the leading provider of titanium for use in the manufacture of golf clubs, which accounted for 20 percent of sales. The Albany, Oregon-based company operates titanium metals service centers in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and Canada through Titanium Industries, Inc., an 80 percent-owned subsidiary. The only other U.S. producer of titanium sponge is Denver-based Titanium Metals Corporation, the industry leader.
U.S. Bureau of Mines
In 1942, with the United States at war in Europe and the Pacific Theater, Carl Curlee, then president of the Albany, Oregon, Chamber of Commerce, flagged down a passenger train heading from California to Washington State. On board was an agent for the now-defunct Bureau of Mines, then an agency of the U.S. Department of the Interior, who was on his way to inspect the proposed site of a new metals laboratory in Spokane, Washington. However, Curlee and other members of the Albany Chamber of Commerce had an alternative site in mind--the 45-acre campus of buildings that had recently been abandoned by Albany College when it left the languishing Willamette Valley logging and farming community and moved to Portland to begin anew as Lewis & Clark College.
Curlee dumped aerial maps and brochures about the Albany area into the startled agent's lap and succeeded in convincing him to tour the former college campus. A few months later, the Albany business community sent Curlee to Washington, D.C., where he was able to present the city's proposal directly to the Bureau of Mines. As he wrote in January 1943, "My big moment had arrived. I did my best under pressure. What with Senators Wheeler, Murray, Cone and Walten, to say nothing of the score of 90 congressmen looking down my throat, I introduced our material. They immediately struck the fancy of the Bureau people." Not long afterwards, the Bureau of Mines designated the abandoned college campus as the site for the sought-after metals laboratory.
A decade later, Steve Shelton, then Northwest regional director for the Bureau of Mines, casually mentioned during an Albany Chamber of Commerce luncheon that perhaps the city should try to attract a titanium plant to boost the still-lagging local economy. The primary role of the Bureau of Mines, created in 1910, was to promote mine safety and develop more efficient mining methods. But during the war, it had assumed the added responsibility of assuring that the country had adequate supplies of critical raw materials. In the early 1950s, that was beginning to include titanium.
Titanium was discovered in 1791, but was not produced commercially until 1948, by the Du Pont Co., because it was difficult and expensive to refine. However, titanium is relatively light and has a higher strength-to-weight ratio than steel. It also resists rust and corrosion as well as platinum and better than stainless steel, and combines readily with nearly every other metal, except copper and aluminum, making it useful in creating strong, lightweight alloys for military and aerospace applications.
But in 1955, titanium was still an exotic, little-known material, and after the Chamber of Commerce luncheon, Charlie McCormack, then mayor of Albany, followed Shelton back to his office at the Bureau of Mines and asked, "What the hell is a titanium plant?" Shelton explained and McCormack took on the project personally. He registered stock with the Oregon Corporation Commission for sale to Oregon residents and sold more than half a million shares at $1 each.
Founding of Oremet
The Oregon Metallurgical Company was incorporated on December 1, 1955, with Dale Fischer of Eugene, Oregon, as president. The company, known as Oremet for short, bought 56 acres about a mile south of Albany, and on March 15, 1956, hired its first employee, George Smith, as construction supervisor. Oremet broke ground the following day.
Shelton left the Bureau of Mines to became general manager at the end of March and hired Frank Caputo, a titanium and zirconium metallurgist for the Bureau of Mines, to design the refining plant. Several other employees also left the federal agency to join Oremet, which produced its first 60-pound ingot of titanium by Labor Day. Shelton was named president in 1959.
Despite the high cost of producing titanium, it was widely used by the military for ship propellers, armor plating, jet engines parts, steam-turbine blades in nuclear power plants, surgical instruments, and components in the U.S. space program. As a result, Oremet prospered during the 1960s, a period of rapid technological development in the United States, with revenues growing from $4.2 million in 1961 to $13.8 million in 1969, when it posted net earnings of $518,000. But sales began to slip in 1970, falling to about $12.4 million, with slowdowns in both the military and commercial aerospace industries and the U.S. space program. Oremet moved to reduce costs by producing its own titanium "sponge"--the first stage in recovering metal from ore--completing a five-year, $9 million development program.
With a recession beginning, the market for titanium virtually disappeared the following year when Congress cut off funds to the Boeing Company, which was developing a U.S. version of the supersonic transport (SST), which was to have been a nearly all-titanium aircraft. Oremet was forced to mothball its new sponge plant. It also suspended research and development programs and cut its workforce by two-thirds, from more than 300 to barely more than 100 employees. Sales in 1971 fell to $8.3 million and Oremet posted its first loss, of nearly $2 million, in more than a decade.
Even with growing inflation, Oremet sales continued to fall in 1972, to $7.3 million, and the company posted its second consecutive loss of $1.7 million. With the slowdown in the aerospace industry, which had accounted for nearly 90 percent of all titanium orders, Oremet began exploring new markets. In 1974, both General Motors and Ford began to use a titanium-steel alloy in government-mandated antipollution equipment, adding about a half pound of titanium to every new automobile. Oremet also began selling titanium for use in seafood processing equipment because of its resistance to saltwater corrosion. In the company's annual report for 1973, then-President Henry F. Peters also noted that one of Oremet's customers "has put considerable time and effort" into experimenting with a titanium alloy for golf club shafts. By the mid-1990s, golf clubs would be the fastest-growing market for titanium.
Purchase by Armco
Government purchases of titanium for missile components and inflation above 10 percent pushed sales in 1974 to record levels of $22 million, although the sponge facility remained closed. That changed in 1976, when the company decided to reopen its moth-balled sponge plants in anticipation of the federal B-1 bomber development program. The board of directors decided the move was essential since the idled plants represented 70 percent of the company's fixed assets. But the decision came at a price. Oremet borrowed $3 million from the First National Bank of Oregon, with $2 million guaranteed by Armco Steel Corporation. Armco, which already owned about 1.6 million shares of Oremet stock, received an option for another 1.5 million shares at a par value of $1.
Only months after the three plants comprising Oremet's sponge facility were brought back on line, an explosion shut down operations in late 1977, injuring seven workers and causing $2.4 million in damage. The plant was back in operation by the end of the year, and Oremet finished fiscal 1978 with nearly $22 million in sales and a profit of $1.7 million. Sales and profits more than doubled the following year, and doubled again in 1980, with another resurgence in commercial aerospace.
Encouraged by the strong financial performance, Armco exercised its option to buy 1.5 million shares of Oremet stock. That gave Armco 62 percent of Oremet, and the titanium producer became a corporate subsidiary. Peters, in that year's annual report, noted, "Armco management has stated its intent to encourage Oremet's on-going development as a growing, positive force in the titanium industry."
Unfortunately for Armco, the boom in the titanium industry was short-lived. In 1982, Business Week reported, "After three years of prosperity, the U.S. titanium industry is heading into a slump." The magazine noted that the "big price boosts of the late 1970s was largely the result of misplaced optimism, particularly by commercial aircraft builders." The optimistic aerospace industry stockpiled titanium, creating the appearance of a shortage that turned into an overabundance of the metal when expectations failed to materialize.
After peaking at $111.5 million in 1981, sales at Oremet fell to $28.3 million in 1983. In 1985, Armco sold its Aerospace & Strategic Materials Group, including its share of Oremet, which had grown to 80 percent, to the Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation for $415 million. Owens-Corning, the worldwide leader in fiberglass products for industry and home insulation, was then expanding into high-tech composites and was interested primarily in Armco's Hitco Materials Division, which produced composites for the aerospace and defense industries. Armco, however, made it clear that it would not sell the division piecemeal.
Owens-Corning announced it would sell its interest in Oremet, along with other parts of the former Armco aerospace division it did not want. But before the company could act, Owens-Corning found itself in a fight for survival. In 1986, the Wickes Companies, a California-based building materials retailer, launched a hostile bid to acquire Owens-Corning. Wickes, which already held about 10 percent of Owens-Corning's outstanding stock, offered shareholders $74 a share for shares that were then trading for about $35 on the New York Stock Exchange. To fight the takeover, Owens-Corning borrowed $2.5 billion to recapitalize, offering stockholders a package that included $52 a share plus one new share of stock for every old share the company repurchased. Wickes eventually withdrew its offer and walked away with a $30 million profit, while Owens-Corning was saddled with a massive debt.
Employee Ownership
In the late 1980s, Owens-Corning cut its payroll from a high of 29,000 in 1986 to less than 17,000. The company also sold several subsidiaries at fire-sale prices, including the entire aerospace division it had acquired from Armco. Rather than another corporate owner, however, the 280 workers at Oremet stepped in to buy the titanium producer. In a deal orchestrated by the United Steelworkers Union, the employees agreed to a 20 percent cut in hourly wages and borrowed $17 million from Owens-Corning in an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP). To provide the company with some stability, the ESOP placed strict limits on how much stock the employees could withdraw unless they quit their jobs.
Despite rising sales, Oremet struggled financially the next several years, accumulating more than $17 million in losses between 1990 and 1995. Caputo, the last remaining executive from the original Bureau of Mines group that launched the company in 1956, also retired in 1993. After serving as president for 13 years, Caputo took advantage of a brief financial upswing--Oremet's first profitable quarter in two years&mdashø announce he was leaving while the company was the only profitable titanium producer in the world. He was succeeded by Carlos E. Aguirre, former president of Axel Johnson Metal, Inc., the U.S. subsidiary of Sweden's Axel Johnson Inc. Aguirre, a native of Argentina with a doctorate in metallurgy, told American Metal Market, "My role will be to develop a new strategic direction that results in consistent, profitable growth."
One of Aguirre's first accomplishments was a six-year agreement with the United Steelworkers, signed in 1994, that allowed the company to buy titanium sponge on the world market without paying laid-off employees the difference between their unemployment benefits and their regular wages, which the old contract required. At the time, titanium sponge could be purchased cheaper in foreign markets than it could be produced by Oremet because of "dumping" by former Soviet Union countries.
By 1996, sales had reached $236.9 million and Oremet seemingly had turned the corner on what the annual report that year called "one of the most severe downturns the industry has ever experienced." Oremet posted a net income of $22.3 million and the Oregonian reported that Oremet's employees were "reaping the rewards for a frightening risk they took nine years ago."
The Oregonian went on to note, "Today (the workers are) doing better than good. Many of these who spend their 12-hour shifts cutting, melting and pushing titanium around Oremet's dark and noisy plant buildings are wealthy. Some of them display it, many of them don't." When the ESOP purchased the company at the end of 1987, the stock was trading for about $3 a share. After fluctuating at about $12 a share through the early 1990s, it rocketed to $30 in late 1996, before settling back to the high $20s.
One reason for increasing sales was the purchase of 80 percent of the New Jersey-based Titanium Industries Distribution Group from Kamyr, Inc. in 1994 for $13.5 million. Titanium Industries operated Titanium Wire Corp. and metal service centers in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and Canada, which opened new markets for Oremet. In 1995, for the first time ever, more than half of Oremet sales were for non-aerospace applications, led by growth in recreational uses, including golf clubs and titanium lacrosse sticks. In the company's 1996 annual report, Aguirre declared, "New applications for titanium continue to arise and Oremet is well positioned to benefit in such a marketplace."
Principal Subsidiaries: Titanium Industries Inc. (80%); Oremet France.
Related information about Oregon
pop (2000e) 3 421 400; area
251 409 km²/97 073 sq mi. State in NW USA,
divided into 36 counties; the ‘Beaver State’; established as a
fur-trading post on the site of the present town of Astoria, 1811;
occupied by both Britain and the USA, 1818–46, when the
international boundary was settled on the 49th parallel; became a
territory, 1848; joined the Union as the 33rd state, 1859;
population grew after 1842 with settlers following the Oregon
Trail, and again in the late 19th-c after the completion of the
transcontinental railway; capital, Salem; other chief cities,
Albany, Eugene, Portland, Springfield; bounded W by the Pacific
Ocean; rivers include the Columbia, Snake, Willamette; split by the
Cascade Range; fertile Willamette R valley in the W, with the Coast
Ranges beyond; High Desert in the E, a semi-arid plateau used for
ranching and wheat-growing; Blue Mts and Wallowa Mts in the NE;
Fremont Mts and Steens Mts in the S; highest point Mt Hood
(3424 m/11 234 ft); several small lakes in the S,
including Upper Klamath L and L Albert; about half the area
forested; produces over a quarter of the USA's softwood and
plywood; electronics, food processing, paper, fishing; livestock,
wheat, dairy produce, fruit, vegetables; major tourist region;
Crater Lake National Park in the SW.
noncompliant
Oregon (pronounced The pronunciation , while common, is
incorrect., ?o.??.??n Occurs among speakers where the horse-hoarse merger
has occured, which include the majority of native Oregonians.) is a
state in the Pacific Northwest
region of the United
States. Oregon borders the Pacific Ocean on the west, Washington on the north,
Idaho on the east, and
California, and
Nevada on the south. Two
north-south mountain ranges?the Pacific Coast Range
and the Cascade
Mountain Range?form the two boundaries of the Willamette Valley, one
of the most fertile and agriculturally productive regions in the
world.fact
Oregon has one of the most diverse landscapes of any state in the
US. It is one of the few places in the Northern Hemisphere
where lift-serviced alpine skiing is available year round.fact
Oregon's population in 2000 was 3,421,399, a 20.4% increase over
1990.
History
Oregon's earliest residents were several Native
American tribes, including the Bannock, Chinook, Klamath, and Nez Perce. In 1811, New York
financier John
Jacob Astor established Fort Astoria at the mouth of the Columbia River with the
intention of starting a chain of Pacific Fur Company
trading posts along the river. In the War of 1812, the British gained control of all of the Pacific Fur Company
posts.
By the 1820s and 1830s, the British Hudson's Bay
Company dominated the Pacific Northwest. John McLoughlin, who was
appointed the Company's Chief Factor of the Columbia District,
built Fort
Vancouver in 1825.
In 1841 the master trapper and entrepreneur Ewing Young died with
considerable wealth, with no apparent heir, and no system to
probate his estate. Doctor Ira Babcock of Jason Lee's
Methodist Mission was
elected Supreme Judge. Babcock chaired two meetings in 1842 at
Champoeg?half
way between Lee's mission and Oregon City?to
discuss wolves and other
animals considered troublesome at the time. This government was
first of several acting governments of the Oregon Country (also
referred to as the Republic of Oregon) citeneeded prior to American annexation.
The Oregon Trail
infused the region with new settlers, starting in 1842–43, after
the United States agreed to jointly settle the Oregon Country with the
United Kingdom.
Cooler heads prevailed, and the Oregon boundary
dispute between the United States and British North
America was set at the 49th parallel. The Oregon Territory was
officially organized in 1848.
Settlement increased due to the Donation Land Claim
Act of 1850, in conjunction with the forced relocation of the
native population to Indian
Reservations in Oregon. The state was admitted to the Union on
February 14,
1859.
At the outbreak of the American Civil War, regular troops were withdrawn and
sent east. The First Oregon Cavalry served until June 1865.
In the 1880s, railroads
enabled marketing of the state's lumber and wheat, as well as the more rapid growth of its
cities.
Industrial expansion began in earnest following the construction of
the Bonneville
Dam in 1943 on the Columbia River. (See: State of
Jefferson, State of Klamath, State of Shasta and Cascadia.)
Oregon state ballots often include politically conservative
proposals (e.g. Those trade routes brought the term
eastward.
- In a 2004 article for the Oregon Historical Quarterly,
Professor Thomas Love and Smithsonian
linguist
Ives Goddard argue that Rogers chose the word based on exposure
to either of the Algonquian words wauregan and olighin,
both meaning "good and beautiful".
Less supported theories are based on it having a Spanish
etymology. Others have speculated that the name is related to the
kingdom of Aragon: the
major part of the Spanish soldiers that conquered the West Coast
from California to Vancouver Island in the 18th century were, in fact, from Catalonia, a principate of the
ancient Crown of
Aragon in Spain.
In 1778, Jonathan
Carver used Oregon to label the Great River of the
West in his book Travels Through the Interior Parts of North
America. this use helped establish it in modern use.
Geography
Oregon's geography may be split roughly into six areas:
- the Coast
Range,
- the Willamette Valley,
- the Cascade
Mountains
- the Klamath
Mountains,
- the Columbia River Plateau, and
- the Basin and
Range Region.
.
Oregon is 295 miles (475 km) north to south at longest
distance, and 395 miles (475 km) east to west at longest
distance. As a West Coast state, its lowest point is sea level.
Crater
Lake National Park is the state's only national park, and the
site of Crater Lake,
the deepest lake in the U.S. at 1,943 feet. Similar
federally-owned, protected recreation areas that are entirely in
Oregon include: John
Day Fossil Beds National Monument, Newberry
National Volcanic Monument, and Oregon Caves
National Monument.
Areas that are partly in Oregon and partly in neighboring states
include the California National Historic Trail, Fort
Vancouver National Historic Site, the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail, the Lewis and Clark National and State Historical
Parks, the Nez Perce National Historical Park, and the
Oregon National Historic Trail.
Oregon claims the D
River is the shortest river in the world, though the American state of
Montana makes the same
claim of its Roe
River. Oregon is also home to the smallest park in the world,
Mill Ends Park in
Portland.
Law and government
The Oregon
Country functioned as an independent republic citeneeded with a 3-person executive office and a chief
executive until August
131848, when Oregon was
annexed by the United States, at which
time a territorial government was established. Oregon maintained a
territorial government until February 141859,
when it was granted statehood.
State government
Oregon state government has a separation of
powers similar to the federal government. It has three branches, called
departments by the state's constitution:
- a legislative
department (the bicameral Oregon
Legislative Assembly),
- an executive department which includes an "administrative
department" and Oregon's governor serving as chief executive,
and
- a judicial
department, headed by the Oregon Supreme
Court.
Governors in Oregon serve four-year terms and are term limited
to two consecutive terms, but an unlimited number of total terms.
The Oregon Legislative Assembly consists of a thirty-member
State Senate
and sixty-member House. The state supreme court has
seven elected justices, including the only openly gay state supreme
court justice in the nation, Rives Kistler. The only court that may reverse or modify
a decision of the Oregon Supreme Court is the United States
Supreme Court.
Oregon is one of the few states whose legislature is
biennial. Recent
legislatures have had to be called into special session repeatedly
to address revenue shortfalls resulting from economic downturns,
bringing to a head the need for more frequent legislative
sessions.
The state maintains formal relationships with the nine federally-recognized tribal governments in
Oregon:
- Burns Paiute Tribe
- Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and
Siuslaw Indians
- Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde
- Confederated Tribes of Siletz
- Confederated Tribes of Warm
Springs
- Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian
Reservation
- Coquille
Tribe
- Cow Creek Band
of Umpqua Indians
- Klamath Indian Tribe of Oregon
Oregon adopted many electoral reforms proposed during the
Progressive Era,
due to the efforts of William S. Under his leadership, the state overwhelmingly
approved a ballot measure in 1902 that created the initiative and referendum processes for citizens to directly introduce
or approve proposed laws or amendments to the state constitution.
In following years, the primary election to select party candidates was adopted
in 1904, and in 1908 the Oregon Constitution
was amended to include recall of public officials. More recent
amendments include the nation's only doctor-assisted suicide law,
called the Death with Dignity law (which was challenged in
2005 by the Bush administration in the U.S.
Supreme Court), legalization of medical marijuana, and among
the nation's strongest anti-sprawl and pro-environment
laws.
Of the measures placed on the ballot since 1902, the people
have passed 99 of the 288 initiatives and 25 of the 61 referenda on
the ballot, though not all of them survived challenges in courts
(see Pierce v. During the same period, the legislature has
referred 363 measures to the people, of which 206 have
passed.
Oregon has been a pioneer in the use of vote-by-mail:
- 1981 The Oregon
Legislative Assembly approves experimentation with
vote-by-mail for local elections.
- 1987 Vote-by-mail
becomes permanent, with the majority of Oregon's counties
making use of it.
- 1995 Oregon becomes
the first state to conduct a federal primary election totally by mail.
- 1996 Ron Wyden, Bob Packwood's
replacement, is elected by mail with a 66% turnout.
- 1998 Through a voter
initiative, Oregonians confirm their overwhelming
support for vote-by-mail.
-
2000 Oregon becomes the
first state in the nation to conduct a presidential election entirely by mail.
The state legislature is split between the two parties,
with Republicans dominating the House of
Representatives and Democrats controlling the Senate.
The distribution, sales and consumption of alcoholic
beverages are regulated in the state by the Oregon
Liquor Control Commission. Thus, Oregon is an Alcoholic beverage control state.
Entering the Union at a time when the status of "Negroes" was very much in
question, and wishing to stay out of the looming conflict
between the Union and Confederate States, Oregon banned African Americans
from moving into the state in the vote to adopt its
Constitution (1858). in
2002, additional
language now considered racist was struck from the Oregon
Constitution by the voters of Oregon.
Federal government
Oregon is represented in the United
States legislature by two Senators and
five Representatives. (See also the historical US Congressional Delegations from Oregon.)
In the U.S. Electoral College, Oregon casts seven votes.
See United States court of appeals.
See also : United States presidential election, 2004, in
Oregon
Economy
The Willamette Valley is very fertile and,
coupled with Oregon's famous rain, gives the state a wealth of
agricultural products, including cattle, dairy products, potatoes, peppermint, and apples and other fruits. While the history of the wine production in Oregon can
be traced to before Prohibition, it became a significant industry
beginning in the 1970s and Oregon is home to ten wine
appellations, with three others straddling the
Oregon-Washington border.www.oregonwine.org/ Oregon Wine Center Due to
regional similarities of climate and soil, the grapes planted
in Oregon are often the same varieties found in the French
region of Alsace.
Vast forests have historically made Oregon one of the nation's
major timber
production and logging states, but forest fires (such as the
Tillamook
Burn), over-harvesting, and lawsuits over the proper
management of the extensive federal forest holdings have
reduced the amount of timber produced. According to the
Oregon Forest Resources Institute, timber harvested
from federal lands dropped some 96% from 1989 from 4,333
million to 173 million board feet (10,000,000 to 408,000 m³) in 2001.
Examples include Weyerhaeuser's acquisition of Willamette
Industries in January, 2002, the announcement by Louisiana Pacific
in September, 2003 that they will relocate their corporate
headquarters from Portland to Nashville,
and the experiences of small lumber towns like Gilchrist.
Tektronix was the
largest private employer in Oregon until the late 1980s. Medford is home to
two of the largest mail order companies in the country:
Bear
Creek Corporation which sells gift items under several
brands, and Musician's Friend an international catalog and
Internet retailer of music gear.
Oregon had one of the largest salmon-fishing industries in the world, although
ocean fisheries have reduced the river fisheries in recent
years. The Oregon Shakespeare Festival, held in Ashland, is a
tourist draw near its Californian border which complements the
area's scenic beauty and opportunity for outdoor
activities.
Oregon is home to a number of smaller breweries.
Oregon's gross state product is $145.35 billion as of 2005.
Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net
increase of 72,263 people, and migration within the country
produced a net increase of 77,821 people.
As of 2004, Oregon's population included 309,700 foreign-born
(accounting for 8.7% of the state population) and an estimated
90,000 illegal aliens (2.5% of the state population).
The largest reported ancestry groups in Oregon are: German (20.5%),
English
(13.2%), Irish (11.9%), American (6.2%), and Mexican
(5.5%).
Most Oregon counties are inhabited principally by residents of
European ancestry. Concentrations of Mexican-Americans are
highest in Malheur and Jefferson
counties.
6.5% of Oregon's population were reported as under 5, 24.7%
under 18, and 12.8% were 65 or older. "Non-religious" is an
umbrella term
which is sometimes synonymous with or includes elements of
atheism, agnosticism, skepticism, freethought, humanism, secular humanism,
heresy, logical
positivism, and even apathy.
2000-2003 population trends
Estimates released September 2004 show
double-digit growth in Latino and Asian American populations
since the 2000 Census. Eugene, home of the University of
Oregon, is the third largest city, closely following
Salem.www.pdx.edu/prc/annualorpopulation.html
Oregon
City was the first incorporated city west of the Rockies and later,
the first capital of the Oregon Territory, from 1848 to 1852, when the territorial capital was moved to Salem, Oregon. It
was also the end of the Oregon Trail and the site of the first public
library established west of the Rocky Mountains,
stocked with only 300 volumes. The University of
Oregon in Eugene is Oregon's flagship liberal arts
institution, while Oregon State University in Corvallis is the
flagship agricultural school. The State also has three regional
universities: Western Oregon University in Monmouth,
Southern Oregon University in Ashland, and Eastern Oregon
University in La Grande. Concordia University, Lewis &
Clark College, Marylhurst University, Reed College, Warner Pacific
College, and the National College of Natural Medicine are also in
Portland. Pacific University is in the suburb of Forest
Grove.
There are also private colleges further south in the Willamette
Valley. McMinnville has Linfield College, while nearby Newberg is home
to George
Fox University. Salem is home to two private schools,
Willamette
University and Corban College. In addition to the University of
Oregon, Eugene is home to the campuses of Northwest
Christian College and Eugene Bible
College. Colleges belonging to the state are:
- Blue Mountain Community College in
Pendleton
- Central Oregon Community College in
Bend
- Chemeketa Community College in Salem
- Clackamas Community College in Oregon
City
- Clatsop Community College in Astoria
- Columbia Gorge Community College in The
Dalles
- Klamath Community College in Klamath
Falls
- Lane Community College in Eugene
- Linn-Benton Community College in Albany, with a
campus in Corvallis
- Mount Hood Community College in Gresham
- Oregon Coast Community College in
Newport
- Portland Community College in Portland
- Rogue Community College in Grants Pass
- Southwestern Oregon Community College in
Coos Bay
- Tillamook Bay Community College in Bay
City
- Treasure Valley Community College in
Ontario
- Umpqua Community College in Roseburg
Professional sports teams
The only major professional
sports team in Oregon is the Portland Trail
Blazers of the National
Basketball Association. The Rose Garden's other tenants
include the Portland Winter Hawks, a longstanding and popular
Western
Hockey League team, and the Portland
Lumberjax, an expansion National
Lacrosse League team.
In addition to the Winter Hawks and Lumberjax, Portland has two
more minor-league sports teams who play at PGE Park. The Portland Timbers of
the USL First
Division are a very popular soccer team, and the Portland Beavers of
the Pacific
Coast League are the Triple-A club of the San Diego Padres.
The Eugene
Emeralds and the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes both play in the
Single-A Northwest League. Oregon also has four teams in the
fledgling International Basketball League: the Portland Chinooks,
Central
Oregon Hotshots, Salem Stampede, and the Eugene
Chargers.
Even with all of these professional options available, the
state's two major college teams, the Oregon Ducks and
Oregon
State Beavers remain the most popular sports entities in
the state. They are:
- State
flower: Oregon-grape (since 1899)
- State song: "Oregon, My Oregon" (written in 1920 and
adopted in 1927)
- State bird: Western Meadowlark (chosen by the state's
children in 1927)
- State tree:
Douglas-fir
(since 1939)
- State fish: Chinook salmon (since 1961)
- State rock: Thunderegg (like a geode but formed in a rhyolitic lava flow; since
1965)
- State animal: American Beaver (since 1969)
- State dance: Square dance (Adopted in 1977)
- State insect: Oregon Swallowtail
butterfly (Papilio oregonius; since
1979)
- State
fossil: Metasequoia (since 2005)
- State gemstone: Oregon sunstone, a
type of feldspar
(since 1987)
- State nut: Hazelnut (since 1989)
- State seashell: Oregon hairy triton (Fusitriton
oregonensis, a gastropod in the cymatiidae family; since 1991)
- State mushroom: Pacific Golden Chanterelle (since
1999)
- State
beverage: Milk
(since 1997)
- State fruit: Pear (since 2005)
- State motto: Alis Volat
Propriis, Latin for ?She Flies With Her Own Wings? in
1957.www.leg.state.or.us/history/motto.htm)
- State hostess: Miss Oregon (since 1969)
- State team: Portland Trail Blazers of 1990?1991 (since
1991)
See also
- Wikitravel Entry: Oregon
- Music of
Oregon
- Scouting in Oregon
-
The Begum's Millions, a Jules Verne utopian
fantasy set in Oregon
Notes and references
This web site and associated pages are not associated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Oregon Metallurgical Corporation and has no official or unofficial affiliation with Oregon Metallurgical Corporation.