词条 | Cazadero, Oregon |
释义 |
|name = Cazadero |settlement_type = Unincorporated community |image_skyline = Dam and fish ladder on the Clackamas River at Cazadero, Oregon (3230117262).jpg |imagesize = |image_caption = Dam and fish ladder at Cazadero, {{Circa}} 1904 |pushpin_map = USA Oregon#USA |pushpin_label_position = |pushpin_map_caption = Location within the state of Oregon |pushpin_mapsize = |image_map = |map_caption = Location within Clackamas county |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = United States |subdivision_type1 = State |subdivision_name1 = Oregon |subdivision_type2 = County |subdivision_name2 = Clackamas |established_title = |established_date = 1903 |unit_pref = Imperial |area_footnotes = |area_magnitude = |area_total_km2 = |area_land_km2 = |area_water_km2 = |population_as_of = 2000 |population_footnotes = |population_total = |population_density_km2 = auto |timezone = Pacific (PST) |utc_offset = -8 |timezone_DST = PDT |utc_offset_DST = -7 |elevation_footnotes = |elevation_ft = |coordinates = {{coord|45|15|59|N|122|18|22|W|type:city_region:US-OR|display=inline,title}} |postal_code_type = ZIP codes |postal_code = |area_code = |blank_name = FIPS code |blank_info = |blank1_name = GNIS feature ID |blank1_info = 1163860[1] |footnotes = }}Cazadero is an unincorporated historic locale in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States.[1] Cazadero was a station on the Estacada interurban railway line of the Portland Railway, Light and Power Company (PRL&P) and later Portland Electric Power Company (PEPCO), near where the power plant of the PEPCO-owned Cazadero Dam was located on the Clackamas River.[2] The station was named by the original promoters of the line, likely after Cazadero, California.[2] Cazadero is a Spanish word meaning "a place for the pursuit of game".[2] Cazadero post office operated from 1904–1918;[2] it was located southeast of Cazadero station, near what is now Oregon Route 224 at {{coord|45.262343|-122.296195|type:landmark_region:US-OR|display=inline}}.[3] Railway historyService to Cazadero was routed via Lents and Gresham, along the Springwater Corridor, and the Gresham–Boring–Cazadero section was built in 1903–04, with electric interurban service reaching Boring in 1903[4] and Cazadero in 1904.[5] The line was built and operated by the Oregon Water Power and Railway Company (OWP), but by 1906 OWP had been taken over the PRL&P,[5][6] which in turn was reorganized as PEPCO in 1924.[7] Cazadero station was located three stations beyond Estacada on the interurban line[6] and was the end of the line for many years, until PEPCO eventually developed the line farther up the river.[2] The interurban service was abandoned in 1933,[5] but the line remained intact and usable for freight service for many more years; for example, an excursion by railfans in an old interurban car covered the line in 1953.[8] References1. ^1 {{cite gnis|id=1163860|name=Cazadero (historical)}} {{Clackamas County, Oregon}}2. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite book |last= McArthur |first= Lewis A. |authorlink= Lewis A. McArthur |author2=Lewis L. McArthur |title= Oregon Geographic Names |origyear= 1928 |edition= 7th |year= 2003 |publisher= Oregon Historical Society Press |location= Portland, Oregon |isbn= 0-87595-277-1 |page= 182}} 3. ^{{cite gnis |id=1164258 |name=Cazadero Post Office (historical)}} 4. ^{{cite book |last= Labbe |first= John T. |title= Fares, Please: Those Portland Trolley Years |year= 1980 |publisher= The Caxton Printers |location= Caldwell, Idaho |isbn= 0-87004-287-4 |pages= 108–9}} 5. ^1 2 Thompson, Richard (2008). Willamette Valley Railways, pp. 9, 11. Arcadia Publishing. {{ISBN|978-0-7385-5601-7}}. 6. ^1 Labbe (1980), pp. 121–123. 7. ^Labbe (1980), p. 141. 8. ^"Railway Fans On Last Ride; Old No. 1101 In Final Battle" (June 23, 1953). The Oregonian, Section 3, p. 5. 3 : Unincorporated communities in Clackamas County, Oregon|Unincorporated communities in Oregon|Railway towns in Oregon |
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