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1710 results
  • Tillamook Cheese

    For many Oregonians, “Tillamook” and “cheese” are inextricably linked. For more than a hundred years, generations of dairy farmers and cheesemakers have brought economic prosperity …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Tillamook Forest Center

    The Tillamook Forest Center, located twenty-two miles east of Tillamook on Oregon Highway 6 (known as the Wilson River Highway), is a visitor information and …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Tillamook Rock Lighthouse

    Tillamook Rock Lighthouse sits on a rock a mile offshore of Tillamook Head in Clatsop County, Oregon. Operating from 1881 to 1957, the lighthouse was …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Timber Industry (essay)

    Since the 1880s, long before the mythical Paul Bunyan roamed the Northwest, the timber industry has been a driving force in the economies of Oregon …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Timberline Lodge

    Timberline Lodge is the showplace for Works Progress Administration projects in Oregon. Its construction was financed with nearly a million dollars from the WPA, with …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Timothy Woodbridge Davenport (1826-1911)

    Timothy Woodbridge “T.W.” Davenport, known as the Sage of Silverton, was a teacher, doctor, farmer, surveyor, Indian agent, storeowner, and legislator. He was also the …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Tokyo International University of America

    In May 1989, the first group of students walked through the doors of the still-uncompleted building that housed Tokyo International University of America (TIUA), adjacent …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Toledo Incident of 1925

    In 1925, a mob forced a Japanese labor crew to leave Toledo, a community of about 2,500 people on the central Oregon coast. The incident …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Tomas Svoboda (1939-)

    Tomas Svoboda is an internationally renowned composer, performer, professor, and conductor who has composed over two hundred works, including six symphonies, orchestral, choral, and vocal …

    Oregon Encyclopedia

  • Tonquin (ship)

    The Tonquin, built in 1807, was described by Edmund Fanning, its builder, as “a first-rate ship and fast sailing vessel.” The ninety-four-foot, three-masted ship was …

    Oregon Encyclopedia