Railroads of Hillsboro
Hillsboro, Oregon, always seemed destined to be an important railroad town. When the first trains arrived in Hillsboro in 1871 under the banner of the Oregon & California Railroad, the town began to develop into a key railroad junction point. Hillsboro was strategically located just 20 miles from the booming Portland metropolis, a regional center of manufacturing and trade, and by 1911, Hillsboro was where several rail lines branched off. One line headed west toward Tillamook, where the railroad tapped rich timber resources along the Oregon coast. Another line cut south into the fertile Willamette Valley, accessing prime agricultural lands that produced a bounty of wheat and other commodities. A third route carried passengers and goods to and from Portland and the neighboring communities of Cornelius and Forest Grove. As these routes developed, heavy volumes of freight began rolling into Hillsboro. At the same time, travelers moved through Hillsboro on passenger trains, including the Southern Pacific Railroad�s famed �Red Electrics� and the Oregon Electric Railway�s interurbans, which advertised passenger service with �no soot and no cinders.�
1119641881
Railroads of Hillsboro
Hillsboro, Oregon, always seemed destined to be an important railroad town. When the first trains arrived in Hillsboro in 1871 under the banner of the Oregon & California Railroad, the town began to develop into a key railroad junction point. Hillsboro was strategically located just 20 miles from the booming Portland metropolis, a regional center of manufacturing and trade, and by 1911, Hillsboro was where several rail lines branched off. One line headed west toward Tillamook, where the railroad tapped rich timber resources along the Oregon coast. Another line cut south into the fertile Willamette Valley, accessing prime agricultural lands that produced a bounty of wheat and other commodities. A third route carried passengers and goods to and from Portland and the neighboring communities of Cornelius and Forest Grove. As these routes developed, heavy volumes of freight began rolling into Hillsboro. At the same time, travelers moved through Hillsboro on passenger trains, including the Southern Pacific Railroad�s famed �Red Electrics� and the Oregon Electric Railway�s interurbans, which advertised passenger service with �no soot and no cinders.�
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Railroads of Hillsboro

Railroads of Hillsboro

by D.C. Jesse Burkhardt
Railroads of Hillsboro

Railroads of Hillsboro

by D.C. Jesse Burkhardt

eBook

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Overview

Hillsboro, Oregon, always seemed destined to be an important railroad town. When the first trains arrived in Hillsboro in 1871 under the banner of the Oregon & California Railroad, the town began to develop into a key railroad junction point. Hillsboro was strategically located just 20 miles from the booming Portland metropolis, a regional center of manufacturing and trade, and by 1911, Hillsboro was where several rail lines branched off. One line headed west toward Tillamook, where the railroad tapped rich timber resources along the Oregon coast. Another line cut south into the fertile Willamette Valley, accessing prime agricultural lands that produced a bounty of wheat and other commodities. A third route carried passengers and goods to and from Portland and the neighboring communities of Cornelius and Forest Grove. As these routes developed, heavy volumes of freight began rolling into Hillsboro. At the same time, travelers moved through Hillsboro on passenger trains, including the Southern Pacific Railroad�s famed �Red Electrics� and the Oregon Electric Railway�s interurbans, which advertised passenger service with �no soot and no cinders.�

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439647059
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 09/01/2014
Series: Images of Rail
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 74 MB
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About the Author

Author D.C. Jesse Burkhardt is associate editor of the Hillsboro Tribune, the city�s weekly community newspaper. He lives in Aloha, an unincorporated community that borders Hillsboro, with his wife and daughter.
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