Eugene, Oregon Eugene, Oregon City of Eugene Clockwise: Downtown Eugene from Skinner Butte, Lane County Farmers' Market, Hiking on Spencer Butte, University of Oregon Autzen Stadium, Delta Ponds pedestrian bridge Clockwise: Downtown Eugene from Skinner Butte, Lane County Farmers' Market, Hiking on Spencer Butte, University of Oregon Autzen Stadium, Delta Ponds pedestrian bridge Official seal of Eugene, Oregon Lane County Oregon Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Eugene Highlighted.svg Eugene, Oregon is positioned in the US Eugene, Oregon - Eugene, Oregon Eugene (/ju d i n/ yu-jeen) is a town/city of the Pacific Northwest positioned in the U.S.

As of the 2010 census, Eugene had a populace of 156,185; it is the second most crowded city in the state (after Portland) and the governmental center of county of Lane County. The Eugene-Springfield, Oregon urbane statistical region (MSA) is the 146th biggest urbane statistical region in the US and the third-largest in the state, behind the Portland Metropolitan Area and the Salem Metropolitan Area. The city's populace for 2014 was estimated to be 160,561 by the US Census. Eugene is home to the University of Oregon and Lane Community College. The town/city is also noted for its natural beauty, recreational opportunities (especially bicycling, running/jogging, rafting, and kayaking), and focus on the arts.

Eugene's official slogan is "A Great City for the Arts and Outdoors". It is also referred to as the "Emerald City" and as "Track Town, USA". The Nike corporation had its beginnings in Eugene. In 2021, the town/city will host the 18th Track and Field World Championships. 8.1 Eugene City Council The first citizens to settle in the Eugene region were known as the Kalapuyans, also written Calapooia or Calapooya.

When crop activities waned, they returned to their winter villages and took up hunting, fishing, and trading. They were known as the Chifin Kalapuyans and called the Eugene region where they lived "Chifin", sometimes recorded as "Chafin" or "Chiffin". Other Kalapuyan tribes occupied villages that are also now inside Eugene town/city limits.

According to archeological evidence, the ancestors of the Kalapuyans may have been in Eugene for as long as 10,000 years. In the 1800s their traditional way of life faced momentous shifts due to devastating epidemics and settlement, first by French fur traders and later by an overwhelming number of United States colonists. This balance was further altered over the next several years by the arrival of Anglo-American settlers, beginning in 1840 with 13 citizens and burgeoning exponentially each year until inside 20 years more than 11,000 US colonists, including Eugene Skinner, had arrived. Eugene Skinner Eugene Franklin Skinner, after whom Eugene is named, appeared in the Willamette Valley in 1846 with 1200 other colonists that year.

It was relocated in 1853 and titled Eugene City in 1853. Formally incorporated as a town/city in 1862, it was titled simply Eugene in 1889. Skinner ran a ferry service athwart the Willamette River where the Ferry Street Bridge now stands.

The part of south Eugene known as College Hill was the former locale of Columbia College.

The town raised the initial funding to start a enhance university, which later became the University of Oregon, with the hope of turning the small town into a center of learning.

Eugene bested the close-by town of Albany in the competition for the state university.

Eugene interval quickly throughout most of the twentieth century, with the exception being the early 1980s when a downturn in the timber trade caused high unemployment.

By 1985, the trade had recovered and Eugene began to attract more high-tech industries.

The flat-roofed buildings of downtown Eugene in front of Spencer Butte, a prominent forested hill According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 43.74 square miles (113.29 km2), of which 43.72 square miles (113.23 km2) is territory and 0.02 square miles (0.05 km2) is water. Eugene is positioned at an altitude of 426 feet (130 m).

Mount Pisgah is southeast of Eugene and includes Mount Pisgah Arboretum and Howard Buford Recreation Area, a Lane County Park.

Eugene is surrounded by foothills and forests to the south, east, and west, while to the north the territory levels out into the Willamette Valley and consists of mostly farmland.

The Willamette and Mc - Kenzie Rivers run through Eugene and its neighboring city, Springfield.

Eugene Yacht Club hosts a sailing school and sailing regattas at Fern Ridge amid summer months. Eugene has 23 neighborhood associations: West Eugene Eugene Like the rest of the Willamette Valley, Eugene lies in the Marine West Coast climate zone, with Mediterranean characteristics.

Eugene's average annual temperature is 52.1 F (11.2 C), and annual rain at 50.9 inches (1,290 mm). Eugene is slightly cooler on average than Portland.

Even with being positioned about 100 miles (160 km) south and having only a slightly higher elevation, Eugene has a more continental climate, less subject to the maritime air that blows inland from the Pacific Ocean via the Columbia River.

Eugene's average August low is 50.8 F (10.4 C), while Portland's average August low is 56.5 F (13.6 C). Average winter temperatures (and summer high temperatures) are similar for the two cities.

Climate data for Eugene, Oregon (Eugene Airport), 1981 2010 normals Average snowy days ( 0.1 in) 0.4 0.7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.1 0.5 1.7 Eugene is downwind of Willamette Valley grass seed farms. The combination of summer grass pollen and the confining shape of the hills around Eugene make it "the region of the highest grass pollen counts in the USA (>1,500 pollen grains/m3 of air)." These high pollen counts have led to problem for some track athletes who compete in Eugene.

In the Olympic trials in 1972, "Jim Ryun won the 1,500 after being flown in by helicopter because he was allergic to Eugene's grass seed pollen." Further, six-time Olympian Maria Mutola abandoned Eugene as a training region "in part to avoid allergies". According to the 2010 census, Eugene's populace was 156,185. The populace density was 3,572.2 citizens per square mile.

The census of 2000 showed that there were 137,893 citizens , 58,110 homeholds, and 31,321 families residing in the town/city of Eugene.

Religious establishments of higher learning in Eugene include Northwest Christian University and New Hope Christian College.

New Hope Christian College (formerly Eugene Bible College) originated with the Bible Standard Conference in 1915, which joined with Open Bible Evangelistic Association to problematic Open Bible Standard Churches in 1932.

Eugene Bible College was started from this boss by Fred Hornshuh in 1925. There are two Eastern Orthodox Church churches in Eugene: St John the Wonderworker Orthodox Christian Church in the Historic Whiteaker Neighborhood and Saint George Greek Orthodox Church. There are six Roman Catholic churches in Eugene as well: St.

Eugene also has a Ukrainian Catholic Church titled Nativity of the Mother of God. The Eugene region has a sizeable LDS Church presence, with three stakes, consisting of 23 congregations (wards and chapters). The Portland Oregon Temple is the nearest temple. The Reconstructionist Temple Beth Israel is Eugene's biggest Jewish congregation. It was also, for many decades, Eugene's only Jewish church, until Orthodox members broke away in 1992 and formed "Congregation Ahavas Torah". Eugene has a improve of some 140 Sikhs, who have established a Sikh temple. The 340-member congregation of the Unitarian Universalist Church in Eugene (UUCE) purchased the former Eugene Scottish Rite Temple in May 2010, renovated it, and began services there in September 2012.

About 82% of Eugene inhabitants are eligible voters.

In January 2006, the FBI conducted Operation Backfire, dominant to federal indictment of eleven citizens , all members of a Eugene-based cell of the Earth Liberation Front (ELF). Operation Backfire was the biggest investigation into radical underground surroundingal groups in United States history. Ongoing trials of accused eco-terrorists kept Eugene in the spotlight for a several years. Anarchists at an Occupy Eugene event in November, 2011 Some Eugene anarchists attained international notoriety in 1999 for their perceived part in the violent protests at the WTO Conference in Seattle. Eugene resident John Zerzan, an editor of the Green Anarchy magazine, has been associated with the expansion of the green anarchist boss and with the philosophy behind black bloc tactics of the Seattle riots. During a Reclaim the Streets event in 1999, some protesters blocked downtown streets and smashed the windows of three stores and threw stones and bottles at police. Following those protests, then-mayor Jim Torrey described the town/city as "the anarchist capital of the United States." Eugene's biggest employers are Peace - Health Medical Group, the University of Oregon, and the Eugene School District. Eugene's biggest industries are wood products manufacturing and recreational vehicle manufacturing. Emporium Department Stores, which was established in North Bend, Oregon, had its command posts in Eugene but closed all stores in 2002.

Organically Grown Company, the biggest distributor of organic fruits and vegetables in the northwest, started in Eugene in 1978 as a non-profit co-op for organic farmers.

Until July 2008, Hynix Semiconductor America had directed a large semiconductor plant in west Eugene.

The footwear repair product Shoe Goo is produced by Eclectic Products, based in Eugene.

Burley Design LLC produces bicycle trailers and was established in Eugene by Alan Scholz out of a Saturday Market company in 1978.

Eugene is also the place of birth and home of Bike Friday bicycle manufacturer Green Gear Cycling.

Many multinational businesses were launched in Eugene.

In 2012, the Eugene metro region was dubbed the Silicon Shire.

According to Eugene's 2015 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the city's top employers are: 4 City of Eugene 1,369 8 Eugene School District 4 - J 1,163 A vendor's craft booth at the Eugene Saturday Market Eugene has a momentous population of citizens in pursuit of alternative ideas and a large initial hippie population. Beginning in the 1960s, the countercultural ideas and viewpoints espoused by Ken Kesey became established as the seminal elements of the vibrant civil tapestry that continue to define Eugene. The Merry Prankster, as Kesey was known, has arguably left the most indelible imprint of any cultural icon in his hometown.

In 2005, the town/city council unanimously allowed a new slogan for the city: "World's Greatest City for the Arts & Outdoors".

While Eugene has a vibrant arts improve for a town/city its size, and is well situated near many outside opportunities, this slogan was incessantly criticized by locals as embarrassing and ludicrous. In early 2010, the slogan was changed to "A Great City for the Arts & Outdoors." Eugene's Saturday Market, open every Saturday from April through November, was established in 1970 as the first "Saturday Market" in the United States. It is adjoining to the Lane County Farmer's Market in downtown Eugene.

Eugene is noted for its "community inventiveness." trends in improve evolution originated in Eugene.

The University of Oregon's participatory planning process, known as The Oregon Experiment, was the result of student protests in the early 1970s.

Some research for the book A Pattern Language, which inspired the Design Patterns boss and Extreme Programming, was done by Alexander in Eugene.

In the 1970s, Eugene was packed with cooperative and improve projects.

It is possible to see Eugene's trend-setting non-profit tendencies in much newer projects, such as the Tango Center and the Center for Appropriate Transport.

In 2006, an initiative began to problematic a tenant-run evolution process for downtown Eugene.

In the fall of 2003, neighbors noticed that "an unassuming two-acre remnant orchard tucked into the Friendly Area Neighborhood" had been put up for sale by its owner, a resident of New York City. Learning that a prospective buyer had plans to build a several homes on the property, they formed a nonprofit organization called Madison Meadow in June 2004 in order to buy the property and "preserve it as undeveloped space in perpetuity." In 2007 their accomplishment was titled Third Best Community Effort by the Eugene Weekly, and by the end of 2008 they had raised enough cash to purchase the property. The City of Eugene has an active Neighborhood Program.

A 65-tree filbert grove on enhance property is being restored by citizen volunteers in cooperation with the town/city of Eugene.

Asian Celebration, presented by the Asian Council of Eugene and Springfield, takes place in February at the Lane County Fairgrounds.

A part of Eugene LGBT culture since 1993, it provides a lighthearted and supportive civil venue for the LGBT community, families, and friends.

Eugene Celebration is a three-day block party that usually takes place in the downtown region in August or September.

The SLUG Queen coronation in August, a pageant with a campy spin, crowns a new SLUG Queen who "rains" over the Eugene Celebration Parade and is an unofficial ambassador of Eugene. Eugene exhibitions include the University of Oregon's Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art and Museum of Natural and Cultural History, the Oregon Air and Space Museum, Conger Street Clock Museum, Lane County Historical Museum, Maude Kerns Art Center, Shelton Mc - Murphey Johnson House, and the Science Factory Children's Museum & Planetarium.

Eugene is home to various cultural organizations, including the Eugene Symphony, the Eugene Ballet, the Eugene Opera, the Eugene Concert Choir, the Northwest Christian University Community Choir, the Oregon Mozart Players, the Oregon Bach Festival, the Oregon Children's Choir, the Eugene Youth Symphony, Ballet Fantastique and Oregon Festival of American Music.

A number of live theater groups are based in Eugene, including Free Shakespeare in the Park, Oregon Contemporary Theatre, The Very Little Theatre, Actors Cabaret, LCC Theatre, and University Theatre. Each has its own performance venue.

Main article: Music of Oregon Eugene Because of its status as a college town, Eugene has been home to many music genres, musicians and bands, ranging from electronic dance music such as dubstep and drum and bass to garage rock, hip hop, folk and heavy metal.

Eugene also has a burgeoning reggae and street-performing bluegrass and jug band scene.

Multi-genre act the Cherry Poppin' Daddies became a prominent figure in Eugene's music scene and became the home band at Eugene's W.O.W.

Eugene is home to "Classical Gas" Composer and two-time Grammy award winner Mason Williams who spent his years as a youth living between his parents in Oakridge, Oregon and Oklahoma.

Eugene is also home to a large Zimbabwean music community.

Kutsinhira Cultural Arts Center, which is "dedicated to the music and citizens of Zimbabwe," is based in Eugene.

Eugene's visual arts improve is supported by over 20 private art arcades and a several organizations, including Maude Kerns Art Center, Lane Arts Council, DIVA (the Downtown Initiative for the Visual Arts), the Hult Center's Jacobs Gallery, and the Eugene Glass School.

The Eugene region has been used as a recording locale for a several Hollywood films, most famously for 1978's National Lampoon's Animal House, which was also filmed in close-by Cottage Grove.

John Belushi had the idea for the film The Blues Brothers amid recording of Animal House when he happened to meet Curtis Salgado at what was then the Eugene Hotel. Nicholson directed the 1971 film Drive, He Said in Eugene.

James, was filmed in Eugene in the fall of 1979.

Several track and field movies have used Eugene as a setting and/or a recording location.

Personal Best, starring Mariel Hemingway, was filmed in Eugene in 1982.

Prefontaine was filmed in Washington because the Without Limits manufacturing bought out Hayward Field for the summer to prevent its competition from shooting there. Kenny Moore also wrote a biography of Bill Bowerman, played in Without Limits by Donald Sutherland back in Eugene 20 years after he had appeared in Animal House.

Stealing Time, a 2003 autonomous film, was partially filmed in Eugene.

Zerophilia was filmed in Eugene in 2006.

"Welcome to Track Town USA" sign in Eugene.

Eugene's Oregon Ducks are part of the Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12).

American football is especially popular, with intense rivalries between the Ducks and both the Oregon State University Beavers and the University of Washington Huskies. Autzen Stadium is home to Duck football, with a seating capacity of 54,000 but has had over 60,000 with standing room only. For nearly 40 years, Eugene has been the "Track and Field Capital of the World." Eugene's jogging trails include Pre's Trail in Alton Baker Park, Rexius Trail, the Adidas Oregon Trail, and the Ridgeline Trail.

Through Eugene, brought from New Zealand by Bill Bowerman, who wrote the best-selling book "Jogging", and coached the champion University of Oregon track and cross nation teams.

Bowerman also invented the waffle sole for running shoes in Eugene, and with Oregon alumnus Phil Knight established shoe enormous Nike.

Eugene's miles of running trails, through its unusually large park system, are the most extensive in the U.S.

Eugene is home to the University of Oregon's Hayward Field track, which hosts various collegiate and amateur track and field meets throughout the year, most prominently the Prefontaine Classic.

On April 16, 2015, it was announced by the IAAF that Eugene had been awarded the right to host the 2021 World Championships in Athletics. The town/city had previously bid for the 2019 event but lost narrowly to Doha, Qatar.

Eugene is also home to the Eugene Emeralds, a short-season Class A minor-league baseball team.

The Nationwide Tour's golfing event Oregon Classic takes place at Shadow Hills Country Club, just north of Eugene.

The Eugene Jr.

The following table lists some sports clubs in Eugene and their usual home venue: Eugene Emeralds Baseball 1955 Northwest League PK Park Lane Community College Titans Basketball, Cross Country, Track and Field, Soccer, Baseball 1965 Northwest Athletic Association of Community Colleges Lane Community College Eugene Gentlemen Rugby 1973 Pacific Northwest Rugby Football Union Eugene Chargers Basketball 2006 International Basketball League Morse Event Center Eugene Generals Ice hockey 2005 Junior A Tier III-League Hockey: Northern Pacific Hockey League Lane County Ice Center Spencer Butte Park at the southern edge of town provides access to Spencer Butte, a dominant feature of Eugene's skyline.

The town/city of Eugene maintains an urban forest.

The nearest ski resort, Willamette Pass, is one hour from Eugene by car.

Eugene inhabitants also incessant Hoodoo and Mount Bachelor ski resorts.

In 1944, Eugene adopted a council-manager form of government, replacing the day-to-day management of town/city affairs by the part-time mayor and volunteer town/city council with a full-time experienced town/city manager.

The subsequent history of Eugene town/city government has largely been one of the dynamics often contentious between the town/city manager, the mayor and town/city council.

The current mayor of Eugene is Lucy Vinis, who has been in office since winning the prominent vote in 2017.

Eugene City Council The Eugene Police Department (EPD) is the city's law enforcement and enhance safety agency. The Lane County Sheriff's Office also has its command posts in Eugene. The University of Oregon is served by the University of Oregon Police Department (UOPD), and EPD has a police station in the West University District near campus.

Lane Community College is served by the Lane Community College Public Safety Department. The Oregon State Police have a existence in the non-urban areas and highways around the Eugene metro area. The LTD downtown station, and the Em - X lines are patrolled by G4 - S Transit Officers.

Eugene City Hall was abandoned in 2012 for reasons of structural integrity, energy efficiency, and obsolete size.

Eugene is home to the University of Oregon.

Other establishments of higher learning include Northwest Christian University, Lane Community College, New Hope Christian College, Gutenberg College, and Pacific University's Eugene campus.

The Eugene School District includes four full-service high schools (Churchill, North Eugene, Sheldon, and South Eugene) and many alternative education programs, such as global schools and charter schools.

The Bethel School District serves kids in the Bethel neighborhood on the northwest edge of Eugene.

Eugene also has a several private schools, including the Eugene Waldorf School, the Outdoor High School, Eugene Montessori, Far Horizon Montessori, Eugene Sudbury School, Wellsprings Friends School, Oak Hill School, and The Little French School. Parochial schools in Eugene include Marist Catholic High School, O'Hara Catholic Elementary School, Eugene Christian School, and St.

The Eugene Public Library The biggest library in Oregon is the University of Oregon's Knight Library, with collections totaling more than 3 million volumes and over 100,000 audio and video items. The Eugene Public Library moved into a new, larger building downtown in 2002.

The four-story library is an increase from 38,000 to 130,000 square feet (3,500 to 12,100 m2). There are also two chapters of the Eugene Public Library, the Sheldon Branch Library in the neighborhood of Cal Young/Sheldon, and the Bethel Branch Library, in the neighborhood of Bethel.

Eugene also has the Lane County Law Library.

The biggest journal serving the region is The Register-Guard, a daily journal with a circulation of about 70,000, presented autonomously by the Baker family of Eugene. Other newspapers serving the region include the Eugene Weekly, the Emerald, the student-run autonomous journal at the University of Oregon, now presented on Mondays and Thursdays;The Torch, the student-run journal at Lane Community College, the Ignite, the journal at New Hope Christian College and The Mishpat, the student-run journal at Northwest Christian University.

Eugene Magazine, Lifestyle Quarterly, Eugene Living, and Sustainable Home and Garden magazines also serve the area.

Adelante Latino is a Spanish language journal in Eugene that serves all of Lane County.

KKNX 840 Eugene Oldies (Willamette Media Group) KPNW 1120 Eugene NEWS/TALK (Bicostal Media) KRVM 1280 Eugene NPR News/Talk (Eugene School District) (JPR affiliate) KLZS 1450 Eugene Comedy (Eugene Comedy Radio) KOPB 1600 Eugene NPR News/Talk (Oregon Public Broadcasting) KWVA 88.1 Eugene Freeform (University of Oregon) KLCC 89.7 Eugene NPR News/Talk/Jazz (Lane Community College) KWAX 91.1 Eugene Classical (University of Oregon) KRVM 91.9 Eugene Adult Album Alternative (AAA) (Eugene School District) KMGE 94.5 Eugene Adult Contemporary (Mc - Kenzie River Broadcasting) KZEL 96.1 Eugene Classic Rock (Cumulus) Lane Transit District's Eugene Station LTD also operates a bus rapid transit line that runs between Eugene and Springfield Emerald Express (Em - X) much of which runs in its own lane.

LTD's chief end in Eugene is at the Eugene Station.

In 2009, the League of American Bicyclists cited Eugene as 1 of 10 "Gold-level" metros/cities in the U.S.

Because of its "remarkable commitments to bicycling." In 2010, Bicycling periodical titled Eugene the 5th most bike-friendly town/city in America. The U.S.

Enumeration Bureau's annual American Community Survey reported that Eugene had a bicycle commuting mode share of 7.3% in 2011, the fifth highest percentage nationwide among U.S.

Air travel is served by the Eugene Airport, also known as Mahlon Sweet Field, which is the fifth biggest airport in the Northwest and second biggest airport in Oregon.

The Eugene Metro region also has various private airports. The Eugene Metro region also has a several heliports, such as the Sacred Heart Medical Center Heliport and Mahlon Sweet Field Heliport, and many single helipads. Highways traveling inside and through Eugene include: Interstate 5: Interstate 5 forms much of the easterly town/city limit, acting as an effective, though unofficial boundary between Eugene and Springfield.

The Eugene portion of this highway begins at an interchange with Interstate 5 and ends two miles (3 km) west at a freeway terminus.

Randy Pape Beltline: Beltline is a limited-access freeway which runs along the northern and edges of incorporated Eugene.

Oregon Route 99: Oregon Route 99 forks off Interstate 5 south of Eugene, and forms a primary surface artery in Eugene.

Eugene is the home of Oregon's biggest publicly owned water and power utility, the Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB).

EWEB got its start in the first decade of the 20th century, after an epidemic of typhoid found in the groundwater supply. The City of Eugene condemned Eugene's private water utility and began treating river water (first the Willamette; later the Mc - Kenzie) for domestic use.

Wastewater treatment services are provided by the Metropolitan Wastewater Management Commission, a partnership between the Cities of Eugene and Springfield and Lane County.

Sacred Heart Medical Center University District is the only one inside Eugene town/city limits.

Main article: List of citizens from Eugene, Oregon Notable athletes from Eugene include football players such as Todd Christensen, Quintin Mikell, Kailee Wong, Alex Brink, and Chris Miller.

Decathlete Ashton Eaton competes for the Oregon Track Club Elite team based in Eugene.

Politicians from Eugene include U.S.

Also born in Eugene was Joan Mondale, wife of Vice President Walter Mondale.

Nike co-founder Phil Knight and author Ken Kesey also called the town/city home as did poet, screenwriter and film director William De Los Santos who wrote the movie Spun while living in Eugene.

Other past inhabitants include Eugene Lazowski who saved 8,000 amid World War II, New Orleans Saints general manager Mickey Loomis, and astronaut Stanley G.

Eugene has four sister cities: "Eugene Marathon Moving to Late July for 2014".

Eugene Daily News.

"Eugene dials back its slogan".

"Eugene to Host 2021 Track World Championships".

Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University Press.

Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University Press.

Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University Press.

Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University Press.

Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University Press.

Skinner, Eugene (2009).

"Photo and text - Eugene Skinner".

"Eugene, Oregon, United States".

"Eugene Yacht Club at Fern Ridge Lake".

Eugene Yacht Club.

City of Eugene.

Name = 'A truly historic "spring" snowstorm for Eugene ' "Portland International Airport, Multnomah County, Oregon, USA".

"December Daily Averages for Eugene, OR (97404)".

"August Daily Averages for Eugene, OR (97404)".

"Average Weather for Eugene, OR Temperature and Precipitation".

"Eugene's contingent shrinking".

"Number of Inhabitants: Oregon" (PDF).

"Oregon: Population and Housing Unit Counts" (PDF).

"2010 Enumeration profiles: Oregon metros/cities alphabetically D-G" (PDF).

"Eugene (city), Oregon".

"Oregon Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places: Earliest Enumeration to 1990".

John the Wonderworker: A little church in Eugene carries on ancient traditions".

Eugene Register-Guard.

"Spiritual quest: A Eugene man pursues the priesthood in the Serbian Orthodox Church".

Eugene Register-Guard.

Eugene, Oregon, stake Portland Oregon Temple Archived August 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.

Eugene Weekly.

Unitarian Universalist Church in Eugene.

Oregon Secretary of State, October 2016 Data Eugene Weekly.

Eugene Weekly.

"Anarchists could hurt Eugene's image".

"Anarchist in Prison on Eugene Riot Anniversary".

City of Eugene.

Eugene Zip.

City of Eugene.

"Remembering Ken Kesey Eugene, Oregon, USA".

Eugene Wonders".

"Eugene, Oregon's Saturday Market".

"Eugene OR 97405- Tax Exempt Organizations and 97405 Eugene Oregon Non Profit Organizations".

"BEST OF EUGENE 2007: Tightrope Walkers and Trapeze Artists".

"Oregon Asian Celebration".

"Oregon Festival of American Music 2014".

Oregon Bach Festival "Oregon Country Fair".

"Eugene Celebration Parade and Evening Concert".

Eugene Celebration Parade.

Eugene Register-Guard.

Eugene Cascades & Coast.

"Eugene awarded 2021 IAAF World Championships".

"The history of the Oregon Classic".

City of Eugene.

"Oregon Heritage Trees".

City of Eugene.

Eugene, OR Website.

City of Eugene, Oregon.

"Eugene Police Department".

"Oregon state police".

Eugene Waldorf School "Eugene Sudbury School".

Eugene Sudbury School.

City of Eugene Public Library home page "New Eugene enhance library jubilates its first birthday".

"Eugene one of top metros/cities in country for bicycling".

"Eugene OR Receives Gold-Level from LAB".

"Eugene Earns Top Five Ranking in List of Most Bike-Friendly Cities in America" (PDF).

City of Eugene.

"City of Eugene Announcement of Opening: Airport Manager" (PDF).

City of Eugene.

FAA Registered Airports & Heliports in Eugene Area.

Eugene Water & Electric Board.

"About Oregon Medical Group".

Eugene Register-Guard Google News Archive Search City of Eugene.

Stan Bettis, Market Days; An Informal History of the Eugene Producers' Public Market.

Eugene, OR: Lane Pomona Grange Fraternal Society, 1969.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eugene, Oregon.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Eugene, Oregon.

Entry for Eugene in the Oregon Blue Book Eugene Register-Guard, Google news archive.

Municipalities and communities of Lane County, Oregon, United States

Categories:
Eugene, Oregon - Cities in Lane County, Oregon - Willamette Valley - Cities in Oregon - County seats in Oregon - University suburbs in the United States - Track and field in the United States - Populated places established in 1846 - Hippie boss - 1846 establishments in Oregon Country - Populated places on the Willamette River