Hillsboro, Oregon Hillsboro, Oregon Official logo of Hillsboro, Oregon Location of Hillsboro in the state of Oregon Location of Hillsboro in the state of Oregon Hillsboro, Oregon is positioned in the US Hillsboro, Oregon - Hillsboro, Oregon Hillsboro (/ h lzb ro /) is the fifth-largest town/city in the State of Oregon and is the governmental center of county of Washington County. Lying in the Tualatin Valley on the west side of the Portland urbane area, the town/city hosts many high-technology companies, such as Intel, that comprise what has turn into known as the Silicon Forest.
Hillsboro has a council manager government consisting of a town/city manager and a town/city council headed by a mayor.
In addition to high-tech industry, sectors meaningful to Hillsboro's economy are community care, retail sales, and agriculture, including grapes and wineries.
The town/city operates more than twenty parks and the mixed-use Hillsboro Stadium, and ten sites in the town/city are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).
Modes of transit include private vehicles, enhance buses and light rail, and airplane using the Hillsboro Airport.
The European-American improve was established by David Hill, Isaiah Kelsey, and Richard Williams, who appeared in the Tualatin Valley in 1841, followed by six more pioneers in 1842. The locality went by two other names East Tualatin Plains and Columbia before it was titled "Hillsborough" in February 1850 with respect to Hill, when he sold part of his territory claim to the county. On February 5, 1850, commissioners chosen by the territorial council chose the improve to be the seat of the county government. Hill was to be paid $200 for his territory after plots had been sold for the town site, but he died before this occurred, and his widow Lucinda received the funds. The town's name was later simplified to Hillsboro.
A log cabin was assembled in 1853 to serve as the community's first school, which opened in October 1854. Riverboats provided transit to Hillsboro as early as 1867 when the side-wheel steamer Yamhill worked on the Tualatin River. In 1871, the Oregon and California Railroad line was extended to the area, but it ran just south of town because the town/city did not want to give the barns territory in exchange for the rail connection. Hillsboro was incorporated as the Town of Hillsboro on October 19, 1876, by the Oregon Legislature. The first mayor was A.
Hare (1885). In 1923, the town/city altered its charter and adopted a council-manager government with a six-person town/city council, a part-time mayor who determined primary policies, and a town/city manager who ran day-to-day operations. On September 30, 1908, 5,000 citizens gathered as the Oregon Electric Railway opened a connection between the town/city and Portland with an interurban electric rail line, the first to reach the community. In January 1914, the Southern Pacific Railroad introduced its own interurban service, known as the Red Electric, on a separate line and serving different communities between Hillsboro and Portland. SP discontinued its Hillsboro service on July 28, 1929, while the Oregon Electric Railway's passenger service to Hillsboro lasted until July 1932. The city's first fire department was a hook and ladder business organized in 1880 by the board of trustees (now town/city council). A drinking water and electricity distribution fitness added in 1892 93 gave the town three fire hydrants and minimal street lighting. Hillsboro assembled its first sewage fitness in 1911, but sewage treatment was not added until 1936. In 1913, the town/city assembled its own water system, and the first library, Carnegie City Library, opened in December 1914. From 1921 to 1952, the world's second-tallest radio fortress stood on the south side of the city, but in 1952, the wireless telegraph fortress was demolished.
In 1972, the Hillsboro City Council passed a Green River Ordinance banning door-to-door solicitation, but it was ruled unconstitutional by the Oregon Supreme Court in a 1988 decision. The court determined that the town/city ordinance was overly broad, in a case that was seen as a test case for many similar laws in the state. In 1979, Intel opened its first facility in Hillsboro. The Hawthorn Farm ground was followed by the Jones Farm ground adjoining to the airport in 1982, and finally by the Ronler Acres ground in 1994. Tri - Met opened a Metropolitan Area Express (MAX) light rail line into the town/city in 1998.
Properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in and around Hillsboro include the Old Scotch Church, instead of in 1876 north of the city. Near the Orenco neighborhood is Imbrie Farm, which includes a home assembled in 1866 and the Frank Imbrie Barn, both of which Mc - Menamins converted for use as a brewpub. Built in 1935, the Harold Wass Ray House is near Intel's Hawthorn Farm campus. Historic properties in downtown include the Zula Linklater House (completed 1923), Rice Gates House (1890), Edward Schulmerich House (c.
1908). The Richard and Helen Rice House is adjoining to the Sunset Highway on the north side of the town/city and homes the Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals. The Old Washington County Jail had been at the Washington County Fairgrounds in the city, but was restored and moved to the Washington County Museum outside the town/city in 2004, and was de-listed from the NRHP in 2008. In 2007, the Manning Kamna Farm was added to the NRHP and includes 10 buildings, dating to as early as 1883. The Malcolm Mc - Donald House in Orenco was added to the Registry in 2015. Map of Hillsboro with eight planning areas designated in different colors.
Map of Hillsboro and neighborhoods as of February 2008 Hillsboro is positioned at 45 31 N 122 59 W. The United States Enumeration Bureau reports the town/city has a total region of 21.6 square miles (55.9 km2), all of which is land.
In 2013, Hillsboro itself reported an region of 23.88 square miles (61.8 km2), equivalent to 15,283 acres (61.8 km2). The town/city is positioned in the Tualatin Valley, and the Tualatin River forms part of the southern town/city limits.
The city's terrain is fairly level, consistent with an agricultural past and the farms still in operation. Hillsboro is about 17 miles (27 km) west of Portland and immediately west of Beaverton, at an altitude of 194 feet (59 m) above sea level. In addition to the Tualatin River, streams include Dairy Creek, Mc - Kay Creek, Rock Creek, Dawson Creek, and Turner Creek.
Hillsboro's street fitness differs from many the rest in the county. Most metros/cities in Washington County use a numbering fitness and cardinal direction orientation based on a grid that begins at the Willamette River in downtown Portland, which was originally part of Washington County. For example, the street names in Beaverton generally include Southwest (SW) prefixes because Beaverton lies in the southwest quadrant of the Portland grid.
In Hillsboro, some county road names and addresses conform to the Portland grid freshwater Hillsboro's internal cardinal direction grid, and the town/city has been working to make addresses and streets inside Hillsboro conform to the internal grid. The internal grid in Hillsboro centers on the downtown intersection of Main Street, which runs east west, and First Avenue, which runs north south.
Main Street is simply designated as East Main or West Main, and First Avenue is only North First or South First. Addresses on the streets' south side and the avenues' east side have even numbers, while odd numbers are on the opposite side. Hillsboro's street fitness contains 20 blocks per mile (12.5 blocks per kilometer). The town/city is divided into eight planning areas, each of which contains a several neighborhoods. The east planning region contains the Tanasbourne neighborhood and Oregon Health & Science University's West Campus. The northeast planning region includes the Orenco, Orenco Station, Airport, and West Union neighborhoods. Jackson School, Sunrise, and Glencoe neighborhoods lie in the northwest area, and the Dennis, Garibaldi, and Connell neighborhoods are in the west area. The central region includes the Downtown, Jackson Bottom, Henry, and Eastwood neighborhoods. Blocks in the downtown core are 400 feet (120 m) long on each side. The Minter Bridge, Rood Bridge, and River Road neighborhoods are in the south planning area; the southeast region consists of the Reedville and Witch Hazel neighborhoods, and the Brookwood planning region in the center of the town/city contains the Cedar, Bentley, and Brogden neighborhoods. Landmarks in Hillsboro include the Washington County Courthouse, the seat of county government. Along the edge of the town/city is Hillsboro Pioneer Cemetery, established in 1870, which serves as the final resting place of town/city pioneers and politicians. Next to the airport is the Washington County Fair Complex, home to the annual county fair. Located at Shute Park is the 25-foot (7.6 m) tall wood sculpture Chief Kno-Tah, donated to Hillsboro and dedicated in 1987 as part of Peter Wolf Toth's Trail of the Whispering Giants. Summers in Hillsboro are generally warm, but temperatures year-round are moderated by a marine influence from the Pacific Ocean. The Willamette Valley in which Hillsboro lies receives the majority of its rain amid the winter months, with the wettest reconstructionfrom November through March. This occasionally includes snowfall. Hillsboro receives rain on 161 days per year, on average. The average annual rain between 1930 and 1998 was 38 inches (970 mm). August is the warmest month with an average high temperature of 81 F (27 C), while January is the coolest month with an average high of 46 F (8 C). The highest recorded temperature, 108 F (42 C), occurred on July 19, 1956, and the lowest, 10 F ( 23 C), occurred on January 31, 1950. According to the Koppen climate classification system, Hillsboro has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Koppen Csb).
Climate data for Hillsboro Hillsboro's populace interval from 402 in 1880 to 2,016 by 1910, making it the county's most populated city, as stated to the 1910 census data. By 1970, it had increased to more than 15,000, although neighboring Beaverton had overtaken it as the county's most crowded city. By 1990 there were more than 37,000 residents, and commuters raised this to 110,000 amid daytime. At the 2010 Census, the populace was 91,611, fifth in project among the state's biggest cities behind Portland, Eugene, Salem and Gresham and slightly ahead of Beaverton, which ranked sixth. This figure was a 30.5 percent increase from Hillsboro's 70,186 inhabitants in 2000, which made Hillsboro the fourth fastest-growing town/city in the state amid the 2000s (decade), and the fastest-growing town/city in the Willamette Valley over the same period.
In 2007, there were 17,126 homes lived in by their owners, with an average home price in the town/city of $246,900. Bloomberg Businessweek listed the town/city as the fastest-growing in Oregon for the reconstructionbetween 1990 and 2010, for metros/cities with populations over 10,000. The ethnic makeup of the town/city was approximately 73% White, 2% African American, 1% Native American, 9% Asian, less than 1% Pacific Islander, 10% from other competitions, and 5% from two or more competitions.
Hillsboro's town/city hall is positioned in the six story glass and brick Civic Center.
Hillsboro's Civic Center and City Hall Males had a median income of $41,000 compared to $30,000 for females. The per capita income for the town/city was about $22,000. Approximately 6% of families and 9% of the populace were below the poverty line, including 11% of those under age 18 and 8% of those age 65 or over. In 2007, 28% of citizens 25 and older held at least a bachelor's degree, while an additional 11% held an associate degree. Those with less than a high school diploma made up 15% of the population, and 22% of inhabitants had more than a high school diploma but less than a college degree. Hillsboro
Property crimes include arson, motor vehicle theft, larceny, and burglary. Statistics presented by the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission showed a slight downward trend in the Washington County crime rate between 1991 and 2005.
Hillsboro School District 2,570 City of Hillsboro 734 Manufacturing is the dominant employment zone in Hillsboro, employing 24% of the workforce, followed by community care, education, and civil services with a total of 15%. One example of a manufacturer headquartered in Hillsboro is Beaverton Foods, a family-owned condiment manufacturer since 1929, with 70+ employees and $25 million in annual sales; it moved to its current command posts in 2001. Retail employment constitutes 12%, assembly makes up 7%, and 13% of workers are working in the administrative, scientific, professional, or waste management industries. Sixty-eight percent of workers commute alone to the workplace, and eight percent use enhance transportation. The average one-way commute time is about 24 minutes. Many technology companies operate in Hillsboro, making it the center of Oregon's Silicon Forest. In particular, Intel's biggest site is in Hillsboro, and includes three large campuses: Ronler Acres, Jones Farm, and Hawthorn Farm, along with a several smaller campuses that employ about 16,000 workers. Other high-tech companies operating facilities in Hillsboro include Synopsys, Epson, Salesforce, and Oracle's (formerly Sun Microsystems) High-End Operations.
Hillsboro is the corporate command posts for Radi - Sys and Planar Systems among others. In 2006, Genentech announced plans to locate a packaging and distribution facility on 100 acres (0.40 km2) in Hillsboro. The $400 million facility opened in 2010, which Oregon officials hoped would eventually also be used for research and evolution for the biotechnology company. Other biotech or medical companies based in Hillsboro include FEI Company and Acumed. Hillsboro serves as the corporate command posts for Rodgers Instruments, Soloflex, Norm Thompson Outfitters, Sure - ID, and Parr Lumber, among others.
Fujitsu and NEC Corporation formerly had factories in Hillsboro. Hillsboro is also home to the Laika stop-motion animation studio, creator of the Oscar-nominated feature films Coraline (2009) and Paranorman (2012). The Hatfield Government Center in Hillsboro is the end of the MAX Blue Line, part of the Portland urbane area's light-rail system. The existence of MAX prompted the evolution of the pedestrian-oriented improve of Orenco Station inside Hillsboro. (See also: Orenco, Oregon.) Orenco Station was called the Best Planned Community of 1999 by the National Association of Home Builders. It was also titled "Best new burb" by Sunset periodical in 2006. Hillsboro overall was listed on CNN Money Magazine's list of best places to live in 2010 for metros/cities with populations between 50,000 and 300,000 residents. The town/city came in at 92, the highest ranking for any town/city in the state. The other large shopping center in the town/city is The Sunset Esplanade, positioned along Tualatin Valley Highway. In November 2005, the world's biggest Costco, a warehouse club store, opened in Hillsboro. The store, with 205,000 square feet (19,000 m2) of floor space, is about 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2) bigger than the average Costco. Wineries near the town/city include Oak Knoll Winery, established in 1970, the earliest and biggest winery in Washington County. Helvetia Winery & Vineyards to the north of Hillsboro started in the 1980s. Wineries to the south include Gypsy Dancer Estates Winery and Raptor Ridge. Local wines include pinot noir, pinot gris, and chardonnay. This includes the Venetian Theatre that re-opened at the site of the old Town Theater in 2008. The Oregon Chorale (a 60-person symphonic choir), a men's barbershop chorus, the Hillsboro Symphony Orchestra, and the Hillsboro Artists' Regional Theatre are also positioned in Hillsboro. The orchestra was established in 2001 under the direction of Stefan Minde. In 2004, the town/city opened the Glenn & Viola Walters Cultural Arts Center in a remodeled church in downtown. The center provides space for arcades and performances, as well as classrooms for art instruction. The Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals is positioned on the northern edge of the city. The Washington County Museum returned to downtown Hillsboro in 2012 when it moved into the Civic Center. Opened in 2007 after a lesser locale was closed, the 38,000-square-foot (3,500 m2) chief branch is positioned in the north-central section of the city. The older, lesser second branch is in Shute Park in the southwest region of the city.
The Hillsboro libraries are part of Washington County Cooperative Library Services, which allows inhabitants to use other libraries in the county and includes interlibrary loans. AM airways broadcast KUIK and the Hillsboro Tribune (launched in 2012) are based in Hillsboro.
Historically, the city's longtime journal of record was the weekly Hillsboro Argus journal (published twice-weekly from 1953 2015). It was presented in Hillsboro for more than 120 years until its discontinuation in 2017.
The Tribune started in September 2012 and now prints weekly. The town/city is also served by Portland-area media outlets including The Oregonian, Willamette Week, and all broadcast stations. Hillsboro's Department of Parks and Recreation operates more than 20 facilities, including Hillsboro Stadium.
There are 23 parks, two sports complexes, the Walters Cultural Arts Center, the Shute Park Aquatic & Recreation Center, and three other mixed-use facilities. The town/city also owns the Jackson Bottom Wetlands Preserve along the Tualatin River on the south side of the community. South of town/city is Bald Peak State Scenic Viewpoint, which is day-use only, and is the closest state park to Hillsboro.
Hillsboro's annual Fourth of July Parade is the second-largest Independence Day parade in Oregon. The Oregon International Air Show, Oregon's biggest air show, is held each year amid the summer at the Hillsboro Airport. Each summer the town/city offers a no-charge concert series at Shute Park (Showtime at Shute), while the Washington County Fair is held annually at the county fairgrounds adjoining to the airport. Hillsboro Farmers' Markets operates weekend farmers' markets on Saturdays downtown and on Sundays at Orenco Station, from May to October. The Saturday market began in 1982 and sells arts and crafts, food, produce, and plants. A different organization, Hillsboro Tuesday Marketplace, operates a downtown farmers' market on Tuesdays from mid-June through September 1. Farmers' markets also operate on Wednesday afternoons from June through August at Kaiser Permanente and on Thursday afternoons at Tuality Hospital from June through August. The town/city has one experienced sports team, the Hillsboro Hops of the Northwest League, a Minor League Baseball club affiliated with the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Hillsboro operates under a council manager form of town/city government.
Voters elect six at-large councilors and a mayor, who each serve four-year terms, subject to a charter-imposed limitation of two consecutive terms. The mayor and council appoint a town/city manager to conduct the ordinary company of the city.
Administrative functions are carried out by the manager and manager-appointed staff. Government functions are centered at the Hillsboro Civic Center, which homes the office of the town/city manager and is the locale of the twice-monthly town/city council meetings. As of November 2015, Jerry Willey was mayor with Darell Lumaco, Rick Van Beveren, Kyle Allen, Olga Acuna, Steve Callaway, and Fred Nachtigal as the town/city councilors. Michael Brown serves as the city's manager. Hillsboro operates its own library system, fire department, parks department, water system, and police department. The Hillsboro Fire Department has five stations, and the Hillsboro Police Department operates two standard precincts and a mobile precinct. Wastewater treatment is provided through the county-wide Clean Water Services.
At the federal level, Hillsboro lies in Oregon's 1st congressional district, represented by Suzanne Bonamici. In the State Senate, Hillsboro is in District 15, represented by Bruce Starr, District 13, represented by Larry George, and District 12 represented by Brian Boquist.
In the House, Districts 24 (Jim Weidner), 26 (John Davis), 29 (Ben Unger) and 30 (Joe Gallegos) cover the city. Parts of county commissioner districts 1 (Dick Schouten), 2 (Desari Strader), and 4 (Andy Duyck) overlap the city. In addition, Hillsboro lies inside District 4 (Kathryn Harrington) of the Metro county-wide government. The Hillsboro School District's are headquartered in a two story concrete office building.
Hillsboro School District command posts Public schools in Hillsboro are directed by the Hillsboro School District (1 - J).
The precinct is a unified school precinct with twenty-three elementary schools, four middle schools, and four high schools. The precinct also operates the Miller Education Center, an alternative school, the Hare Field athletic complex, and City View Charter School. The school precinct covers Hillsboro, Scholls, Reedville, North Plains, West Union, and other encircling communities. Total enrollment as of the 2015 16 school year was 20,501 students, making it the fourth biggest precinct in the state (behind Portland, Salem-Keizer, and Beaverton). The four traditional enhance high schools are, in order of creation: Hillsboro High School 1969 1,323 Spartans Post-secondary educational opportunities include the west ground of Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) while Pacific University operates a satellite Health Professions Campus in downtown adjoining to Tuality Community Hospital. The OHSU site was formerly that of the Oregon Graduate Institute (later OGI School of Science and Engineering) and the Oregon National Primate Research Center portions of OHSU.
Hillsboro is home to private major and secondary schools including Faith Bible High School, St.
Public transit is available by bus and light rail, managed by county-wide transit agency Tri - Met. The first MAX light rail line, now known as the Blue Line, was extended to serve Hillsboro on September 12, 1998. The end is positioned downtown.
The Willow Creek and Hillsboro transit centers (TC) are the chief hubs of the enhance transit system, although seven other MAX stations furnish varying degrees of bus interconnection.
MAX stations (west to east) are the Hatfield Government Center, Hillsboro Central TC, Tuality Hospital, Washington/Southeast 12th Avenue, Fair Complex / Hillsboro Airport, Hawthorn Farm, Orenco, Quatama, and Willow Creek TC.
Located next to the Tuality Hospital station is the Hillsboro Intermodal Transit Facility, which opened in 2010 and was jointly paid for by the hospital, Pacific University, and the city. The facility is primarily a parking garage, but includes lockers and showers for bicyclists along with electric vehicle charging stations. Freight rail service from Portland and Western Railroad with interconnections to the BNSF Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad both serve Hillsboro. The town/city is not served by passenger rail service over a heavy-rail line. Air travel is available at the Hillsboro Airport in the center of the town/city and at Stark's Twin Oaks Airpark, a general aviation field south of the city.
The Hillsboro Airport is a general aviation airport directed by the Port of Portland, and is the second-busiest airport in the state after Portland International Airport. The airport mainly serves private pilots and corporate flights, with no scheduled airline flights from its two runways, but does have an on-call customs service. Other primary east west roads are Cornell Road and Main Street / Baseline Road. Major north south routes are Oregon Route 219 / 1st Avenue, 10th Avenue, Cornelius Pass Road, and Brookwood. The easternmost north south route, 185th Avenue, borders Beaverton and runs between the Tanasbourne Town Center and the rest of Hillsboro.
Hospital services in the town/city are provided by Tuality Community Hospital in the downtown region of the city. Opened in 1918 as the city's first hospital, the 167-bed facility is directed by Tuality Healthcare.
Main article: List of citizens from Hillsboro, Oregon For more than 150 years, the town/city has had inhabitants as varied as David Hill, the city's founder, to Tiffeny Milbrett, an Olympic and World Cup champion soccer player. Two governors of Oregon, James Withycombe and Paul L.
Hillsboro's only sister town/city relationship is with Fukuroi, a town/city of about 85,000 inhabitants in the Shizuoka Prefecture in central Japan.
The cities, which have similar economic bases in agriculture and high technology, began their relationship in November 1988. The relationship has encompassed exchanges of students between schools in each city. In the late 2000s, Hillsboro unsuccessfully explored finding a sister town/city in Mexico and also neglected the relationship with Fukuroi. However, in 2008, a Fukuroi contingent of grownups visited Hillsboro to jubilate the 20th anniversary of the Sister City agreement. a b c d e f g h i "American Fact - Finder".
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Categories: Hillsboro, Oregon - 1842 establishments in Oregon - Cities in Oregon - Cities in Washington County, Oregon - County seats in Oregon - Populated places established in 1842 - Portland urbane area
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