Woodburn, Oregon Woodburn Woodburn, Oregon OR Woodburn Woodburn is positioned in the US Woodburn - Woodburn Woodburn is a town/city in Marion County, Oregon, United States.

Oregon routes 211, 214, 219, and 99 - E also serve the city, as do Union Pacific and Willamette Valley Railway freight rail lines.

Woodburn is part of the Salem Metropolitan Statistical Area.

With a populace of 24,080 at the 2010 census, it is the third-most crowded in that urbane region after Salem and Keizer. Those who identify as Hispanic or Latino make up a majority of the populace in the city.

The Woodburn region also has a momentous historic populace of Russian Orthodox Old Believers, whose ancestors settled here after the October Revolution of 1917.

4.1 Woodburn Premium Outlets Originally, the region around Woodburn was inhabited by the Kalapuya Native Americans.

After the Provisional Government of Oregon set-up territory claims in the Oregon Country, the United States took in much of the Pacific Northwest and established the Oregon Territory in 1848.

Ducharme all established donation territory claims on the easterly part of the French Prairie where Woodburn would later be founded. Cooley immigrated to Oregon in 1845, and Bonney established his territory claim in 1849. Ducharme's territory was sold off in 1862 in a foreclosure with Mt.

Settlemier had traveled west over the Oregon Trail in 1849 and first settled in California before moving north to Oregon in 1850. He settled in the Mt.

Angel region where he was a prosperous nurseryman. Settlemier then moved to his new property in 1863 and established the Woodburn Nursery Company. Even with improvements to the land, including assembly of his home, title in the territory remained in doubt due to the purchase via a foreclosure. During the litigation over title in the land, Settlemier borrowed cash from capitalist William Reed with the territory as collateral. When Reed began to build a barns through the area, he decided to run the line through what became Woodburn in anticipation of acquiring the territory himself, as he expected Settlemier to default on the mortgage. However, Settlemier did not default and eventually his case made it to the Supreme Court of the United States in Settlemier v.

Meanwhile, transit baron Ben Holladay ran his Oregon and California Railroad through what became Woodburn in 1871, at which time Settlemier platted the first four blocks of the town. Originally, the town and station were called Halsey, but the name was changed to Woodburn due to the existence of Halsey, Oregon, further down the valley. The name Woodburn came about after a slash burn that got out of control and burned down a close-by woodlot in the 1880s, after the barns line had been laid through the area. A barns official witnessed the fire and retitled the community. The town/city was incorporated by the Oregon Legislative Assembly on February 20, 1889. According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 5.37 square miles (13.91 km2), all of it land. There were 7,545 homeholds of which 35.9% had kids under the age of 18 living with them, 53.8% were married couples living together, 11.6% had a female homeholder with no husband present, 5.9% had a male homeholder with no wife present, and 28.8% were non-families.

In the city, the populace was spread out with 30.9% under the age of 18, and, as of 2000, 11.8% from 18 to 24, 25.5% from 25 to 44, 14.6% from 45 to 64, and 18.1% who were 65 years of age or older.

Woodburn town/city hall Woodburn is home for a sizeable improve of Russian Orthodox Old Believers. This Christian traditionalist church had escaped persecution from the official Russian Orthodox Church and moved to the United States from Turkey in the 1950s.

Woodburn Premium Outlets In August 1999, Woodburn Premium Outlets, known as the Woodburn Company Stores until June 2013, opened in Woodburn.

Mac - Laren Youth Correctional Facility is on Oregon Route 99 - E on the outskirts of Woodburn, in which young delinquent and criminal males are incarcerated.

Chris Klein recording Hallmark Hall of Fame Production The Valley of Light in downtown Woodburn Tulip Festival in Woodburn in 2007 It was a one-day event that was held in downtown Woodburn.

The Woodburn Dragstrip is a 1/4-mile National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) dragstrip that annually hosts an event on the NHRA Lucas Oil Series. It is positioned about 2 miles (3 km) west of Woodburn on Oregon Highway 219.

The Oregon Golf Association (OGA) Golf Course in Woodburn is a enhance course, rated by Golf Digest in 1996 as one of the top 10 affordable courses in the United States. It routinely hosts many large amateur and high school affairs in the state.

Woodburn is served by the Woodburn School District, which includes four elementary schools and two middle schools. Woodburn High School includes the following small schools: the Wellness, Business and Sports School, the Woodburn Academy of Art, Science and Technology, the Academy of International Studies at Woodburn, and the Woodburn Arts and Communications Academy.

Woodburn Success High School is the district's alternative high school, serving grades 7 12. The Woodburn Independent is a weekly improve journal serving the immediate area. The region is also served by the larger Statesman Journal daily journal based in Salem and the state's biggest journal The Oregonian based in Portland.

Woodburn is home to two airways broadcasts.

The station was assembled by volunteers from Woodburn and around the nation in August 2006 at the tenth Prometheus Radio Project barnraising. KPCN broadcasts music, news, and enhance affairs to listeners in Spanish and a several indigenous Latin American languages.

The Transit Division of the Woodburn Community Services Department runs the Woodburn Transit System (WTS), which uses small buses amid non-holiday weekdays inside the city's limits, and the Dial-a-Ride program, which operates paratransit vans for reserve by the elderly and disabled amid weekdays inside the small-town region and, for medical appointments, anywhere between Portland and Salem. Other enhance bus systems making stops in Woodburn are CARTS (Chemeketa Area Regional Transportation System), administered by Oregon Housing and Associated Services, Inc.

The Amtrak affiliated Cascades POINT bus service stops at the Woodburn Park & Ride at the Woodburn I-5 exit.

Kat Bjelland, lead singer of Babes in Toyland, interval up in Woodburn.

Stacy Allison (born 1958), a 1975 graduate of Woodburn High School and a 1984 Oregon State University alum, was the first American woman to summit Mount Everest amid her second attempt on September 29, 1988. That same year, when Woodburn Mayor Nancy Kirksey declared November 17 "Stacy Allison Day," she visited and spoke at a several Woodburn venues and attended ceremonies when a street in the city, Stacy Allison Way, was dedicated to her. Kat Bjelland of the punk band Babes in Toyland, interval up in Woodburn.

Model and actress Kate Nauta interval up in Woodburn and lived there until 2000.

"2010 Enumeration profiles: Oregon metros/cities alphabetically T-Y" (PDF).

"The History of Woodburn, Oregon: 1851 1900" (PDF).

City of Woodburn.

Portland, Oregon: Oregon Historical Society Press.

Salem, Oregon: State Printer.

"Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2015".

United States Enumeration Bureau.

"Oregon National Register List" (PDF).

Woodburn Dragstrip.

Woodburn School District.

Woodburn School District.

Woodburn Independent.

City of Woodburn.

Oregon State Archives: Governor Neil Goldschmidt's Records (pages 32 34) Wikimedia Commons has media related to Woodburn, Oregon.

Entry for Woodburn in the Oregon Blue Book History of Woodburn from the City of Woodburn Municipalities and communities of Marion County, Oregon, United States Paul Salem Scotts Mills Silverton Stayton Sublimity Turner Woodburn

Categories:
Woodburn, Oregon - Cities in Oregon - Cities in Marion County, Oregon - Russian communities in the United States - Salem, Oregon urbane region - Old Believer communities in the United States - Populated places established in 1889 - 1889 establishments in Oregon - Ukrainian communities in the United States - Russian-American culture in Oregon