Eighty Years of Power
Life in Oregon Vastly Easier Than in (Old) Days
When Grandfather Had Only Horses and Muscle
Oregonians of the Centennial year
are supermen of energy.
They perform almost miraculous
feats of labor in a few minutes
rather than days, and live in dream
hcmes-washing clothes, preparing
meals and cleaning house in hours
rather than in days of a week.
The energy today’s Oregonians
use so matter-of-factly Ls electri
city
In terms of its use at work and
at home, a single kilowatt-hour,
which is one thousand watts used
for one hour, is the measure of
a giant.
The muscle energy an average
man can exert in one eight-hour
working day for example has been
calculated as equivalent to that of
a mere 35 minutes of electricity.
How much work electricity per
forms is reflected by industrial
applications. In terms of human
energy equivalents, the average
per-man use of 69 kilowatt-hours
every day means that 240 men
stand beside every worker at a
sawmill head-rig in Prineville, a
trailer assembly line in McMinn
ville, and a furniture factory in
Filot Rock. And throughout the
state, based on average household
use of electricity, the homemakers
busily operate equipment equal to
90 servants at work each day in
each home.
Great - grandfather could have
used those extra hands in an early-
day woolen mill at Brownsville or
at clearing the Barlow Road, and
grandmother would have welcomed
the help in the homestead on the
Tualatin plain.
Region Use High
Oregonians of today live in a
region that enjoys the advantages
of more electricity at use in their
homes than anywhere else, twice
as much as the national average
arid at a cost less than half the
U.S. average. Forecasts are for con
sumption to double every ten years
The fam ily that now uses between
7,000 and 10,000 kilowatt-hours an
nually will likely be using 14,000
cr 20,000 in a decade.
Growth of the electric utility in
dustry in the state has included
eras of pioneering typical of the
spirit that motivated the stalwart
emigrants and their sons whose en
terprise has marked the state’s
progress.
The earliest adoption in the state
of the awe-inspiring idea that some
thing invisible could make a motor
turn faster than a steam engine,
or produce a light brighter than a
whale-oil lamp, was linked with a r
rival of ships in Willamette River
ports.
Arcs from a bare-wire circuit
linked to a dynamo aboard the
steamship California introduced the
magic of electricity to Portland in
1879. The next year, the United
States Electric Lighting and Power
Company was formed in the city.
Shortly thereafter a string of
lamps served by a sawmill dynamo
lit up Astoria on a Christmas Eve
for the start of a service that
eventually grew into the present
utility there.
Other pioneering ventures indud
ed the first long-distance transmis
sion of power, from the W illam
ette Falls
hydroelectric plant.
which in 1889 was a pioneer in the
west, to Portland, a distance of
14 miles. Then in 1905 the mag-
n.ficence of 80,000 electric globes
lighting the Lewis & Clark Expos
ition became the talk of the nation.
Pioneering of rural electrification
into Hood River and Wallowa val
leys by predecessors of Pacific
Power & Light Company was an
achievement of 1906.
Electric service for homes and
factories became almost universal
ir. later years, when power systems
began linking larger areas to cen
tral
station
generating
plants.
During World War 11 these systems
became interconnected and grew
into the first regional power pool,
of which the Oregon utilities are a
part.
Because of these activities by
the industry, Oregon has long en
joyed the benefits of ample elec
tric supplies of light and power
Large dams now dot the state and
the great rivers on its borders,
and transmission networks link
tneu- powerhouses to farms, homes,
ar.d factories. Expansions are con
tinuing, to provide for the years
ahead
The utilities serving Oregon share
with the federal government in the
greatest hydroelectric program ever
advanced by any region The con
struction caps more than a half-
century of progress that rapidly
is utilizing the remaining good
hydroelectric sites in the region.
Consequently, the electric utility
companies are looking to thermai-
type plants for the future power
supplies. These may use fossil,
fuels, such as Coos County coal,
or the unlimited enegy of nu-
clcai fuel .ores being mint'd from
the earth in Lake County.
Editors Comment
About Smaller Cities and the
Future of Them in Oregon
People differ widely as to what
sized town they like (or city, if
you p lea se)- all the way from the
metropolis to the village. They dif
fer, too, as to their favorite types
of town. Some like the so-called
"bedroom " suburb, close to the big
town; some prefer the rural town,
the market-spot for the outlying
country; still others are happiest
to be in the little factory town,
where they work at good jobs while
their home towns grow into some
thing different. All these are good
weekly newspaper towns. The edit
ors and their readers agree, gener
ally, that these various types and
sizes of towns are the backbone of
Oregon, at once a supply depot and
market for the producers on farm
and in factory.
Following are some comments of
editors about what the smaller
cities and towns mean to Oregon
and the outlook for the future.
Rural-Life Benefits
VVoodbum
Independent:
The
smaller cities and towns mean that
Oregon will continue to be a part
icularly desirable state in which to
live. They provide the benefits of
rural life but in most cases are
close enough to big cities or met
ropolitan areas to make possible
the sports and cultural advantages.
Valley Herald, Milton-Freewater:
The smaller towns and cities of
Oregon furnish real ’grassroots’
background for the State of Ore
gon. These smaller places are the
provisioning points, the suppliers for
much ranch and timberland area.”
Madras Pioneer: "T h e smaller
cities and towns of Oregon are
rallying points for groups and in
dividuals bent on finding ways to
improve themselves and their com
munities.”
Stayton Mail, “ ....smaller cities
and towns offer the best living con
ditions....with pure air to breathe,
elbow’ room to move about, no con
gestion to fight, picturesque natural
setting to enjoy, and warm and
friendly community relationships.
S M I T H R O C K S ON C R O O K E D R I V E R , « y e n mile» n orth of
Redmond, it being promoted fo r a »tate p a rk by the c ity of R e d
mond and the Redmond C h a m b e r of C o m m e rce .
Many of our best citizens develop
in the pleasant atmosphere of the
small town.”
Seaside Signal: "T o a great many
residents of metropolitan areas
towns mean Recreation
This is
particularly true of the towns on
the scenic Oregon Coast. The fam
ous Clatsop beaches, Seaside, Can
non Beach, and Gearhart have held
the interest of millions of persons
seeking recreation over a period of
75 years. They still constitute one
of the most popular recreational
areas on the Pacific Coast because
of a rare combination of ocean, ex
tensive beaches, natural scenic
beauty, and recreational develop
ment.”
Newberg Graphic: "Fam ilies of
today frequently prefer to live in
smaller cities and towns, where
they enter into community
life.
Towns close to larger cities and
metropolitan centers attract people
who commute to and from work
but prefer the neighborliness of the
smaller city to life in the metropo
lis. Suburban life is becoming
more popular, and even in the
smaller cities there is a tendenev
fur many to build homes in t h e
f’ inge area or on small acreages
and subdivisions.”
Small Towns Vital
Hermiston Herald: "Th e smaller
cities and towns a ie just as import
ant to the growth of our state as
the large cities are-and just as v i
tal as an aid to the c o n t i n u e d
growth of each . . .”
Myrtle Creek Mail: "T h e future
of non-metropolitan Oregon? It is
Opportunity, unlimited. For, as this
nation's population grows, here in
Oregon are the untapped raw re
sources of timber, minerals, and
water power, the sites for industry
and homebuilding—the ’lebensraum’
or living space, for which the people
in many nations of the world have
N O T A C E N T E N N I A L P O S E D S H O T it the above picture , taken
in 1906, of E z r a M eeker and hi» oxen in Pendleton.
sought and fought. And, strange as
it may seem to many Easterners,
it is none the less true that most of
this pxtra room’ is in an area with
a mild, equable climate and some
of the nation’s finest scenery and
natural recreations lands."
Impact Significant
Curry County Reporter, Gold
Beach: "Oregon does not have the
large population centers of eastern
states so the smaller towns here
serve a much more important pur
pose than similar-sized towns else
where. A town with no more than
two or three thousand piersons may
he the trading center for a large
area. This tends to place a strain
on the small towns since they are,
in a sense, ’playing over their
heads.’ In Gold Beach, for example
with a population of 1,900 then1 is
a general hospital, yet we have seen
mid-western cities with populations
of over 5,000 that do not have hos
pitals. Because of these factors, the
small towns of Oregon have a sig
nificant impact on the state as a
whole."
Influx Expected
Redmond Spokesman: "With de
centralization of population evi
dent on every hand, rural Oregon
can expect an influx of new resi
dents within the next dozen or so
years such as it never saw in the
last 50."
Malheur Enterprise, Vale: “ . . .
It is not so much what the future
holds for non metropolitan Oregon
as that in the non-metropolitan Ore
gon lies the future "
Madras Pioneer: "Industry, at
least light industry will find
it
desirable to locate in small towns,
where employees can live a n d
work in an atmosphere conducive
to agreeable relations, permanent
residence, and low turnover."
Pace Accelerated
Polk County Item izer-Observei.
Dallas: "T h e growth of non-metro
politan communities in western
Oregon during the past 15 years
has been consistent and is bound to
continue at an accelerated pace.
The day is here when comparative
ly small communities will he the
center of manufacturing in various
lines, where workmen are not com
pelled to travel long distances in
crowded traffic. The expansion of
the fruit and vegetable canning in
dustry, together with valley irri
gation to make this possible, means
much for the entire valley. It means
higher land production, market for
needed products, employment for
youths and women as well as men
The small towns of the area will
see continued rapid growth and bet
ter local business.”
In the middle of the 19th cen
tury. the immigrants flooded to
ward the Pacific Ocean and the
rich Willamette valley that lay
sheltered just this side of the go a l
Reaching there they crowded to
gether until the inevitable back
wash began.
For a centuiy those who flowed
back from the first surge, who set
tled on less favorable land in the
great eastern portion of the state,
built a prosperity unforeseen by
those headed for quicker rewards.
Now, the second great wave of
immigrants has begun With Calif
ornia filling up, with Oregon begin
ning to want her share, the flood
tide of new residents should over
run the state within another cen
tury.
For non-metropolitan Oregon, that
boom will hold the real promise
of the future. Rural communities
face a hard choice between their
natural beauties they cherish and
the economic benefits of more
people and more businesses.
Into the smaller town and cities
of the state will come industiy.
wanting a place to grow in the
favorable setting built over the
past 100 years. Towns which fail
now to protect themselves by care
ful zoning, by modern industrial
planning, by long-range social im
provements may well be ground in
to industrial slag heaps by the
pressure due to come.
The industrial worm is finally due
to turn towards the rural part of
Oregon. The early birds will find
the choicest chunks await them—
R.C.H., Hood River News
No Need To I>ie
Port Umpqua Courier: "Some
people think the building of great
super-highways, the tendency of in
dustries to congregate and concen
trate will spell the doom of little
towns. Some will die as some have
always died because they were
founded on pure opportunism, but
those small cities which have
REASONS for being will continue
to grow and prosper, and there are
many industries and many people
who will seek them out because of
what they can offer. A good exam
ple is the City of Bend, which did
not die (as many feared» when
one of the mills closed some years
ago for lack of tim ber."
Lincoln County Leader, Toledo:
"Small cities and towns are the
backbone of American economy-
and nowhere is this more important
than in Oregon. Most tow’ns and
cities in Oregon are small, each
with its own business area, serving
its own trade area."
O S W A L D W E S T S T A T E P A R K preserve» ty p ically wild ocean »hore upon w hich no development»
a re to be made to en ro a ch upon the t p e c t a c u la r ly »cenic beach of th ree mile». T h e pa rk al»o i n
clude« »toried N e a h k a h n ie m o u n ta in w hich ri»e» 1795 feet fro m the P a c if ic ocean on the northern
O regon coa»t.
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