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areas to avoid in portland

The area to avoid is where the thick cloud cover is... known as "the valley" where all the people are.
The Cascade mountains to the east. Standing in the Cascades look west across the tops of the shorter mountains see across problematic area ..."the valley", and there is the Coast Range...then the Pacific.
Go past the Cascades and miles of high desert, then more mountains.

Wind storms & fires can be dangerous, trees fall down by the hundreds. You can be trapped, one road in, no help, no way out.
And it takes a team of chainsaws & heavy equipment to clear.

Relatively new Semi dormant volcanos, huge land slides, forest fires, a huge fault out in the Pacific past time for a huge earth quake, rattlesnakes in the lower elevations out in the desert... then worst of all, there's the control freak, commie politicians, down in "the valley".

Never go to Portland, it's worse than the movie "Escape From LA." A real shit hole.
 

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We call it "Lake No Negro's"


Lake Oswego is 0.8% black.

The state has a very low percentage of black residents, though. Only 2.2% of Oregon's population is black. The state constitution banned settlement by blacks to discourage free blacks from relocating there. Oregon banned slavery in 1843 to keep blacks in servitude from being located there. In 1844 they amended the law to provide some time for slaveholders to remove their property under penalty of manumission should they fail to do so. Once freed, they could not remain. Males had two years to leave, and females had three (guess here, but that was so the man could find a place to settle and then send for his wife).

Oddly, all of this was more of a threat than reality, but the law effectively discouraged free blacks from settling there. I have found only one black farmer who moved over the Columbia River voluntarily to avoid the law (see link below). There were so few blacks in the state (128) that their white farmer neighbors took up for them, and the law basically was not enforced.

Oregon was the only state admitted to the union with an exclusion clause. Oregon removed it in 1926.

Although the exclusion laws were not generally enforced, they had their intended effect of discouraging Black people from settling in Oregon. The 1860 census for Oregon, for example, reported 128 African Americans in a total population of 52,465. In 2013, only 2 percent of the Oregon population were Black people.


The low percentage is an artifact of history and the fact Oregon has never had a robust economic growth period in industry that attracted a large population of blacks to emigrate for work, such as, for example, Detroit.
 
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You could stay up at Timberline for a couple nights on Mt Hood. I’d rather do that than be in Portland. I honestly can’t think of anything to recommend in Portland. Last ten years have really gone downhill in downtown. If you want to stay in town I’d stay around the SE side, Lake O, West Linn, Oregon City. Downtown OC is pretty cool. Rivershore hotel is right on the river with a good view in OC.
 
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Lake Oswego is 0.8% black.

The state has a very low percentage of black residents, though. Only 2.2% of Oregon's population is black. The state constitution banned settlement by blacks to discourage free blacks from relocating there. Oregon banned slavery in 1843 to keep blacks in servitude from being located there. In 1844 they amended the law to provide some time for slaveholders to remove their property under penalty of manumission should they fail to do so. Once freed, they could not remain. Males had two years to leave, and females had three (guess here, but that was so the man could find a place to settle and then send for his wife).

Oddly, all of this was more of a threat than reality, but the law effectively discouraged free blacks from settling there. I have found only one black farmer who moved over the Columbia River voluntarily to avoid the law (see link below). There were so few blacks in the state (128) that their white farmer neighbors took up for them, and the law basically was not enforced.

Oregon was the only state admitted to the union with an exclusion clause. Oregon removed it in 1926.




The low percentage is an artifact of history and the fact Oregon has never had a robust economic growth period in industry that attracted a large population of blacks to emigrate for work, such as, for example, Detroit.
How long have lived in Lake Oswego? Did you hear they are going to have to open up access the lake to the public?

https://www.lakeoswegoreview.com/ne...cle_a03f1606-f87e-11ef-aa34-836c2d691f16.html