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Brooklyn, Portland, Oregon

Brooklyn
Neighborhood
Brooklyn is located in Portland, Oregon
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Coordinates: 45°29′38″N 122°39′10″W / 45.49401°N 122.65280°W / 45.49401; -122.65280Coordinates: 45°29′38″N 122°39′10″W / 45.49401°N 122.65280°W / 45.49401; -122.65280
Country United States
State Oregon
City Portland
Government
 • Association Brooklyn Action Corps
 • Coalition Southeast Uplift Neighborhood Program
Area
 • Total 0.90 sq mi (2.34 km2)
Population (2000)
 • Total 3,542
 • Density 3,900/sq mi (1,500/km2)
Housing
 • No. of households 1672
 • Occupancy rate 95% occupied
 • Owner-occupied 611 households (37%)
 • Renting 1061 households (63%)
 • Avg. household size 2.12 persons

Brooklyn is a mostly residential neighborhood in southeast Portland, Oregon. It sits along the east side of the Willamette River in the vicinity of Reed College. Founded as a neighborhood in the late 1860s, the neighborhood today is a middle-class area comprising mainly single family homes, interspersed with remaining industrial sites along the river and a large railyard. This railyard is home to Southern Pacific 4449 as well as several other large antique steam and diesel-electric locomotives.

The area of the neighborhood was inhabited by Clackamas people before settlement by whites. The first white settler in the area of was Giddeon Tibbets, who acquired the land in the Donation Land Claim Act of 1850. He settled the area in 1851, building a family home and grist mill. Tibbets named the area "Brookland" due to the river, creeks, and lakes on his property. In 1868 Tibbets subdivided the property into smaller lots and allowed the Oregon Central Railroad to cross the property. The rail line and the subdivision quickly brought in a large number of residents to the neighborhood, which acquired its current name of "Brooklyn". The influx led to the construction of a town square at the corner of Powell Boulevard and Milwaukie Avenue. In the 1890s, the neighborhood received an influx of largely Roman Catholic German-Americans. While many of the German street/landmark names were changed during World War I, the neighborhood continues to bear the traces of this period today, with several older German-American businesses, as well as the Sacred Heart Catholic Church and the 1891 Johan Poulsen House. In 1908, The contracting firm Giebisch and Joplin built this neighborhood's original sewer system. In the 1920s, the neighborhood changed drastically as a part of a citywide construction effort. The construction of the Ross Island Bridge over the Willamette destroyed the town square. At the same time, many of the streams and ponds in the neighborhood were filled in. The construction of McLoughlin Boulevard (Oregon Route 99E) severed the neighborhood's connection to the Willamette waterfront. The construction of an overpass on 17th avenue also divided the neighborhood in two.


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Wikipedia

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