*** Welcome to piglix ***

Multnomah County, Oregon

Multnomah County, Oregon
Multcocourthouse.jpg
Multnomah County Courthouse in Downtown Portland
Logo of Multnomah County, Oregon
Logo
Map of Oregon highlighting Multnomah County
Location in the U.S. state of Oregon
Map of the United States highlighting Oregon
Oregon's location in the U.S.
Founded December 22, 1854
Seat Portland
Largest city Portland
Area
 • Total 466 sq mi (1,207 km2)
 • Land 431 sq mi (1,116 km2)
 • Water 34 sq mi (88 km2), 7.4%
Population (est.)
 • (2015) 790,294
 • Density 1,705/sq mi (658/km²)
Congressional districts 1st, 3rd, 5th
Time zone Pacific: UTC-8/-7
Website www.multco.us

Multnomah County /məltˈnmə/ is one of 36 counties in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2010 census, the county's population was 735,334. Its county seat, Portland, is the state's largest city. Multnomah County is part of the Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA Metropolitan Statistical Area, and though smallest in area, it is the state's most populous county.

Multnomah County (the thirteenth in Oregon Territory) was created on December 22, 1854, formed out of two other Oregon counties – the eastern part of Washington County and the northern part of Clackamas County. Its creation was a result of a petition earlier that year by businessmen in Portland complaining of the inconvenient location of the Washington County seat in Hillsboro and of the share of Portland tax revenues leaving the city to support Washington County farmers. County commissioners met for the first time on January 17, 1855. The county is named after the Chinook word for the "lower river", Multnomah and Matlnomaq being alternative, interpretive English spellings of the same word. In Chinook Jargon, Ne-matlnomaq, means the "place of matlnomaq" or the (singular) Ne-matlnomag, "the lower river", from the Oregon City Falls to the Columbia river. The explorer William Clark wrote in his Journal: "I entered this river...called Multnomah...from a nation who reside on Wappato Island, a little below the enterence" (quoted from Willamette Landings by H.M. Corning). Note that Clark refers to Sauvies Island as Wappato Island and the lower Willamette River as Multnomah. Simply put, Multnomah or "down river" is the shortened form of nematlnomaq, meaning "the down river".


...
Wikipedia

...