Yamhill County was
the second of the four original districts created by the Provisional Legislature
in 1843. Its boundaries were drawn to include all the area from the Willamette
River west to the Pacific Ocean and from the Yamhill River south to the California
border. The district consisted of 12,000 square miles; however, twelve counties
were eventually created from Yamhill County leaving 709 square miles within its
present borders. The county shares borders with Washington County to the north,
Tillamook County to the west, Polk County to the south, and Marion and Clackamas
Counties to the east. The
county was named for the original inhabitants of the area, the Yamhill Indians,
a tribe of the Kalapooian family, who lived around the Yamhill River. The tribe
was moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation in 1855. The earliest non-native settlers
entered the area in 1814; most were employees of the various fur companies operating
in Oregon. Many of the American immigrants who came over the Oregon Trail during
1843-1844 settled in the Yamhill region, which became the agricultural center
of the Willamette Valley. LaFayette,
at one time the principal trading center of the western Willamette Valley, became
the county seat in 1847. The first courthouse, purchased in 1850, was originally
a county store in LaFayette. The building was destroyed by fire in January 1857,
and all records except probate and land records were destroyed. The next courthouse
was built in 1858 and remained in use until the county seat moved in 1889 to McMinnville
where a new courthouse was built. The fourth and present courthouse was built
in 1964. Yamhill
County government originally consisted of three commissioners, district attorney,
assessor, clerk, sheriff, surveyor, and treasurer. In 1964 the probate function
was transferred from the jurisdiction of the county court to the district court.
The county court was abolished in 1968 and the board of commissioners was established
in 1969. The
population of Yamhill County in 2000 was 84,992 representing a 29.66% increase
over 1990. Yamhill
County ranks seventh out of Oregon's thirty-six counties in annual market value
of its agricultural production. Today, the county's primary industry is agriculture,
specifically wheat, barley, horticulture, and dairy farming. Yamhill County is
also the center of Oregon's wine industry. One-third of the county is covered
with commercial timber, and the economic mainstay of the western part of the county
is logging and timber products. Non-seasonal light industries have also located
in Yamhill County. Nearly one-fifth of the county's workforce commutes to the
Portland metropolitan area. |
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A
40-ton boulder is sitting in the middle of the rolling Yamhill County farmland
southwest of McMinnville. The erratic (wandering) rock had a long and strange
journey to its present home. It most likely was picked up by a glacier during
the Ice Age. The piece of the glacier carrying the rock then calved or broke off
and became an iceberg. The iceberg probably floated down the Columbia River during
a flood about 20,000 years ago. When the ice melted, the rock was deposited.
This
is the largest glacial erratic found in the Willamette Valley. Many more of these
rocks existed when white settlers first came to the valley. Over the decades farmers
destroyed a considerable number because of the obvious impediment to farming. |
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Backroad
Wineries of Yamhill County Drive and admire expansive views, enjoy
bucolic scenery, savor samples of world famous wines as you explore the backroad
wineries of Yamhill County. |
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