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Canby, Oregon
Canby is a thriving agricultural and residential community
of 12,790. The surrounding area contains some of the richest
farmland in Oregon. Local nurseries produce a wide variety
of plants, bulbs and seeds. Canby has the largest served industrial
area in Clackamas County. It's development is actively promoted
by the city government and an economic development committee.
Major annual events include the award winning Clackamas County
Fair, General Canby Days and Summer Concerts in the Park.
The community is located on the Willamette River and Highway
99E, just 4 miles from I-5. Employers include Johnson Controls-Battery,
Willamette Egg Farms, Cutsforth Thriftway, Package Containers
Inc., McGill & Son Nursery and J V Northwest.
History:
On the high plateau, bordered by the Willamette and Molalla
Rivers, Canby was once the seasonal meeting place for tribes
of local Indians and was well known for its annual crop of
wild strawberries. The area known as Baker Prairie was an
open expanse of ground in the dense fir forest that stretched
for miles.
Baker,
one of the earliest white settlers in Oregon, arrived in the
area in 1832 with a cattle drive from California, took an
Indian wife and was soon farming. The land he "squatted"
on was what is now north Canby. Other settlers arrived, including
Philander and Anna Lee in 1848, who bought "squatter's"
rights beside a spring-fed creek on what is now SE First Avenue.
The family's long-time home nearby was on the site now owned
by Package Containers, Inc.
Lee
began growing apples on 80 acres of land and shipped them
to the gold miners in California. In 1850, the Lees gained
title to their 647 acres through the Donation Land Claim Act
which brought many more settlers over the Oregon Trail to
Baker Prairie and surrounding areas.
William Knight and four sons moved to Baker Prairie in 1868.
They were instrumental in Canby's early development as they
opened one of the first general stores, built many local buildings,
served as postmaster, school clerk, sheriff, druggist, blacksmith,
carpenter and more. William Knight's 1874 home still stands
at 525 SW Fourth Avenue as does the 1890 Knight Building on
NW First Avenue, the original meeting place of City Council
and first home of Carlton & Rosenkrans, "Clackamas
County's largest department store."
Along
with a meager network of dirt roads and trails, some still
visible, such as Territorial Road with its tall fir trees
lining the road, the Willamette River served as main transportation.
Steamboats took produce into the markets of Oregon City and
Portland from the little local communities of Baker Prairie,
Barlow, New Era, Riverside, Macksburg, Mundorff, Lone Elder,
Mark Prairie and others.
While
pushing the Oregon and California Railroad line from east
Portland to San Francisco, promoters approached Philander
Lee for land in 1870. For $2,960, he sold 111 acres for the
24-block city, 12 lots per block. The Knight family and others
sold the remainder of the 300 acres to the railroad. Lee would
only sell land for a town if the streets were wide enough
for two span of oxen and a wagon to turn. So, Philander's
son, Albert, hitched up the oxen and turned the team and wagon,
measuring the diameter of the turn to be 80 feet, which became
the width of Canby's original streets. The City's plat was
filed in Oregon City on August 9, 1870.
Major
General Edward R.S. Canby, hero of the Civil and Indian Wars,
had arrived in Oregon only one week earlier to assume command
of the U.S. Army's Department of the Columbia and the new
town was given this hero's name. Rails were laid in 1870 and
in 1873 the depot was built near what is now NW First and
Grant. Albert H. Lee, Philander's eigth child, was the first
railroad agent.
The
first post office and depot was in the drug store across from
the depot, and druggist Charles "Doc" Knight, who
came in 1870 and also built the first hotel, was the first
postmaster.
Canby
was incorporated on February 15, 1893, making it the second
oldest city in Clackamas County. Herman A. Lee, Philander's
second son, served as the first mayor. By 1890 Canby boasted
three hotels and a bank, and by 1910, the population was 587.
The railroad tracks were quickly lined with warehouses as
the agriculture industry grew in the Canby area. Local crops
included grain, hay, potatoes, dairy products, turkeys, flax,
prunes, rhubarb, asparagus, berries, nuts, livestock, lumber,
bulbs, flowers, and nursery stock. For many years, three covered
bridges crossed the Molalla River from Canby and in 1914,
local businessmen established ferry service across the Willamette
River.
Prior
to 1920, the "Road of 100 Wonders", now NW First
Avenue, was the main route through Canby, running northeast
to Oregon City and west to Barlow and up the valley. That
year marked the arrival of the Pacific Highway (Hwy 99E) to
the south of the railroad tracks, making the beginning of
yet a new era of transportation and development in Canby.
Canby has grown from 998 people in 1940, to 1,286 residents
by 1945. Now Canby boasts a population of over 13,000, and
the city covers a three-square mile area. Many of the early
buildings and homes in the original 24-block town site still
exist and the city is surrounded by early farmhouses and barns,
reminders of Canby's early pioneer, railroad and agricultural
heritage.
Population:
Click here to
see population numbers from the latest census for Canby and
other Oregon cities.
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