
Looking southwest at the corner of NE 24th and Fremont, early 1920s. Note delivery bike visible behind power pole. OrHi 49061.
In collaboration with the Alameda Neighborhood Association, I’ll be presenting a local history program Wednesday, March 1st from 7:30-9:00 p.m. at the Fremont United Methodist Church (2620 NE Fremont), and you’re invited (RSVPs required, see below).
Using early maps, documents, photos and newspaper accounts—and memories collected from past residents—we’ll explore how forests and fields defined the landscape of Portland’s eastside. Then, as a young city sprawled across the river, the rural landscape was replaced by a grid of neighborhoods, a busy streetcar system and tens of thousands of new residents. Successive waves of homebuilding and change in the decades that followed shaped the neighborhoods we know today.
This illustrated one-hour program explores the early years of Alameda, Beaumont-Wilshire, Sabin, Vernon, Concordia, and Cully as we examine connections between past, present and future.
To reserve your spot for the March 1 program, e-mail the Alameda Neighborhood Association at alamedanewsletter@gmail.com. Reservation deadline is February 24th. Doors open at 7:00 and the association will have light refreshments on hand.
The Alameda Neighborhood Association is a neighbor-led board that advocates for smart policies, takes action on neighbors’ concerns, facilitates communication about neighborhood issues, hosts events to bring residents together and publishes the quarterly newsletter AlamedaPDX.
Please reserve two seats for this event. >
Thanks, Doug. I just reserved two seats via the ANA email address you provided. After living in the Alameda Neighborhood for 37 years, Sheryl and I are eager to finally meet you in person!
Hi Doug, Your March 1 event sounds great. I’d be there but am immunocompromised so need to still avoid crowds until Covid burns out further.By any chance do you plan on recording the talk, even just the audio? thanks, John Hunt
Is there a way I can get original replacement house address numbers that were issued in maybe the 1930’s (?) when streets and houses were renamed and numbered? The ones from my 1928 Concordia home are long gone.
Hi Marsha. Hippo Hardware sells reproduction address tiles: https://www.hippohardware.com/products/ceramic-tile-portland-house-numbers
Thank you so much!
Marsha
Hi John. Thanks for the note. Hang in there! Not sure if ANA is planning on recording, I’ll check and follow-up.
Wish I could be there. Break a leg😊
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Looking forward to this event! I think I met you at a talk a long time ago at the Subud Center? Love your blog!