Burnside Street: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 22:18, 1 January 2014
Burnside Street is serviced by TriMet bus line 20-Burnside and is also accessed by: 12-Sandy, 15-Belmont and 19-Glisan. |
Burnside Street is the axis that splits Portland's Five Quadrants on its North-South axis.
- On the west side of the Willamette River, it is called West Burnside.
- It's named East Burnside on the east side of the Willamette River.
Before the street renaming of 1931, Ankeny Street was the north-south axis for the Eastside.
History of Burnside Street
As printed originally in the Oregonian, October 5, 1921[1], origin of Burnside Street's name.
Contrary to the frequently voiced opinion that Burnside street was named after General Ambrose Burnside of civil war fame, the name was chosen to supplant the former appellation of B street when Portland and East Portland were consolidated in 1891 in honor of Davis W. Burnside, a pioneer of the early ’50′s and a well-known business man in the early history of the city. The East Portland Street which became Burnside Street, was previously known as F Street.
Davis Burnside was born in Vermont in 1825 and went to California in 1850 following the first wave of the gold rush. In 1852 he came north to Portland and settled here, establishing a small business which later grew to quite respectable proportions.
He became a member of the city council and took an active interest in civic affairs. He was also a prominent member of the city’s volunteer fire department. In 1860 he married Jane Davis.
References
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