Misplaced Pages

Lake Oswego Review

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Lake Oswego Review is an American newspaper published in Lake Oswego , Oregon , within the Portland metropolitan area . It is owned by the Pamplin Media Group .

#788211

7-554: The paper began as the Western Clackamas Review , was later known as the Oswego Review from 1929 through 1961, and then adopted its present name when the city of Oswego annexed Lake Grove and the lake. It has been published weekly since 1988. Eagle Newspapers purchased the newspaper in 1978. The previous owners were Steve and Randalyn Clark. The newspaper was merged into Community Newspapers, Inc. in 1987. The business

14-480: The 1960s, Intercity Buses, Inc. provided transit service connecting Lake Grove with downtown Lake Oswego and downtown Portland through neighborhoods on both sides of the lake, until taken over in 1970 by TriMet , which continues to operate bus service through the area today. As the area developed and the automobile became the dominant mode of transportation, Lake Grove's commercial and residential development continued along (Lower) Boones Ferry Road. That road remains

21-756: The Lake Grove area are within other neighborhood associations such as the Waluga), the Lake Grove Rural Fire District, the Lake Grove Water District and the Lake Grove Post Office serving ZIP code 97035. All these elements combined often give Lake Grove the feeling of being a separate town from Lake Oswego. Lake Grove was also part of the inspiration that led to the name of the small city of Rivergrove . The Lake Grove Elementary School

28-566: The main artery of Lake Grove, a prominence reinforced by its central role in the Lake Grove Village Center, a Metro "Town Center" for 21st century land-use and transportation planning purposes. Besides the town center, Lake Grove's identity is evident in the name of institutions such as Lake Grove Elementary School (which dates back to at least the 1920s), the Lake Grove Neighborhood Association (though parts of

35-486: The west and Oswego and Portland to the east and north (the latter two connected using a line now used by the Willamette Shore Trolley ). In 1916, Waluga Post Office was established in the area, named after the native American name for Oswego Lake; the post office was renamed Lake Grove in 1923. A May 1959 vote by residents of Oswego and Lake Grove resulted in the establishment of the city of Lake Oswego. In

42-585: Was platted in 1912 as a development on the western end of Oswego Lake, near the railroad line. That line, the Portland, Eugene and Eastern Railway (PE&E), was part of the East Side Local route of the " Red Electric " passenger service beginning in 1914, a service continued by Southern Pacific after it bought PE&E a year later. A stop on that line, Goodin Station, connected the development with Tualatin to

49-596: Was sold to Steve Clark in 1996 and later acquired by Pamplin Media Group in August 2000. This article about an Oregon newspaper is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Lake Grove, Oregon Lake Grove is a neighborhood of Lake Oswego , Oregon , United States , located west of Oswego Lake, south of the Mountain Park neighborhood, east of Interstate 5 , and north of Rivergrove . Lake Grove

#788211