Lake Grove, Oregon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lake Grove is a neighborhood of Lake Oswego, Oregon, United States, located west of Oswego Lake, south of Mountain Park (another Lake Oswego neighborhood), east of Interstate 5, and north of Rivergrove.
Lake Grove 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 Railroad (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 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.
As the area developed and the automobile became the dominant mode of transportation, Lake Grove's commercial and residential development continued along (Lower) Boone's Ferry Road. That road remains 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 the Lake Grove area are within other neighborhood associations such as the Waluga), the Lake Grove Rural Fire District, and the Lake Grove Post Office serving zipcode 97035. Lake Grove was also part of the inspiration that led to the name of the small city of Rivergrove.
[edit] References
The article is based on information from Oregon Geographic Names and online articles maintained by the Oswego Heritage Council, particularly
- Reminiscences about early days in Lake Grove, from In Their Own Words, reminiscences of early Oswego, Oregon edited and published in 1976 by the Lake Oswego Public Library
[edit] External links
- Lake Grove Village Center from the city of Lake Oswego's official website
- Maps and aerial photos
- WikiSatellite view at WikiMapia
- Street map from MapQuest or Google Local
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
- Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth