Hog
Farms and Sewers: Commercial Communities
Industrial, commercial and residential development
is rampant along the Columbia Slough. Left, industrial sites
for sale on a branch of the lower slough near the Multnomah
County Drainage District. Right, Blue Heron Shores Residential
Development on the upper slough at Fairview Lake.
Photos by Donna Sinclair, 2000
For
at least the past 230 years, the Columbia River Slough
has been an integral part of various commercial communities.
Native Americans traded wapato from the swampy sloughs
for upriver salmon and beargrass. Early white settlers
logged where massive firs once rose high above the banks
of the slough, first moving the logs to Portland markets
and then constructing sawmills along the waterway. By
the turn of the century industrialists recognized the
slough's value not only as a commercial waterway, but
as a dumping ground for industrial debris. Throughout
the twentieth century, the slough increasingly supported
the major economic infrastructures of the Portland Metropolitan
area; shipyards; the Portland International Airport; and
the Port of Portland, among the most valuable U.S. west
coast ports.
This
section highlights the early industrial history of the
Columbia Slough. To learn more about recent history on
the slough at the Port of Portland, Swan Island, and the
Portland International Airport, see the:
Columbia Sleuthers
Capstones Students Web Pages.