25 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About Portland
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1. Portland’s name was decided by a coin flip.
2. That’s because Asa Lovejoy and Francis Pettygrove wanted to name the area after their hometowns. (Had it gone the other way, it would be called “Boston.”)
3. The “Portland Penny” the two men flipped is still on display at the Oregon History Center.
4. Lovejoy and Pettygrove were probably onto something with their decision to rename the city. Before their coin flip, the settlement was known simply as “The Clearing.”
5. Portland is one of two U.S. cities that has a dormant volcano—Mount Tabor—within its city limits.
6. Portland has more microbrews and brewpubs than any other U.S. city.
8. Don’t you dare try pumping your own gas there. It’s a $500 fine.
9. But there’s a good chance gas won’t be an issue. Portland has more bicyclists per capita than any other U.S. city.
11. She banned pinball machines.
13. It’s about two feet across, or 452 square inches
14. You’ll need an alarm clock like everybody else in Portland, because it’s illegal to own a rooster for “private use.”
16. That’s because, in its early days, Portland grew so quickly that tree stumps were left in the middle of the roads.
17. They left some trees, however. The city’s Forest Park is the largest natural urban wilderness in the country.
19. The first wiki website was created in Portland in 1994.
20. Portland’s first pro hockey team’s name? The fearsome “Rosebuds.”
21. Portland’s massive rose garden was built during World War I, just in case bombs destroyed all of Europe’s rosebushes.
22. Water fountains, called Benson Bubblers, were installed in front of pubs years ago to keep people from drinking during work hours. It saved many lumberjacks from tipsy ax accidents.
23. Speaking of pubs, Portland is one of the few places outside of France where it’s okay to take your dog inside a tavern.
25. If any of that sounds strange, consider that the city’s unofficial slogan is “Keep Portland Weird.” But according to City Vitals Weirdness index, it ranks only eleventh.
Now that you're a Portland expert, sign up for the Great Urban Race on April 12, 2014 for the smartest, most active way to test your knowledge!
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