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Page "Coos County, Oregon" ¶ 3
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Coos and County
* Stratford, New Hampshire, a town in Coos County
The tallest living specimen is the " Doerner Fir ", ( previously known as the Brummit fir ), tall, at East Fork Brummit Creek in Coos County, Oregon, the stoutest is the " Queets Fir ", diameter, in the Queets River valley, Olympic National Park, Washington.
* Coos County, New Hampshire – east
In 1856 the Camas Valley was annexed to Douglas County from Coos County.
* Coos County, Oregon-( west )
However, boundary adjustments with Coos County in 1872 and 1951 and Josephine County in 1880 and 1927 increased the area to.
* Coos County, Oregon-( north )
Coos County is a county located in the U. S. state of Oregon.
Currently, forest products, tourism, fishing and agriculture dominate the Coos County economy.
Two projects are currently under development in Coos County.
* National Register of Historic Places listings in Coos County, Oregon
* Coos County, Oregon ( official website )
cs: Coos County ( Oregon )
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li: Coos County ( Oregon )
nl: Coos County ( Oregon )
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sv: Coos County, Oregon

Coos and was
One was USS Anacapa ( AG-49 ) formerly the lumber transport Coos Bay which was converted to Q-ship duty as project " Love William ".
Although exploration and trapping in the area occurred as early as 1828, the first settlement was established at Empire City in 1853, now part of Coos Bay, Oregon, by members of the Coos Bay Company.
A project to build a natural gas pipeline between the cities of Roseburg and Coos Bay, which would attract new industry to the Coos Bay area, was begun in 1999 when voters approved a local bond measure to raise as much as $ 27 million, with the state of Oregon providing $ 24 million.
Coos Bay is considered the best natural harbor between San Francisco Bay and the Puget Sound, and the Port of Coos Bay was the largest forest products shipper in the world until late 2005 when raw log exports via transport ship were suspended.
In 1803, the northern area was removed for the formation of Coos County.
A descendant of Thomas Leavitt, one of the first English settlers of New Hampshire, Hazen Leavitt was born in Percy, Coos County, New Hampshire.
Settled that same year, it would be incorporated as Colebrook June 11, 1796, and was for many years the shire town of the Northern Judicial District of Coos County.
" After the Coos Trail through Dixville Notch was created in 1803, farmers loaded sleds each winter with potash, pearlash, wheat and other produce, including potato whiskey, to exchange in Portland, Maine for molasses, saltfish and other necessities.
In 1852, Henry Baldwin, from County Cork, Ireland, was shipwrecked on the Coos Bay bar and walked into this area.
Coos Bay's population as of the 2010 census was 15, 967 residents, making it the largest city on the Oregon Coast .< ref >
The Wolverine was built in Coos Bay in 1908 and the Coquille was also built in 1908.
Prior to around 1915, The Coos region was largely isolated from the rest of Oregon due to difficulties in crossing the Coast Range and fording rivers, and the Pacific Ocean was used to link people to other areas, including San Francisco, which was an easier two-day trip compared to traveling inland over rugged terrain.
North Bend has a public recreational boat ramp that accesses Coos Bay, along with a new concrete pier / boardwalk area that was completed in 2010 per North Bend's regional urban renewal policy.
On December 22, 1853, part of the western portion of the county was included in the newly formed Coos County.
Granted as Upper Coos in 1763 by Colonial Governor Benning Wentworth to Captain David Page of Petersham, Massachusetts, the town was settled in 1764 by his son, David Page, Jr. and Emmons Stockwell.
Mayfield was born in Coos Bay, Oregon and grew up in Halstead, Kansas.

Coos and created
In 1853 The Coos Bay Commercial Company arrived from the Rogue Valley and created routes for settlers.

Coos and by
It crosses the Chetco River at Brookings, the Rogue River in Gold Beach, the Coquille River just north of Bandon, Coos Bay at North Bend via the McCullough Bridge, named after the engineer who designed a series of bridges built on the Oregon Coast in the 1930s, the Umpqua at Reedsport, the Siuslaw in Florence, Yaquina Bay at Newport, and the Columbia River by Astoria.
The Oregon Coast, the Burrard Inlet, Puget Sound, the mouth of the Columbia River, Coos Bay, and Humboldt Bay are some of the larger features along the hundreds of miles of coast that has been shaped and reshaped by weather and geologic forces.
Colebrook is the hub of northern Coos County, and is the largest town ( by population ) north of the county seat of Lancaster.
Ignited by the forest fire, the town ’ s abundant gorse became engulfed in flames, Bandon resident D. H. Woomer told The Coos Bay Times.
North Bend is surrounded on three sides by Coos Bay, an S-shaped water inlet and estuary where the Coos River enters Coos Bay on the Pacific Ocean, and borders the city of Coos Bay, Oregon to the south.
Some local businesses include Mo's Restaurants and the Three Rivers Casino, which is run by the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians.
In order to open up land in the Coos Bay area for homesteading in the early 1860s, the U. S. Army forcibly marched the Coos and Lower Umpqua Indians north over rugged terrain to the Alsea Sub-Agency reservation in Yachats where the peaceful Indians, treated by the Army as though they were prisoners of war, were incarcerated.
Umbellularia has long been valued for its many uses by Native Americans throughout the tree's range, including the Cahuilla, Chumash, Pomo, Miwok, Yuki, Coos and Salinan people.
Formed by the confluence of its major tributaries, the South Fork Coos River and the Millicoma River, it drains an important timber-producing region of the Southern Oregon Coast Range.
The river enters the bay about from where the bay — curving east, north, and west of the cities of Coos Bay and North Bend and passing by the communities of Barview and Charleston — meets the ocean.
Flowing west from the confluence of the South Fork Coos River and the Millicoma River, the Coos River is bordered by Oregon Route 241 ( Coos River Highway ) on the right and Coos River Road on the left.
Coos Bay is the proposed site of a liquefied natural gas ( LNG ) terminal by Jordan Cove Energy Project.
Owned by Newport Television, the station reaches additional viewers in central and western Oregon via co-owned full-powered satellite stations KMCB digital channel 22 ( Coos Bay ) and KTCW digital channel 45 ( Roseburg ).

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