Vancouver, Washington
city in Clark County, State of Washington, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vancouver is a city just north of the Columbia River in the U.S. state of Washington. It is directly north of Portland, Oregon, and 305 miles (491 km) south of Vancouver, British Columbia. Both cities were named for George Vancouver, a British explorer and sea captain.
Vancouver | |
---|---|
City | |
Skyline of Vancouver with Mount St. Helens in the background Vancouver Barracks Esther Short Park | |
Motto(s): A colorful past, a bright future | |
![]() Location in Washington | |
Coordinates: 45°37′52″N 122°40′18″W | |
Country | United States |
State | Washington |
County | Clark |
Founded | 1825 |
Incorporated | January 23, 1857 |
Named for | George Vancouver |
Government | |
• Type | Council–manager |
Area | |
• City | 52.45 sq mi (135.84 km2) |
• Land | 48.74 sq mi (126.25 km2) |
• Water | 3.70 sq mi (9.59 km2) |
Elevation | 184 ft (56 m) |
Population | |
• City | 190,915 |
• Rank | U.S.: 132nd WA: 4th |
• Density | 3,784.32/sq mi (1,461.14/km2) |
• Urban | 2,104,238 (US: 23rd) |
• Metro | 2,509,489 (US: 25th) |
Demonym | Vancouverite |
Time zone | UTC−8 (Pacific (PST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−7 (PDT) |
ZIP codes | 98660-98666, 98668, 98682-98687 |
Area code(s) | 360, 564 |
FIPS code | 53-74060 |
GNIS feature ID | 1531916[2] |
Website | cityofvancouver.us |
The city includes Fort Vancouver, which was begun by the British Hudson's Bay Company in 1824. It was made part of the United States on June 15, 1846, as part of the Oregon Treaty. It is the fourth-largest city in Washington State.
History

The Vancouver area was home to Native Americans before the arrival of Europeans. Chinook and Klickitat tribes called this area "land of the mud turtles" before 1775. Disease killed most natives before the Hudson's Bay Company came in the 1820s. The Hudson's Bay Company built Fort Vancouver to trade in beaver skins, which were used to make top hats. Workers at Fort Vancouver came from England, the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii), Scotland, and Canada. Many trappers had native wives and lived outside Fort Vancouver.
Americans began to arrive from the Oregon Trail. John McLoughlin was head of Fort Vancouver and helped the Americans with tools and seed. Fort Vancouver closed in the 1840s. The city of Vancouver was incorporated in 1857 and had grown to be over three times by 1909. In 1917, the first bridge connecting Oregon to Washington over the Columbia River was built from Vancouver. In 1982, another bridge was built a few miles east for the I-205 freeway.

Columbia Barracks became Vancouver Barracks and was larger than any other US military base in Oregon, Washington, or Idaho for many years. During World War I, the Vancouver Barracks had a lumber mill to cut spruce wood to make biplanes. Another ship yard built ships for World War II.
Shipyard workers came, and Vancouver grew from 18,000 to over 80,000 people. Vancouver grew again and in 1997 became almost its present size. About half as many people live just north of Vancouver as live inside the city. About one in three Vancouver workers work in Portland, Oregon.
Geography
Vancouver is located at 45°38′1″ North, 122°36′11″ West (45.633743, −122.603011)[4].
Vancouver is just north of the Columbia River and west of the volcanic Cascade Range mountains and the Columbia gorge. Vancouver is about fifty miles from the Pacific Ocean, which gives it rain. Because it is in a valley between the Pacific Coast and Cascade mountains, there are clouds in winter. When it is clear one can see Mount Hood, the Mount Saint Helens volcano and Mount Adams from Vancouver.
Climate
Vancouver is north of Portland, Oregon, and shares a similar climate: wet from November through June and dry from July through October. Vancouver has snow once or twice a year, on average. Vancouver has a total area of 46.1 square miles (119 km2). About 7% is water, including Vancouver Lake to the west.
Architecture and buildings
The National Register of Historic Places considers Vancouver to be a good place to visit. Because it is the oldest city in the area, Vancouver has a wide variety of buildings such as these:
- The Covington House at 4201 Main Street is a log cabin built in 1848.
- Officers Row has many old houses from Vancouver Barracks.
- Mother Joseph's Providence Academy was built in 1868.
- Saint James Church had its first Roman Catholic Mass in 1885.
- A Carnegie Library at Sixteenth and Main opened on New Year's Eve, 1909.
- The 1914 U.S. National Bank, now the Heritage Building, is at Fifth and Main.
- A 1916 post office is at 1211 Daniels Street.
- The 1935 Art Deco telephone exchange building is at Eleventh and Washington.
- The 1941 Clark County courthouse was designed by Day Hillborn
- Smith Tower, a round apartment building for the elderly, was built in downtown in 1965.
- Modern buildings surround Esther Short Park, the oldest public park in the state.
Fort Vancouver National Historic Site also has many structures, which have been rebuilt as they were in the 1830s.
References
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