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Washington Square Transit Center

1994 establishments in OregonOregon building and structure stubsOregon transportation stubsTigard, OregonTransportation buildings and structures in Washington County, Oregon
TriMet transit centers
Washington Square Transit Center (Tigard, Oregon) in 2012
Washington Square Transit Center (Tigard, Oregon) in 2012

The Washington Square Transit Center is a TriMet transit center located at the Washington Square shopping center in Tigard, Oregon, in the mall's parking lot north of J. C. Penney.The following bus routes serve the transit center: 43 – Taylors Ferry Road 45 – Garden Home 56 – Scholls Ferry Road 62 – Murray Blvd. 76 – Beaverton/Tualatin 78 – Beaverton/Lake Oswego

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Washington Square Transit Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Washington Square Transit Center
Washington Square Transit Center, Tigard North Tigard

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Wikipedia: Washington Square Transit CenterContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.4527 ° E -122.7788 °
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Address

Washington Square Transit Center

Washington Square Transit Center
97223 Tigard, North Tigard
Oregon, United States
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Washington Square Transit Center (Tigard, Oregon) in 2012
Washington Square Transit Center (Tigard, Oregon) in 2012
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Nearby Places

Augustus Fanno Farmhouse
Augustus Fanno Farmhouse

The Augustus Fanno Farmhouse was the home of Augustus Fanno, one of the first European American settlers in what became Washington County in the U.S. state of Oregon. Born in Maine in 1804, Fanno lived in Missouri as a young adult and in 1846 moved to Oregon with his first wife, Martha, and son. After Martha died in childbirth in Linn City in the Willamette Valley, Fanno and his son settled a 640-acre (2.6 km2) donation land claim 12 miles (19 km) to the northwest on a small tributary of the Tualatin River. It was the first such claim to be filed in the county.In 1851, Fanno married Rebecca Denney, and the first of their six children was born later that year. In 1859, he designed and built a rural home in the modified New England revival style popular in Oregon at the time. The family pioneered the cultivation of onions in Oregon, and by the 1890s these became regionally recognized for their high quality. Fanno descendants produced onions on the farm until onion maggots drove them out of business in the 1940s. Members of the family occupied the farmhouse until 1974, and in March 1982 they donated the house and adjacent land to the Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District (THPRD). Fanno Farmhouse remains on its original site along Fanno Creek in the Portland, Oregon, suburb of Beaverton. Restored by THPRD, the house is on the National Register of Historic Places, was honored as a significant historical site by Tualatin Valley Heritage, has been named a Century Farm, and was nominated for the 1985 Griffin Cabin Award by the Washington County Historical Society.