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Port–Manning House

1884 establishments in OregonHouses completed in 1884Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Salem, OregonNRHP infobox with nocatOregon Registered Historic Place stubs
Use mdy dates from August 2023
Port Manning House Salem Oregon
Port Manning House Salem Oregon

The Port–Manning House is a historic home in Salem, Oregon, United States. The house was built in 1884 by Dr. Luke A. Port. The house was designed after the Italianate Victorian style. Under threat of demolition, it was moved from its downtown location to south of the city of Salem in 1972.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Port–Manning House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Port–Manning House
Halls Ferry Road South,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.880887 ° E -123.131448 °
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Address

Halls Ferry Road South

Halls Ferry Road South

Oregon, United States
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Port Manning House Salem Oregon
Port Manning House Salem Oregon
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Nearby Places

Ash Creek (Polk County, Oregon)
Ash Creek (Polk County, Oregon)

Ash Creek is a short stream in Polk County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. Formed by the merger of its north and middle forks near Monmouth, it flows generally east to meet the Willamette River at Independence. The creek passes under Oregon Route 51 just before entering the river. The creek's mouth is about 95 miles (153 km) upstream of the Willamette's confluence with the Columbia River.North Fork Ash Creek begins at the eastern edge of the Central Oregon Coast Range near Dallas at 44°54′35″N 123°21′44″W and flows generally southeast to meet the Middle Fork. Middle Fork Ash Creek begins at 44°53′26″N 123°17′37″W near Mount Pisgah and flows generally east. Both forks pass under Oregon Route 99W shortly before they merge to form the main stem.Ash Creek is joined by a third fork, South Fork Ash Creek, in Independence. The South Fork begins at 44°52′36″N 123°18′28″W slightly south of the Middle Fork and flows generally east to meet the main stem at 44°51′13″N 123°11′36″W The South Fork passes under Route 99W south of Monmouth and under Route 51 in Independence.None of the three forks has a named tributary. Before alterations by settlers in the 19th century, the basin was a "boggy, 'braided' marsh with many small creeks spilling into Ash Creek" and the river. European-Americans drained and leveled wetlands and riparian zones for farming, logging, housing, and urban development.