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Redmond, Oregon?
Lana
specializes in Real Estate Property in Redmond,Oregon.
Don't make a mistake when trying to purchase Real Estate property,
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comes to Real Estate purchases.
Weather you are looking for an investment or real estate
property for yourself, contact me about the opportunities in Central Oregon.
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A little about
myself:
Lana has been part of the Central Oregon community since 1998. She
and her husband Larry are in the process of building their dream
home on ten view acres northwest of Bend about 8 miles from
Sisters, Oregon.
"Living in Central Oregon is a dream come true for us. We enjoy
fishing, golfing, skiing and hiking and Central Oregon has
it all! Together with the added benefit of a wonderful
sense of community, gorgeous geography and all that sunshine, it’s
hard to beat -- anywhere!"
Lana is a native Oregonian and has an extensive business
background. She holds an MBA from Seattle University and prior to
joining the Coldwell Banker Reed Brothers team in Sisters,
OR, Lana was President/CEO of her own Management
Consulting firm.
About Redmond, Oregon
Redmond is a city in Umatilla
County, Oregon, United States. Redmond was named in
1868 by the county commissioners for George H.
Redmond, Democratic candidate for Vice-President in
the 1864 presidential campaign. The population was
16,354 at the 2000 census. The 2006 estimate is 17,310
residents. It is the county seat of Umatilla County.
A commercial center in the locality
of Redmond began as early as 1851 when Dr. William C.
McKay established a trading post at the mouth of McKay
Creek. A Post Office with the name of Marshall (named
for the owner of another local store, and sometime
gambler) was established April 21, 1865, and later
renamed Redmond. The city was incorporated in 1880.
By 1900, Redmond had a population of 4,406 and was the
fourth-largest city in Oregon. Like many cities in
eastern Oregon, it had a flourishing Chinatown from the
1880s into the 1920s.
Redmond Woolen Mills, founded in 1893, is known
world-wide as a maker of fine Indian trading blankets
and men's plaid shirts.
In addition to the woolen mills, Redmond is also
famous for its annual rodeo, the Redmond Round-Up.
First held in 1910, it is part of the Professional Rodeo
Cowboys Association (PRCA) sanctioned rodeo circuit. In
1999, the Redmond Round-Up Association added a two
night Professional Bull Riders Classic to the Annual
events.
In addition Redmond had a noted red light district,
which as late as 1947 counted 20 brothels in the heart
of the city. While the threat of a Presbyterian minister
in 1953 to read in church a list of names of patrons of
the city's brothels closed the district, one survivor,
Stella Darby continued to operate her establishment
until she retired in 1965. The four blocks that this
red-light district once covered is now the "old town" of
Redmond, and is listed on the National Register of
Historic Places.
Redmond has been a center of Culture and Art in the
region for many years. Boasting institutions like the
Redmond Center for the Arts (in the town's old
Carnegie Library building) and Crow's Shadow Institute
of the Arts on the nearby Umatilla Indian Reservation.
About Central Oregon
Central Oregon is a geographical
region lying near the center of the U.S. state of
Oregon. It is commonly considered to include Deschutes,
Jefferson, and Crook counties. Primary cities in Central
Oregon are La Pine, Sunriver, Bend, Redmond, Madras, and
Prineville.
Sisters Oregon
Sisters is a city in Deschutes
County, Oregon, United States. It is part of the Bend,
Oregon Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was
959 at the 2000 census. By 2005 the population had grown
to about 1500 with growth predicted to 4700 by 2020.
Camp Polk was established as a
military post in 1865 in response to the Paiute Indian
wars that were raging throughout eastern Oregon during
the 1860s and 70s. Named after the Oregon county from
which the camp’s commanding officer hailed, it consisted
of a group of cabins along the west bank of Squaw Creek,
about three miles northeast of Sisters. The troops spent
the winter of 1865-66 there. After discovering that
there was no Indian problem they left. Around 1870, the
area was homesteaded by Samuel Hindeman who also ran the
post office. The post office at Camp Polk was moved to
the present site of Sisters in 1888, and the name was
changed to Sisters after the Three Sisters mountains
that dominate its western skyline.
Bend Oregon
Bend is a city in Deschutes County,
Oregon, United States. The name Bend was derived from
"Farewell Bend," the designation used by early pioneers
to refer to the location along the Deschutes River where
the town eventually was platted, one of the few fordable
points along the river. It is the principal city of the
Bend, Oregon Metropolitan Statistical Area. The
population was 52,029 at the 2000 census, though it has
grown to over 75,290 as of 2006.
Bend is located on the edge of the Cascade Range
Ponderosa Pine forest on the west as it transitions into
the Great Basin high desert plateau, characterized by
junipers, sagebrush, bitter-brush, and little water.
Originally a logging town, Bend has become identified as
a jump-off point for multiple outdoor sports, such as
mountain biking, fishing, hiking, camping, rock
climbing, skiing, and golf. It has also been named one
of the best real estate hotspots in the country.
Until the winter of 1824, the Bend
area was known only to Native Americans who hunted and
fished there. That year, members of a fur trapping party
led by Peter Skene Ogden visited the area. John C.
Fremont, Dr. John Strong Newberry, and other Army survey
parties came next. Then pioneers heading farther west
passed through the area and forded the Deschutes River
at Farewell Bend.
Actual settlement did not occur until the early 1900s
with the founding of the Pilot Butte Development Company
by Alexander M. Drake. A small community developed
around the bend in the river, and in 1904 a city was
incorporated by a general vote of the community's 300
residents. On January 4, 1905, the city held its first
official meeting as an incorporated municipality,
appointing A. H. Goodwillie as the first mayor. Twelve
years later, Deschutes County was formed from the
western half of Crook County and Bend was designated as
the county seat. In 1929, Bend amended the charter and
adopted the manager/council form of government.
Redmond Oregon
Redmond is a city in Deschutes
County, Oregon, United States. It is named for Frank T.
Redmond, who settled near the present site of the town
in 1905. It is part of the Bend, Oregon Metropolitan
Statistical Area. Redmond's 2006 population is 23,500.
City and State Information is licensed
under the terms of the
GNU Free Documentation License.
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