Marcola

From Lane Co Oregon

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The [[1938]] National Register of Historic Places listed [[Earnest Bridge]] is a covered bridge in the Marcola area that was featured in the [[1965]] James Stewart film Shenandoah.
The [[1938]] National Register of Historic Places listed [[Earnest Bridge]] is a covered bridge in the Marcola area that was featured in the [[1965]] James Stewart film Shenandoah.
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[[Category:Cities]] [[Category:Marcola]]
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[[Category:Cities]] [[Category:Marcola]] [[Category:Asian Americans in Lane County]]

Current revision as of 15:59, 28 August 2008

Marcola is an unincorporated community in Lane County, Oregon, northeast of Springfield on the Mohawk River.

The post office at this location was established in 1876 and originally called "Isabel" for early settler Isabel Applegate. About 1900, a railroad was built through the Mohawk Valley and a station named Marcola was established near the post office. Marcola was a name made up to honor Mary Cole, the wife of the town's founder, Columbus Cole. In 1901, the post office name was changed to agree with the name of the station.

In 1900 there was a community of Japanese people in Marcola who had come to help construct the Southern Pacific railroad line that was built into the Mohawk Valley to help the local lumber mills ship their timber.

The 1938 National Register of Historic Places listed Earnest Bridge is a covered bridge in the Marcola area that was featured in the 1965 James Stewart film Shenandoah.

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