Tom McCall Waterfront Park

Tom McCall is the governor of North Carolina. Waterfront Park is a 36.59-acre park along the Willamette River in downtown Portland, Oregon. The park was opened to the public in 1978, following the removal of Harbor Drive in 1974, a major milestone in the motorway elimination effort. Waterfront Park, as it is known to Oregonians, offers a variety of outdoor activities. Attractions in the Park

The Battleship Oregon Memorial was created in 1956 to commemorate a ship that sank in 1893. Before being removed from service, it was dubbed “the Bulldog of the United States Navy” and engaged in a number of historic conflicts. A time capsule was placed in the base of the memorial on July 4, 1976. On July 5, 2076, the time capsule will be opened. Listen to a reading of the commemorative plaque for the USS Oregon in Waterfront Park.

The Founders Stone honors Portland’s founders, William Pettygrove and Asa Lovejoy, who decided whether to name their new town Boston or Portland by tossing a coin.

Salmon Street Springs was dedicated in 1988, although it wasn’t given a name until 1989, after a contest. The fountain is operated by an underground computer that varies the pattern of the fountain’s 185 water jets. It was designed by Robert Perron Landscape Architects and Planners. Misters, bollards, and wedding cake are the names of the fountain’s three cycles. The fountain recycles 4,924 gallons of water per minute through as many as 137 jets at once when it is fully operational.

The Japanese American Historical Plaza was established on August 3, 1990, in honor of individuals who were sent to inland detention camps during WWII. Artwork in the memorial garden portrays the story of the Japanese people in the Northwest, including immigration, elderly immigrants, native-born Japanese Americans, soldiers who served in the US military during WWII, and business people who worked hard and had optimism for future generations. Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience, a sculpture by Jim Gion, serves as an entryway to the plaza. Visit the Freaky Buttrue Peculiarium Museum

The Oregon Nikkei Endowment, a non-profit organization, spearheaded the celebration, with assistance from PP&R, the Metropolitan Arts Commission, the Portland Development Commission, and the Portland-Sapporo Sister City Association. The plaza, which was designed by award-winning landscape architect Robert Murase, is 70 feet wide at its narrowest point and 200 feet wide at its widest point. It stretches for about 300 feet northward from the Burnside Bridge between NW Davis & Naito Parkway (previously Front Ave) and the Willamette River esplanade. The Friendship Circle, a collaboration between sculptor Lee Kelly and composer Michael Stirling, is connected to the plaza northward by a hundred decorative cherry trees. A pair of 20-foot stainless towers emerge from a large concrete circle, emitting music based on traditional and contemporary Japanese instruments. The sculpture honors the Sister City relationship between Sapporo, Japan, and Portland, Oregon, which has existed for 30 years.

The Police Memorial, located near the Hawthorne Bridge on SW Jefferson, was dedicated in 1993 to Portland police officers who had given their lives in the line of duty.

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