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The earliest evidence of the name Oregon has Spanish origins. The term " orejón " comes from the historical chronicle Relación de la Alta y Baja California (1598) [2] written by Rodrigo Montezuma, a man of New Spain. His work made reference to the Columbia River when the Spanish explorers penetrated into the actual North American territory ...
There is growing consensus that its origin is most likely Algonquian, a family of Indigenous languages spoken east of the Rocky Mountains and in present-day Canada. In the early twentieth century, banker and historian Thomas Coit Elliott uncovered a document in a 1765 proposal written by Major Robert Rogers, a colonial soldier.
Apr 27, 2022 · The history of the name 'Oregon' dates back to at least the mid-1700s, but what it means or where it originated has been debated for many years.
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The writer Joaquin Miller said that the term Oregon came from the Spanish words aura and agua, [3] a poetic reference to the rains for which the Oregon coast is famous. Popular history in the Pacific Northwest relates the term Oregon with Aragon, after Spanish King Ferdinand of Aragon.
Oregon 1765 as the name of a large river in the west of North America, probably the modern Columbia; a word of uncertain and disputed origin. It seems to be of Algonquian origin.
Jan 4, 1974 · OREGON: One theory is that the name is derived from "origanum," a species of wild sage which grows abundantly on the coast of Oregon; another, that it stems from the Spanish "Oregones," which referred to the Indian tribes inhabiting the region and meant "big-eared men." Joaquin Miller, poet of the Sierras" gave another version - that the name ...
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Oregon has been home to many indigenous nations for thousands of years. The first European traders, explorers, and settlers began exploring what is now Oregon's Pacific coast in the early to mid-16th century.