Laurelhurst, Portland, Oregon
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Laurelhurst is a neighborhood of vintage single-family homes and undulating streets surrounding a park of the same name, straddling the NE and SE sections of
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. Stone markers flank the entrances to the area. The center of the neighborhood, Coe Circle, contains a gilded
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of
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, which is a
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war memorial A war memorial is a building, monument, statue, or other edifice to celebrate a war or victory, or (predominating in modern times) to commemorate those who died or were injured in a war. Symbolism Historical usage It has ...
. The Laurelhurst Historic District was officially listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019.


History

In 1909, the Ladd Estate Company sold its Hazelfern Farm to the Laurelhurst Company for approximately $2 million. The name Laurelhurst was borrowed from a residential development in Seattle that Laurelhurst Company general manager Paul Murphy had recently completed. The name combined a reference to the laurel shrubbery near the Seattle development with the Old English hurst, denoting a wooded hill. The Laurelhurst Company platted a residential development of with the help of co-investor and landscape architect
John Charles Olmsted John Charles Olmsted (September 14, 1852 – February 24, 1920) was an American landscape architect. The nephew and adopted son of Frederick Law Olmsted, he worked with his father and his younger brother, Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., in their fath ...
. As the first houses were being built, the city purchased for $92,000 to construct Laurelhurst Park. Advertised as a "High Class Residence Park," the Laurelhurst Company placed numerous restrictions on the neighborhood. Similar to the Ladd's Addition development, the sale of alcohol was prohibited. Additionally, there were to be no apartments, hotels, motels, flats, stables, or commercial buildings, and no homes were to be sold to Chinese, Japanese, or African Americans. The Laurelhurst Neighborhood Association (LNA) met as massive changes to Portland's transportation options were discussed in the 1970s, which included the eventual construction of the first TriMet MAX Light Rail line in the 1980s. LNA and the community endorsed light rail being placed in the Banfield corridor, but was strongly opposed to alignment along the Burnside corridor, either a busway or light rail. A 1978 petition submitted by 34 neighbors objected "to any parking, widening, or lane changes on East Burnside Street in the Laurelhurst area now or in the future", calling it "a serious threat" to the neighborhood, that would lower property values, and be "a definite threat to our daily living pattern and destroy our neighborhood." The Portland-wide study noted a requirement to minimize projects "specifically in the Laurelhurst area".
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reported proximity to Laurelhurst Park was a selling point for realtors in this neighborhood until the homeless camp situation.


Redlining and racial covenant

In 1913, a racial covenant governing development of Laurelhurst mandated "...nor shall the same or any part thereof be in any manner used or occupied by Chinese, Japanese or negroes, except that persons of said races may be employed as servants by residents." A 1934
redlining Redlining is a Discrimination, discriminatory practice in which financial services are withheld from neighborhoods that have significant numbers of Race (human categorization), racial and Ethnic group, ethnic minorities. Redlining has been mos ...
map of Portland assigned the areas within current Laurelhurst boundaries with a blue grade, or "Still Desirable." Regarding the B19 tract, mapmakers noted "homogenous surroundings, improvements, and population" as among the neighborhood's favorable influences and called the subdivision's origins "a well conceived promotion, honestly administered"; regarding inhabitants, no foreign-born or Black inhabitants were reported.


Neighborhood quality of life

The official neighborhood representative Laurelhurst Neighborhood Association sought to prevent homeless camps within of schools, parks and where children congregate and further proposing that those who camp in this area be fined up to $100 or sent to jail for up to 30 days. Its members also vocally opposed development in the neighborhood to increase housing availability. The Laurelhurst School was opened in 1918 and was originally named Scott School, after the first editor of
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. It was renamed to Laurelhurst School in 1925 along with the construction of the building that sits there today.


See also

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National Register of Historic Places listings in Northeast Portland, Oregon Current listings Former listings Notes References {{NRORextlinks, PDX Northeast Portland, Oregon Northeast The points of the compass ...
*
National Register of Historic Places listings in Southeast Portland, Oregon Current listings Former listings Notes References {{NRORextlinks, PDX Southeast The points of the compass are a set o ...


References


External links


Portland Parks & Recreation: Laurelhurst ParkLaurelhurst Street Tree Inventory Report
{{Portland neighborhoods Neighborhoods in Portland, Oregon Northeast Portland, Oregon Southeast Portland, Oregon