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The Oregon Territory is the name applied both to the unorganized Oregon Country claimed by both the United States and Britain, as well as to the organized U.S. territory formed from it that existed between 1848 and 1859.

The Territory of Oregon was organized on August 14, 1848 by Act of Congress out of the U.S. portion of the Oregon Country below the 49th parallel. It originally included all of the present-day states of Idaho, Oregon and Washington as well as Montana, west of the Continental Divide, and Wyoming, west of the Continental Divide and north of the 42nd parallel—the northern border of the Mexican Cession.

The first territorial capital was in Oregon City. The capital was later moved Salem in 1851.

In 1853, the portion of the territory north of the lower Columbia River and north of the 46th parallel east of it was organized into the Washington Territory.

In February 14, 1859, the territory entered the Union as the State of Oregon within its current boundaries. The remaining eastern portion of the territory (i.e., the portions in present-day southern Idaho and western Wyoming) was added to the Washington Territory.

Image:Wpdms_oregon_territory_1848.png|Oregon Territory, as originally organized, in 1848 Image:Wpdms_oregon_washington_territories_1853.png|Oregon Territory (blue) with Washington Territory (green) in 1853 Image:Wpdms_oregon_washington_territory_1859.png|State of Oregon (blue) with Washington Territory (green) in 1859

See also


Historical regions and territories of the United States | History of Oregon | Oregon Trail | 1848 establishments | Oregon Country | Territorio dell'Oregon | Oregonterritorium

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Oregon Territory".

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