Robinette, Oregon
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Robinette,_Oregon an entity of type: Thing
Robinette is a former unincorporated community in Baker County, Oregon, United States. Robinette was platted around 1898, along a line that never developed. In 1909, a railroad station and townsite at this locale were named for James E. Robinette, a native of Maryland. Robinette came to what was then Union County in 1884 and settled on the west bank of the Snake River near the mouth of the Powder River in 1887. Robinette post office was also established in 1909.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Robinette, Oregon
rdf:langString
Robinette, Oregon
xsd:float
44.75277709960938
xsd:float
-117.0305557250977
xsd:integer
25823470
xsd:integer
941375847
rdf:langString
GNIS feature ID
rdf:langString
InternetArchiveBot
rdf:langString
May 2019
xsd:integer
2077
rdf:langString
yes
rdf:langString
Robinette, Oregon
rdf:langString
Oregon#USA
rdf:langString
Former unincorporated community
rdf:langString
United States
rdf:langString
PDT
xsd:integer
-8
xsd:integer
-7
xsd:string
44.75277777777778 -117.03055555555555
rdf:langString
Robinette is a former unincorporated community in Baker County, Oregon, United States. Robinette was platted around 1898, along a line that never developed. In 1909, a railroad station and townsite at this locale were named for James E. Robinette, a native of Maryland. Robinette came to what was then Union County in 1884 and settled on the west bank of the Snake River near the mouth of the Powder River in 1887. Robinette post office was also established in 1909. By 1940, when Robinette had a population of 46, it was the northern terminus of a branch line of the Union Pacific Railroad (Oregon Short Line) that ran along the Snake River from Huntington, and served the Pine Valley and Eagle Valley agricultural areas to the north. The line had previously extended 25 miles (40 km) further north to Homestead, but that section, which was used to haul ore from the Cornucopia area mines, was later abandoned and the railroad grade was converted into a highway. The Robinette railhead of the Union Pacific branch line "probably generated most of the freight hauled by the railroad." The townsite is now under the water of the Brownlee Reservoir, which was created by the damming of the Snake River by the Brownlee Dam in 1958. Before the flooding, the Robinette Store was moved to Richland, where it still stands today. Richland, the closest city to Robinette, was formerly accessible by a road along the Powder River that has since been flooded by the reservoir. The post office was closed in 1957. As of 2010, the United States Geological Survey still classified Robinette as a populated place. Robinette was home to the Stil-Van Lumber Company from 1949 until just prior to the town being flooded. Marion Dale Stillwell sold the company, including , to from Baker City. Stillwell also received compensation when the Robinette facility flooded.
xsd:integer
1126115
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
6718
xsd:double
633.0696
xsd:string
-7
-8
<Geometry>
POINT(-117.0305557251 44.752777099609)