Harlan is an unincorporated community in Lincoln County, Oregon, United States, about 30 miles west of Corvallis. [1] It is located in a valley of the Central Oregon Coast Range in the Siuslaw National Forest. [2] The community's economy was once based on logging and sawmills. [3] Cattle ranching is another mainstay of the local economy. [4] [5]
James R. Harlan helped establish a post office at this locale and the office was named for him. [6] Harlan post office ran from 1890 until 1968; Harlan was the first postmaster. [6] Harlan Cemetery was also founded in 1890. [7]
In 1915, Harlan had a public school and a population of 200. [8] A new school and a store were built in 1926. [7] Harlan School closed in 1967 and students then attended school in Eddyville. [7] The store, which housed the post office and was also a gas station, closed in 1971 and is now a private residence. [3] [8] In 1993, author Ralph Friedman reported that there was "nothing much" in Harlan. [9] Chapel of the Valley church, built in 1961, still serves a congregation. [5] [7] The last commercial sawmill in Harlan shut down in the early 1980s. [7] As of 2008, a small one-man hobby sawmill still operated. [4]
44°32′23″N123°41′35″W / 44.539842°N 123.693165°W