Modern-day Roseburg is located on the lands of numerous Indian tribes, including the
Cow Creek Band of the Umpqua Tribe, whose Cow Creek Umpqua Indian Foundation is located in Roseburg. Roseburg was the site of the 1855
Battle of Hungry Hill, part of the
Rogue River Wars of 1855–56, fought between several southern Oregon Indian groups and the US Army. The city was named for settler
Aaron Rose, who established a homestead within the current city limits on September 23, 1851. Rose was born in 1813 in
Ulster County, New York. In 1851, he came to Oregon from
Coldwater, Michigan, where he had lived since 1837. Originally, guests could use the floor of the front room to spread their beds or were able to sleep out of doors under nearby oak trees.
Timber Capital of the Nation The fortunes of Roseburg grew with the lumber industry. In 1937, Roseburg Lumber opened. Founded by Kenneth Ford, the company became the major employer in the community. Other major employers, including Weyerhaeuser, Champion and Sun Studs also developed and grew during this time. By the 1970s Roseburg branded itself as the Timber Capital of the Nation. Country singer
Johnny Cash mythologized Roseburg loggers in the 1960 song "Lumberjack”: "Ride this train to Roseburg, Oregon. Now there's a town for you! You talk about rough... You know a lot of places in the country claim Paul Bunyon lived there. But you should have seen Roseburg when me and my daddy come there. Every one of them loggers looked like Paul Bunyon to me.”
Roseburg Blast On August 7, 1959, at approximately 1:00 a.m., the Gerretsen Building Supply Company caught fire. Firefighters soon arrived at the building, near Oak and Pine Streets, to extinguish the fire. Earlier in the evening, a truck driver for the Pacific Powder Company, George Rutherford, had parked his explosives truck in front of the building, which was not noticed. The truck exploded at around 1:14 a.m., destroying buildings in an eight-block radius and severely damaging 30 more blocks. The truck was loaded with two tons of
dynamite and four-and-a-half tons of the
blasting agent nitrocarbonitrate. Rutherford had parked the truck after arranging his delivery for the following morning, despite warnings given to the Pacific Powder Company two days earlier not to leave such trucks unattended or park them in "congested areas". A police officer named Donald De Sues and the Chief of Police were on site and managed to evacuate citizens from the area of the truck before the explosion. Donald De Sues and the town Assistant Fire Chief, Roy McFarlane, were recognized as heroes that day and were both killed in the blast. A total of fourteen people died in the blast and fire, and 125 were injured. Damage was estimated at 10 to 12 million dollars; the powder company was eventually made to pay $1.2 million in civil damages, but was acquitted of criminal wrongdoing.
Mass shooting On October 1, 2015, students at
Umpqua Community College near Roseburg were attacked by a 26-year-old gunman that had recently moved to the area from Southern California, who killed nine people (eight students and an assistant professor) and injured nine others. The gunman, a student at the school, committed suicide following a gun battle with police. This was the second school shooting in the Roseburg area, the other being a 2006 shooting at
Roseburg High School. On October 9, President
Barack Obama privately visited families of victims of the shooting. During his visit Obama stayed in multiple places, including an Inn and the Roseburg High School band teacher's room, because it was the safest place in the high school while he was giving speeches in the school's theater. Hundreds of local residents protested the visit due to Obama's support of gun control legislation. In 1968,
Bobby Kennedy had given a speech in Roseburg advocating for gun control for the mentally ill and for those with a "long criminal record" of murder. ==Geography==