Vancouver, city, seat (1854) of Clark county, southwestern Washington, U.S. It lies at the head of deepwater navigation on the Columbia River, there bridged to Portland, Oregon. The oldest continuously inhabited white settlement in the state, it was founded in 1824 as a Hudson’s Bay Company post, Fort Vancouver (named for Captain George Vancouver), and served as headquarters of the company’s Pacific Northwest operations. The fort, now a national historic site, became a U.S. military reservation (Vancouver Barracks) in 1848. The SS Beaver, which was the first steamboat to operate on the Pacific Ocean north of San Francisco (1836), was assembled there after arriving under sail from England with engines and paddle wheels as deck cargo.
Manufacturing, farming, lumbering, and port operations (including the shipping of grain, lumber, paper, cable, and canned foods) provide a diversified economic base. The city is a distribution centre for hydroelectric power produced in the Columbia Basin. It is the site of Clark College (1933) and state schools for the deaf and the blind. Gifford Pinchot National Forest is headquartered in Vancouver. The western entrance to the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area lies 30 miles (48 km) east of the city. Vancouver’s population growth between 1990 and 2000 reflects the unusually large (about 45 percent) growth rate for Clark county. Inc. 1857. Pop. (2010) 161,791; Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro Metro Area, 2,226,009; (2020) 190,915; Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro Metro Area, 2,512,859.