Urban League Reception for the New CEO and Albina Area, Portland Exhibit

Michael Alexander, Urban League CEO and President

On November 29, the Urban League of Portland hosted a reception for its new CEO and President Michael Alexander and the OMA attended to show its support!

About Michael Alexander:

“Prior to assuming the presidency of the Urban League of Portland, Michael served seven years as VP of account management for Regence Blue Cross Blue Shield. His professional career spans over 30 years of experience in community mental health, philanthropy, and business management. Michael holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Lewis University and a Masters in Social Sciences from Bryn Mawr College School of Social Work and Social Research.”

 ~ Urban League of Portland

CEO Reception at the Legacy Emanuel Medical Center CEO Reception at the Legacy Emanuel Medical Center 

The Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, known as “Emanuel Hospital” just recently opened a new, permanent exhibit in the hospital’s atrium: “Acknowledging the Past, Embracing the Future” regarding the history of the Albina Neighborhood.

The exhibit is made of up of 10 panels and documents over 100 years of the area’s history, but focuses on the Emanuel Hospital Urban Renew Plan of the 1960s and 1970s which expanded the hospital through the destruction of the Eliot Neighborhood within the Albina area, a predominately African-American community. 

 Link to an article in The Oregonian “Legacy Emanuel Medical Center debuts exhibit documenting history of Eliot neighborhood”

Albina’s Eliot Neighborhood Exhibit Albina’s Eliot Neighborhood Exhibit

 Exhibit Info:
“Acknowledging the Past, Embracing the Future
What: A history of the Eliot neighborhood
Where: Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, 501 N. Graham, Portland
When: Always open

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St. Philip the Deacon Oral History Interviews

 

Rev. Alcena Boozer and Carl Deiz

Oral History Interviews:

Earlier this year, we conducted oral history interviews with Rev. Alcena Boozer and Carl Deiz of the St. Philip the Deacon Church and those interviews are now available online!

Rev. Alcena Boozer

Born Alcena Elaine Caldwell on March 19, 1938, Boozer was the Rector of the St. Philip the Deacon Parish for 17 years. Alcena grew up in Northeast Portland and was the fifth of six children. She studied education at Portland State University and got married during her last year in 1960. Over the next 14 years she taught Social Studies, was a counselor and eventually appointed Vice Principal at Grant High School. In 1983 she decided to go to Seminary at Church Divinity School of the Pacific. She was one of the first women ordained in the Diocese of Oregon and one of only 3 African American women ordained in the Episcopal Church nationally. In 1993 Alcena Boozer became Rector of St. Philip in Portland, Oregon, the church she grew up in, and retired in 2012.

Interview 1 ~ Transcript and Audio 
Date: May 19, 2012
Length: 00:19:17
Abstract: Boozer discusses her family, especially how her mother and father met and her oldest brother, who was the first African American Pharmacist at OSU. She details her time at Portland State University, obtaining her Bachelors in Education and Graduate Certificate in Counseling, working at Grant High School as a teacher, counselor and vice principal, and leaving for Seminary at Church Divinity School of the Pacific. She explains her husband’s occupation and her two sons Bentley and Clark. She shares her thoughts on the Church and her faith, how she came to the conclusion to become a Deacon, influential figures in her life. She concludes with her hobbies of activism, hiking and gardening.

Interview 2 ~ Transcript and Audio 
Date: May 30, 2012
Length: 01:03:27
Abstract: Boozer discusses the multiethnic neighborhood she grew up in Northeast Portland, the significant places people in the community would gather at, how her family hosted black entertainers from out of town, such as Lionel Hampton. She describes her time in school at the challenges she faced in high school. She details the day of the Vanport Flood, what she saw, what she heard and how the community reacted. How she met her husband and her wedding day. She then discusses her involvement in civil rights in the 60s, public demonstrations in Oregon, Freedom Riders, the ongoing Civil Rights Movement in Oregon, names main figures of the Civil Rights movement in Portland, her thoughts on national Civil Rights activists such as Malcolm X, Dr. King and the Black Panthers. She discusses her feelings on the last draft board and “Project Return.” Boozer explains her time at the Seminary, the transition from the Seminary to becoming a Reverend, her experience being Vicar of Emmanuel Missions in Birkenfeld and St. Philip the Deacon Episcopal Church, the changing demographic of St. Philip. Afterwards, she goes into details about past reverends, Ramsey Schadewitz, Karl Reich, Sally Lambert, and Richard Green. She concludes the interview by explaining the difficulty she had leaving the church when she retired, how the church is connected to the Urban League of Portland, and her thoughts her own life and what she has accomplished.

Carl Deiz

Born November, 16 1920, Deiz has been a prominent member of St. Philip the Deacon Episcopal Church since 1921. Raised in Northeast Portland, Carl graduated from Franklin High School and soon after worked on the railroad as a waiter. In 1942 he was drafted and sent to Montgomery, Alabama. His older brother, who had been drafted two years prior, had already been trained as a Tuskegee Airman. After finishing officer’s school in Miami, Carl arrived in Tuskegee and trained as a pilot. Upon not passing his last eye exam he became a supply officer at Tuskegee. He was discharge in 1945 and returned to Portland where he studied Business Administration at the University of Portland on the G.I. Bill. He eventually worked for the Forest Service and Bonneville Power Administration. In 1949 he married Mercedes Deiz, who became the first African American female judge in Oregon. Deiz continues to volunteer his time and effort at St. Philip the Deacon.

Interview 1 ~ Transcript and Audio
Date: May 19, 2012
Length: 00:33:32
Abstract: Deiz discusses his parents and their journey to Portland, working on the railroad as a waiter, being drafted and sent to Montgomery, Alabama in 1942. He explains his brother and his role in the Tuskegee Airmen, being discharged and attending University of Portland on the G.I. Bill. He concludes the interview by sharing information regarding his meeting and marrying his wife, Judge Mercedes Deiz, their three children, and his photography hobby as well as being a part of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity.

Interview 2 ~ Transcript and Audio 
Date: May 30, 2012
Length: 01:27:06
Abstract: Deiz discusses the Southeast Portland neighborhood he grew up in, the activities he was involved in as a kid, especially being a boy scout. He explains the personalities and lives of his parents. Deiz discussed his feelings about the Tuskegee program, how is brother was involved in the Tuskegee Airmen, the training process, how popular culture has portrayed the Tuskegee Airmen. He shares his memories on the Vanport Flood and what he lost in the flood. He explains how he met his wife, how she became a judge, what challenges if any she faced, and how he felt about her becoming a judge. Deiz concludes the interview by discussing his involvement in the Civil Rights Movement in Portland and the place St. Philip the Deacon Episcopal Church has had in his life.

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Sundown Towns in Oregon Display, Fall 2012

Sundown Towns in Oregon Display, 2012

This Fall term Professor Jean Moule taught her course TCE 408H “Sundown Towns in Oregon” and she invited the OMA to be a part of the classroom experience!

Natalia, OMA Archivist, and Tiah, SCARC’s Instruction Archivist, worked with Professor Moule to design the course and acted as research consultants throughout the class. The two credit class began with a meeting in the SCARC reading room with an introduction to archives and archival research. Over the course of the next two months we met to discuss the book Sundown Towns by James Loewen, we traveled to the coast to get hands-on archival research experience, and we designed a display for the Valley Library: “Sundown Towns in Oregon: Reflections on the Research Process”

So, what is a Sundown Town?

A Sundown Town is “any organized jurisdiction that for decades kept African Americans or other groups from living in it and thus “all-white” on purpose…from about 1890 – 1968, white Americans established thousands of towns across the United States” (Sundown Towns, 4)

And, why is knowing about and understanding Sundown Towns important? 

“Recovering the memory of the increasing oppression of African Americans during the first half of the twentieth century can deepen our understanding of the role racism has played in our society and continued to play today” (Sundown Towns, 16)

Photos of the Display and More Information about Sundown Towns is available through the Sundown Towns in Oregon Flickr Set 

Want to learn more about Sundown Towns?

Check out Jim Loewen’s Sundown Towns website

Display Information:

Dates: Mid-November 2012 – Mid-December 2012
Location: OSU Valley Library, 5th Floor, across from the main elevators
Exhibit Curation: TCE 408H Students and Natalia Fernández, Oregon Multicultural Librarian

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OMA Oral History Collection

 

The OMA now has a finding aid for its Oral History collection which includes brief biographies of the interviewees and descriptions of the content of each interview!

OMA Oral History Collection – OH 18

 Interviewees Include:

  • Alcena Boozer
  • Carl Deiz
  • Norm Monroe
  • Jean Moule
  • Karen Olivo and Andrew Parodi
  • Charlie White

Be sure to check out all of the OMA’s Audio/Video

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OMA Exhibit!

 

OMA Exhibit

As part of the Special Collections and Archives Research Center‘s new Signature Areas Exhibit, the OMA is featuring numerous manuscript, photo, and oral history collections available to researchers!

Exhibit Photos and Information

Oregon’s African American and Latino/a Communities

Oregon’s African American Community

Various collections within the OMA reflect Oregon’s African American community’s continued commitment toward social justice through community organizations and education. The Urban League of Portland is a community-based organization with a mission to “empower African Americans and other Oregonians to achieve equality in education, employment, and economic security.” The Corvallis, Oregon branch of the NAACP was chartered by the national organization in 1971 with the mission to improve the “political, educational, social, and economic status of minority groups within the Corvallis area.” Dr. Jean Moule is Professor Emeritus of OSU’s College of Education. Throughout her career, Moule focused on social justice issues related to multicultural education and teacher training.

Oregon’s Latino/a Community

The Latino/a community’s impact in Oregon through agriculture, education, and politics, can be researched within OMA collections. The Braceros in Oregon Photograph Collection documents Oregon’s Braceros’ harvesting work in the fields as well as their activities in the farm labor camps. The Annabelle Jaramillo Papers reflect Jaramillo’s work as an advocate for civil rights and environmental protection, especially through her service as Benton County Commissioner. The Colegio César Chávez Collection documents Arthur Olivo and his family while he was a student and groundskeeper at the Colegio during the early 1980s. The Erlinda Gonzales-Berry Papers document Gonzales-Berry’s research in the fields of Latino literature and culture and immigration from Mexico to the United States. 

Oregon’s Asian American and Native American Communities

Oregon’s Asian American Community

Collections pertaining to Asian American communities within Oregon include the Oregon Chinese Disinterment Documents collection and the Japanese American Association of Lane County, Oregon, Oral History Digital Collection. The Chinese disinterment documents pertain to the 1948-1949 disinterment and shipment to China of hundreds of Chinese immigrants’ remains from cemeteries throughout Oregon. The oral histories of eleven Japanese Americans document the immigrant experiences of the interviewees: their parents’ and grandparents’ lives, their World War II experiences in the United States or in Japan, their lives in Eugene and neighboring communities in the years following the end of the war, and their experiences living in Oregon.

Oregon’s Native American Community 

The OMA is a strong advocate of community archiving and this past summer organized and hosted the Oregon Tribal Archives Institute, a gathering of tribal archivists, records managers, and culture keepers. Notably, although the OMA does not actively collect records produced by Oregon’s tribal communities, it does include materials about various tribes. One such collection is the Mater Engineering, Inc. Records pertaining to the company’s consultation work with various tribes in the use of their forest lands. Another collection is the Gifford Photograph Collection includes early 20th century images of Native Americans from the Columbia Plateau region and images of Native American participants in the Pendleton Round-Up in the 1940s.

Multiculturalism at OSU

Multiculturalism at OSU

In addition to documenting multicultural communities on the state level, the OMA also highlights OSU’s multicultural history. OSU’s history includes low points such as boycotts and walk outs due to racial incidents as well as triumphs such as the creation of four campus cultural centers. There are various university records collections pertaining to the university’s efforts to create a more inclusive campus as well as to record the injustices committed such as the Affirmative Action Records (RG 172), the Office of Multicultural Affairs Records (RG 225), and the Diversity Development Office Records (RG 228). Other information sources include The Daily Barometer and the Beaver Yearbook.

Exhibit Information

Dates: November 2012-Spring 2013
Location: OSU Valley Library, 5th Floor, 8:30am – 5pm
Exhibit Curation: Natalia Fernández, Oregon Multicultural Librarian
Exhibit Design: Christy Turner, OSU Libraries Special Collections and Archives Research Center Student Worker

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The OMA in the OLAQ

OLAQ Fall 2012

One of the OMA collections is featured in this Fall’s Oregon Library Association Quarterly (pages 21-27)!

It’s the Braceros in Oregon Photograph Collection and in the article we discuss the history of the collection, access to the photos, and a brief overview of the Bracero Program.

The entire issue is dedicated to Oregon’s cultural history and the archives that preserve that history and make it accessible, so be sure to check out the other great articles as well.

The Oregon Library Association “exists to promote and to advance library service through public and professional education and cooperation”   ~ OLA website

Happy Reading!

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The OMA and CL@SE

CL@SE Inaugural Week Poster

This past week was the inaugural week of OSU’s Center for Latino/a Studies and Engagement (CL@SE) and the OMA was excited to be a part of the festivities.

CL@SE’s mission is to promote engaged research and outreach devoted to advancing knowledge and understanding of Latino/a contributions and the issues surrounding the population in Oregon, the region, and beyond. For more information about the development history of the center, click here for a 2011 article about the newly formed center.

The week’s events began with a panel discussion of the history of the Latino/a community in Oregon, especially highlighting the Bracero Program in Oregon and the resources that we have available through the OMA and the Valley Library: Braceros Photograph Collection, OPB’s Braceros in Oregon episode, and the documentary Harvest of Loneliness.

On Tuesday night Dr. Juan Andrade Jr. gave the keynote address in which he spoke about his personal and professional experiences. He expressed the need for change in the United States’ immigration, agriculture, and education policies as they relate to the Latino/a population. The many young students in attendance were definitely inspired by his call to leadership.

Wednesday night was the opening reception of an art exhibition by Analee Fuentes, “Del Corazon (By Heart)” featuring paintings that reflect Fuentes’ identity as a third-generation Chicana who grew up around Latino communities the United States. For more information, check out this Corvallis Gazette-Times article.

The week concluded with a research symposium that brought together a variety of disciplines within OSU all working on assisting the Latino/a community in Oregon. Participants included Ethnic Studies Dept, the College of Education, Extension, Dept of Science and Math Education, the Healthy Ford Center for Healthy Children and Families, just to name a few.

CL@SE would not be in existence without the dedicated leadership of Professor Susana Rivera-Mills, the center’s interim director; her story is featured as part of the OSU Spotlight Blog

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The OMA in the OHQ and at the Archives Crawl!

The OMA in the OHQ

This year in honor of the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage in Oregon, the Oregon Historical Quarterly published a special issue regarding Women and Citizenship in Oregon. The OMA is included in this fantastic issue with the article “Women of the Oregon Multicultural Archives” which discusses the herstories and collections of Annabelle Jaramillo, Jean Moule, and the women of the Urban League of Portland.

OMA OHQ Poster at the Archives Crawl

In celebration of Archives Month, the OMA participated in the 3rd Annual Archives Crawl in Portland and our table was in the Oregon Historical Society which publishes the OHQ. We created a poster for the event to promote the article and highlight the collections.

The OMA was part of the OSU Special Collections and Archives Research Center table which included lots of brochures and fabulous bookmarks featuring women from the 1912 OSU Beaver Yearbook:

 OSU SCARC Table and Bookmarks! 

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The Urban League of Portland’s 2012 Equal Opportunity Day Awards Dinner

Hello, Hannah Mahoney here. The summer is officially over and I am back working in the archives. This year I will be keeping you up to date on the latest and greatest things happening here at the OMA, so bookmark this page because you won’t want to miss out!

Last night Natalia and I were lucky enough to attend The Urban League of Portland’s 2012 Equal Opportunity Day Awards Dinner in Portland.  For the event, the Oregon Multicultural Archives created a display, using materials from the collection, that spotlighted some of the rich history of The Urban League.  Last night’s display was inspired by a display that was used at the 7th Annual Meeting in 1952. Before the dinner began, we spoke to many people who shared their personal stories pertaining to The Urban League and told us their plans to do research at the OMA.

Urban League buttons made by the OMA

The program this year was truly inspiring, and I was overwhelmed with the amount of pride and love present in the room. The new Chief Executive Officer of The Urban League of Portland, Michael Alexander, welcomed everyone and explained that even though there has been great work done since The Urban League began in 1945, that cannot take away from what still needs to be done. He simply put that the work of The Urban League, “is a journey, not a trip.”

Two men were honored last night for the work they have done for the Portland community. Rob Ingram, who passed away last year, worked with at-risk youth and violence prevention programs and Ron Herndon, who is an advocate for minority rights and equality in education. During his speech Ron Herndon brought up Issacc Newton’s quote that’s says, “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” We are individuals, but our triumphs our based on the work that others have done before us. We are able to see further because of them. I thought the quote really summed up the evening’s idea of community well.

The Urban League Records are generated by the League and its board, officers, and staff. The records include constitutions and bylaws, correspondence, financial statements, flyers, meeting minutes, newsletters, newspaper clippings, photograph albums, photographs, posters, reports, resolutions, scrapbooks, sound recordings, surveys, videotapes, and a building plaque. If you are interested in this subject I would highly recommend looking at this collection.

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Oregon Latino/a Heritage Conference

On Saturday September 22, the OMA was thrilled to attend the Hispanic Heritage and Activism in Oregon conference at Pacific University in Forest Grove, a one day gathering of academics, students, and community members organized by the Centro Cultural de Washington County, Oregon Humanities, and Pacific University.

We began the day viewing the documentary Harvest of Loneliness: The Bracero Program which incorporates numerous interviews with ex-Bracero workers and their families who share their memories of the program.  

The morning then included three forums to “explore the journey of Hispanics to Oregon and Washington County in particular and the activism that has nurtured self determination in the Hispanic community.” 

  • Latinos in Oregon: De dónde venimos y cómo llegamos
  • Activism for Social Justice: Apoyándonos y defendiéndonos
  • Personal, Family and professional resiliency. Sobreviviendo y superándonos

~ Hispanic Heritage and Activism in Oregon website

During lunch, the keynote speaker, Jerry Garcia, PhD, Director, Chicano Education Program and CAMP, Eastern Washington University, discussed his research on the Bracero Program, specifically the deaths that occurred during the 1940s to Bracero railroad workers.

The afternoon sessions focused on activism in relation to employment, education, and social justice for the Latino/a community in Oregon.

We concluded the conference with a discussion of the take away theme for the day which was: the Need for Education. The education of the Latino/a population so that current and future generations can know their rights and continue the tradition of activism in Oregon as well as the education of the state as a whole so that others will be able to better understand Oregon’s Latino/a heritage and will ideally, become allies in the continued journey toward social justice.

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