Warm Springs Visit, July 11 and 12

Earlier this week, we made our second site visit to the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs as part of the planning for our Oregon tribes archives and records training institute.  The tribal representatives that we met with from the records center, Culture and Language Education Department, and the Museum at Warm Springs where gracious enough to welcome us into their community and share some of their current projects with us.

As a highlight of our visit, we had the opportunity to tour their tribal museum.  The Museum at Warm Springs is a beautiful building and an amazing resource for preserving and passing on their heritage to future generations.  If you are ever in Warm Springs, be sure to stop by and take a look, I promise it will be worth the detour.

Exterior view of the Museum at Warm Springs

Exterior view of the Museum at Warm Springs.

As with our previous visit, we are excited by the enthusiasm that we were met with by the people at Warm Springs.  In taking the time to meet with us and to share their successes and their challenges, they have reaffirmed the need for affordable, local training in archival procedures to ensure that their history be preserved for future generations.  We look forward to working with them more in the coming year.

Check back next week as we travel to Siletz, OR to meet with members of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians.

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Photo Albums Galore!

Fresh off the scanner…

Check out these 5 Photo Albums that document the programs, activities, and participants of the Asia University America Program (AUAP) at OSU.

Album 1

Album 2

Album 3

Album 4

Album 5 

From 1988-1994 students from the Asia University in Tokyo traveled to OSU for a study abroad program including intensive English language training as well as classes in American history and culture and physical education.

P209 Collection Finding Aid

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Our Visit to Grand Ronde, July 7

We started our site visits for the Oregon tribes archives and records training institute close to home yesterday with a trip up to the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde.  While there, we met with members of the Cultural Resources and the Tribal Records departments.  What a great place to start off our summer tour!  David Lewis and his staff in Cultural Resources have done a great job pulling together archival resources from across the country to enrich the history of the Grand Ronde Tribe.  One of our favorite parts of the project was the “Tribal Reference” Section in their library which features copies of important documents that community members can come in and utilize to research tribal and family history.

David Lewis and University Archivist Larry Landis viewing the tribal history reading area in the community library.

The other highlight of our visit to Grand Ronde was their amazing tribal records center.  The staff have transformed the records center from the back room of a barn into an immaculate document storage facility that not only actively digitizes most of the tribe’s records, but also helps to ensure that their paper documents will be preserved for future generations of tribal members to draw upon.

Look at all those fabulous rows of boxes! Shelving in the tribal records center.

We left Grand Ronde full of planning ideas and excited for the rest of our site visits.  Stay turned for updates as we travel to Warm Springs for the next leg of our journey next week.

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The Tribal Archives Site Visit Summer Schedule

The schedule for our tribal archives and records site visits is now finalized.  We look forward to meeting with everyone this summer and sharing the exciting plans for our Oregon Tribal Archives and Records Institute next summer.

Grand Ronde: July 7
Warm Springs: July 11-12
Siletz: July 20
Klamath: July 25-26
Umatilla: August 8-10
Burns: August 30-September 1
Cow Creek: September 8
Coquille and CTCLUSI: September 15-16

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Planning for the 2012 Archives and Records Training Institute for Oregon’s Tribes is Underway

We are now well underway with the planning stages of the archives and records training institute.  In the past few weeks we have gathered survey responses on the status of current tribal records programs in the state and are now in the process of scheduling dates for our site visits to each of the tribes in Oregon.  With 9 federally recognized tribes in the state and only 10 weeks of summer to do them in, it is going to be a busy couple of months for everyone here at the OMA.  The crazy travel schedule aside, we cannot wait for the chance to see the state, meet some amazing people, and talk our favorite subject–archives.

For those of you who are not familiar with this project, here are some more details about the grant proposal and our vision for what we would like the training institute to become.

This project will address the need for in-depth archives and records management training for Oregon’s nine federally recognized tribes.  Establishing formal and sustainable archives and records management programs by the tribes has been difficult in part due to the lack of affordable and location-accessible training opportunities for tribal members with responsibilities for records.  The need for this training will be met through the planning and implementation of a one week institute that will cover the basic concepts and requirements for tribes to establish or improve their archives and records management programs.  The training will be based in Oregon and will be at no or low cost to tribal participants.  Beyond the training institute, the OSU Libraries will be able to continue working with the tribes on records related issues in a consulting capacity and help to facilitate information sharing among the tribes.

Our goal for this summer is to complete a site visit to each of the tribes in Oregon.  This will help us to be able to develop a curriculum for the institute that is both timely and relevant to the needs of the diverse communities represented.  We hope also to foster a sense of community and future collaboration and dialogue not only between OSU Archives and the tribal communities, but also amongst archivists within the communities themselves.

The first site visit is scheduled for July 7, so be on the lookout and if you see us on the road this summer, wave hello.

For more information about the training institute contact:

Natalia Fernández
Oregon Multicultural Librarian
OSU Libraries: Oregon Multicultural Archives
natalia.fernandez@oregonstate.edu
541-737-3653

Larry Landis
University Archivist/Interim Head of Special Collections
OSU Libraries: University Archives and Special Collections
larry.landis@oregontate.edu
541-737-0540

Laura Cray
Graduate Student Intern
OSU Libraries: University Archives
soulesl@onid.orst.edu

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A Brief History and Look Towards the Future

My name is Natalia Fernández. I am Oregon State University’s new Oregon Multicultural Librarian and I am the archivist of the Oregon Multicultural Archives, the OMA – this archive is a part of Oregon State University (OSU), located in Corvallis, OR.

This summer the OMA has two very exciting projects that I want to share with anyone who is interested and I thought…why not a blog? But before I begin talking about those projects, I think a little background information about the OMA would be helpful. So, I plan to briefly explain the establishment and mission of the OMA, mention a few cornerstone collections, and then I’ll talk about the two upcoming projects.

The OMA was established in 2005 with a collection focus of 4 ethnic minorities within Oregon: African-Americans, Asian-Americans, Native Americans, and Latinos. First, existing collections within the OSU archives that matched the collection scope were highlighted and then new collections were solicited.

Though the physical collections are a part of the OSU archives, they are intellectually separated. On the website you will find collection guides which are divided by ethnic community, a link to our digital photographic collection, and a related resources page that includes a listing of repositories that hold multicultural collections throughout the Northwest.

http://archives.library.oregonstate.edu/oma/

 

The OMA Digital Collection currently contains over 600 images with new materials added at least every two weeks. One of our most heavily represented collections within the digital collection is the Urban League of Portland records which I will discuss in more detail momentarily – the digital collection contains over 350 Urban League photographs.

http://oregondigital.org/sets/oregon-multicultural-archives/

 

I’ve selected a few collections that represent the scope and variety of archival materials within the OMA: the Braceros in Oregon Photograph Collection, the Urban League of Portland Records, and The Japanese-American Association of Lane County, Oregon Oral History Collection.

This collection documents both the work and daily lives of the agricultural workers in the 1940s Bracero Program.  It is an example of a collection created out of existing OSU university archives materials, the majority of which are Extension Service photographs.  The website itself includes a lengthy listing of additional primary and secondary sources.

http://oregondigital.org/sets/braceros/

 

The Urban League of Portland was established in 1945 to assist the African-American Community socially, economically, and politically. The collection was acquired in 2007 and because the organization still exists, we continue to have a relationship with the record creators and we continue to receive administrative and programming records.

http://archives.library.oregonstate.edu/ulpdx/index.html

 

The content of these 11 oral histories includes the interviewees immigrant and World War II internment camp experiences, as well as their lives in Eugene and neighboring communities in the years following the war. The website consists of contextual and biographical information, interview transcripts, and digital recordings of the interviews.

http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/digitalcollections/jaa/

 

The OMA has two very exciting upcoming projects: the first is a project to develop and implement an Archives and Records Management Training Institute for Oregon’s nine federally recognized tribes. The second is to create a website/digital collection for a recent acquisition of Oregon Chinese Disinterment documents.

There are nine federally recognized tribes in Oregon and various tribal leaders have voiced the need for assistance with their tribal archives. So the question became “How can we provide tribal members with the opportunity to attend an archival and records management training institute at little to no cost and specifically designed for their needs?”

The OSU Archives developed a proposal for a 2 year LSTA grant that would provide the tribes with financially affordable and locally accessible archival training.  The year 1 proposal was accepted and this summer we will be visiting each of the tribes for an onsite needs assessment of their archival materials and we will begin developing the institute curriculum.

The curriculum development and institute itself will be a collaborative effort. We have invited Native American archivists from the Grand Ronde Tribe and the Smithsonian to co-teach and the curriculum will be based on other Tribal Institutes.  Our hope is to host the institute in the new OSU Native American Longhouse which is scheduled to be completed in the Summer  of 2012.

As part of our goals of accessibility and sustainability with this project, we plan to create a project website to be updated throughout the two years, record the institute workshops and sessions to then make them available for future use for the attendees as well as non-attendees, and follow up with the tribes in the months following the institute.

Our Second Upcoming Project: It is part of Chinese tradition for the living to care for the deceased’s remains in order to protect their spirits and those of the living. The way in which the Chinese immigrants that came to the Pacific Northwest in the mid nineteenth century and afterward continued this practice was by making arrangements for their remains to be disinterred and shipped back to China to their families.

In early 2010, an anonymous donor gave a box of records to the Oregon Public Broadcasting radio’s newsroom which pertained to the shipment of Chinese immigrant remains from Portland to Hong Kong. Several months later Northwest News Networks regional correspondent Tom Banse reported the story.

The collection consists of documents such as these disinterment application and permit forms from cemeteries all over Oregon. Two major disinterment and shipment efforts took place in 1928 and 1949.  The organization responsible for this process was the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association.

As part of a collaborative effort, the records were temporarily transferred to the PSU University Archives for digitization and preservation work, the OMA will host the electronic files within a digital collection, and the original documents will eventually be transferred permanently to the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association in Portland.

The digital collection project will begin this summer as an internship and it will be a collaborative effort between the OMA, the CCBA and potentially other institutions who have related materials. As a part of this project, the CCBA has more documents to digitize, documents in Chinese need to be translated, and further research needs to be conducted.

One shared idea between the two projects that I just mentioned is the concept of stewardship of documents vs. custodianship of documents. Rather than solely focusing on acquiring physical collections, the OMA can provide assistance to communities to care for their own archival materials and can act as a host to collections rather than an owner.  A way in which to accomplish this is by building trusting relationships with communities and working in collaboration with other institutions with similar goals to ultimately allow communities to tell their own stories and preserve their own history.

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