Category Archives: Uncategorized

OSU Archives in The Commons: Images of Celilo Falls

Look for more from the Gerald W. Williams Collection Wednesday March 4th

On March 10, 1957, the Columbia River pooled behind the newly constructed Dalles Dam, effectively drowning a five-mile stretch of cascades known as Celilo Falls. The rising water flooded one of the most prolific salmon runs in North America; it was also an area that had been occupied by Pacific Northwest Indians for at least 10,000 years.

Continuing our focus on photographs from the Gerald W. Williams Collection, we’ve decided to show you all some of the images he collected of Celilo Falls. Many of the pictures you’ll find in this set were taken by Williams’ father, Jack Williams, in September 1956 — only a few months before the falls were inundated.

For thousands of years, Celilo Falls was a traditional fishing spot for mid-Columbia tribes, producing millions of pounds of salmon each year; but the area was much more than a “favorite fishing hole.” Nearby Celilo Village was also trading hub for tribes from California, Montana, and Canada, with an active and lively market that saw local salmon traded for medicines, dried meats, and hides from the East and cedar, shells, and beads from the Pacific Coast. Noted by the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1805, the explorers said they found a “great emporium…where all the neighboring nations assemble,” and a population density unlike anything they had seen on their journey —historians have called the Celilo area the “Wall Street of the West.” However, even beyond commerce, the area was a place where “friendships were renewed, and men found brides.”

The US Army Corps of Engineers (USACOE) began work on The Dalles Dam in 1952 as a means of harnessing the Columbia River and providing “clean, sustainable, and cheap” hydroelectric power to Portland and Seattle . Between 1952 and 1955, ‘USACOE and representatives from the Warm Springs, Umatilla, Yakama, and Nez Perce reservations negotiate a monetary settlement for the loss of fishing sites resulting from construction of The Dalles Dam.” It was completed it five years later. Records and recollections say that Big Eddy was under water in less than an hour and Celilo Falls in six.

Where to go for more?

To watch the Oregon Field Guide “Celilo Fishing” video, which features a color film shot by the Army Corps of Engineers, click here. To see a detailed picture of the bottom of the Columbia River at Celilo Falls, check out the sonar data from the Army Corps of Engineers, check out the “Celilo Animation” video found here.

YouTube also has many videos of Celilo Falls, with a search for “Celilo,” you’ll find plenty! For example, there are some great historic photos of the people of Celilo Falls in the “celilo finished 0001” YouTube video by clicking here.

Oregon Public Broadcasting Oregon Territory program called “Celilo Falls,”which aired March 3, 2007 is worth a viewing. Find out more here.

Katrine Barber’s 2005 book Death of Celilo Falls is another excellent resource for information on the both the cultural and political history of the area. “This book examines the negotiations and controversies that took place during the planning and construction of The Dalles dam and the profound impact the project had on both the Indian community of Celilo Village and the non-Indian town of The Dalles.”

Sites Consulted:

Two New Flickr Sets

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We wouldn’t want you all to think it was all Flickr Commons all the time in the University Archives, so we’ve put up 2 new sets on our osu.archives Flickr account.

While you are on the Flickr site, be sure to check out our “History in the Making” set and “What did you see, Where did you go: History in the Making” group — who knows what else our friends have captured on “film”…

What else is there? Spend some time and check out all the osu.archives collections in Flickr.

And mark your calendars to check the OSU Flickr Commons site next Wednesday for a new set of Gerald Williams images. The new release will be 43 images of Celilo Falls (read a bit of background here).

Northwest History & Heritage Extravaganza

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Breaking news for all those interested in the 2009 Northwest History & Heritage Extravaganza– the full preconference program has been released.
What’s worth seeing? In addition to hundreds of really great attendees, here what to look for:

  • Informative and inspiring presentations, including one by Pulitzer Prize winning author M. Scott Momaday
  • More than 40 panels and tours devoted to the important topics and challenges of Northwest history and heritage
  • Great interactive workshops
  • Unique interdisciplinary panels that challenge your understanding of historical information and heritage practices
  • Young scholars and veteran historians showing their recent discoveries
  • An exhibit hall and poster sessions full of information, ideas, and networking

See you there!

Oregon’s 150th Anniversary

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In honor of the 150th anniversary of Oregon’s statehood, the University of Oregon Libraries and the Oregon State University Libraries collaborated to release Oregon Maps, a digital collection of approximately 200 scanned maps illustrating many characteristics of the state’s history and physical makeup.

The resource is available online at http://boundless.uoregon.edu/digcol/ormaps/index.php.

To read more about it, read the “University libraries release online collection of state maps” press release!

Happy Presidents’ Day!

williamsg_ccc_kitchen_crew2.jpgThe big OSU Archives Flickr Commons launch happened Friday evening— and over the weekend we had nearly 8000 views on our photos!

Please join us for our official launch open house celebration today from 2:00PM to 4:00PM in the Autzen classroom on the 2nd floor of The Valley Library. We’ll be there to answer questions about The Commons and the Archives, show off our images, set you up with a Flickr account, and learn from you. Please drop by and introduce yourself!

Hope to see you all this afternoon.

The Flickr Commons

The Oregon State Archives sends out a soggy “hello” to the Flickr world from the Pacific Northwest—it’s good to be here!

Today, as we head home for that most romantic of holidays and Oregon’s 150th birthday celebrations, the Oregon State University Archives will become the 21st institution to join The Commons.

[Yes, it’s true, it really still is Friday the 13th … But rather than court disaster, we’re pretending it’s tomorrow!]

Not only are we joining noteworthy North American institutions like the Library of Congress, Smithsonian, New York Public Library, and George Eastman House, we will sit next to international libraries and museums such as the National Library of New Zealand, the Powerhouse Museum, National Galleries of Scotland, and Bibliothèque de Toulouse. If that wasn’t exciting enough, the OSU Archives is the first university to join The Commons!

Please join us for our official launch open house celebration on Monday, February 16th, 2009 from 2:00PM to 4:00PM in the Autzen classroom on the 2nd floor of The Valley Library. We’ll be there to answer questions about The Commons and the Archives, show off our images, and learn from you—please drop by and introduce yourself!

What will you find here?

Our contribution to Flickr Commons will focus on the history of conservation, natural resources, and agriculture. This is a history OSU is proud to celebrate; a complex story with chapters on forestry, geology, environmentalism, and the people that have inhabited and worked this land. As time passes, the OSU Archives will be digitizing and releasing other images in our collections that showcase some of the amazing items that illustrate the complicated intersection of culture, natural resources, and history.

We’re delighted to start our Flickr Commons adventure with a set of depression era images of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) from the Gerald W. Williams Collection. The photographs in the Williams Collection reflect a range of amazing images, we plan to highlight in the coming months, including the photos of CCC camps and activities; shots of the WWI era Spruce Production Division; Northwest Oregon logging photos taken by John Fletcher Ford; and slides of Celilo Falls taken by Williams’ father, Jack Williams, in September 1956 — only a few months before the falls were inundated by The Dalles Dam.

How did we get here?

In order to celebrate and publicize photographic collections that showcase Oregon State University’s rich heritage, the OSU Archives joined Flickr in the summer of 2008. We found it was a great place for pictures of current events, virtual tours and instructions for using microfilm machines, and assorted historic photos; though after seeing the real impact the historic photographs in The Commons were having on both Flickr users and the larger community, as well as the great personal connections between people and pictures that emerged, the OSU Archives was more than eager to join the project.

We’re always uploading more online images, and Flickr gives us another avenue to share our remarkable collections. You’ll find images specific to forestry and natural resources on our Flickr Commons page, current and historic images related to OSU on our osu.archives Flickr page, and a wonderful assortment of digital collection projects on the OSU Digital Collections page.

Still Can’t Get Enough?

Check out some of our other resources.  We love them — and you just might, too.

NAGARA Launches Online Document Library Where Users May Share Archives Publications

The National Association of Government Archives and Records Administrators (NAGARA) has launched an online document library, which allows people to share archives and records management publications. Visit www.NAGARAresources.org to learn about subjects such as accessibility, advocacy, electronic records, disaster preparedness, electronic records, facilities, files management, grants, historical records, inactive records, local government records, microfilm, preservation, legal issues, retention, scanning and digitization, security, storage, training, and miscellaneous. Only documents in the public domain may be uploaded on this site, or copyrighted documents posted by the owner of the copyright. Currently, the library houses nearly 300 documents, with new additions almost daily. As content grows, the site administrators will add new subject categories and/or subdivide existing categories.

The site was built in partial response to a 2008 recommendation of the Council of State Archivists’ “Closest to Home” Task Force on Archival Programs for Local Governments to “develop a coordinated plan for a portal to provide access to web-based resources on local government archives,” but as content expanded, the site has proven to be of interest to archivists from other fields as well.

No registration is required to download documents; however, if you would like to upload documents you must be registered.

New Collection Descriptions for the Month!

The following 12 finding aids for OSU Archives collections have been completed or updated in January 2009. They have been loaded to the NWDA finding aids database and have a PDF on the OSU archives’ website and a catalog record in the OSU Libraries’ catalog, Summit, and Worldcat. Five of these are for collections acquired in 2008; six are for collections for which there was previously no information available online.

We now have 368 finding aids in NWDA.

Agricultural Sciences, College of, Photographs, 1892-2001 (P 036)

  • http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv14749
  • http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/archives/archive/documents/OREp036.pdf
  • These images (1247 total) depict OSU’s academic and research programs in agriculture; Branch Experiment Stations in Oregon; faculty, students, and alumni; international programs; and special events, conferences, and workshops. Of particular note are images taken in 1913 by bacteriologist Emile Pernot of farms and slaughter houses in Benton County. The largest component of the collection is a group of 900 color slides, many taken in 2001, that depict students and faculty participating in instruction and research activities. This finding aid includes a detailed list of the photographs.

Audiovisual Education Scrapbook, 1930-1939

Borg, Marcus J., Papers, 1969-2000

Foote, Wilson H., Photographs, 1948-1955 (P 268)

  • http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv68258
  • http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/archives/archive/documents/OREp268.pdf
  • This Wilson H. Foote Photographs consist of 241 color slides taken by Foote during his early years at Oregon State College and depict the OSC campus, students, and athletic events; agriculture and forestry; Oregon landscapes and landmarks; and landscapes of western North America. Of special note are images of football games at Bell Field, construction of the heating tunnels on campus, Native Americans fishing in the Columbia Basin (perhaps Celilo Falls), and the effects of a flood (perhaps the Vanport Flood in 1948). This collection was donated to the Archives in 2008 by Foote’s daughter. This is a preliminary collection-level description.

Home Management House Photograph Collection, 1945-1948 (P 266)

International Research and Development Office Records, 1993-2007 (RG 211)

Jeffersonian Literary Society Records, 1897 (RG 067)

Lloyd, Les, Papers, 1942-1951

McCormick, Alta, Photograph Collection, 1905-1931 (P 113)

Morris, Walter E., Photograph Collection, 1909-1911 (P 122)

Siletz News, 2007-2008

Zobel, Donald B, Papers, 1995-2003