An audio recording of an oral history of Ron Howe on the Korean War. In this interview, Howe discusses his war experiences, stories, and friends who died. He won medals and went to college on the GI bill. Howe believes that kids today not as patriotic or disciplined.
An audio recording of an oral history of Jane Dykslag of her life in Beaverton, Oregon, during the Korean War recorded on May 30, 2000. Dykslag was in her late twenties during the Korean War living in Washington County. Prior to the war, she was teaching primary grades at Skyline School in Multnomah County, but during the war, she switched to substitute teaching. She recounts doing bomb drills with her students, but does not remember any bomb shelters in the area. There was a lot of talk about communism then, but personally, Dykslag did not fear it. She describes how they were trying to recruit more people to join the war effort and was afraid of her husband having to go when he had already fought in the South Pacific. Outside of the communism issue, Dykslag believes that people trusted the US government more back then than now because today, there is more talk of politics in the media. The interview occurred as a part of the Century High School oral histories project. The voices in the recording are clearly audible.
An audio recording of an oral history of Carl Burnett on the Korean War. Burnett talks about his experiences in the Air Force and the training he received; his feelings when he entered Korean War, his opinions about the enemy, South Koreans, Truman and MacArthur. He discusses the Atomic bomb and being stationed in Nevada in 1958 and witnessing the blast. He also made trips to Bikini Island.
An audio recording of an oral history of Helen E. Pape on the Korean War. In the interview, Pape discusses the Cold War and her recollections of the Portland community and its attitudes towards government, Communism and Joseph McCarthy. She mentions Portland as a strategic target in the Cold War. Pape also talks about entertainment and the media in the 1950s.
An audio recording of an oral history of Walter McKinney on the Korean War. McKinney talks about his life in Hillsboro in the early 1950s and his time at the University of Oregon in Eugene. He recalls being an aircraft observer for Hillsboro and the fear of missile bombing. He discusses the Korean War, World War II, and the Cold War as well as General MacArthur and President Truman. McKinney also talks about the effects of the polio epidemic.
An audio recording of an oral history of Leonard Peshka on the Korean War. Peshka discusses his whereabouts 1950-1953 and life in Hillsboro, Communism and the Red Scare, the possibility of nuclear attacks in the Portland area, and civil defense. He talks about the Korean War and its local impact, and compares the Korean War with World War II. He was stationed in New Guinea in World War II. Peshka also talks about the polio epidemic and entertainment in 1950s.
An audio recording of an oral history of Earl and Mari Jewel Ficken on the Korean War. The Fickens were high school age during this period, residing in Hillsboro and the St. Johns neighborhood of Portland, which were both farming communities at that time. They share recollections of farm work, school, neighborhood unity, and security. They discuss the media's influence on Communism and war, and discuss the effects of the war on the local economy.
An audio recording of an oral history of Jane Lamb on the Korean War. Lamb discusses life in the Beaverton area, mentions the Aloha Theater, Beeches Market, the Beaver Theater, Beaverton High School, Reedville Caf
An audio recording of an oral history of Gale Schnieder on the Korean War. Schnieder iscusses his induction into the army in 1950, training at Camp Polk and Japan, then into Korea. He worked as a mail clerk. He was aware of the nuclear threat and familiar with Communism, but kept clear of propaganda. Schnieder discusses local efforts for war, not political. He was exposed to polio as a child but never got the disease. He describes Hillsboro as an average American community.
An audio recording of an oral history of Eldo L. Nofziger on the Cold War and Korean War and its effects in the Washington County area. Nofziger discusses his draft into the Army in 1950 in first group of Oregon draftees. He was a non-combat soldier, stationed in France at the communications center at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers in Europe (SHAPE). Nofziger did not feel Communism was much of a threat to U.S. He mentions Senator McCarthy. He describes Hillsboro in 1950s as a small farming community.
An audio recording of an oral history of Robert C. Barnes and Irene Barnes on the Korean War era in Hillsboro, Oregon including topics such as the politics of the Korean War, the United States' response to communism, and comparing the war to World War II and Vietnam. They talk about nuclear weapons, fear of nuclear attack and civil defense drills. They comment on Hitler, Stalin and Joseph McCarthy and discuss veterans, government help, and great sacrifices. They also touch on the polio epidemic.
An audio recording of an oral history of Bill and Bernice Tescher on the Korean War. The Teschers discuss life in the Beaverton/Portland area in the 1950s, including their feelings about Communism, fear of attack, bomb drills and Senator Joseph McCarthy. They talk about the local impact of the Korean War.
An audio recording of an oral history of Walter Vandervelden, volunteer fire chief of the Forest Grove fire department, who experienced the first hours of the 1933 Tillamook fire. The interview abruptly starts in the middle of a conversation. Forest Grove fire department had very limited equipment at the time so did not take anything with them when they were first sent out to the scene of the fire to see the seriousness of it. It would take the firefighters three to four hours to get to the location of the fire with the equipment lent to them by the Northwest Forest Fire Association. Men who would stay overnight would wake up unable to see because of the damage done to their eyes due to the fire; an easy fix of dampening a handkerchief and resting on their eyes for fifteen to twenty minutes. After the fire was contained and put out 73 million trees were hand planted along with seeds being dropped from planes flying above. The audio interview cuts out at 31:02 and 45:58, to start again in the middle of a conversation.
An audio recording of an oral history of Larry Williams, head of the Oregon Environmental Council, on his views regarding forestry and the ecology movement. Larry Williams strongly believes that the government and industry are not doing everything they can to sustain our forests. The argument of clear cutting is brought to the interviewer's attention with strong facts supporting the idea that the industry and government are not being smart when choosing where to clear cut. The interview cuts out at 6:47, 31:54 and 46:41 with multiple interruptions due to a ringing phone. The last ten minutes of this audio are strictly the observations of the interviewer.
An audio recording of an oral history of Wes Lematta, helicopter pilot and founder of Columbia Helicopters, about the use of helicopters in lumber operations. Wes explains the process of collecting lumber while using a helicopter as well as the benefits. With the lack of roads they are able to go places other people were not able to travel to. This is one of the first businesses to do this job using a helicopter, doing business all over Oregon and in San Bernardino, California. A phone interruption occurs at 2:15.
An audio recording of an oral history of Charles Renard of Milwaukie, a trolley operator in Portland, Oregon for several years, starting in 1912. Renard explained the many routes he would take and how technology changed during his time as an operator. He describes a fight he got in with a senior conductor after only being on the job a few months. There were three trolley barns in Portland at that time and Mr. Renard worked on all three after being fired or quitting and returning to work. He gives brief demographic descriptions based on the different areas the trolley services, such as Alberta, Mt. Tabor, etc. At the time horse-drawn vehicles were still in operation and Renard recounts one carrying a milk truck not moving out of the trolley’s way on the Burnside Bridge resulting in a collision. He reflects that he shouldn’t have hit the brakes so hard and locked the wheels. He compares the Portland trolley system to the Oakland system and claims the Portland system was superior.
An audio recording of an oral history of Earl Mossman, an entertainer known as the 'Mayor of Broadway', about his life and the theater and vaudeville business in Portland, Oregon. Recorded in 1971, he talks about how he got involved in show business in the first place, started learning and improving his dancing, and what shows he took part in. Mossman talks about his friend Ray who got drafted into the military during World War One while Mossman was denied into the draft. Waiting for Ray to return, Mossman continued performing and producing shows, including a play called “Sunny Side of Broadway” in New York. Much of Mossman’s time was spent in Oregon, but he also spent a large amount of time traveling and performing around the country. In 1940, Mossman moved back to Portland in order to look after his ill mother, but he stayed in contact with people in show business through letters and reviews. He mentions the Oregon Centennial and who he performed with. Mossman talks about each of the theatres that were in Portland and where they were located during his time there. While in Portland, Mossman appointed himself the unofficial greeter for all of the celebrities to the city. He would meet them at the airport and make sure they were able to get around town safely. Much of his ability to do this comes from him already knowing many of the celebrities beforehand. Mossman comments on the rise of television and what that does to show business and the people involved in it. The beginning of the recording is hard to hear, but at about three minutes, the recording focuses and becomes easier to hear for the rest of the interview. There are intermittent background noises of airplanes overhead and cars passing by. Throughout the recording are names of actors, dancers, and other famous people that Mossman know. There is a full transcript of the recording. Many of the names and companies could be misspelled in the transcription.
An audio recording of an oral history of Al Weisendanger, Director of Keep Oregon Green, about his long career in forestry and the Keep Green movement. From the age of 16, Weisendanger began working in forestry and found his calling relating to young students to explain forest practices and fire prevention. He talks about the Keep Oregon Green organization educating people on fire prevention as well as Oregon’s Green Guard to encourage young people to get involved. He talks about Smokey the Bear, involvement in fairs and parades, and where most of the fire prevention advertisements go to in order to lessen the amount of fires in Oregon. They remember large fires that had happened recently to the interview and how each county had help from the forest service. Weisendanger comments on Oregon being the only state with a young program for the forest service and funds preventing him to sending materials to other states. He also talks about the importance of watchmen placed in the forest to look out for fires and raise the alarm as well as having planes that can quickly get over the fire and help put it out. The recording starts in the middle of a conversation and has frequent pauses as the tape gets paused.
An audio recording of an unnamed woman's recollections of growing up in Portland. First 30 minutes is a personal message to Ellis Lucia and his wife Elsie addressing them as a friend or acquaintance; last 20 minutes are recollections of growing up in Portland in an ethnic German neighborhood.
An audio recording of an oral history of Robert 'Bob' Torheim, U.S. Forest Service, about current issues of the Forest Service in the Pacific Northwest, including the relationship between the environmental movement and the lumber business.
An audio recording of an oral history of Jim Wakefield, Meteorologist and head of the Portland office of the National Weather Service, on the Vancouver tornado of 1972. The recording starts in the middle of the interview and ends before the interview is over. In the interview, Wakefield and the interviewer talk about the tornado that happened in Vancouver and their opinions on the possible climate change over the last hundred years. They cover topics such as having the buildings secured, the level of preparedness in the northwest as in the midwest, and whether people were able to take pictures of the tornado. Wakefield had put out a notice in the 'Columbian' asking for people to submit pictures of the storm, but he was not very hopeful. There is a lot of background noise throughout the entire recording including telephones ringing, the tapping of a typewriter, and an airplane flying overhead. Sometimes it is hard to discern what the speakers are saying.