Oregon City Enterprise!

Masthead reads: "Oregon City Enterprise, devoted to news, literature, and the best interests of Oregon."
“Devoted to news, literature, and the best interests of Oregon.” Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) August 08, 1878, Image 1, Page 1. http://tinyurl.com/l5kppua

Exciting news! Two new historic newspapers (with the same title!) from Oregon City, covering the late 19th/early 20th century, are now available online at the Historic Oregon Newspapers website:

  1. Oregon City Enterprise, Nov. 15, 1872-Nov. 7, 1878
  2. Oregon City Enterprise, Feb. 24-1893-March 3, 1911

Click the “Calendar View” button/calendar icon to browse issues or look for specific issue dates, or use the “Search” page to do a keyword search.

Established in 1829, Oregon City was the first city to be incorporated west of the Rocky Mountains, playing a significant role in the history of Oregon and the American West. Not only is Oregon City historically known to mark the end of the Oregon Trail, it was also the birthplace of the very first newspaper to be published in Oregon and on the West Coast – the Oregon Spectator, published in Oregon City from Feb. 5, 1846-March 10, 1855. Located just south of Portland, Oregon City is the home of the Willamette Falls and serves as the county seat of Clackamas County.

Here are just a few examples of the interesting clips that can be found in these Oregon City newspapers: precisely 112 years ago today in Oregon City:

Image of a bridge over a river with caption that reads: "Oregon City's Free Suspension Bridge spanning the Willamette river."
Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) August 09, 1901, Image 1, Page 1. http://tinyurl.com/mn6ngew
Photograph looking down on the Willamette river valley and several industrail buildings with caption that reads: "Oregon City Manufacturing Company's Mill - showing two paper mills, flour mills, electric station and Willamette falls."
Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) August 09, 1901, Image 1, Page 1. http://tinyurl.com/mn6ngew

This new content is available through funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services and the Oregon State Library with a Library Services and Technology Act grant in partnership with the Oregon City Public Library. More historic newspaper content from Oregon City will be coming soon, so stay tuned! Happy searching!

St. Helens newspaper content now online!

We are pleased to announce that three historic St. Helens newspaper titles have just been added to the Historic Oregon Newspapers website! The following titles are now available for keyword searching and browsing online:

St. Helens Mist (St. Helens, Or.) 1914-1921, digitized through funding from the Library of Congress’ and National Endowment for the Humanities’ National Digital Newspaper Program.

St. Helens Mist
St. Helens mist. (St. Helens, Or.) 1913-1933, June 19, 1914, Image 1. http://tinyurl.com/pyvshvb

The Columbia Register (Houlton, Or.) 1904-1906, digitized in partnership with the St. Helens Public Library, with a grant from the Columbia County Cultural Coalition.

The Columbia Register
The Columbia register. (Houlton, Columbia County, Or.) 1904-1906, April 29, 1904, Image 1. http://tinyurl.com/pjx372o

The Columbian (St. Helens, Or.) 1882-1886, digitized in partnership with the St. Helens Public Library, with a grant from the Columbia County Cultural Coalition.

The Columbian
The Columbian. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 1880-1886, March 10, 1882, Image 1. http://tinyurl.com/oqqfahq

St. Helens, Oregon is the county seat of Columbia County, located 30 miles north of Portland along the Columbia River with a gorgeous view of Mount St. Helens. These historic newspaper pages are now freely available to the public for searching and browsing online; a great primary resource to learn more about the history and culture of Oregon and the city of St. Helens. Happy Searching!

 

 

Portland Oregonian online through January 1922!

Historic issues of the Portland Morning Oregonian and The Sunday Oregonian, from the late 19th century through the end of January 1922, are available for keyword-searching and browsing through Historic Oregon Newspapers online! Learn about the early history of the Oregonian newspaper and other titles online by clicking on the History tab at the top of the Historic Oregon Newspapers website. Browsing through the historic pages of the Oregonian alone can turn up countless interesting clips, advertisements, and images, like these for example:

1) What kind of music would be considered “toe-tickling dance music” today?

Drawing of a woman and man dancing together with caption that reads, "Toe-tickling dance music."
Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) June 06, 1919, Page 11, Image 11. http://tinyurl.com/d67xcbe

2) Medical masks may not be very fashionable, but they have survived over the years for their usefulness in preventing the spread of illness as well as showing off “civic patriotism!”

Image of a man wearing a medical mask with text that reads, "We appeal to your civis patriotism to cooperate with us in our efforts to stamp out the Spanish Influenza or 'Flu' plague in Portland by wearing a mask."
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, January 12, 1919, Section One, Page 23, Image 23. http://tinyurl.com/czbtf73

3) The changes we have made with cars in less than 100 years will always be fascinating…

Image of a car from 1920 with text that reads: "New Scripps-Booth Six one of handsomest of all the 1920 models."
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, July 04, 1920, SECTION SIX, Page 9, Image 65. http://tinyurl.com/cujffkg

4) Women’s fashion: will 1920s style (especially these hats) make a comeback in the 21st century?

Two photographs of women wearing hats in 1920s fashion. Text reads: "Parisians now tie face veil on top and let it hang gracefully over head."
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, September 18, 1921, SECTION FIVE, Page 5, Image 71. http://tinyurl.com/bnlnypn

5) Although some ailments had different names back then (for example, “catarrh” was used to refer to nasal congestion, and “rheumatism” refers to arthritis symptoms), it appears that alternative medicine might have been just as popular back then as it is today:

Advertisement for C. Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co.
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, October 24, 1920, Section One, Page 9, Image 9. http://tinyurl.com/butt3xp

6) Men’s fashion: the clothes may not have changed much, but the prices sure have! (Note the use of the 1920s Candlestick Telephone!)

Advertisement depicting three men in suits reads, "Largest Display of Men's and Young Men's Fall Clothing in Northwest at $10.00 or less"
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, September 12, 1920, Section One, Page 9, Image 9. http://tinyurl.com/cdowko2

7) In politics, government, and economics, many of the same issues still plague our society today, judging from this political cartoon:

Political cartoon depicts a man standing on a dock holding two crying babies that represent "current taxes," while a woman school teacher in a sinking boat labeled "salary" is calling for help. The water into which the boat is sinking represents the "cost of living." The man holding the babies is shocked and troubled and doesn't know what to do. Caption reads, "The taxpayer's dilemma."
Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, May 10, 1919, Image 1. http://tinyurl.com/cn4d5eo

8) There are just some things that will probably never change:

Advertisement for coffee shows a drawing of a man holding a coffee cup with wings coming out of it. Text reads, "Wings of the morning! That's just what good coffee is - wings of the morning. The delicious fragrance steals up into your nostrils, the rich smooth flavor enchants your palate; the wholesome invigorating effect sets you up for the day's work."
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, May 09, 1920, SECTION THREE, Page 6, Image 54. http://tinyurl.com/borb3sn

What kinds of interesting clips will you find? Happy Searching!

New historic Oregon newspaper content now online at Chronicling America!

Attention all historic Oregon newspaper lovers! The Library of Congress and National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) have added hundreds of new Oregon newspaper issues to Chronicling America, the nation’s free, online, keyword-searchable historic newspaper database!

Ashland Tidings Salute Old Glory
Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) July 04, 1912, Image 1. http://tinyurl.com/bqvxtfn

New content includes:

In addition to these Oregon titles, Chronicling America now has an additional 800,000 new newspaper pages from more than 130 new titles from across the country, including all new content from Indiana and North Dakota, as well as new content in French and Spanish from Arizona, Louisiana and New Mexico.
For more info, please see the NEH Announcement of New Release of Chronicling America.

Ring in the New Year with more Oregonian content!

It’s officially 2013, and what better way to celebrate the dawn of a new year than with the addition of more newspaper content from Portland’s Morning Oregonian and The Sunday Oregonian, now freely available through February 1916 for keyword searching online! Visit our Historic Oregon Newspapers online database to search and browse these and more Oregon titles; see how much things have changed (and stayed the same) from 1916 to 2013:

THeater New Year_SO_19160102_sec4_p7
Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, January 01, 1916, SECTION TWO, Page 12, Image 24. http://tinyurl.com/bevdldc
Electric New Year_MO_19160101_Sec2_p12
The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, January 02, 1916, SECTION FOUR, Page 7, Image 47. http://tinyurl.com/auhu4ae
RobertsBros New Year_MO_19160101_sec5_p2
Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, January 01, 1916, SECTION FIVE, Page 2, Image 54. http://tinyurl.com/ate77qm

Happy New Year from the ODNP!

New Content Added to Historic Oregon Newspapers!

Over 40,000 pages of new content have just been added to the Historic Oregon Newspapers online database!

New titles include:

As well as additional content from:

~~~

Stay tuned for future announcements and highlights, and happy searching!

 

 

The New Northwest added to Historic Oregon Newspapers!

The Oregon Digital Newspaper Program is excited to announce the addition of Portland’s historic suffragist newspaper The New Northwest to our free online collection of digitized and keyword-searchable content at Historic Oregon Newspapers!

Portland the New Northwest, June 8, 1877
Front page of Portland's the New Northwest, June 8, 1877

For sixteen years, between 1871 and 1887, The New Northwest blazed a progressive and iconoclastic trail, bringing much-needed attention to controversial issues such as suffrage, worker’s rights, temperance, racial inequality, civil liberties, immigration, and human rights.  The paper advocated tirelessly for the equal rights of American Indians and Chinese immigrants even as the general press remained openly hostile to such causes.  Most famously, the paper was instrumental in agitating for the nascent women’s suffrage movement in the Pacific Northwest.

In addition to its influential and highly political journalistic content, The New Northwest also served as a significant publisher of quality literary content.  Poems, serialized fiction, and literary non-fiction reflecting the newspaper’s progressive political stance were published alongside regional and national news.  Following a change in ownership in 1887, the paper continued for another two years as a purely literary journal.

The uncommonly forward-thinking agenda of this firebrand newspaper was coordinated under the guidance of Abigail Scott Duniway, Oregon’s “Mother of Equal Suffrage”.  Duniway saw The New Northwest as an instrument of social change, a tool for the “[e]nfranchisment of women and full emancipation of speech, press and people from every fetter of law or custom that retards the free mental and physical growth of the highest form of humanity.”

Though women’s suffrage in Oregon was not to become a reality during the run of The New Northwest, Duniway would continue to fight tirelessly for the cause.  In 1912, following a lifetime of struggle, Duniway was asked by Governor Oswald West to author and sign the Oregon Proclamation of Equal Suffrage.  This historic and hard-won victory was sealed when Duniway registered, at the age of 79, as the first female voter in Multnomah County.

Abigail Scott Duniway.  Photo courtesy of Library of Congress.
Abigail Scott Duniway. Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress.

More Cultural Heritage Goes Online

Although I am not supposed to use the term ‘archive’ for the results of our digitization project (microfilm remains the official archival medium of newspaper content) — the internet ‘archiving’ of cultural materials is a buzz-worthy topic in the news of late.

Especially with the recent launch of Google’s Art Project, there is a growing sense that the time for ambitious, full-scale digitization of cultural relics and resources has finally arrived. Technology is evolving to the point that the ‘library experience’ and the ‘museum experience’ can now be replicated with a high degree of sophistication in an online environment.

“Images are no longer just uploaded onto a website, but can be made stimulating and engaging,” observes Nicholas Serrota, director of the Tate Gallery in London.

'The Harvesters' by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Digitized by Google's Art Project.

Digitized newspapers and paintings are just the beginning: see The best online culture archives, Florence Waters’ recent Telegraph (UK) article with links to help you explore 15 of the top websites. You probably will be amazed by what is available–whether your interest is in art, poetry, film, history, textiles, or even spelunking!

Bonus Announcement!

While I was working on the post about microfilming the Astorian (see below), we received word from our colleagues in Washington, DC that the latest round of content updates has been released on Chronicling America. In addition to further pages completing our run of the Klamath Falls Evening Herald, you can also now view some content from the Sumpter Miner.

Masthead of the Sumpter Miner newspaper, Sumpter, Oregon

For all participating states, the content totals on Chronicling America now look like this:

2,692,369 pages

348 titles

264 historic essays

That’s a lot of reading material! (With plenty more still to come.)