The OPB program Think Out Loud is going to have a show on the OHS library closure Tuesday, March 24, from 9-10 a.m., at 91.5 fm. 

NHN board member James Hillegas did talk to Julie Sabatier of TOL, and gave her our perspective on the situation. Please listen, call, and email during the show. Sometimes they read emails out loud, or even call to follow up. 
Some things that we had discussed trying to emphasize on the show was that the Oregon Historical Society executive director and board need to work with community stakeholders, openly and publicly, to find a sustainable solution for the library — which is a unique, vast resource important not only to historians, but many other people doing research about Oregon and the region. The collections are held in the public trust, and must be accessible and protected by trained archivists and librarians. 

Floyd McKay at Crosscut covered the March 13 rally in support of the OHS Research Library and Staff:

Last week closed with nearly all of the research librarians and archivists at the 110-year-old Oregon Historical Society picking up their personal effects and exiting into the crisp March air. The newly unemployed staff were greeted by almost 100 Oregon historians and friends of the archives in a hastily organized protest across from the library in the Portland Park Blocks.

Lacking a secure public funding source, the library over the years has lost out on private funding as Portland’s pioneer families dispersed and many of the businesses they owned were picked up by out-of-state corporations with little interest in Oregon’s history. Glitzier, more-popular cultural attractions, particularly a rejuvenated Oregon Art Museum and an expanded theater scene became the places for new Oregonians to invest and be seen. Traditional state support of OHS was halted several years ago, and, gradually, services of the Historical Society were cast aside to save the core of the institution.

The shaky backing for the research function has already prompted its backers to begin thinking of other options, primarily partnership or even transfer to a major state university. OHS is two blocks from Portland State University, and there is also a large library and history program at the University of Oregon. The century-old Oregon Historical Quarterly is also an OHS function, but has its own endowment, which might keep it at the Society.

Read the full story here.

Click on links for the complete stories.

Portland Mercury

… As of Friday, March 13, the collection of Oregon’s films, photos, trail diaries, propaganda posters, and transit maps that for decades anyone could use to research Oregon’s history is no longer open to the public.

The timing of the closure is ironic. In mid-February, state legislators celebrated Oregon’s 150th birthday at the capitol building in Salem by consuming a reported 423 pounds of cake and 3,100 hot dogs. In between mouthfuls, Senate President Peter Courtney, dressed in period costume, gave a speech emphasizing the importance of Oregon’s history.

Rachel Schoening, OHS spokeswoman, says the society has run up “a huge deficit” since the state cut its funding in 2001. “We basically ran ourselves into the ground,” says Schoening. …

“This affects everyone from novelists to state legislators to documentary filmmakers,” says Richard Engeman, the public historian at OHS before he was laid off in 2006. “You slam the door shut on the ability to tell those stories.”

Thirty years ago, the library was free and open to the public seven days a week. In 2008, the library cost $10 to enter and was only public five days a week.

“If the archives remain inaccessible, it will make it so many graduate students won’t finish their theses, books won’t be written, and historical research will be shut down,” says Kathy Tucker, director of the historian-run nonprofit Northwest History Network.

Historians are also upset about what will happen to the many photos, diaries, and other one-of-a-kind items people have donated to the library over the past century. “These materials were given in perpetuity, to be used by the public of Oregon. To say the public cannot access them is terrible,” says Engeman. …

Portland Tribune

… The Oregon Historical Society took steps Friday to reopen its shuttered research library, but the lack of a long-term solution to its budget crunch still worries regional historians.

Society officials announced that the library, which is popular with historians and researchers, will reopen by the end of this month with a skeleton staff. …

… The additional staff is welcome news to historians, who stood on a makeshift soapbox across the street from the library at a Friday afternoon rally to draw attention to the library’s plight.

Michael Munk, author of the “Portland Red Guide,” is one of many authors, historians and others who use the archives in their research. Munk noted that the Portland City Council agreed this week to subsidize the wealthy sports team owner in hopes of getting a Major League Soccer team here, even as many of the library’s staff worked their last day.

“Where is the priority for our city and our taxpayers’ money?” Munk asked the crowd from atop the soapbox.

Historian Harry Stein, author of a biography of federal Judge Gus Solomon and other works, said he has seen many people use the archives during the years, including amateur genealogists, architects, lawyers, journalists, filmmakers and Native Americans trying to protect their rights.

“A century of effort, thought and money has gone into this place so that everybody can use it,” Stein told the crowd.

Northwest History Network members are concerned that the library could reopen with volunteers or others who won’t be able to allow access to its most valuable material: the cataloged first-hand histories and writings donated by pioneers and early settlers in the state. …