The Northwest History Network invites all NHN Associates to its Annual Holiday Party on Tuesday, December 8, 2015!

Where:  Ex Novo Brewing Company, 2326 N. Flint Ave., Portland, OR  97227 (across Flint from Lillis Albina Park)

When:  6:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Who’s invited:  NHN Associates and their families, friends and colleagues (minors welcome until 9:00 pm)

What’s to eat and drink:  Snacks will be provided by the NHN. There is a no-host bar, and individuals may purchase entrees if they wish.

For more information, including the menu, here is a link to the Ex Novo Brewing website:  http://www.exnovobrew.com/#home

Please RSVP Andrew Bryans – bryans1212 at q.com

Thank you, and Happy Holidays!

NHN Associates Gus Frederick and Geoff Wexler will make presentations about their projects and have discussion and question and answer sessions with event attendees.

Gus Frederick will make a presentation about his Free Thought Magazine Project. In the course of research for a presentation on Oregon’s Freethought History, and subsequent digging—mainly in digitized Freethought publications from GoogleBooks—Frederick decided to create a WordPress site around select pieces from one unique publication, the “Free Thought Magazine,” from Chicago. Horace L. Green, the publisher, died October 30, 1903, when an open gas jet asphyxiated his wife and him. The last eleven years of Free Thought Magazine—Volumes 11 to 21—have a wide range of different topics covering the universe of the so-called “Golden Age of American Freethought.” All the big names are there, as well as others, pretty much unknown now. Green’s tagline was “Hospitable to all truth and especially devoted to the exposing of ancient error by the light of modern science and intelligent criticism.”

Horace L. Green (1828-1903). Publisher, with his wife Thyrza Ann of the "Free Thought Magazine" for 21 years, starting in 1882, first in Buffalo, then from Chicago. Publication ceased after the deaths of Mr. & Mrs. Green from a leaking gas valve.
Horace L. Green (1828-1903). Publisher, with his wife Thyrza Ann of the “Free Thought Magazine” for 21 years, starting in 1882, first in Buffalo, then from Chicago. Publication ceased after the deaths of Mr. & Mrs. Green from a leaking gas valve.

Geoff Wexler, in History is Bunk – Part 2, will follow up on his Northwest History Network talk in 2011 with a discussion of what he sees as popular misconceptions about history. Using illustrations from the collections of the Oregon Historical Society, he will demonstrate the immediacy of history in our lives and the importance of historical research in understanding the present moment.

Palace Garage Company, SW 12th & Stark, Portland, 1920, OHS Neg. Gi9760
Palace Garage Company, SW 12th & Stark, Portland, 1920, OHS Neg. Gi9760

Gus Frederick is a native Oregonian, born in Salem in 1954, 100 years after his hometown of Silverton was founded. He is by training a filmmaker and photographer, although he has broadened that term by necessity to multimedia artist. He works as a conceptual artist, photographer, filmmaker and animator for the Oregon Office of State Fire Marshal’s Fire & Life Safety Education Branch. A long-time local history enthusiast, he continues to be fascinated with many of the incredible stories from the Silverton Country. Other current projects include a video documentary on Homer Davenport, as well as an annotated version of Homer Davenport’s second collection of cartoons, The Dollar or the Man? The Question of To-Day. He remains deeply involved in his community of Silverton, serving as a member of the Board of Directors for the Silverton Country Historical Society, promotion chair for the annual Homer Davenport Community Festival, and as a City of Silverton Planning Commissioner, an appointed volunteer position.

Geoff Wexler is the director of the Davies Family Research Library at the Oregon Historical Society in Portland. He began his archival career in the mid-1980s at the Wisconsin Historical Society in Madison, and has since served at the University of California, San Diego; the Bancroft Library in Berkeley; and as the archivist for theater artist Robert Wilson in New York City. He holds a bachelor’s degree in history from UC Berkeley, and master’s degrees in history and library science from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He is dedicated to preserving and providing access to OHS’s wealth of historical records.

The event is free and open to NHN Associates and the general public, and will be held at the Hollywood Library in Portland (https://multcolib.org/library-location/hollywood) on Saturday, December 5, 2015, in the library’s meeting room from 10:30 am – 12:30 pm. The Hollywood Library is located at 4040 NE Tillamook Street, Portland, Oregon, 97212. RSVP requested via email at bryans1212 at q.com or by phone at 503-747-9652.

We’re very pleased to announce the results of the third cycle of the Northwest History Network’s microfunding program. We received a total of eight proposals this year, which were reviewed by a committee of five professionals. The NHN Board has approved funding for four proposals that earned enthusiastic support from our reviewers:

Project:  “Commemorating the Events and History of the 1934 Longshore Strike”

Organization:  The Bloody Wednesday Project

Project Director:  Ryan Wisnor

The Bloody Wednesday Project will use their $250 award to assist in the costs of drafting a design for a historical marker to bring the history of Bloody Wednesday to the public.

Project:  “Portland’s Type Casting Heritage Project, an Oral History”

Project Director:  Rebecca Gilbert

The $250 award will be used to fund the purchase of equipment to record oral history interviews to document the era of hot-metal printing in the Portland Metro area.

Project:  “Life in the Newberg Boyhood Home of Herbert Hoover:  A Resource”

Organization:  Hoover-Minthorn House Museum

Project Director:  Sarah B. Munro

The Hoover-Minthorn House Museum will use their $231 award to develop a resource book for teachers to be used in preparation for class visits to the museum.

Project:  ”Wage/Working explores income inequality through a traveling jukebox of interviews and stories about working”

Organization:  Wage/Working

Project Director:  Laura Hadden

Wage/Working will use their $250 award to fund the installation of the jukebox, which contains oral histories about wage and income inequality, at venues in the Portland area.

Please email nhn-board@googlegroups.com if you have suggestions about the program or would like to help out.