Oregon Historical Quarterly/Volumes 111-120

Volume 111 (2010)
No. 1 Spring
 * Desegregation and Multiculturalism in the Portland Public Schools Ethan Johnson and Felicia Williams
 * She Flies With Her Own Wings: Women in the 1973 Oregon Legislative Session Tara Watson and Melody Rose
 * The Wartime Correspondence of Monroe Sweetland and Lillie Megrath Sweetland William G. Robbins
 * The Correspondence of Ralph Radcliffe Whitehead, July 1900: Douglas firs, Life, and the Ideal James J. Kopp

No. 2 Summer
 * Betwixt and Between the Official Story: Tracing the History and Memory of a Family of French-Indian Ancestry in the Pacific Northwest. Melinda Marie Jetté
 * Connecting Oregon: The Slow Road to Rapid Communications 1843–2009. Frank Dillow
 * Research Files
 * “Let us honor those to whom honor is due”: The Discovery of the Final Link in the Southern Route to Oregon. Stafford Hazelett
 * OHS Directors and Honorary Council
 * Reviews
 * Book Notes
 * Notices
 * Contributors
 * OregonScape. Mikki Tint

No. 3 Fall
 * “We’re going to defend ourselves”: The Portland Chapter of the Black Panther Party and theLocal Media Response Jules Boykoff and Martha Gies
 * The Rise and Fall of Burley Design Cooperative Joel Schoening
 * Ole Hedlund, Photographer of the Central Oregon Railroad Era, 1909–1911 Beth Crow and Jarold Ramsey
 * Green Beans, Green Cash Alderman Farms’ Post–World War II Teenage Workforce Floyd J. McKay
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

No. 4 Winter Henry S. Tanner and the Cartographic Expression of American Expansionism in the 1820s James V. Walker A Northwest Language of Contact, Diplomacy, and Identity: Chinuk Wawa / Chinook Jargon Henry Zenk with Tony A. Johnson Essay Reflections on Writing a Siletz Tribal History Charles Wilkinson The People Are Dancing Again: Bringing Siletz Tribal History to the Public Robert Kentta Oregon Places Western Oregon Reservations: Two Perspectives on Place David G. Lewis and Robert Kentta Oregon Voices The Albina Mural Project Robin Dunitz OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Letters Notices Contributors OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 112 (2011)
No. 1 Spring
 * A Lovely but Unpredictable River: Frances Fuller Victor’s Early Life and Writing Sheri Bartlett Browne
 * Silver Falls State Park and the Early Environmental Movement Zeb Larson
 * “READ YOU MUTT!”: The Life and Times of Tom Burns, the Most Arrested Man in Portland Peter Sleeth
 * Oregon Peace Corps Volunteers: Letters from Nigeria, 1964–1965 Jerry Fagerlund and Liisa Fagerlund
 * The Army in the Woods: Spruce Production Division Records at the National Archives Kathleen Crosman
 * Archaeology, History, and Community: An Enduring Legacy at Beatty, Klamath County Thomas J. Connolly
 * The Old Wasco County Courthouse: Still Making History after 152 Years Karl Vercouteren
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

No. 2 Summer Local History Spotlight
 * “Hardly a Family is Free From the Disease”: Tuberculosis, Health Care, and Assimilation Policy on the Nez Perce Reservation, 1908–1942 Elizabeth James
 * On the Road with Rutherford B. Hayes: Oregon’s First Presidential Visit, 1880 Kristine Deacon
 * The Sicuro File: A Personal Perspective on the Struggle over Portland State University’s Most Controversial President David A. Horowitz
 * Where They Came From: Voices of Reed College, 1920–1940 John Sheehy
 * Soccer in the Seventies: Chris Dangerfield and the Original Portland Timbers Michael Orr and Morgen Young
 * Madras Railroad Day Centennial Celebration, 1911–2011 Jarold Ramsey
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

No. 3 Fall Murder on Train No. 15: Race Relations, the Home Front, and the Trial of Robert E. Lee Folkes Neil Barker Building an Alternative: People’s Food Cooperative in Southeast Portland Marc D. Brown Essay The Trouble with Cross-Dressers: Researching and Writing the History of Sexual and Gender Transgressiveness in the Nineteenth-Century American West Peter Boag Photo Essay Red Heads to War Dogs: Taft, 1941–1943 G. Thomas Edwards Primary Document Okinawa 1945: Monroe Sweetland and American Prisoners of War William G. Robbins Local History Spotlight Shawash Iliʔ i Kǝnim Ikanum (Grand Ronde Canoe Story) David G. Lewis OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Contributors OregonScape Mikki Tint

No. 4 Winter
 * “Hop Fever” in the Willamette Valley: The Local and Global Roots of a Regional Specialty Crop Peter A. Kopp
 * Portland Modern: The Northwest Architecture of Van Evera Bailey Hope H. Svenson
 * Martin Luther’s Fragmented Body: Lutheranism in Astoria, Oregon C. Welborn
 * Sin in the Sagebrush: Creating an Exhibit for the High Desert Museum Robert Boyd
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 113, No. 1 (Spring 2012)
The Foreign Policy of Senator Wayne L. Morse Larry Ceplair

Portland’s Gettysburg Cyclorama: A Story of Art, Entertainment, and Memory Jeffry Uecker

Oregon Voices

The Late-Life Career of Marian Wood Kolisch Jennifer Strayer

Research Files

Historic Oregon Newspapers Online: Bringing Oregon’s “first rough draft of history” into a New Era of Public Accessibility Jason Stone

Local History Spotlight An Inheritance: A Gift to the Deschutes County Historical Society Tells the Story of a Life, a Family, and a Town Kelly Cannon-Miller OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Contributors OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 113, No. 2 (Summer 2012)

 * “He took up arms against the loins from which he sprang and the womb that bore him”: Gender and Parricide During the American Agrarian Crisis — A Case Study Peter Boag
 * Ghadar, Historical Silences, and Notions of Belonging: Early 1900s Punjabis of the Columbia River Johanna Ogden
 * “the kind of person who makes this America strong”: Monroe Sweetland and Japanese Americans William G. Robbins
 * Reflections of my Father: The Architecture and Legacy of Pietro Belluschi Anthony Belluschi
 * Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center: Telling the Story of African Americans in Wallowa, Oregon Gwendolyn Trice
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 113, No. 3 (Fall 2012)

 * Women and Citizenship in Oregon History Kimberly Jensen
 * “What Shall Be Done with Her?”: Frances Fuller Victor Analyzes “The Woman Question” in Oregon Sheri Bartlett Browne
 * Creating New Citizens: The National Council of Jewish Women’s Work at Neighborhood House in Portland, 1896–1912 Emily Zeien-Stuckman
 * Asian Women: Immigration and Citizenship in Oregon Peggy Nagae
 * From Coverture to Supreme Court Justice: Women Lawyers and Judges in Oregon History Janice Dilg
 * The Straight State of Oregon: Notes Toward Queering the History of the Past Century Jacqueline Dirks
 * Multilayered Loyalties: Oregon Indian Women as Citizens of the Land, Their Tribal Nations, and the United States Kay Reid
 * “The Noble Representative Woman from Oregon”: Dr. Mary Anna Cooke Thompson Jean M. Ward
 * The Lucy Davis Phillips Collection: Finding the Lost Women Graduates of Oregon’s Medical Schools Karen Lea Anderson Peterson
 * Latinas and Citizenship in Oregon Marcela Mendoza
 * Equality, Politics, and Separatism: The Papers of Oregon Feminists in the University of Oregon Libraries Linda Long
 * Women of the Oregon Multicultural Archives Natalia Fernández and Tiah Edmunson-Morton
 * Women and Oregon Political History: The Research and Writing of Up the Capitol Steps Jessica Tollestrup
 * Chronicling Women’s History at the Oregon State Archives Austin Schulz and Mary Beth Herkert

Volume 113, No. 4 (Winter 2012)

 * Tree Farms on Display: Presenting Industrial Forests to the Public in the Pacific Northwest, 1941–1960 Emily K. Brock
 * Bringing “good Jargon” to Light: The New Chinuk Wawa Dictionary of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, Oregon Henry Zenk
 * Tom McCall and the Language of Memory Brent Walth
 * History: Made by You: A New Approach from the Southern Oregon Historical Society Amy Drake and Allison Weiss
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 114, No. 1 (Spring 2013)

 * Black and Blue: Police-Community Relations in Portland’s Albina District, 1964–1985 Leanne C. Serbulo and Karen J. Gibson
 * The Hunt for Oregon Missionary Sources: Clifford M. Drury’s Enduring Archives Legacy Trevor James Bond
 * Populists, Dreamers, and the Citizens who Built Oregon’s 1938 Capitol Floyd J. McKay
 * Architecture of the Oregon State Capitol William F. Willingham
 * The Southern Oregon University Laboratory of Anthropology Public Archaeology and History Mark Tveskov, Chelsea Rose, and Katie Johnson
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 114, No. 2 (Summer 2013)

 * “well and favorably known”: Deciphering Chinese Merchant Status in the Immigration Office of Astoria, Oregon, 1900–1924 Aaron Coe
 * The Oregonian Navigates the Great Depression Harry H. Stein
 * Trudy Rice’s Story: Nursing and Race in Oregon History Christin L. Hancock
 * What Would You Do?: If Heroes Were Not Welcome Home Linda Tamura and Marsha Takayanagi Matthews
 * Hood River County Museum: Looking Backward, Moving Forward Connie Nice
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 114, No. 3 (Fall 2013)
Curiosity or Cure?: Chinese Medicine and American Orientalism in Progressive Era California and Oregon Tamara Venit Shelton Portland’s “Refugee from Occupied Hollywood”: Andries Deinum and his Center for the Moving Image Heather O. Petrocelli Research Files Following the Roots of Oregon Wine Rachael Cristine Woody and Rich Schmidt Photo Essay Project Dayshoot30: An Oregon Self-Portrait for the Digital Age Brian Burk Local History Spotlights Russell Lee in the Northwest: Documenting Japanese American Farm Labor Camps in Oregon and Idaho Morgen Young Remembering Chinese in Hells Canyon and the Pacific Northwest R. Gregory Nokes OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Letters Contributors OregonScape Jennifer Keyser

Volume 114, No. 4 (Winter 2013)
“Our Vanishing Glaciers”: One Hundred Years of Glacier Retreat in Three Sisters Area, Oregon Cascade Range Jim E. O’Connor Special Section Oregon Historical Society “Summer of Citizenship” Series Eliza E. Canty-Jones Citizenship and Belonging in Uncertain Times Marcela Mendoza Speaking for the First Americans: Nipo Strongheart and the Campaign for American Indian Citizenship Andrew H. Fisher From Citizens to Enemy Aliens: Oregon Women, Marriage, and the Surveillance State during the First World War Kimberly Jensen Research Files “A Rich Darkness”: Discovering the William Stafford Archives at Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson and Jeremy Skinner Photo Essay Evidence of Noticing: Photographs by William Stafford Kirsten Rian Local History Spotlights Ghadar Party Centennial Celebration in Astoria, Oregon Johanna Ogden I-O-N Heritage Museum: Remembering the Past — Preserving the Future in Jordan Valley, Oregon Joanne Cunningham OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Letters Contributors OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 115, No. 1 (Spring 2014)
“The Road that Won an Empire”: Commemoration, Commercialization, and the Promise of Auto Tourism at the “Top o’ Blue Mountains” Chelsea K.Vaughn Nose Sakae’s Study Abroad: Idealization and Devaluation of American Education During Japan’s early Meiji Era Yasutaka Maruki Oregon Voices Women’s Lands in Southern Oregon: Jean Mountaingrove and Bethroot Gwynn Tell Their Stories Heather Burmeister Enforcing Oregon’s State Alcohol Monopoly: Recollections from the 1950s Warren Niete, introduction by Rob Donnelly Oregon Places Thompson’s Mills and the Lost Town of Boston: Oregon’s Newest Heritage Site Celebrates Its Ten-Year Anniversary Kristine Deacon A Tribute: Eckard V. Toy, Jr., March 19, 1931–October 7, 2013 OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Contributors OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 115, No. 2 (Summer 2014)

 * Oregon’s Civil War: The Troubled Legacy of Emancipation in the Pacific Northwest Stacey L. Smith
 * The Allure of Lincoln: Using Material Culture to Complicate Shared Memories Brian J. Carter, with Amy E. Platt
 * Extant Outdoor Garments in Oregon, 1880 to 1920: Historic Research Using Objects from Oregon’s Historical Institutions Jennifer M. Mower and Elaine L. Pedersen
 * Printers and Press Operators: The Oregonian Remembered Harry H. Stein
 * A Tribute: Thomas Vaughan, October 13, 1924–December 6, 2013
 * History from Below: Connecting Rural Oregon to Its Social Movement History Sarah K. Loose
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 115, No. 3 (Fall 2014)

 * Natives and Pioneers: Death and the Settling and Unsettling of Oregon Matthew Dennis
 * “We Are Created from this Land”: Washat Leaders Reflect on Place-Based Spiritual Beliefs Rex Buck, Jr. and Wilson Wewa
 * Stealing from the Dead: Scientists, Settlers, and Indian Burial Sites in Early-Nineteenth-Century Oregon Wendi A. Lindquist
 * Death and Oregon’s Settler Generation: Connecting Parricide, Agricultural Decline, and Dying Pioneers at the Turn of the Twentieth Century Peter Boag
 * Killing Narcissa: Race, Gender, and Violence in Recreations of the Whitman Incident Chelsea K. Vaughn
 * Four Deaths: The Near Destruction of Western Oregon Tribes and Native Lifeways, Removal to the Reservation, and Erasure from History David G. Lewis
 * A Reflection on Genocide in Southwest Oregon in Honor of George Bundy Wasson, Jr. Gray H. Whaley
 * How the West was Lost: Reflections on Death and the Settling and Unsettling of Oregon Jennifer Karson Engum
 * Dislodging Oregon’s History from its Mythical Mooring: Reflections on Death and the Settling and Unsettling of Oregon Melinda Marie Jetté

Volume 115, No. 4 (Winter 2014)

 * Planning for a Productive Paradise: Tom McCall and the Conservationist Tale of Oregon Land-Use Policy Laura Jane Gifford
 * “Union for the Sake of the Union”: The Selection of Joseph Lane as Acting President of the United States, 1861 Si Sheppard
 * A History of Science and Society in Oregon: Oregon State University’s Extension and Experiment Station Publications Sue Kunda
 * [http://ohs.org/research-and-library/oregon-historical-quarterly/upload/05_Hassen_Klamath-Armory_115_4_Winter-2014.pdf Klamath Armory and Auditorium: Klamath County Museum’s “Biggest and Most Important Artifact” Judith Hassen
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 116, No. 1 (Spring 2015)

 * “Criminal Operations”: The First Fifty Years of Abortion Trials in Portland, Oregon Michael Helquist
 * “The Job was Big and the Man Doing it was Still Bigger”: The Forgotten Role of Thomas B. Watters in Klamath Termination, 1953–1958 Matthew Villeneuve
 * A Foreigner’s View of Oregon: The Portland Photography of E.O. Hoppé Jennifer Strayer
 * Western Landscape Photography: Then and Now Rachel McLean Sailor
 * P.I.B. Ping: A Kansan in 1880s Oregon Lynn Summers
 * How Do You Celebrate a County’s Centennial? Jarold Ramsey
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 116, No. 2 (Summer 2015)
Hitting the Trail: Live Displays of Native American, Filipino, and Japanese People at the Portland World's Fair Emily Trafford “To the World!!”: The Story Behind the Vitriol Stafford Hazelett “We were nothing but rust”: Beatrice Green Marshall’s Wartime Experience Melissa Cornelius Lang “Go into the yard as a worker, not as a woman”: Oregon Women During World War II, A Digital Exhibit on the Oregon History Project Amy E. Platt The Augmented Reality of Oregon History Shawn Daley OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Contributors OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 116, No. 3 (Fall 2015)

 * “This is where we want to stay”: Tejanos and Latino Community Building in Washington County Luke Sprunger
 * Promoting Tourism and Development at Crater Lake: The Art of Grace Russell Fountain and Mabel Russell Lowther Gail E. Evans
 * Letters to Klickitat Street, 1940–1945 Sandra Hickson Carter
 * Shared Narratives: The Story of the 1942 Attack on Fort Stevens Laura Jane Gifford
 * Restoring the Morrow County Courthouse Clock: An Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution Clock-Making Trade School Project Gary L. Kopperud
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 116, No. 4 (Winter 2015)

 * Revisiting Rajneeshpuram: Oregon’s Largest Utopian Community as Western History Carl Abbott
 * The Value of a Historical Landscape: Heritage and Nature at Bridal Veil David Benac
 * Comrade Johns: Oregon’s Socialist Presidential Candidate Jeffrey Johnson and Nate Pedersen
 * A Black Logger’s Journey: Jackson Parish, Louisiana, to Wallowa County, Oregon Pearl Alice Marsh
 * Assembling a Life: James L. Wasson and Old Portland Hardware Greta Smith
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 117, No. 1 (Spring 2016)

 * Chinookan Villages of the Lower Columbia Henry Zenk, Yvonne Hajda, and Robert Boyd
 * The Pictorial Maps of Fred A. Routledge Craig Clinton
 * From Church to State: The Sectarian Roots of Oregon State University, 1868–1888 William G. Robbins
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 117, No. 2 (Summer 2016)
Vazquez
 * Regulating Birth: Locating Power at the Intersection of Private and Public in Oregon History Christin Hancock
 * Changing the Debate: A Twentieth-Century History of People with Disabilities, Their Families, and Genetic Counseling Adam Turner
 * Health and Well-being: Federal Indian Policy, Klamath Women, and Childbirth Christin Hancock
 * Birth Activism, Law, and the Organization of Independent Midwifery in Oregon Bruce Hoffman
 * Birth, Healing, and Women of Color: Symposium Keynote Lecture and Discussion Shafia M. Monroe with Zalayshia Jackson, Mariah A. Taylor, and Consuelo
 * “We can give birth. We can do it.”: Reflections on Learning and Promoting Midwifery in Oregon Holly Scholles, Mary Solares, and Sarah Taylor
 * “Lewd, Obscene and Indecent”: The 1916 Portland Edition of Family Limitation Michael Helquist
 * Adventures in Family Limitation Khris Soden and Michael Helquist, drawn by Khris Soden
 * Birth Home, Inc.: Discovering the Records of an Independent Birth Center Maija Anderson

Volume 117, No. 3 (Fall 2016)

 * The Persistence and Characteristics of Chinook Salmon Migrations to the Upper Klamath River Prior to Exclusion John B. Hamilton, Dennis W. Rondorf, William R. Tinniswood, Ryan J. Leary, Tim Mayer, Charleen Gavette, and Lynne A. Casal
 * The National Historic Preservation Act at Fifty: How a Wide-Ranging Federal-State Partnership Made its Mark on Oregon Elisabeth Walton Potter
 * Big Red: The Crane Shed, Community Identity, and Historic Preservation in Bend Kelly Cannon-Miller
 * A Look Back at Oregon’s Future with Space, Style and Structure Christine Curran
 * Significant Events in the Historic Preservation Movement in Oregon Elisabeth Potter
 * Hometown Show: Early Movie Theaters in Eugene and Springfield Elizabeth Peterson
 * An Activist with a Camera Sandy Polishuk and Bette Lee

Volume 117, No. 4 (Winter 2016)

 * The Unwanted Sailor: Exclusions of Black Sailors in the Pacific Northwest and the Atlantic Southeast Jacki Hedlund Tyler
 * The Making of Seaside’s “Indian Place”: Contested and Enduring Native Spaces on the Nineteenth Century Oregon Coast Douglas Deur
 * The Malheur Occupation and the Problem with History William G. Robbins
 * Frederic Homer Balch (1861–1891): Romancer and Historian Richard W. Etulain
 * A Conversation with Geoff Wexler: Photography and the Davies Family Research Library Collections Jennifer Strayer
 * OHS Directors and Honorary Council
 * Reviews
 * Letters
 * Book Notes
 * Correction
 * OregonScape Mikki Tint

Volume 118, No. 1 (Spring 2017)

 * Editor’s Note
 * Eliza E. Canty-Jones
 * The State of Jefferson Historical Group Trudy Vaughan
 * “The State of Jefferson”: A Disaffected Region’s 160-Year Search for Identity Jeff LaLande
 * A “Most Disastrous” Affair: The Battle of Hungry Hill, Historical Memory, and the Rogue River War Mark Axel Tveskov
 * The Carolina Company: Identity and Isolation in a Southwestern Oregon Mountain Refuge Chelsea Rose and Mark Axel Tveskov
 * Inland Sanctuary: A Synergistic Study of Indigenous Persistence and Colonial Entanglements at Hiouchi (Xaa-yuu-chit) Shannon Tushingham and Richard Brooks
 * Jim Rock Historic Can Collection: Southern Oregon University’s Digital Collection Celebrating Jim Rock’s Contributions to Tin Can Archaeology Shana Sandor and Chelsea Rose
 * OHS Directors and Honorary Council
 * Contributors
 * OregonScape Matthew Cowan

Volume 118, No. 2 (Spring 2017)
The Earliest American Map of the Northwest Coast: John Hoskins’s A Chart of the Northwest Coast of America Sketched on Board the Ship Columbia Rediviva. . . 1791 & 1792 James V. Walker and William L. Lang Women’s “Positive Patriotic Duty” to Participate: The Practice of Female Citizenship in Oregon and the Expanding Surveillance State during the First World War and its Aftermath Kimberly Jensen Special Section World War One Centennial Roundtable The War to End War One Hundred Years Later: A First World War Roundtable Kimberly Jensen and Christopher McNight Nichols The Americans Who Opposed The Great War: Who They Were, What They Believed Michael Kazin Resistance, Dissent, and Punishment in WWI Oregon Michael Helquist World War I and the Northwest’s Working Class Steven C. Beda Indispensable Histories Adriane Lentz-Smith In Search of Citizenship: The Society of American Indians and the First World War Steven Sabol Power to the People: American Peace Women’s Democratic Cures for War Candice Bredbenner Picturing the Past, Looking to the Future: The Forest History Society’s Repeat Photography Project Sara Pezzoni OHS Directors and Honorary Council Reviews Book Notes Contributors From the OHQ Archives OregonScape Matthew Cowan Editor’s Note

Volume 118, No. 3 (Fall 2017)

 * “The Nomadic Race to Which I Belong”: Squatter Democracy and the Claiming of Oregon John Suval
 * “I wanted Oregon to have something”: Governor Victor G. Atiyeh and Oregon-Japan Relations Christopher Foss
 * Merchant and Imperial Diplomat: The Extraordinary Career of Portland’s Moy Back Hin Chuimei Ho and Bennet Bronson
 * Dear Abigail: The Advice Letters of Abigail Scott Duniway, 1871–1876 G. Thomas Edwards
 * Yamhill County Crop History Project: Community-Involved Historical Discovery Russ Karow and Gloria Lutz
 * OHS Directors and Honorary Council
 * Reviews
 * Book Notes
 * Letter
 * From the OHQ Archives
 * Contributors
 * OregonScape Matthew Cowan

Volume 118, No. 4 (Winter 2017)

 * Trouble in Paradise: A Historical Perspective on Immigration in Oregon Historical Society Robert Bussel and Daniel J. Tichenor
 * Tribes of the Oregon Country: Cultural Plant Harvests and Indigenous Relationships with Ancestral Lands in the Twenty-first Century Rebecca Dobkins, Susan Stevens Hummel, Ceara Lewis, Grace Pochis, and Emily Dickey
 * Oregon Roma (Gypsies): A Hidden History Carol Silverman
 * Guatemala Immigration to Oregon: Indigenous Transborder Communities Lynn Stephen
 * History, Public Memory, and Creating the Bracero Archive Mario Jimenez Sifuentez
 * Migration Public History: A Roundtable Discussion at the Oregon Migrations Symposium Gwen Trice, Gabriela Martinez, and Suenn Ho
 * In the Shadow of the 2016 Election: Immigration Debates in Oregon and Beyond Kim Williams, Andrea Williams, and Phil Carrasco
 * OHS Directors
 * Reviews
 * Letters
 * Book Notes
 * From the OHQ Archives
 * Contributors
 * OregonScape Matthew Cowan
 * Volume Contents
 * Volume Index