February 15, 2017 BLACK HISTORY MONTH Page 5 photo courteSy o regon h iStorical S ociety Verdell and Otto Rutherford (far right) were among the leaders of Portland civil rights community in the 1940s and 1950s who worked with then-state Rep. Mark O. Hat- field to adopt Oregon’s Public Accommodation Act, the 21st state in the union to pass legislation outlawing discrimination in public places. A Legacy Preserved c ontinued from f ront was strictly on a volunteer basis, Charlotte Rutherford explains, stating that they were never compensated for their work. After returning to Portland in the late 1990s from her own career as a civil rights attorney with the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund on the East Coast, the younger Ruth- erford began the task of clearing through her parents’ belongings. “I didn’t really know what was in the boxes, I just had sense enough not to throw them away,” Rutherford explains. Eventu- ally, through the help of friend and former state legislator Avel Gordly, the collection made its way to PSU. “It has preserved the culture from a spe- cific time period, from the ‘40s through the ‘80s,” says Rutherford, describing the collection’s significance. Rutherford says that this was the height of Portland’s black community, “Because after the 90s, people started being dispersed.” The wide variety of content within the Rutherford collection offers a valuable sur- vey of the historic strength of the commu- nity, as even items such as dance programs can offer insight into what neighborhoods in north Portland once contained: “They sold advertisements… So it would show you what black businesses existed, and where they were located, up and down Williams Ave. and up and down Vancouver Ave.” Today, the work of the Rutherford fam- ily continues to serve Portland’s black population. Two documentaries, “Lift Ev’ry Voice,” and “Local Color,” both of which were produced by Oregon Public Broadcasting, made extensive use of the material present in the Verdell Burdine and Otto G. Rutherford collection. In ad- dition, a CDC-funded Oregon Health and Science University initiative has taken advantage of the images. The ‘Sharing History through Active Reminiscence and Photo-imagery,’ or SHARP, program is uti- lizing the extensive nature of the collection to promote community memory building and learn about Alzheimer’s risk in African Americans over 55. In November, Charlotte Rutherford was honored with the Continuing the Legacy Award by the Portland Branch of the NAACP for her efforts preserving and donating the collection to PSU’s Library. Rutherford is quick to point out that PSU is always eager to expand its records relating to the history of Oregon’s black community, and encourages individuals with potentially noteworthy con- tent to reach out to the university. Says Rutherford, “It’s a snapshot of a period of time that probably doesn’t exist like that anywhere else.”