REGION THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A3 Talking about the John Day totem pole By BENNETT HALL Blue Mountain Eagle TOTEM POLE SYMBOLS JOHN DAY — The years have not been kind to the John Day totem pole. A quarter-century of wind and rain, sun and snow have taken a toll on the local landmark, leaving its once-bright wood dark- ened, weathered and cracked. That doesn’t sit well with Margot Heiniger-White, the widow of Ralph White, the Canyon City chainsaw artist who carved the pole. “I would like that totem pole cleaned up,” she said. And she’s not crazy about the location, either, tucked between a tele- phone pole and a two-story building just off the city’s main drag. “It’s not a very good place for it because nobody can see it,” she said. “It’s in a bad spot.” The John Day totem pole is adorned with four stylized animal carvings, each with its own symbolic meaning. Eagle: The Great Spirit Salmon: The food of life Turtle: Eternal life Beaver: The Great Builder Location, location Bennett Hall/Blue Mountain Eagle her out, then he went to see for himself — and found that he agreed with her. “It needs something done,” he said. “I stopped by and looked at it, and it definitely has seen its better days.” Lundbom brought the matter up at a city council meeting, and the con- sensus was that the city should pay to have the pole cleaned up and sealed with oil or varnish. The mayor estimates the work could be done for about $500 or so, and the plan is to do it this spring. He also thinks Hein- iger-White has a point when she says the totem pole needs a new home. “I all but forgot about it — I walk by it every day, but I didn’t really notice it anymore,” Lundbom said. “We talked about moving it to a more prom- inent location, but the problem is where?” Heiniger-White, as you might expect, has some thoughts on that subject. “I think it needs to be somewhere it can be seen,” she said. “And the place I would like to see it put is at the entrance to John Day.” Specifically, she thinks it should be relocated to the small patch of city- owned land by the bridge over Canyon Creek at the corner of Main and Third streets. Labhart says he’s not sure that’s the best spot. He points out that while the totem pole might catch the eye of passing motor- ists at that location, there’s no place for them to park if they want to get out of their cars and admire it. A better place, he sug- gests, might be the Pit Stop, another city-owned property on the site of the former Wright Chevrolet dealership at Main and Canton. Or maybe one block north on Canton, where the Oregon Department of Parks and Recreation is planning a multimil- lion-dollar expansion of the Kam Wah Chung State Heritage Site? “To me, it would make more sense to put it in that new state park,” Labhart said. “It’s not Chinese, but it’s part of the culture … (and) a lot of people would see it.” Ultimately, Heiniger- White wants to do right by the totem pole. She thinks that’s what the man who carved it — her late husband, Ralph White — would want if he were here to speak for himself. “I feel strongly that I am the messenger for him,” she said, “because he’s passed on.” Truth be told, it really The John Day totem pole is showing its age, but the city has plans to clean it up and refi nish it in the spring of 2022. There are also discussions about possibly moving it to a more prominent location. is an odd place for a totem pole. Standing 50 feet tall the Strawberry Wilderness and weighing in at 18,000 Fine Art Gallery, a business pounds, the tow- that no longer exists. ering tamarack spar The only other record is topped by an eagle of it in the newspa- with a 20-foot wing- per’s fi les from that span. Below the time is a photo of the eagle are three more fi nished pole lying carved fi gures: a on the side of Dayton salmon, a turtle and a Street, about to be Heiniger- White beaver. hoisted into place by It’s perched atop a crane. a concrete footing at the Heiniger-White’s mem- intersection of Main and ories of the pole’s carving Dayton streets, at the east have faded a bit with the end of downtown John Day. years. Yet despite its imposing In an interview with the size and central location, newspaper, she remembered the totem pole is surpris- that there had been some ingly easy to overlook. sort of an arrangement with Driving down Main a man who owned a store Street from the east, the to place the totem pole near totem pole is hidden behind his business because “the the imposing bulk of the land was free.” She couldn’t Grant County Ranch and remember the man’s last Rodeo Museum. Coming name but thought his fi rst from the west, the view is name might have been Ray. partially obscured by a tele- And she couldn’t remember phone pole. the name of the business. And why is there a totem Blue Mountain Eagle, File But some of her recollec- pole in John Day at all? tions are crystal-clear, even Ralph White, a.k.a. the Mountain Man, pilots a horseless carriage in Grant County’s ‘62 Days Celebration Parade in this fi le photo from August 2013. Grant County doesn’t 26 years after the fact. have much of a Native She remembers the American presence these including a tribal historian bright glow of the tamarack Oregonian newspaper, the tury as a place for tribes days — according to the article says the pole had its from throughout the region who talked about his peo- after Ralph White fi nished 2020 census, only 1.7% of ple’s traditional connection genesis as a promotional carving it. to gather for trade. the county’s residents iden- to John Day. gimmick. “It was the most beau- “Burke honored White tify as Native American or After that, a dozen or As Command tells the tiful wood you have ever and Potter with Indian Alaska Native. more people got up and seen,” she said, eyes shining tale, Ray Potter, owner names, and the carving of Perhaps more to the stood in a circle, including with the memory. “It should of the Strawberry Wil- the pole and its blessing point, Oregon tribes didn’t derness Fine Art Gallery, have been spar-varnished ceremony drew many sup- Labhart, White, Burke carve totem poles. That and a number of tribal was looking for some- at the time to preserve the porters,” the article states. was something the coastal members. thing to attract customers color, but it wasn’t.” “To further sanction the tribes of what is now Wash- “We passed a peace to the gallery’s new loca- And she remembers event, the three friends and ington, British Columbia pipe around,” Labhart said. tion just off Main Street in the town fathers smoked exactly why her husband and Southeast Alaska were “Each of us took a toke John Day, and he asked his a pipe beside the ancient carved it. known for. off the pipe and passed it “He carved it as a tribute artist friend Ralph White tamarack’s new home.” So what’s it doing here? around.” for advice. to Chief Raymond Burke.” Making history The answer to that ques- He agrees with Heini- White’s suggestion: “A tion comes back to Ralph Personal connection A plaque at the base of ger-White that the totem totem pole; it stops ‘em Raymond “Popcorn” White. the pole commemorates the pole is in need of some every time.” Burke died on June 27, event. serious TLC. Once the idea was Mountain Man 2006. “Erected August 21, “It’s in pretty bad hatched, several things Ralph White died on Jan. In 1995 he was the chief came together neatly to 1995,” it reads. “This totem shape,” Labhart said. “It 28, 2018, at the age of 79. of the Confederated Tribes make it a reality: A local pole is a symbol of friend- probably needs to be pres- In life, by all accounts, of the Umatilla Indian ship and peace from all of sure-washed, maybe logger provided the mas- he was a colorful character. Reservation, which lies Grant County to Raymond patched up a little.” sive tamarack trunk, the He wore a bushy beard between Pendleton and La Burke and all of the And he also thinks she’s local Ford dealership pro- and a bearclaw necklace, Grande and is home to the Umatilla-Walla Walla- right when she says it ought vided the land and the and he called himself the Umatilla, Walla Walla and local electric utility agreed Cayuse Tribe who lived to be moved. Mountain Man. Cayuse nations. here before us.” “A lot of people don’t to set the nine-ton pole in According to an article And he was Ralph Chris Labhart remem- even know it’s there place — all at no cost. by C.J. Gish in the July 20, White’s friend. bers that day. He was mayor because of its location.” The story goes on to 1995, edition of the Blue As Heiniger-White at the time, and he was one talk about the historical Next chapter Mountain Eagle, he made remembers it, her husband connection between the of the honored guests in In December, Heiniger- his living for many years had a genuine affi nity for attendance at the blessing people of the Confeder- White took her concerns as a chainsaw artist. White Native American culture ated Tribes of the Umatilla ceremony. about the totem pole to had a love for the Old West and traditions that was The intersection was Indian Reservation and John Day’s current mayor, and Native American art refl ected in his art. And he the John Day area — as closed to traffi c for the Ron Lundbom. He heard forms — and a knack for wanted to do something to remembered by Chief Ray- occasion, he said, and the turning tree trunks into honor his friend. weather was perfect. He mond Burke. As a boy in animal fi gures. “He had such a deep remembers tribal members the 1930s, Burke recalled “My saw is like an respect for the Native in ceremonial regalia, and bringing his grandmother instrument, like a banjo American people and Native American drummers and other female elders to or guitar, and it’s music to respect for Chief Raymond the area, which he said had playing their instruments. my ears,” he told the news- Burke.” served for more than a cen- Several people spoke, paper. “When I look at a An article that appeared log, I know it’s going to be in the Dec. 3, 1995, Seattle an eagle or a fi sh. 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