w w « 1 aRe 2 • Portland, Observer March 7, 1990 E ditorial / O pinion African-Americans History in Oregon:. . Eventually, these provisions were le ­ gally superceded by the passage o f the 14th amendment to the federal constitution fol­ lowing the C ivil War. But the social climate and environment which these earlier laws reflected did NOT change after the 14th amendment. These portions o f the original Oregon constitution were not officially This article goes on to describe this first “ Give Us This Day Family Services.” removed from that document until N ovem ­ large gathering o f the clan, 375 members in Motivated by her own experiences after ber 3rd, 1926. The race relations these ear­ all, including those with a surname devia­ being widowed and left eight children to lier laws sym bolized has not yet disap­ tion who were discovered through careful raise, she has led the way in several Oregon peared from Oregon life - nor has the head­ research ( “ H yche” ). Very important here communities in implementing the horizon­ start they provided for the white population is the concept o f pre-m eetings to establish tal Extended Family. “ Phillips would like o f the state. newly identified links, arrange transporta­ to see more homes open to children within In many ways the war years o f WWH tion modes (especially children, the handi­ the Black com m unity--thousands have no represent a watershed o f Oregon race rela­ capped and the elderly). Family patriarchs roots, she said.” tions. Prior to that time, Oregon’s African- were consulted ahead for the chronicalling There is much else going on this vein, American population was too small to ne­ the traditions and exploits o f the extended and w e wish we had room to tell it all. The cessitate great concern on the part o f the clan. Several found that they had crafts or following is anew s accountof June 1,1988: white majority. The state's white popula- professions in comm on, and established "The Black Family Reunion C ele­ tionin 1940w a s305,394. "T h eB lackpopu ­ w orking com m ercial relationships. bration, widely view ed as the m ost sig ­ lation w as 2,565 . . . ” 1,931 o f whom lived Schultz Family Reunion (several Se­ nificant live event in Black Am erica in in Portland. The pioneer objective o f Afri­ attle and Portland Newspapers, July 1987): recent years, returns in 1988 with an can-American exclusion from Oregon as "About 1 0 0 fam ily m em bers from expanded program , it was announced by desired by earlier pioneer whites had not numerous states including N ew York, D orothy I. Height, president o f the N a­ been 100% effective, but it had certainly Ohio, Illinois, Kentucky, Minnesota, Texas tional C ouncil o f N egro Women. C alled been close enough to assure white domina­ and California w ill spend fo u r days, "a show o f strength" by Newsweek Maga­ tion. socializing, sightseeing and conducting zine, the Black Family Reunion C elebra­ It is generally true however, that in the business a t the Seattle M arriott Hotel. tion has attracted over one m illion p a r­ pre-war years an “ accomm odation” be­ Comm ittee meetings tofin alize plan s fo r ticipants during its fiv e previou s events tween the races had evolved. African- the fa m ily scholarship fu n d as w ell as fro m Septem ber o f 1986087. P hiladel­ Americans knew their “ place” and grudg­ other business w ill be interspersed with phia w ill be added this yea r to the list o f ingly accepted it while envisioning an im­ banquets, a vocal concert art exhibit by cities hosting annual Black Family R e­ proved status for their offspring. Whites, for fa m ily mem bers, and extensive geneal­ union C elebrations, including Atlanta, their part, tolerated African-Americans and ogy display an d a dance with music by L os Angeles, D etroit and Washington, created an environment in which African- "House Blend." A trip to the Tillicum D C ." Americans could expect, with occasional village Salmon Bake on B lake Island w ill And so w e have it; it is about financial, exceptions, to be safe from the extreme, end the fo rm a l activities on Sunday. commercial and educational networking as overt physical dangers o f racism as prac­ George Shultz, b o m in Africa around well as the filial--Bibliography follows. ticed in other parts o f the country. 1810, was brought to America at the age Bibliography for Family R eunion The labor demands o f World War II o f four. He and his wife, Julia Ann Hawker, Emma J. W isdom, Planning A Family destroyed the elements o f this accomm oda­ had 11 children. The offspring o f those Reunion, Post Oak Publications, P.O. Box tion. Portland became a west coast center o f children com prise the "His' ’ p ortion o f 8455, Nashville, Tenn. 37207-0455, $8.95 wartime ship building. African-Americans the fam ily tree. James' second wife who plus $2.00 postage (a must!) in large numbers were recruited from other had been m arried to his brother, Hollis, Beard, Timothy Field, with Denise parts o f the country, to work in the Kaiser w as the aunt o f first wife, Joanna. With Demong, H ow To Find Your Family Roots. ship yards in the Portland area. The African- their first spouses having d ied at an New York, NY, 1977. American population in the Portland-Van­ early age, Jam es Schultz and Elizabeth Blockson, Charles L. and Ron Fry. Black couver area peaked at approximately 21,000 Katherine Doolin Schultz married, added G enealogy, Englewood C liffs, NJ, Pren­ in 1945. fiv e children o f their own and treated a tice-Hall, 1977. The real estate practices o f this era had to ta l o f 16 children. The loving, caring Doane, Gilbert H. and James B. Bell. a large part to play in creating the patterns of sp irit o f that big, happyfam ily carries on Searching For Your Ancestors. N ew York, race relations present in Oregon today. The to this day. M arion Sch u ltz Sutherland, N Y, Bantam, 1982. old Black community centered around the the 1987 N ational V ice P resident o f the Greenwood, Val D. The Researcher's railroad station on both sides o f the W illam­ Link, Inc. w as the key person in the Guide to American Genealogy. Baltimore, ette River. This was a reflection o f the fact logistics o f the gathering." M D, 1973. that practically the only employment avail­ There seems to be som ething for ev ­ Helmbold, F. Wilbur. Tracing Your able to adult African-American males was eryone in these expressions of ethnic consa- Ancestry: A Step by Step Guide to Research- • shinning shoes or working on the railroads guinity. In the May 5 ,1 9 8 6 edition o f “ This ing Your Family History. Birmingham, AL, as porters, luggage handlers, etc. W eek,” Maggi White has an excellent and Oxmore House, 1976. This pattern o f African-American resi­ inspiring article on a strong African-Ameri­ Newman, Debra L. L ist o f F ree Black dence was not accidental, it was aproductof H eads o f Families in the First Census o f the can woman, the biological mother o f eight deliberate policy as had been the case in the U nited States 1790. Special List No. 36, who also has adopted. The article, titled pioneer period . . . re-enforced by such Washington, D.C., 1974. "The Plight o f the Black Family: Serious widely accepted real estate practices as the Breakdown Leads W omen to Build Ex­ U.S. National Archives, G uide to G e­ ‘ ‘restrictive covenant’ ’ based on race which tended Fam ilies," is based upon an inter­ nealogical Research in the N ational A r­ was included in many deeds and real estate view with Dr. Virginia Phillips, founder o f chives. Washington, D.C., 1964. transactions o f the era, i.e. the Ladd District. Typical language can be seen in a deed for a home in the Grant High School District from 1934 which stated: ". . .N o building th ereof sh all be used or occupied otherwise than fo r strictly residence purposes, an d shall not be used or occu pied by Chinese, Japanese, o r N egroes, except that person s o f such races may be em ployed as servants upon said prem ises." Enforcement o f such restrictive co v e­ nants was not made unconstitutional until 1948 by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in that year. The covenants them selves were not made nationally illegal until passage o f the Fair Housing Act in 1968. The first suit to * Lack o f appropriate promotional tor to meet with inmates that have been enforce this ban was not filed by the federal opportunities for African-American correc­ released and are living in the Portland m e­ government until 1984. In Oregon, such tional staff. tropolis. covenants were made illegal by the state's * Lack of appropriate facilities to ac­ Based upon information gathered from adoption o f a fair housing law in 1957. commodate large number o f participants in community representatives, and the prison The restrictive covenant was not and is Adult Basic Education program. population, the Special Investigator would not the only barrier non-whites experience * Lack o f access to G.E.D. and Voca­ have concrete information to facilitate a in real estate concerns. The practice o f red­ tional training programs for African-Ameri­ comprehensive investigation. We would lining by lending institutions continues to can inmates. expect a detail report stating the plight o f plague African-American property seekers. * Absence o f effective cultural aware­ African-American population. W e would Under this practice lending institutions treat ness training and follow-up for all correc­ then expect specific recommendations to loan applications for property in identified tional administrators and on-line staff. eradicate the inequities that exist in the districts more harshly than in other areas. Because o f these concerns, we are call­ Oregon Correctional System. An even more formidable obstacle in ing on Governor Neil Goldschmidt to ap­ W e call on the Governor to take imme­ earlier periods was the code o f ethics o f the point a Special Investigator. Among the key diate steps to address the pressing issues real estate industry itself. As late as the responsibilities o f this position, w e would that confront the African-American inmate 1950s such language as the follow ing, ap­ expect the Special Investigator to meet with population in the State of Oregon. peared in the industry's real estate hand­ members o f African-American community Halim Rahsaan, book [this passage comes from the 1948 based organizations as w ell as with African- Chairperson, Prison edition in use in Portland]: American inmates currently in the system. Outreach Committee PART 111 We would also expect the Special Investiga- Black M en's C oalition RELATIONS TO CUSTOMERS AND THE PUBLIC A rticle34. A realtor should n ever be instrum ental in introducing into a neigh­ W esbecker massacre o f his co-workers in Our organization has documented hun­ borhood a character o f p ro p erty o r o c ­ Louisville, Kentucky, the killings o f school dreds o f insane and unpredicted violence cupancy, mem bers o f any race or nation­ children by James W ilson in Greenwood, perpetrated by persons who had been sub­ ality, o r any individuals whose presen ce South Carolina, and others. jected to pschiatric drugs and other treat­ w ill clearly be detrim ental to p roperty It is obvious that the psychiatric infor­ ments. N ow that psychiatrists have more values in that neighborhood. mation given to the court w ill only lead to power to force their deadly drugs on others, The objective o f this section could not more death and destruction in our society as w e can expect to see the crime rate soar, and be more clear. Under the practice known as more o f their killers are unleashed to rape the number o f psychotic killings to sky­ "B lock-busting,” the rewards for partici­ and murder again. rocket pating real estate agents could be quite Tanya Whitman, We have seen the effects o f psychiatric lucrative. When an agent moved a non­ R egional D irector drugs in the Patrie Purdy massacre o f inno­ white into a formerly all white area, then C itizens Comm, on cent children in Stockton, California, (prior sought to benefit from panic selling of nearby Human Rights in O regon Sandy, Oregon resident), the Joseph homes by whites which would be re-sold to in-moving non-whites at greatly inflated CREED OF THE BLACK PRESS prices, the damage to race relations was a The Black Press believes that A m erica can best lead the world away from social and national antagonisms when it accords to every person, regardless of race, color, or high price to pay for this individually prof­ creed, h ill human and legal rights. Hating no person, fearing no person, the Black itable behavior. Press strives to help every person In the firm belief that all are h u rt as long as anyone For example , the issue o f school inte­ Is held back. gration which has been o f central concern in Spring Planting Time: A Well-Planned ‘Family Reunion’ Can Be A Cash Crop by Prof. McKinley Burl The family is the foundation o f society. And the E xtended Fam ily concept, espe­ cially, has been a special and significant factor in the African-American experience. Contrary to some opinion, interest in this historic structure did not begin with Alex Haley and ‘‘R oots,” although his research, publications and m ovies undoubtably gave great impetus to the search for a continuity of identity (among as many whites as Blacks- if not more). And contrary to many other opinions (emphasis on the establishment), a great number o f African-American families are alive and well. More importantly, a greater number are quite busy, not only at research o f the past, but are actively engaged in revitalizing and restructuring a priceless heritage. What they are about is promoting the Fam ily R eunion concept across the country, well organized assemblages o f Kin that som etim es span five generations. It was Carter G. Woodson, the noted Black histo­ rian, who said, " If a race has no history, if it has no worthwhile traditiom, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought o f the world, and it stands in danger o f being exterminated.” W hile I have included a working bibli­ ography at the end o f this article, I do wish to introduce som e relevant concepts that may prove useful in escalating the social and econom ic im pactof the Family Reunion institution. Further, borrowing a phrase from Emma J. Wisdom, an author listed here, this m ethodology is ‘ ‘easily translatable toother functions.” It has been especially advanta­ geous in building files on this subject, to have access to most African-American newspapers from around the country. Hitchye Family Reunion (The Okla­ homa Eagle, September 1, 1988): "It all sta rted with Papa G eorge. He was an Alabama grocery store owner, and a cotton gin an d a small m ill on the 540 acres where he made his fin a l p a y ­ ment in 1907. Some say he became too big fo r a Black man in a southern state during the early 1900's. P apa G eorge Hitchye and his fam ily movedfrom Tuscaloosa, Alabama, headed fo r the territory, known now a s O kla­ homa. The fam ily w as Papa G eorge, his wife, Susan, and their tw elve children- G eorge Jr., M ernervia, Eddie, P ea r lie, Goldman, Percy, H ayes, M attie. Fannie, C ora, Roosevelt and Katherine." Continued Next Week . . . Prison Outreach Committee Met With Administrators and African-American Inmates D ea r Editor: In February and March o f 1989, mem ­ bers o f the Prison Outreach Committee met with Oregon State Correctional Adminis­ trators and the African-American inmate population. Based upon these m eetings, and other observations, it was decided that it was necessary to establish dialogue between the Governor’s office and representatives of African-American community organizations. On September 26, 1989, at Portland Com ­ munity C ollege, Cascade Campus, a m eet­ ing w as held. In attendance were the Correc­ tional Director, Fred Pearce, the Governor’s Legal council, and Kathleen Sadaat, the Affirmative Action Officer for the State of Oregon. In addition, there were approxi­ mately ten representatives from the Afri­ can-American community. The following concerns were presented to the Correctional Director, Fred Pearce, and other State Officials: D ea r Editor: Today's Supreme Court decision al­ low ing psychiatrists to forcibly drug prison inmates indicates that full information on the destructive nature o f these drugs must not have been provided to the Court. Reports in medical journals have clearly show n that pspychiatric drugs can and do make people hostile and aggressive and can turn them into killers. One well-known study showed that prisoners given psychiatric drugs are more aggressive, violent and harder to rehabilitate than those not on psychiatric drugs. There is emerging information that these powerful psychiatric drugs can create states o f insanity which persist long after the drug is withdrawn, and which in some cases are permanent. t ( r>4.-<5*A - i . - / ‘V : Portland since the 1960s until today, is not at the bottom o f an educational issue. It is, in fact, a real estate and residential issue. Few people o f any color dispute the value and preference for neighborhood schools. In the Portland experience during the 1940s and early '50s, this negative reality took visible and prominent forms. Quintard Taylor in his article “ The Great Migration o f the Afro-American Communities of Seattle and Portland during the 1940s” provides examples o f the legacy o f social conditions that African-Americans in Portland faced in 1950: ' 'Throughout the w ar years, many white businesses refused to serve Blacks, and a ll public parks an d playgrounds outside the Black community either barred Blacks entirely o r allow ed them to utilize the recreational fa cilities only one day a week. B lack autom obile owners p a id a fifteen percen t surcharge on their insur­ ance, a p ra ctice which w as not elim i­ nated until 1948." Another reflection o f the acceptance by the majority population o f this institutional­ ized racism was the presence in Portland of a popular restaurant called the Coon Chicken Inn, specializing in Southern fried chicken. To enter the restaurant customers walked through the open mouth o f a gigantic Black Sambo character which dominated the front o f the building. Once inside all utensils, plates, cups, etc. were emblazoned with the Sambo m otif. The restaurant operated from the middle 1920s until approximately 1946 when a mysterious fire caused it to close, never to open again. Gradually, African-Americans in Ore­ gon, Portland in particular, were able to rise above the legacy o f early disadvantages and participate more fully in Oregon life. By the m id-1970s—slow ly, through appointments and election victories, Afri­ can-Americans began to fill seats on public boards and governmental bodies. While the 22,155 A frican-A m ericans livin g in Multnomah County at the time represented a significant figure, it was not enough to sw eep African-American office seekers to victory without significant white support. But African-Americans were able to gain appointments in several elective o f­ fices and parlay that incumbency into later election victories. Such was the case in the election to the Portland City Council o f Charles Jordan in 1972 - the first modem era African-American to win such a seat. Other African-Americans during the '70s and '80s were able to gain elective office or gamer highly sought after appointments. W illiam M cCoy was elected in 1972 to the Oregon A ssem bly, becoming the first African- American to hold that position. Gladys M cCoy, his w ife, formerly the first African-American school board mem ­ ber, was first elected to the Multnomah County Com m ission in 1978. In 1980, a young African-American woman, Robin Marks, became the first African-American to be selected as Portland's R ose Festival Queen. In 1984 an African-American woman was selected as Miss Oregon. African- Americans are now represented by D ick B ogle on the Portland City Council, Dr. Matthew Prophet as the Superintendent o f the Portland School District, James De- Priest as the Director o f our state’s sym ­ phony orchestra, and W illiam Hilliard as managing editor o f the Oregonian, as ex­ amples o f the contributions African-Ameri­ cans now make in Oregon life. W hile these accomplishments and remarkable individuals represent real prog­ ress in Oregon race relations, their presence does not, unfortunately, mean that the prob­ lem s o f race have ended in our state. N ow in addition to the battle against institutionalized reflections o f past race discrimination, it seem s the battle must also be waged against a resurgence o f grassroots racism from violently hostile elem ents in the young and disadvantaged white comm u­ nity. The Skinheads, N eo-N azis, and KKK elements have identified the Pacific North­ west - much as their antecedents in the pioneer period did - as the location o f a future "whites only' homeland. These dual dangers o f right wing reac­ tionism and hate group terrorism act as a lightning rod to further polarize, or at best impede, progress in Oregon’s race rela­ tions. N o better example o f that difficult fu­ ture is necessary than a review o f the current controversy over the naming o f "Union A venue.” The basics o f the confrontation are simple. A group o f African-Americans began a campaign in the late 1980s to have the city rename a street after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Originally, the request was for Front Avenue to be re-named. Downtown business and econom ic interest groups put heavy pressure on the city council not to adopt such a change. The council bowed to the pressure. To avoid the appearance o f a direct rebuff to the African-American re­ questing group, the council adopted a com ­ plex process thru which any street renaming proposal was supposed to go. This was in fact only a transparent though indirect way to avoid the Front Avenue issue and to cloak their refusal with a cover o f objectivity. The council, when pressed further by the requesting African-American group, revealed what can most charitably be called I . (Continued from Front Page) t t a benign expression o f "paternal racism," by agreeing to the near instantaneous re­ naming o f Union Avenue to Martin Luther King Boulevard, without even a gesture of applying the process criteria originally developed for the consideration o f Front Avenue. In this sordid episode, there is ample blame in which all the major participants can wallow. What the council thought to be an easy and expedient escape from a sensi­ tive issue, was in fact shortsighted and ill- conceived, lacking integrity at the very least and political courage at the worst. The w ill­ ingness o f the original African-American requesting group in truth failed the same test. The proper response o f this group should have been to refuse to cooperate with the council's shortcut and insist on a full blown and complete application o f the process which had been created to thwart their re­ quest for Front Avenue. T o do otherwise was to willingly conspire in the shallow pretense o f their original rejection. That they were willing to do so was an inexcus­ able miscalculation. Perhaps the rarified experience o f being on the plus side o f a backroom political power-play, rather than being the traditional victim o f such maneu­ vering, was too unusual and overpowering to resist. In any case, because they were willing to eagerly grab the proffered prize, they too contributed to the present predica­ m en t The combined result was to present the opponents o f the change a sure win proposi­ tion. It forced those who might have op­ posed the change for legitimate, w ell-con­ ceived reasons, and there are such reasons, to climb in bed with those w hose motives were much less admirable. It gave the hate mongers and racists a mantle o f legitimacy they should never be able to enjoy in re­ spectable society. If current pre-election polls have any reliability, they also will give the opposition a decisive victory. What is the lesson to be learned here? There are plenty for all. For the city council, they should know that no amount o f late day posturing and public relations preening can be a substitute for w ell-conceived and courageous action when appropriate, in the first place. Inevitably, Portland w ill receive an embarrassing and highly visible national black eye when the election results are in. It is not inconceivable that w e w ill suffer the same kind o f national public relations and economic punishments inflicted recently on Arizona when its former Governor rescinded K ing's Holiday in that state. For the original requesting African- American group, the lesson is different but equally as clear. The seductions o f power politics must be resisted when they come into conflict with the demands o f sound politics and fair play. If Dr. King stood for any thing, it was the need to do the right thing for the right reasons in the right w av. Any­ thing less does not honor his memory. A s I suggested before, the roots o f this issue go deep into Oregon racial history. They are particularly sunk in the real estate and development policies long directed at that location and general area. A recent article in the Oregonian (2/19/ 90) highlighted the development successes o f downtown Portland as an inspiring testa­ ment to what effective urban planning in combination with farsighted economic development can achieve. What that article did not reveal was the disparity between that downtown success and the dismal record of planning and development that is the story o f the inner Northeast/Union Avenue area. The history o f developm ent in the inner northeast is one long song o f ill-conceived notions matched only in magnitude by the exploitive and manipulative suppression of African-American community livability and econom ic activity in the area. Over the years many opportunities to support and encourage true and longlasting econom ic and real estate developm ent in the Northeast Corridor have been fumbled of; bypassed without consideration. A prime example com es to mind in how the avenue; was disfigured w ith a center dividing barrier - in what was supposed to be an economic- development project The barrier produced; no positive visual or econom ic benefits to; the avenue. Instead it dislocated the very parking spaces that made many struggling or marginal business enterprises able tq survive, at all, along that street. Further*;; more it created a very real physical barrier that tended to balkinize the heart o f the African-American community, fragment­ ing an already fragile area. Such are the real issues o f importance, to the Union Avenue/Martin Luther King-; Blvd. area, creating not a sym bol but the-' substance o f econom ic growth and coomu-; •' nity cohesiveness there. Until the city and; all the currently squabbling parties are ready; to engage in that debate-all else will remain superficial and unchanged. They who give have all things C ( they who withhold have nothing. The hardest thing to open is a closed mind. J A J