C1’e JJurtbxxxb COhserocr April 18, 2007 Page B3 Parallel New Orleans Vanport's housing was built to be temporary. And in both eases, com­ where blacks and whites lived in munities were left asking the gov­ close proximity. He describes how ernment why better preparations “for that period of time, that was a weren't made for disaster, why more remarkable experiment in the social permanent housing was never se­ structure of the United States, and cured. we didn’t have nearly the problems Even as the water lapped at the of the segregated South.” top of the embankment, the V anport Harlem and Detroit also experi­ Housing Authority distributed a enced significant strife in 1943, so flyer telling residents, "Dikes are it was particularly impressive that safe at present; You will be warned integration at Vanport "proceeded if necessary; You will have time to with little incident,” according to leave; D on’t get excited." By sheer historian Manly Maben. lack of preparedness, at least 15 “The racial tensions were less­ people lost their lives on that Me­ ened at Vanport because everyone morial Day, and Skovgaard recog­ was tired from working in the Kaiser nized history repeating itself in New shipyards,” muses Skovgaard. Orleans. But the real reason for the peace "There was definitely sort of a between races, Skovgaard insists. management decision to pacify continued from Metro The rescue o f flood victims from Vanport in 1948. The city was one o f the nation's first multicultural communi ties. (Courtesy: Oregon Historical Society) There was definitely sort of a management decision to pacify people when they started worrying about the water coming through. The bureaucrats were trying desperately not to look back, to try to be in control. j* d — Dale Skovgaard was V anport's version of state- sponsored socialism. “ People had their p ersonal items," he says, “but by and large everyone had the same things, so there wasn’t any judgment." The local government’s role in bringing about theend of Vanport's experiment started even before the floodwaters and remains in ques­ tion. “They were taking out buildings as people moved out,” Skovgaard says, "but there was no active con­ spiracy; it was just that the railroad fill (the city was built on a landfill) wasn’t really built to last.” Like the Ninth Ward in New O r­ leans that was destroyed by Katrina, people when they started worrying about the water coming through,” Skovgaard says. "The bureaucrats were trying desperately not to look back, to try to be in control. After­ wards, all they could say was it was not my fault, it was that office’s fault.” Vanport is still quite important in terms of how the community thinks about itself. SasUa Q uintana of- Portland Community ^College's, B lack S tu d ent O nion says, “ V anport started the creed o f Jefferson being a black school.” As a symbol of both good and i 11, the unique housing project that was Vanport looms large in our history. n In Loving Memory James Ray Mitchell Ja m e s Ray “ M itc h ” Mitchell. 59 died April 9,2007. As a youngster and as a young man he sang with G os­ pel groups and traveled far and wide. He worked in secu­ rity positions at the airport and Fred Meyer. He was a won­ d e rfu l c o o k and e n jo y e d barbequing ribs and chicken for his friends and neighbors. He was well loved and will be sorely missed by friends, fam ­ ily and his companion o f 18 years, M arcia Cufton. He had nine children but lost two early on. His daugh­ ters Mina and Nieci reside in the Portland area with his 4 grandchildren. Other survivors include at least tw o o ther b e c a u se G od n e e d ed him at home. In lieu of flo w e rs , p lea se help the family de­ fray expenses, as Mitch will be re­ turned to his na­ tive home in O kla­ hom a for burial. Donations can be made in care of any US Bank un­ d e r the Jam es M itchell Funeral Donation Fund. A Bonneville Power Administration photo­ graph shows white and black residents working together to save lives when the Columbia River flooded Vanport in 1948. Many o f those lucky to survive were put up in barracks and condemned trailers on Swan Island. CHURCH SPACE JF YOU NEED A PLACE TO WORSHIP AND ARE INTERESTED IN SHARING CONTACT PASTOR M. TAYLOR AT 503 939-5488. Stale Farm* Providing tnsutauce anti Financial Service Home Office Bloomington. Illinois 61 /It) Ernest J. 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