BLACK HISTORY MONTH Special edition features inside U£ ‘City 0/Roses’ s v r uv r 4 3 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • Februaiy 6, 2013 F c t i i h l i c h ^ r l in in 1970 IQ 7 A Established Committed to Cultural Diversity > ° -7 •'community wrvic* An untold story to inspire generations C ari H achmann T he P ortland O bserver by JUKI. :AN A M »*" V l'H " A M ' Kimberly Sower Moreland spent a better part of last year sifting through old newspapers and online catalogs, public archives and private family photo albums to collect more than 200 vintage photographs for her first book published this January, “African Americans of Portland.” As a former urban city planner and researcher, it was Moreland’s goal to show readers the unique history and experiences of black people in Portland using one of time s most accessible mediums, the camera lens. “Knowing the history is empowering for African Ameri­ cans,” she said. “We have accomplished quite a bit, and the true story about African Americans in Portland and in Oregon hasn’t been told.” “Our African American history is so different from the rest o f the country,” said Moreland, who grew up in Cleve­ land, Ohio but became a resident of Portland in 1987. Her book follows the journey o f O regon’s black pio­ neers from the first black of record to set foot in Tillam ook in 1788, M arcus Lopius, an African from Cape Verde Islands traveling as a cabin boy aboard Capt. Robert G ray’s ship, to the small, yet determ ined population of African Am ericans who began to settle and prosper in Portland against a backdrop o f hostile state exclusion laws. continued on page 6 All Aboard! Exhibit at History Museum O «4 . . _ , PHOTO BY CARI H a CHMANN/T h E PORTLAND OBSERVER Kimberly Sower Moreland sifted through hundreds o f documents and photographs to create a new book on the umque history o f Portland s black community. Proceeds from the publication, African Americans o f Portland, will go to the group Oregon Black Pioneers to help establish the state's first African-American museum. “All Aboard! Railroading and Portland’s Black Commu­ nity,” is a new exhibit at the Oregon History Museum featuring old photographs, many of which are featured in Kimblery Sower Moreland’s new book, “African Americans o f Portland.” • The railroad was a major employer and contributor of Portland’s black community that emerged around Union Station in the late 19th century and continue through the mid continued on page 7