12 NOVEMBER 3�10, 2021 CULTURE & HERITAGE CELEBRATING THE HISTORY OF EASTERN OREGON ‘The Atlas of Drowned Towns’ Learn more about the project to document towns lost under reservoirs at Nov. 9 talk By Lisa Britton Go! Magazine B AKER CITY — Bob H. Reinhardt is gathering stories about places that no longer exist — towns that disappeared underwater after the construction of large dams in the 20th century. He will be in Baker City on Tuesday, Nov. 9, to talk about his public history project “The Atlas of Drowned Towns,” and specifi - cally the town of Robinette, a Baker County town that disappeared with the construc- tion of Brownlee Reservoir. His presentation starts at 6 p.m. at the Baker Heritage Museum, 2480 Grove St. This is part of the museum’s new lecture series, which will take place on the second Tuesday of each month. Reinhardt is an associate professor in the Department of History at Boise State University, where he teaches, researches and writes about the history of the American West, environmental history, public history and the history of public health. His current history project seeks to explore the hundreds of communities in the American West that were displaced by the construction of dams, mostly in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s. Reinhardt is the author of the “The End of a Global Pox: America and the Eradi- cation of Smallpox in the Cold War Era” (University of North Carolina Press) and “Struggle on the North Santiam: Power and Community on the Margins of the American West” (Oregon State Universi- ty). He served as the executive director of the Willamette Heritage Center in Salem, was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship at Carnegie Mellon University and held teaching positions at Western Oregon University and Willamette University. He is the founder and director of the Working History Center at Boise State University. The Baker Heritage Museum is also working with Reinhardt on the “comunity workshop” portion of this project. “The general purpose of the commu- nity workshop is for us to discuss how to explore and interpret the histories of communities displaced or disappeared by large dams on the Snake River,” said Gracie Hardy, museum assistant. She said the museum will also work with Reinhardt to host a “History Jam- boree” — an event to collect stories from community members about towns displaced by dams, and to work together to preserve memories and artifacts from those lost places. These History Jambo- rees would take place in the spring and early summer of 2023. To learn more about Reinhardt’s project, and to see a map of drowned towns, visit www.drownedtowns.com. www.bakerlib.org/photo-archive The former Baker County town of Robinette was on the western bank of the Snake River 1 mile below the confl uence of the Powder River. The town’s namesake, James E. Robinette, settled there in 1887. The railroad and townsite were inundated in 1958 by the waters of Brownlee Reservoir, which also fl ooded the road that followed the Powder River from Richland to the Snake River. 11am-8pm Tuesday-Saturday