A. L. Jackson portrait of an unidentified man
- OrgLot500_A_370_r
- Item
Part of Cartes-de-Visite photographs
Portrait of an unidentified man taken by A. L. Jackson.
Jackson, Albert L. (Photographer)
13103 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
A. L. Jackson portrait of an unidentified man
Part of Cartes-de-Visite photographs
Portrait of an unidentified man taken by A. L. Jackson.
Jackson, Albert L. (Photographer)
C. L. Winter portrait of an unidentified man and woman
Part of Cartes-de-Visite photographs
Portrait of an unidentified man and woman, featuring a painting of a waterfall. (Possibly Multnomah Falls ?) taken by C. L. Winter.
Winter, Clarence L., -1926
C. L. Winter portrait of an unidentified man and woman (verso)
Part of Cartes-de-Visite photographs
Back of a cartes-de-visite portrait of an unidentified man and woman, featuring a painting of a waterfall, showing the studio stamp for C. L. Winter.
Winter, Clarence L., -1926
Amasa Plummer Flaglor portrait of an unidentified girl
Part of Cartes-de-Visite photographs
Portrait of an unidentified girl taken by Amasa Plummer Flaglor.
Flaglor, A. P. (Amasa Plummer), 1848-1918
Amasa Plummer Flaglor portrait of an unidentified girl (verso)
Part of Cartes-de-Visite photographs
Back of a cartes-de-visite of an unidentified girl showing the studio stamp for Amasa Plummer Flaglor.
Flaglor, A. P. (Amasa Plummer), 1848-1918
Oral history interview with Roy L. Watters III, by Jacqueline Marcotte [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Watters discusses his early life in Vancouver, Washington, life as a young gay man in Portland, Oregon in the 1970s, his experiences during the AIDS epidemic while in San Francisco, California, and feeling the need to hide his sexual orientation to protect his career.
Watters, Roy
Oral history interview with Jerry Weller, by Libbey Austin [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Weller discusses his personal struggles with being gay in the 1960s, the AIDS epidemic, and a timeline of keystone political action surrounding the gay movement in Washington DC as well as a description of the gay community in Portland, Oregon.
Weller, Jerry
Oral history interview with Jerry Weller, by Libbey Austin [Sound Recording]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. Weller discusses his personal struggles with being gay in the 1960s, the AIDS epidemic, and a timeline of keystone political action surrounding the gay movement in Washington DC as well as a description of the gay community in Portland, Oregon.
Weller, Jerry
Oral history interview with Larry Smith, by Tanesha Dawson and Halla Williams [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Smith describes experience of being a gay teacher and his role with Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN); discusses AIDS, challenges faced by gay students, conditions in the Beaverton School District.
Smith, Larry Dale
Oral history interview with Charles F. Hinkle, by Michael Lamore and Michelle Brown [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. This is the first interview with Charles Hinkle. The second interview will be during Spring term 2009. This interview was taken for the Gay and Lesbian Pacific Northwest Archive and conducted by, Michael Lamore and Michelle Brown, who are Portland State University students working with the LGBTQ capstone class. They interviewed Charles F. Hinkle who has been an ACLU lawyer in Portland for over 30 years. Hinkle was involved in the Black civil rights movement in the 60's while working on his degree and took Oregon's first gay rights case of a teacher being fired for her sexual orientation, Peggy Burton, in 1972. Hinkle has been involved in gay civil rights cases ever since. He has been known as a strong ally and advocate to the gay community for many years. His involvement in gay rights in Oregon has a large legacy, but due to time constraints this interview covered his involvement from 1972-1988.
Hinkle, Charles F.
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. This is the first interview with Charles Hinkle. The second interview will be during Spring term 2009. This interview was taken for the Gay and Lesbian Pacific Northwest Archive and conducted by, Michael Lamore and Michelle Brown, who are Portland State University students working with the LGBTQ capstone class. They interviewed Charles F. Hinkle who has been an ACLU lawyer in Portland for over 30 years. Hinkle was involved in the Black civil rights movement in the 60's while working on his degree and took Oregon's first gay rights case of a teacher being fired for her sexual orientation, Peggy Burton, in 1972. Hinkle has been involved in gay civil rights cases ever since. He has been known as a strong ally and advocate to the gay community for many years. His involvement in gay rights in Oregon has a large legacy, but due to time constraints this interview covered his involvement from 1972-1988.
Hinkle, Charles F.
Oral history interview with George Oberg, by Brian Aune and Heather Burmeister [Sound Recording 01]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. George Oberg lives in Vancouver, Washington. He was the first president of the Second Foundation, which was a gay rights organization during the 1970s. During the interview, he talks about the early gay rights movement as well as the AIDS crisis of the 1980s. He talks about how his partner died of AIDS.
Oberg, George
Oral history interview with Rupert Kinnard, by Marissa Gunning and Ellen Tobias [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Kinnard discusses a few different subjects that include the accident that left him a paraplegic, his experience and career in cartooning and graphic design, working for Just Out, his new venture The LifeCapsule Project, and his feelings on gay marriage.
Kinnard, Rupert, 1954-
Oral history interview with Renee LaChance, by Brontë Olson and Nicole Estey [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. This is interview of Renee LaChance was conducted by Brontë Olson and Nicole Estey for the Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest as part of their senior capstone at Portland State University. LaChance worked with the queer newspaper The Cascade Voice, first selling advertising and writing and later as the editor for a period of time before founding Just Out newspaper with Jay Brown in 1983. The interview covers her involvement in the Gay Pride Festival, AIDS and ACT-UP, and Ballot Measures 9 and 13, as well as her experiences with running Just Out, her decision to sell, and her feelings about the path of the paper after its purchase by Marty Davis in 1998. It finishes with words of wisdom offered by LaChance for both the gay community and the general public on life and changing the future.
LaChance, Renee
Oral history interview with Cathlyn Abbruzzese, by Brian Fritzen and Justin Scott [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Abbruzzese discusses how she got involved in and her work with BRO (Basic Rights Oregon).
Abbruzzese, Cathlyn
Oral history interview with Patty Wolff, by David McCormack and Carla Moller [Sound Recording]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. Patty Wolff relates stories and anecdotes about the life of Wolff's partner of many years, Maxine L'Ecuyer, and about the lives of lesbians during the first half of the 20th century. Wolff's partner, Maxine L'Ecuyer (b. 1923), was a French-Canadian, left by her parents to be raised in a Catholic orphanage in Kansas. After moving to California on her own at age 14, L'Ecuyer worked as a movie projectionist for the Marines during WWII, after which she joined a Catholic convent, believing her sexuality to be an abomination. Denied the right to take her final vows, L'Ecuyer attended graduate school at the University of Washington, and was briefly institutionalized (as a result of her sexuality being revealed and compromising her professional career as a professor). L'Ecuyer retired to Portland in her late 50s, at which time she at last found a means of realizing her same-sex attractions to other women. L'Ecuyer met Patty Wolff circa 1992, at a rally on Pioneer Square in opposition of Ballot Measure 9.
Wolff, Patty
Oral history interview with Carol French, by Adrienne Sourbeer and Marcus Haslam [Sound Recording]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. French discusses Gay and Gray (a Portland service organization for elderly LGBT), as well as her own life story and partnership of 25 years with April Lewis.
French, Carol, 1941-
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. This interview is the 2nd of two separate interviews conducted in 2009. Hinkle focuses on the No On 9 campaign and his efforts in defeating Ballot Measure 9. Also discussed is the Oregon Citizens Alliance and its leaders, Lon Mabon and Scott Lively (whom Hinkle debated in a well-known Town Council broadcast.)
Hinkle, Charles F.
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Leo speaks of her experiences as an out lesbian pastor in the United Church of Christ; her experiences in Nicaragua during the 1980s that led to her decision to attend a Presbyterian seminary; homophobia within the church; and social justice & activism. She also addresses the difficulty her mother had in accepting Leo's lesbianism.
Leo, Susan, 1951-
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. Leo speaks of her experiences as an out lesbian pastor in the United Church of Christ; her experiences in Nicaragua during the 1980s that led to her decision to attend a Presbyterian seminary; homophobia within the church; and social justice & activism. She also addresses the difficulty her mother had in accepting Leo's lesbianism.
Leo, Susan, 1951-
Oral history interview with Ed Segel, by Pablo Guzman and Greg Nicosia [Transcript]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Transcript. Segel, a history professor at Reed College, discusses his knowledge of some of the local Portland non-profit organizations including Basic Rights Oregon (BRO), Love Makes A Family, Right to Pride, and Portland Town Council. Segel also discusses his experience of the AIDS epidemic, and his seeing a therapist during the early 1970s in order to come to terms with his homosexuality.
Segel, Edward B.
Oral history interview with Maria Council, by Gary Knapp and A. Krummenacker [Sound Recording]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. Maria Council is co-founder/President of Peacock After Dark. Council discusses her introduction to drag; her drag influences including "drag mother" Patty O'Dora and Lady Elaine Peacock; her reputation as Northwest's First Lesbian Drag Queen and subsequently as the first biologically female Empress of the Rose Court; her experiences in workplaces that required different levels of closeting and self-censorship; and her involvement with the local Portland church community.
Council, Maria
Oral history interview with Roey Thorpe, by Roxanne Michelle Holtman [Sound Recording]
Part of Gay and Lesbian Archives of the Pacific Northwest Oral Histories
Session 1. Thorpe discusses her tenure as Director of Basic Rights Oregon (2001-2006) and her subsequent role on staff at Planned Parenthood in Portland. Thorpe also discusses her youth in Columbia, SC, her coming-out process during the early 1980s, and the significant positions she has held in organizations dedicated to LGBT rights, non-profit community childcare, and at Empire State Pride Agenda (NY).
Thorpe, Rochella, 1962-
Oral history interview with John Murakami, by George Katagiri [Sound Recording 02]
Tape 1, Side 2. Murakami discusses his parents, living in Portland, working at his father's grocery store, the Depression, baseball and sports, race relations. He recounts his life as a soldier during WWII, his family's experience in the Minidoka Camp, life after the war etc.
Murakami, John
Oral history interview with John Murakami, by George Katagiri [Sound Recording 06]
Tape 4, Side 1. Murakami discusses his parents, living in Portland, working at his father's grocery store, the Depression, baseball and sports, race relations. He recounts his life as a soldier during WWII, his family's experience in the Minidoka Camp, life after the war etc.
Murakami, John
Oral history interviews with George Iwasaki, by Etsu Osaki [Transcript]
Transcript. Iwasaki, born in 1912 in Washington State, discusses his family, move to Oregon, childhood, parent's strawberry farm, Portland Assembly Center, life for Japanese during WW2, CCC Camp Adrian, nursery business, local Japanese societies, the Oregon Buddhist Church, etc.
Iwasaki, George, 1912-2009
Oral history interviews with George Iwasaki, by Etsu Osaki [Sound Recording 02]
Tape 1, Side 2. Iwasaki, born in 1912 in Washington State, discusses his family, move to Oregon, childhood, parent's strawberry farm, Portland Assembly Center, life for Japanese during WW2, CCC Camp Adrian, nursery business, local Japanese societies, the Oregon Buddhist Church, etc.
Iwasaki, George, 1912-2009
Oral history interviews with Tatsuro Yada, by Taka Mizote [Transcript]
Transcript. Yada discusses his early life and the Japanese community in Salem, Oregon, his experiences during World War II in the Tule Lake internment camp, and his life since then.
Yada, Tatsuro