Announcements


History: Made by You Exhibit Moves to the Rogue Valley Airport

posted Feb 20, 2012 11:38 AM by Amy Drake

Wire by Wire: How the Telephone, Fencing, and Electricity Came to Lake Creek will be on display at the Rogue Valley International-Medford Airport from February 22 through March 21. Wire by Wire explores how the rural community of Lake Creek changed with the introduction of these new technologies and the effect they have on life in Lake Creek today. 


For more information on the exhibit, or if you would like to request that a public forum/traveling exhibit come to your community, please contact Amy Drake at amy@sohs.org or (541) 773-6536 ext. 1006.

Our new automotive artifacts window display

posted Jan 11, 2012 3:55 PM by Pat Harper   [ updated Jan 11, 2012 3:58 PM ]

The Jackson County New Car Dealers are sponsors of our first funded window display, SOHS Automotive Photos and Artifacts.
Watch our website presentation, too!

History: Made by You Community Forum

posted Jan 5, 2012 1:38 PM by Amy Drake   [ updated Jan 10, 2012 5:26 PM ]

SOHS and the Ashland Center for Creative Change invite you to participate in a Community Forum on Bicycling in Jackson County! What is changing about bicycling today? What's driving these changes? Are any of these changes unique to Jackson County?

Bicycling in Jackson County Community Forum
Where: Ashland Library, Guanajuato Room, 410 Siskiyou Blvd., Ashland, OR 97520
When: Wednesday, January 18, 2012, from 7 pm until 9 pm

The results of this discussion will form the basis of a community exhibit focused on bicycling in Jackson County! History: Made by You is a program developed by SOHS designed to involve the community in traveling exhibits. Come be part of the fun while sharing your insights and exchanging ideas.  

This stimulating workshop will begin with an engaging discussion of current concerns to identify relevant exhibit topics. Experienced exhibit planner, Alice Parman, will lead the group through the process of discovering the history behind the issues and identifying community resources that can help develop a meaningful exhibit.

Anyone with an interest in the past and present of bicycling in Jackson County is welcome to attend!

This program was made possible in part by a grant from Oregon Humanities (OH), a statewide nonprofit organization and an independent affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, which funds OH’s grant program.

For more information on the exhibit, or if you would like to request that a public forum/traveling exhibit come to your community, please contact Amy Drake at amy@sohs.org or (541) 773-6536 ext. 1006. 

New History: Made by You Exhibit!

posted Jan 4, 2012 4:15 PM by Amy Drake   [ updated Feb 20, 2012 11:35 AM ]

SOHS announces a new exhibit, Wire by Wire: How the Telephone, Fencing, and Electricity Came to Lake Creek, on display through February 22 at the Lake Creek Historical Society (open Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 10 am until 3 pm) as part of the History: Made by You program. History: Made by You is a traveling exhibits program that is designed to engage the community in discussions about contemporary issues of local importance and to research the historic roots of these issues.

Open House
Saturday, January 14, 2012
10 am until 3 pm
Wire by Wire: How the Telephone, Fencing, and Electricity Came to Lake Creek explores how the community changed with the introduction of these new technologies. After a community forum in September, participants decided to explore the idea of wire versus wireless in their community. Bonded by more than simply geography, Lake Creek’s determination and spirit of self-reliance helped forge the unique character of their rural community. The use of wire reflects the story of this community, as seen through the history of the telephone, fencing, and electricity, to illustrate the different ways residents united to change their lifestyles. A map of Lake Creek traces the community’s development and depicts many of the original homesteaders.
 
This program was made possible in part by a grant from Oregon Humanities (OH), a statewide nonprofit organization and an independent affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, which funds OH’s grant program.
 
For more information on the exhibit, or if you would like to request that a public forum/traveling exhibit come to your community, please contact Amy Drake at amy@sohs.org or (541) 773-6536 ext. 1006. 

Mysteries in our Backyard

posted Dec 12, 2011 5:20 PM by Pat Harper   [ updated Jan 10, 2012 2:05 PM by Joanna Loops ]

NEW classes & Training on Doing Local Research, available through the Mysteries in Our Backyard program! Click HERE for the full schedule.

SOHS, the Rogue Valley Genealogical Society (RVGS) and the Jackson County Heritage Association (JCHA) have been busy collecting local mysteries for you to solve! We mean it, the mysteries on our website are questions posted by local historians because the answers are unknown to us. 
 
To investigate the mysteries, just click here. Beginning January 1, 2012, you can claim one as your own, and attend workshops on Saturday mornings to learn more about resources for local history. We hope this can be fun for adults, students and families. Please check the website to learn all about this project. 
 
Thanks to the Jackson County Cultural Coalition, funded by the Oregon Cultural Trust, SOHS in partnership with RVGS and JCHA just received a $1,000 grant for Mysteries in Our Backyard! This grant will help fund student participation in the program!
The Medford Mail Tribune recently published an article about the project, which is available here.

Preserving our collection

posted Dec 6, 2011 12:01 PM by Pat Harper   [ updated Dec 14, 2011 9:26 AM by Office Manager ]

The Southern Oregon Historical Society's efforts to preserve the history of the region received a shot in the arm Monday when a Cheyenne Warrior Shirt and several other Native American items sold at auction in San Francisco.

The warrior shirt and other pieces in what is referred to as "The Bones Collection" went to a private collector whose winning bid was $280,000. The proceeds from the sale of other items pushed to $369,902 the total coming to SOHS after the deduction of sales commission and insurance.

"This is a substantial amount which will provide us with the beginnings of a fund needed to maintain our core collection," said SOHS board president Dick Thierolf, who attended the auction. 

"The sale of these items," said Thierolf,  "correlates with our mission to preserve artifacts relevant to the Southern Oregon region.  We basically had no dollars to do that before, so it is a step in the right direction.  We can rely on this money for several years as a foundation to build on."

SOHS policies require that proceeds from the sale of deaccessioned items be used for care of the existing collection or and/or future acquisitions. Such income may not be used for general operating expenses or other needs of the society.

A total of 27 lots offered for sale by SOHS sold at the auction conducted by Bonhams and Butterfields, one of the largest companies of its kind in the world.

Items selling in addition to the warrior shirt include: a Cheyenne mirror stick, $32,000; a Navajo classic child's blanket, $28,000; a Navajo chief's blanket, $15,000, and: a Navajo Moki serape, $10,000.

Perhaps the earliest such item from the Cheyenne Tribe still in existence, the warrior shirt dates back to the mid-19th century.

It and other items were donated to SOHS in 1957 by the late Benjamin R. Bones of Grants Pass. It is thought that the shirt belonged to Sicangu Lakota Chief Spotted Tail, born in 1823 with the given name Sinte Gileshka, and who became a warrior and chief during the Indian Wars. Spotted Tail's sister was the mother of Crazy Horse.

Research indicates the shirt probably changed hands in 1867 at Fort McPherson, Neb., where Bones' ancestor, Marquis Cutting, was a member of the Wisconsin Calvary and later ran a trading post. It is thought that Spotted Tail traded many of his possessions, including the warrior shirt and other items, for food and supplies.

On the shirt's mountain sheep leather body are large rosettes, sleeve and shoulder strips from buffalo hide overlaid with porcupine quillwork. Locks of human hair border the strips and panels of red wool frame the neck opening. The rosettes embody Cheyenne symbolism -- that of a corral and a village circle.

The society had been concerned about whether its possession and the potential disposition of the shirt and other items in the collection were ethical and legal and, if so, made sense in light of its mission to be a repository for historic artifacts closely tied to Southern Oregon.

SOHS staff and outside expert interpretations of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) deemed the Bones items as having been the personal property of Spotted Tail -- not communally owned -- and thereby not covered by the act. That they were owned and traded away by an individual Native American led to the conclusion that both ethically and legally, they properly came under the ownership of SOHS and could be given away or sold if the society decided to do so.

The SOHS decision to deaccession the Bones collection was also guided by its long-standing philosophy and written policies that state "The Society shall collect and preserve objects and research materials that relate to or are representative of the scope and diversity of human experience in Jackson County and Southern Oregon." Since 1965, SOHS has had a policy in place that states it "may sell, exchange or dispose of artifacts that do not relate to Southern Oregon."

Its decision to sell the Bones collection at auction came some eight years after the Society first broached the issue of what to do with it. Concerns had been raised by SOHS staff regarding ability of the society to properly preserve the collection -- one of the major requirements of its collections policies.

Once it has deaccessioned (decided to get rid of) an item or a collection found to be of little or no relationship to county or region, the society may give or sell it to another nonprofit organization, sell it through public auction or discard it if it poses a hazard or has so badly deteriorated that it is of no value.

SOHS began exploring the first two options as early as 2004 by contacting Native American groups, including the Northern Cheyenne tribe, and museums, including The Smithsonian, but there was little feedback and no further communication.

Selling the Bones collection at public auction -- the third option -- was approved by the society's board of trustees as long as the proceeds went toward collections-oriented expenses. Examples would be costs directly related to the White City collections storage facility and the care and maintenance of the historic Hanley Farm.

 

WINNER!!

posted Dec 1, 2011 3:27 PM by Joanna Loops   [ updated Jan 10, 2012 2:09 PM ]

Our sixth drawing winners for FOUR FREE BOOKS from the Research Library are Greg & Tina Sorensen. Mr. & Mrs. Sorensen made a donation to the Bring History to Life campaign on 10/17/2011. Congratulations!!!!

Stay tuned for winners of the next TWO drawings.
Haven't entered the drawing yet? Make a donation today to the Bring History to Life campaign of $35 or more to enter.

WINNER!!!

posted Dec 1, 2011 3:26 PM by Joanna Loops

Our fifth drawing winners for FOUR FREE BOOKS from the Research Library are Alex and Bette Hamilton. The Hamiltons made a donation to the Bring History to Life campaign on 11/04/2011. Congratulations!!!!

Stay tuned for winners of the next THREE drawings.
Haven't entered the drawing yet? Make a donation today to the Bring History to Life campaign of $35 or more to enter.

WINNER!!!

posted Dec 1, 2011 3:24 PM by Joanna Loops

Our fourth drawing winners for FOUR FREE BOOKS from the Research Library are Jerry & Linda Evans of the Jacksonville Inn in Jacksonville. Jerry & Linda made a donation to the Bring History to Life campaign on 10/17/2011. Congratulations!!!!

Stay tuned for winners of the next FOUR drawings.
Haven't entered the drawing yet? Make a donation today to the Bring History to Life campaign of $35 or more to enter.

Mysteries in Our Backyard

posted Nov 29, 2011 7:10 AM by Amy Drake   [ updated Dec 12, 2011 5:15 PM by Pat Harper ]

SOHS, the Rogue Valley Genealogical Society (RVGS) and the Jackson County Heritage Association (JCHA) have been busy collecting local mysteries for you to solve! We mean it, the mysteries on our website are questions posted by local historians because the answers are unknown to us. 

To investigate the mysteries, just click here. Beginning January 1, 2012, you can claim one as your own, and attend workshops on Saturday mornings to learn more about resources for local history. We hope this can be fun for adults, students and families. Please check the website to learn all about this project. 

The Medford Mail Tribune recently published an article about the project, which is available here.

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