Cascade Geographic
Society's
AUTUMN 2000 Classes
(Graduate & Undergraduate cooperative Education
Classes through Portland State University)
Payment Notice: Please
note regarding payment for classes: make out one check (to P.S.U.) or pay with
your credit card. You need to do this separately for each class. Check or credit
card must be processed through Cascade Geographic Society, and must be received
prior to the second class date . Payments not received by then may delay
official registration and credit/grade. Please call (503) 622-4798 (Michael) or
(503) 658-6233 (Nita) for information or registration.
Important Notice:
Participants must be prepared to begin on time and bring the following: sack
lunch & snacks; $10 for museum fees, if needed; extra money in case of
emergencies; proper dress and shoes to fit the weather conditions & season.
Optional: camera & film.
Print
Out Registration Form
CLASSES:
Deschutes
River Ghost Towns (Oct 7)
Mount St. Helens Volcanic Landscapes (Oct 8)
Blue Mountains' Ghost Towns (Oct 13)
Baker City & Blue Mountains
(Oct 14)
Lower Willamette River
Haunted Places (Oct 21)
Shanghai
Tunnels & Haunted Places (Oct 22)
Mt. Hood's Haunted Places (Oct 28)
Mt.
Hood's Huckleberry Country (Oct 29)
Mt.
St. Helens, Ape's Cave & Lava Canyon
(Nov 5)
Old Vancouver
(Nov 12)
Old
French Prairie (Nov 19)
Portland Mansions (Dec 2)
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DETAILED CLASS INFORMATION
Deschutes
River Ghost Towns:
Gold Strikes, Boom Towns, Lost Trails, & Forgotten History
[New as of Oct. 3, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2199A; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN:
K2199Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $125
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 3 (Tues.), 6-9 p.m. --- Rockwood
Library, 17917 S.E. Stark, Portland, OR.; Oct. 7 (Sat.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- Stage
Stop Road Interpretative Center, 24525 E. Welches Rd., Welches, OR.
The ghost towns of Oregon's Deschutes River region represent an exciting but
little-known chapter of history. The miners and gold seekers followed the trails
of real and make-believe treasure all which seemed to lead to the "other
side of the rainbow". Those rare gold strikes drew hordes of get-rich-quick
dreamers that "sparked" the development of "boom towns" and
rough-hewn homestead settlements that sprang-up along the waterways and routes
of the Oregon Trail and other emigrant paths.
This class provides a unique opportunity to
visit some of those places which time seemed to have forgotten. These were the
places where prospectors and hard-scrabbled miners ignited the flames of rumors
that became part of the oral history and folklore of this region. With the
coming of cattle and sheep to the area, livestock represented another form of
riches which, unfortunately, was tied to the railroads and, still later, to the
roads and highways that crossed and cris-crossed the desert until the landscape
swallowed them up and history ignored them. Participants will travel the land of
the Deschutes on some little-known segments of the Oregon Trail and on some
desert paths and back roads that lead to a fascinating history. An ideal way to
rediscover history and to gather many new ideas for your classroom that should
enrich your curriculums and study units.
Folklore & History Mount
St. Helens Volcanic Landscapes
[New as of Oct. 4, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2196Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2196Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $115
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 4 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland Library,
805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.; Oct. 8 (Sun.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet in the
parking lot outside the old cinemas at Mall 205, located at S.E. 102nd &
Washington Streets, Portland, OR.
On May 18th, 1980, Mount St. Helens erupted from its deep slumber, and exploded
into worldwide headlines as it sent up ash plumes that scattered for thousands
of miles. This fiery peak was the first of the sleeping volcanoes of the Cascade
Mountain Range to awaken, which revealed not only a new landscape, but
reaffirmed the Native American oral traditions and other folklore surrounding
this Mountain. This tour explores Mount St. Helens' many thousands of years of
eruptive history, with a focus on the oral traditions of Native Americans, the
journal observations of Euro-American explorers and fur-traders, and those of
the American settlers, the loggers and miners. Participants will be guided
through the mountain's north side volcanic terrain and visitor centers, linking
the peak's multi-cultural history with modern geologic research.
Blue
Mountains' Ghost Towns, Lost Mines, & Forgotten Trails
[New as of Oct. 10, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2189Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2189Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $125
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 10 (Tues.), 6-9 p.m. --- Rockwood
Library, 17917 S.E. Stark, Portland, OR.; Oct. 13 (Fri.), 8-3:30 p.m. --- meet
at the Columbia Gorge Factory Outlet Stores in front of the Mikasa store,
Troutdale, OR. [NOTE: All participants must contact the tour leader! The class
will end up in Baker City and overnight accommodations may need to be arranged.]
The Blue Mountains of Oregon are scattered with ghost towns, lost mines, and
forgotten trails that are historical remnants of former settlements and boom
towns that represent a misplaced heritage. Their colorful history and anecdotes
reflect both the riches of gold strikes and the intense hardships and crumbling
dreams of isolation, the intensity of change, and the challenge of survival.
Some of these byproducts of civilization and greed marked their presence upon
the landscape alongside various routes of the Oregon Trail, military roads,
market roads, and other emigrant paths. Some of these now forgotten paths lead
to other junctures of home sites, mercantiles, saloons, and establishments of
lesser reputations that either thrived and spiraled onward into the coming years
or floundered under the burden of never-ending hard work, or came to an
unceremonious end with the demands of the changing eras.
This class provides an opportunity to visit
those forgotten settlements of Baker, Union, Umatilla, Jefferson, Crook,
Wheeler, and Grant Counties which either the railroads tactfully missed, the
desert seemingly abruptly swallowed up, or highways were deliberately rerouted.
Today, choked with dust and camouflaged by juniper trees and tumbleweeds, or
absent of any evidence of its existence except a lone sign post or just memories
and near-silent stories -- each has their own unique story to tell -- some about
gold and its ravages, and others about endless drought and the perils of
frontier life, while still others give silent testimonials about the hard luck
of being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Participants will travel the back
roads on some little-known segments of the Oregon Trail and other historic paths
all the way to Baker City.
Oregon Trail to Baker
City & Blue Mountains Settlement Sites
[New as of Oct. 11, 2000]--- 1
Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2188Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2188Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $125
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 11 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland
Library, 805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.; Oct. 14 (Sat.), 9-4:30 p.m. --- meet
outside the Baker City Chamber of Commerce in Baker City, Oregon. [NOTE: All
participants must contact the tour leader! The class will end up
in Pendleton and overnight accommodations may need to be arranged.]
The Oregon Trail to Baker City and beyond to the Blue Mountains traversed
a rugged route into history. This crude "overland" path cut through a
parched and forbidding landscape on the upper reaches of the Powder River and
gradually wove its way into the Blue Mountains. These emigrant segments were
dangerously difficult and claimed the lives of many travelers who were just too
worn out to continue the journey to the "New Eden" (the Willamette
Valley). Of those pioneers who were fortunate to have survived, very few would
have thought that gold would be discovered here, yet alone that towns and cities
would one day be established in this region.
This class will take its participants on
special interpretative excursions over this westbound path of history and
explore pioneer cemeteries, historic buildings, the Oregon Trail Interpretative
Center, and much more. This is an opportunity to travel to some little-known
sections of the Oregon Trail.
Oral Traditions, Ghost
Stories, & Folklore of Lower
Willamette River Haunted Places
[New as of Oct. 17, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2194Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2194Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $115
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 17 (Tues.), 6-9 p.m. --- Rockwood
Library, 17917 S.E. Stark, Portland, OR.; Oct. 21 (Sat.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet
in outside the Carnegie Art Center, 606 John Adams, Oregon City, OR.
Ghosts along the Lower Willamette River? Here in this region that possesses some
of the richest heritage of oral traditions in the Pacific Northwest, the stories
and folklore reveal tales of ghostly hauntings that are associated with some
particular historic events and places. From steamboat landings to pioneer
graveyards, to historic homes, to a waterfall and camas-gathering area, and
other significant sites, participants learn about some of the history and of the
people who are said to still haunt these places.
This class features a very different side of
history -- the one rarely written about in books -- but passed on through the
oral traditions of the Indians, the fur traders, and the early-day settlers and
missionaries, and their descendants. This is an ideal way to learn about the
stories and little-known-history of what the emigrants called the "New
Eden" (the Willamette Valley).
Old Portland Shanghai
Tunnels & Haunted Places: Maritime History & Folklore
[New as of Oct. 18, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2190Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2190Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $125
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 18 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland
Library, 805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.; Oct. 22 (Sun.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet in
the parking lot outside the old cinemas at Mall 205, located at S.E. 102nd &
Washington Streets, Portland, OR.
The shanghai tunnels of Old Portland stretched themselves along the Willamette
River and overtook the harbors with vice and corruption that made some people
rich while others were sold to unscrupulous sea captains to fill a void in their
crew. In Downtown Portland's Old Town and along the southwest waterfront areas,
in addition to Lower East Portland, Northwest, Albina, St. Johns, Kenton,
Linnton, and Sellwood, unsuspecting victims were dropped through trap doors and
held in underground cells until taken through tunnels that "snaked"
their way out to ships where the shanghaiiers collected their "blood
money". By the time the Victorian era had come to town, the "City of
Roses" had earned the reputation of being the "worst port in the world
for shanghaiing". This gave birth to the oral traditions that have lingered
to this very day -- tales of ghosts and earthbound spirits -- all linked to the
horrors of the "Portland Underground".
This class explores the little-known tales of
the shanghai tunnels, taking you into historic buildings around the city that
have survived along with those stories that were rarely told until now.
Oral Traditions, Ghost
Stories, & Folklore of Mt. Hood's
Haunted Places
[New as of Oct. 24, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2195Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2195Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $110
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 24 (Tues.), 6-9 p.m. --- Rockwood
Library, 17917 S.E. Stark, Portland, OR.; Oct. 28 (Sat.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- Stage
Stop Road Interpretative Center, 24525 E. Welches Rd., Welches, OR.
Mt. Hood is not only known for its beauty, tranquil landscapes, and rich Native
American and Oregon Trail history, but also for its ghosts and their stories
that have lingered throughout the decades of change. Beginning in 1845 when this
rugged Mountain became an alternative route for the "overland"
emigrants to take their "Prairie Schooners", rather than rafting them
down the Columbia River, certain incidents took place which gave birth to
certain stories that are generally told around the campfires to frighten the
disbelievers and reaffirm just what did happen to those who believe. Forced to
traverse through rugged and dangerous natural areas, these weary travelers
tackled seemingly bottomless swamps and even lowered their covered wagons down
steep cliffs with ropes. The events that took place along this crude path became
part of this Mountain's history and folklore, with fascinating tales of
indigenous people, the Mountain Men, the gold-seekers and other prospectors,
homesteaders, as well as infamous highwaymen, cattle rustlers, horse thieves,
and other outlaws, some of whose spirits reportedly still continue to haunt to
this very day.
This class will allow you to explore the
places where this 11,235-foot Mountain's oral traditions have long told of
ghosts who reportedly still continue to linger in their earth-bound prison. From
historical sites along the Oregon Trail to haunted places within villages, to
quiet out-of-the-way places within the forest and isolated pioneer graves and
mysterious tunnels hidden within the earth, these unique stories are now part of
the area's folklore.
Mt.
Hood's Huckleberry Country:
Native American Oral Traditions & Culture of the Natural Landscapes
[New as of Oct. 25, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2193Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2193Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $110
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Oct. 18 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland
Library, 805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.; Oct. 29 (Sun.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- Stage
Stop Road Interpretative Center, 24525 E. Welches Rd., Welches, OR.
A rich cultural heritage of Native Americans lay intertwined with Mt. Hood's
little-known natural landscapes of its scenic high-country, possesses a rich
cultural heritage. Here, in this rugged terrain where the First People have come
for centuries to gather Huckleberries, hunt, gather roots and medicines,
practice their religion, and reaffirm their cultural traditions, oral traditions
were born.
This class will allow you to travel into the
Cascade Mountain Range, learn about indigenous oral traditions, learn about
their history and traditional way of life. In addition, the history and tales of
the fur traders, the pioneer homesteaders, the sheepherders, the lumberjacks,
and the gold-seekers will also be studied, including some of the geologic,
volcanic, and natural history of the area.
Folklore & History of Mt.
St. Helens, Ape's Cave & Lava Canyon
[New as of Nov. 1, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2192Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2192Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $115
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Nov. 1 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland Library,
805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.; Nov. 5 (Sun.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet in the
parking lot outside the old cinemas at Mall 205, located at S.E. 102nd &
Washington Streets, Portland, OR.
The eruptions of Mt. St. Helens have created some dramatic volcanic landscapes,
not to mention some unique folklore and history that has become part of the oral
traditions of both Native Americans and whites. With the impact of the eruptions
resembling the blasts of multiple atomic bombs, forests were toppled like they
were made of toothpicks, and waterways changed their courses, while lakes
transitioned into literally completely different bodies of water. Today, some of
the clues to the many thousands of years of this Mountain's past volcanic
activity, not to mention its oral traditions, can be found at Ape's Cave and
Lava Canyon -- two unique places for their geology and history.
This class explores how past volcanic
eruptions both created and changed these two sites, and how educational
opportunities can be developed. Participants will study the history of the
indigenous people and their oral traditions associated with these special
places, in addition to the Euro-American explorers, fur traders, homesteaders,
miners, loggers, and others who exploited this Mountain's resources in Ape's
Cave and Lava Canyon. Participants will be able to utilize the information
gained in this course to develop some new inter-disciplinary approaches in their
classroom learning environment.
Old
Vancouver:
Heritage Forts, Frontier Oral Traditions, Oregon Trail & Native American
Settlements
[New as of Nov. 8, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2197Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN:
K2197Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $110
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Nov. 8 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland Library,
805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.; Nov. 12 (Sun.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet in the
parking lot outside the old cinemas at Mall 205, located at S.E. 102nd &
Washington Streets, Portland, OR.
Old Vancouver is one of the most important
heritage sites, in not only the State of Washington and the Pacific Northwest,
but the entire Old Oregon Country that stretched from the Rocky Mountains to the
Pacific Ocean, and from San Francisco Bay north to Alaska. This settlement
possessed a rich heritage that represented a diverse number of cultures and
lifestyles -- Native American to Hawaiian, to Hudson Bay Company and American
fur trade, and to the Oregon Trail and pioneer settlement, as well as early-day
military history that evolved into the era of the first flying machines to the
shipyards of world wars.
This class explores the way of life of the
Native Americans in this locale, the history of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort
Vancouver, the Oregon Trail, Officer's Row, Vancouver Barracks, Pearson Air
Park, and the Kaiser Shipyards, through some unique interpretative tours that
take the participants directly to these important sites where history was made
and is now being preserved. Visit Fort Vancouver, the First Apple Tree Memorial,
Officers Row, and the new General O.O. Howard Museum, as well as other places of
living history and museums.
Shanghai
Tunnels of Old Portland:
Exploring A Hidden & Infamous Waterfront History
[Repeated from July 24, 2000]---
1 Credit
Graduate -- CRN: 14632Ag; CI: 810/Undergrad -- CRN: 14633Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $110 Dates, Times, & Meeting Places:
Nov. 14 (Tues.), 6-9 p.m. --- Rockwood Library, 17917 S.E. Stark, Portland,
Oregon; & (Sat.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet in outside the Carnegie Art Center,
606 John Adams, Oregon City, OR.
"Portland Underground" has an infamous
history that has survived the passage of time and the progress of change.
Solidly-constructed tunnels, fashioned out of stone and brick and built during
the time buildings were constructed, still "snake" their presence
beneath the streets of Old Portland, and represent an important and shocking
piece of the history of the West Coast shanghai trade that earned the "City
of Roses" the dubious reputation of being "the worst port in the
world".
This class reveals a hidden, and little-known,
but very intriguing history of maritime trade in "human cargo" through
a series of explorations of this "Underground" that is made up of
silent cells, trap doors, and catacombs that link darkened basements and
historic landmarks with the past that has not yet found its way into the history
books. This class allows you to explore the remnants of a little-told history of
human rights violations at its absolute worst. From the 1850's to as late as the
1940's, unsuspecting victims learned first hand about the "darkness and
shadows" of this river town that hid its corruption well. Individuals who
frequented places of vice, such as saloons, gambling parlors, opium dens, and
other establishments of lesser reputations, would be given "knock-out
drops" or find themselves dropped through trapdoors into basements, where
they were held hostage in make-shift cells, until, finally, they were taken
through tunnels out to the wharfs and sold to sea captains bound for the Orient.
So many were sold for "blood money" that Portland became the
"Shanghai Capital of the World". Participants will venture into the remnants
of the "Underground" that has survived, along with their oral history,
and experience a unique piece of the past. You'll never view the history of
Portland and the West Coast the same as you explore this "skullduggery"
that also included bootlegging, white slavery, and opium smuggling. An ideal way
to enrich your curriculums and study units in this course that takes you into
"Underground".
Old
French Prairie Historical Excursions
[New as of Nov. 15, 2000]---
1 Credit
Grad -- CRN: K2208Ag; CI: 810/Undergrd -- CRN: K2208Au; CI: 410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $110 Dates, Times, & Meeting Places:
Nov. 15 (Wed.), 6-9 p.m. --- Midland Library, 805 S.E. 122nd, Portland, OR.;
Nov. 19 (Sat.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- meet in outside the Carnegie Art Center, 606
John Adams, Oregon City, OR.
One of the richest heritage areas in the Pacific Northwest is "Old French
Prairie" that stretched along the Willamette River south of Oregon City to
the Pudding River and all the way to Salem. Here, the history of Native
Americans, the fur trade, the missionaries, and settlement is reflected in the
natural landscape and historical sites of this portion of the Willamette Valley.
This unique multi-cultural "greenbelt" possesses the essential
ingredients for learning, especially since this area encompasses the settlements
of Aurora, Canby, Hubbard, Champoeg, Butteville, St. Paul, St. Louis, Gervais,
Mission Landing, Newberg, and Yamhill which are waiting to be explored.
Participants will rediscover history by
visiting important heritage sites -- the well-known and little-known places
where history was made -- and follow in the paths of those who came here during
Oregon's early years.
Portland
Mansions & Other Historic Landmarks:
History, Folklore, & Architecture
[New as of Nov. 28, 2000]---
1 Credit
Graduate -- CRN: 810/Undergraduate -- CRN:
410
Instructor: Michael P. Jones, M.S. Fee: $120
Dates, Times, & Meeting Places: Nov. 28 (Tues.), 10-5:30 p.m. --- Rockwood
Library, 17917 S.E. Stark, Portland, Oregon; Dec. 2 (Sat.), 10-5:30 p.m. ---
meet in the parking lot outside the old cinemas at Mall 205, located at S.E.
102nd & Washington Streets, Portland, OR.
The mansions of Portland are so diverse and
unique in their individual architectural styles that, together and individually,
they represent a unique and fascinating history of settlement in this "City
of Roses". Each of these houses of grandeur have their own stories to tell,
some becoming part of the oral histories of their neighborhoods, while others
became immersed in the folklore of the city itself. Participants will explore
these architectural wonders and learn about the people who not only built them,
but those who have lived there and, in later years, took these once gracious
structures from their Victorian charm to the shame brought on by shame --
bootlegging, prostitution, gambling, and other vice.
In this class you will learn about this exciting
history about some very unique places like Pittock Mansion, the Palmer House,
General Hooker's House, the Lion & the Rose House, the Tudor House, the
Portland White House, the Clinkerbrick House, the MacMaster House, and other
special homes and historical landmarks. View them first-hand inside and out,
gather their histories, and learn about their stories and the special
neighborhoods they occupy.