December 12, 2007

Oregon 150 Asks You To Share Your "Oregon Story"

Below is an excerpt from the Oregon 150 website inviting you to tell your own "Oregon Story" . Click here for the complete version of the invitation.

Please share this link of "Oregon Story" guidelines and examples with your family, friends, neighbors, and co-workers - the more stories received about our wonderful state, the better!
Oregon150Logoblog.jpg

An open letter to all Oregonians:

No one knows Oregon as well as you and your neighbors. On behalf of Governor Ted Kulongoski, we invite you to share your story about what it means to be an Oregonian. The sesquicentennial "Oregon Story" project is a personal invitation to you and your family, friends, community, school, tribe, or company to contribute your favorite stories about life in Oregon, and then share these stories throughout the state.

All Oregon stories are yours to tell - you can write them, sing them, sew them, photograph them, film them, or paint them.

What does an "Oregon Story" look like? Here is just one example - read how Mr. Ralph Beebe and his family worked in Malheur County to "Live the Oregon Dream":

Our team stumbled along the gravel road, my father holding the right-side horse's bit, guiding the wagon against the blinding dust storm. The robust Malheur County winds loved the soft dirt where sagebrush and cheat grass had been, and blew with gusty, dusty pleasure that winter day in 1939.

My dad and brothers had spent months grubbing the brush, leveling, corrugating, planting, scaring away jackrabbits whose homes were being invaded, and convincing the water to abandon gopher holes for the irrigation rows.

As renter farmers my parents had lived in 21 houses their first 20 years of marriage. Now they were upgrading to a cement floored 18' x 28' basement house on our homestead nine miles south of Adrian, which our seven family members shared the first year with the teacher of the newly built Ridgeview Grade School.

Hard times, yes, but my parents lived there for 40 years and persuaded the soil to yield a decent living. My eldest brother, David, still lives on that now productive farm. Thanks, FDR and Congress for the New Deal, the Owyhee Dam and the irrigation ditches. Thanks, USA and Oregon, for giving us the chance to make our dreams come true.

What is your "Oregon Story"?

Oregon 150 will take the best stories from every region and share them statewide through radio, television, online and print "Oregon Minutes". As a lasting legacy, all of these "Oregon Story?" will become part of the Oregon State Archives.


Posted by: Michelle Westerberg Category: Executive Operations Remarks: 0

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