|
|
|
CONTRIBUTORS
R. SCOTT BYRAM holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Oregon. His research centers on the Pacific Northwest and includes Native American heritage preservation and restoration archaeology, indigenous geographies, tidewater fishing practices, and coastal landscape change. He is the principal investigator at BAC, an archaeological consulting firm, and serves as a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley Archaeological Research Facility.
|
|
MEGAN K. FRIEDEL is Archivist at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library. She earned her M.A. in History as well as an M.L.I.S. at Simmons College and is the co-curator, with Terry Toedtemeier, of the Oregon Historical Society's exhibition, Carleton Watkins: Stereoviews of the Columbia River Gorge. Her research interests include the visual history of the American West and women's narratives of traveling the West by auto during the early twentieth century.
|
|
ERIN MCCULLUGH PENEVA graduated with a B.A. in History in 2004 from Eastern Oregon University. She is currently an M.A. candidate at Portland State University, pursuing a degree in American Cultural History. Her current research focuses on free women of color in antebellum New Orleans.
|
|
MICHAEL MUNK is a retired political scientist and author of The Portland Red Guide: Sites & Stories of Our Radical Past (Ooligan Press, 2007). His article on Reed College during the McCarthy era won the first OHQ Joel Palmer Award (1997).
|
|
TERRY TOEDTEMEIER is the Curator of Photography at the Portland Art Museum and the co-editor of Wild Beauty – Photographs of the Columbia River Gorge, 1867–1957 (Oregon State University Press, 2008). Toedtemeier is a photographer whose personal interest is in the geologic history and geographic distribution of the Pacific Northwest's extensive basalt formations. He earned a BS degree in Earth Sciences from Oregon State University in 1969 and has maintained an active interest in geology and mineralogy. The author of numerous articles on photography, Toedtemeier has a strong interest in the history of photography in the Northwest.
|
|
| CHAMP CLARK VAUGHAN serves as president of the Oregon Geographic Names Board and is a past president of the Sons and Daughters of Oregon Pioneers. He is a retired lands and minerals adjudication program manager with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and is a retired U.S. Air Force Reserve lieutenant colonel. His areas of expertise are historical geography and disposition of the public domain. |
|
|
|
Content in the History Cooperative database is intended for personal, noncommercial use only. You may not reproduce, publish, distribute, transmit, participate in the transfer or sale of, modify, create derivative works from, display, or in any way exploit the History Cooperative database in whole or in part without the written permission of the copyright holder.
|