This content was published: January 25, 2011. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
Instructor organizes historic Portlander鈥檚 archives for exhibit
Photos and story by Meryl Lipman
小黄猫传媒 history instructor Jeffer Daykin will be the featured scholarly speaker at the opening of an important archival collection at the Multnomah County Library. The opening ceremony, and Daykin鈥檚 speech, marks the culmination of several years鈥 work to bring the history of Colonel Henry E. Dosch to the public.
The Henry E. Dosch Exhibition opened on Jan. 22 and will be on display through March 27. Opening Ceremony will take place on Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2011, 5:30-7 p.m. at the Collins Library, 3rd Floor, Multnomah County Library Central.
Henry Dosch was a prominent Portlander born in 1841, who became the Director of Exhibits for the 1905 Lewis & Clark World鈥檚 Fair and is credited for inviting Japan to that fair and to the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific World鈥檚 Fair (in Seattle) in 1909. Prior to his involvement in World鈥檚 Fairs, Dosch served in the Union Army as a Fremont Bodyguard during the Civil War, moved to Oregon and became Pony Express rider, and apparently met Mark Twain when he briefly lived in Nevada (though there is no evidence of that). He eventually settled in Portland, where he promoted Oregon and Japan to each other as potential business and cultural partners until his death in 1925.
Daykin鈥檚 research for his original masters鈥 thesis on Japan at the 1905 Portland World鈥檚 Fair led him to Dosch descendant James Driscoll. After meeting Driscoll, he forged a connection between the Dosch family and the Multnomah County Library John Wilson Special Collections, a part of the library he鈥檇 used with great care as a graduate student.
Securing the donation was only the beginning of the partnership between Daykin and John Wilson Special Collections Librarian Jim Carmin. When the collection arrived at the library, it was in 鈥渢wenty five boxes of completely unorganized materials,鈥 said Carmin, who estimates there were over 20,000 photos, documents and pieces of correspondence that 鈥渉ad mostly been boxed since the 1920s.鈥
Daykin, who also teaches at PSU, had a solution to that dilemma. He arranged for his Capstone students (at PSU) to process the archives. Over the last two years, six different Capstone classes have worked tirelessly under Daykin tutelage and Carmin鈥檚 supervision, to make sense of, date, sort, organize the materials and prepare them for public use.
Carmin praised Daykin鈥檚 work with his students. 鈥淛effer is engaging; he is very serious and involved.聽 He encourages students to push and learn. He wants to make sure they know why they鈥檙e there.鈥 According to Carmin, Daykin was highly successful in that endeavor. 鈥淪tudents would come back and either want to continue working on the project or they would thank me,鈥 said Carmin. 鈥淭hey gained (a great deal of) knowledge.鈥
Daykin, who teaches a range of history courses at 小黄猫传媒 Rock Creek including the Eastern Civilization sequence and a Holocaust history course, has attended and presented at several symposia in and about Japan. He continues to produce scholarship related to early 20th Century international expositions through his work with the Shibusawa Eiichi Memorial Foundation of Japan. He says he hopes to use his love of Japanese and Portland history to give 鈥渓ocal perspective to international relations and connect Portland with the wider world.鈥