United States. Work Projects Administration. Oregon

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The federal government initiated the Historical Records Survey (H.R.S.) in 1935 to relieve high levels of white-collar unemployment. Established as one of five programs under the Works Progress Administration (W.P.A., renamed Work Projects Administration in 1939), the H.R.S. employed clerical workers and professionals to inventory public and private archives across the nation. All W.P.A. projects ended in February 1943, and most H.R.S. records were deposited in public repositories. The H.R.S.' primary goal was to survey and inventory public state, county, city, and town archives across the U.S., as well as private collections and archives. The secondary goal was to publish record inventories to make historical records and documents more accessible to researchers. State projects deposited their records in various institutions when the H.R.S. officially ended in 1943 with the hope that the survey would continue after the war. The Oregon H.R.S. deposited its records with the University of Oregon and the Oregon State Library.

From the description of W.P.A. Oregon Historical Records Survey records. (University of Oregon Libraries). WorldCat record id: 51180754

The Work Projects Administration (WPA) was established as a national agency on May 6, 1935, by an executive order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was established as a relief measure during the Great Depression and lasted until it was phased out in 1943, after it was rendered unnecessary by increased employment and reduced relief rolls. In Oregon, artists and crafts people worked on projects for schools, universities, hospitals, and the Forest Service.

From the description of Work Projects Administration Oregon Federal Art Project collection, 1937. (University of Oregon Libraries). WorldCat record id: 56034604

The Work Projects Administration (WPA) was originally named the Works Progress Administration when it was established as a national agency on May 6, 1935, by an executive order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was established as a relief measure during the Great Depression and lasted until it was phased out in 1943, after it was rendered unnecessary by increased employment and reduced relief rolls. Activities of the Work Projects Administration in any given area of the country were dependent on the needs and skills of the persons on relief in that area, since the main prerequisite for WPA employment was one's certified relief status. WPA's building program included the construction of 116,000 buildings, 78,000 bridges, and 651,000 miles of road and the improvement of 800 airports. Also a part of WPA's diversified activities were the Federal Art Project, the Federal Writers' Project, and the Federal Theatre Project. Close to 10,000 drawings, paintings, and sculptured works were produced through WPA, and many public buildings (especially post offices) were decorated with murals. At its peak WPA had about 3.5 million persons on its payrolls. Altogether WPA employed a total of 8.5 million persons, and total federal appropriations for the program amounted to almost $11 billion.

In Oregon, artists and crafts people worked on projects for schools, universities, hospitals, and the Forest Service. This collection includes photographs of paintings and murals that were installed in Oregon public schools, University of Oregon and Doernbecher Memorial Hospital for Children, Portland, Oregon.

The most well known Forest Service project was the construction of Timberline Lodge on Oregon's Mt. Hood. On June 11, 1936, ground was broken for a project unique in America. Timberline Lodge was built entirely by hand, inside and out, by unemployed crafts people hired by the Federal Works Progress Administration. The work was done in an amazingly short time - the intensity of the project being due not only to the weather but also to the uncertainty of the WPA's future. From the first drawings, made in early 1936, to the dedication of the completed lodge by President Franklin Roosevelt in September 1937, only 15 months elapsed.

In 1978, Timberline Lodge was declared a National Historic Landmark.

Sources: www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0852725.html. See D. S. Howard, WPA and Federal Relief Policy (1943) Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, Copyright (c) 2004. www.encyclopedia.com/html/W/WorkP1roj.asp Timberline Lodge web site: www.timberlinelodge.com/lodge/history.shtm.

From the guide to the Work Projects Administration Oregon Federal Art Project collection, 1937, (Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries)

Relation Name
associatedWith Doernbecher Children's Hospital (Portland, Or.) corporateBody
associatedWith Doernbecher Memorial Hospital for Children. corporateBody
associatedWith Federal Art Project. corporateBody
associatedWith O'Connor, James Francis, 1878-1945 person
associatedWith Oregon (Battleship) corporateBody
associatedWith Oregon Historical Records Survey. corporateBody
associatedWith Timberline Lodge (Mount Hood, Or.) corporateBody
associatedWith University of Oregon. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Oregon
Oregon
Subject
Education
Art, American
Art, American
Art in interior decoration
Art in interior decoration
Arts and Humanities
Universities and colleges
County government
Draperies in interior decoration
Draperies in interior decoration
Federal aid to the arts
Federal aid to the arts
Politics and government
Historic buildings
Mural painting and decoration, American
Mural painting and decoration, American
Oregon
Painting, American
Painting, American
Pioneers
Public art
Public art
Public works
School decoration
School decoration
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

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