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<ead><eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" id="a0"><eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="wauar" encodinganalog="identifier" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv23867 " identifier="80444/xv23867 ">WAUHaubergJohnPH2003_043.xml</eadid><filedesc><titlestmt><titleproper>Guide to the John H. Hauberg Photograph Collection <date encodinganalog="date" era="ce">1943-1987</date></titleproper><titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay"> Hauberg
			 </titleproper></titlestmt><publicationstmt><publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries</publisher><date normal="2016" encodinganalog="date">© 2016 (Last modified: 11/27/2017)</date><address><addressline>Seattle, WA 98195</addressline></address></publicationstmt></filedesc><profiledesc><langusage>Finding aid written in 
		  <language encodinganalog="language" langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage><descrules>Finding aid based on DACS (<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Describing Archives: A Content Standard</title>).</descrules></profiledesc></eadheader><archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21"><did><repository><corpname>University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections</corpname></repository><unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="wauar">PH2003-043</unitid><origination><persname source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" encodinganalog="100" role="photographer" authfilenumber="2408442">Hauberg, John H. (John Henry), 1916-2002</persname></origination><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="collection">John H. Hauberg
		  Photograph Collection</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1943/1987" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1943-1987</unitdate><physdesc><extent>12 boxes</extent></physdesc><langmaterial><language langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn">English</language></langmaterial><abstract encodinganalog="5203_$a">Photographs
		  relating to the life of John Hauberg</abstract></did><bioghist encodinganalog="5450_" id="ARN2408442" altrender="sync"><p>John H. Hauberg was a businessman, civic leader, philanthropist, and
		  patron of the arts who helped to shape the civic, political and cultural
		  landscapes of Seattle for over four decades.</p><p>John H. Hauberg was born in 1916 in Rock Island, Illinois. His father,
		  John Henry Hauberg, was an attorney, businessman and noted local historian. His
		  mother, Susanne Denkmann, was the daughter of lumber giant F.C.A. Denkmann, an
		  early partner of Frederick Weyerhaeuser. Both of his parents were active in
		  Rock Island's civic and cultural life.</p><p>Hauberg first came to the Pacific Northwest in 1938 while still a
		  student at Princeton University and spent a summer working in Weyerhaeuser
		  Company logging camps. He returned to Princeton, but left the University for
		  good in 1939. He went to work once again in the forest products industry, first
		  in the mills in Everett, then in the Midwest for Weyerhaeuser. After serving in
		  the Army from 1943-1946, Hauberg entered the University of Washington School of
		  Forestry (now the College of Forest Resources) and earned a bachelor's degree
		  in 1949.</p><p>At a time when the forest industry knew little of reforestation,
		  Hauberg recognized and was troubled by the wasted potential of logged-off
		  lands. Stands of red alder, a tree then considered to have no commercial value,
		  were taking over where old growth cedar forests once stood. Hauberg envisioned
		  putting these lands back into production of commercially valuable Douglas fir.
		  But he first needed to create a bureaucracy-free environment in which he could
		  explore the problems of forest regeneration over the long term. In 1948, while
		  still a student at the University of Washington, Hauberg began purchasing
		  logged-off lands near Stanwood, about 50 miles north of Seattle. He sought out
		  tracts with tree stumps from old growth timber, indicators of the land's
		  tree-growing potential. He quickly acquired his first 5000 acres by buying
		  smaller family-owned properties.</p><p>Family and professional obligations left Hauberg only the weekends to
		  devote to his tree farm. He continued to purchase tracts of land in the face of
		  increasing competition from large timber company. In 1950, with the help of
		  friends he planted his first Douglas fir seedlings. After about five years of
		  experimenting with planting and spraying methods, Hauberg and the forester he
		  later hired were able to find the right combination of actions that led to
		  Douglas fir regeneration on high site, or highly fertile, lands. His innovative
		  research attracted the attention of other forest products companies.
		  Eventually, the Pilchuck Tree Farm would grow to some 15,000 acres, with over
		  11,000 acres in plantation. It continues to be the site of research in forest
		  resource management practices as well as a commercially successful
		  enterprise.</p><p>In spite of his success in the timber industry, Hauberg is perhaps
		  more widely known as a generous benefactor of the arts and prolific collector
		  of artworks. His art interests range from contemporary to Pre-Columbian
		  American and from fine arts to crafts. He has a special interest in Native
		  American art and culture, which he traces back to his father. The elder Hauberg
		  was a student of the Indian tribes near Rock Island and avid collector of
		  Indian relics. As a youth Hauberg spent two summers working with a Sauk Indian
		  chief and a Fox Indian chief to construct a summer and winter house in the
		  museum that would house his father's collection of Indian artifacts. Thus, when
		  in 1950 University of Washington anthropologist Erna Gunther sought Hauberg's
		  help in raising funds for the Burke Museum to purchase a collection of
		  Northwest Native art, he responded eagerly. Hauberg and friend Phil Padelford
		  raised the necessary $10,000 in just three days. In gratitude Gunther allowed
		  Hauberg and Padelford to each purchase one item from the collection. Hauberg
		  chose a raven rattle. That piece, for which he paid $25, became the first in
		  what was to become the largest collection of Coastal Native Indian art in
		  private hands. He would donate the bulk of this collection to the Seattle Art
		  Museum in 1994. Hauberg also built an extensive collection of Pre-Columbian
		  art.</p><p>Hauberg has been a patron and friend of many noted contemporary
		  Northwest artists, including Morris Graves, Kenneth Callahan, and Paul
		  Horiuchi. His long association with the painter Mark Tobey was especially
		  notable. Tobey left Seattle for Basel in 1960. Hauberg, however, was committed
		  to establishing an enduring Tobey presence in the Pacific Northwest. Among his
		  first major art gifts was the Tobey mural, Journey of the Opera Star, that he
		  and his first wife, Anne Gould Hauberg, commissioned for the newly constructed
		  Seattle Opera House. In the late 1960s, the Haubergs proposed establishing a
		  Tobey museum as part of a larger cultural center they envisioned on the
		  Pilchuck Tree Farm property. The Pacific Northwest Arts Center was incorporated
		  to serve as the umbrella non-profit organization for the Tobey Museum and other
		  projects. To secure Tobey's cooperation Hauberg paid Tobey a substantial
		  monthly stipend. The payments, which began in 1971, would continue for the
		  remainder of Tobey's life. In return, Tobey executed a will which left his
		  entire estate to a Seattle-area arts institution. Tobey subsequently made
		  another will that left his estate to his companion, Mark Ritter. The existence
		  of contradictory wills set the stage for a contest over the estate following
		  Tobey's death in April 1976. A PNAC-commissioned film of Tobey in Basel was
		  completed in 1972. Plans for a rural Tobey museum, however, were scrapped prior
		  to Tobey's death, due to funding and logistical problems. The Pacific Northwest
		  Arts Center was absorbed into the Seattle Art Museum, which eventually received
		  Tobey's memorabilia and art works in Tobey's Seattle studio from the artist's
		  estate. The memorabilia later came to the University of Washington Libraries as
		  the Mark Tobey Papers, Seattle Art Museum Archives.</p><p>Hauberg has left his imprint on two of the Seattle area's important
		  art institutions. His association with the Seattle Art Museum has spanned five
		  decades. He was first named a trustee of the museum in 1950. In 1973, he
		  succeeded Dr. Richard E. Fuller as President of the Seattle Art Museum. Fuller,
		  the museum's founder, had operated it for 50 years as practically a private
		  enterprise. It fell to Hauberg to turn the institution into a self-sustaining
		  one. During his tenure as President the Seattle Art Museum was embroiled in the
		  battle over the estate of Mark Tobey.</p><p>The museum also staged the hugely successful "Treasures of
		  Tutankhamun" exhibit, which helped to stabilize the museum's precarious
		  finances. After stepping down as President in 1977, Hauberg continued to serve
		  as a museum trustee and played a significant role in the decision to site the
		  new museum building in downtown Seattle.</p><p>Hauberg's association with the renowned Pilchuck Glass School dates
		  from the school's very beginnings. In 1971, through the textile artist Jack
		  Lenor Larsen, Hauberg and Anne Gould Hauberg became acquainted with Dale
		  Chihuly, a young glass artist and instructor at the Rhode Island School of
		  Design. Chihuly and fellow artist Ruth Tamura, armed with no more than $2000 in
		  grant money and enthusiasm, proposed to run an outdoor summer workshop in glass
		  art. The Haubergs stepped in to provide not only a site at the Pilchuck Tree
		  Farm, but crucial financial and in-kind support for the workshop. The success
		  of the 1971 summer session led the Haubergs to underwrite the workshop the
		  following two summers and place it under the administration of the newly
		  established Pacific Northwest Arts Center. During the mid-1970s the glass
		  workshops began to evolve into a permanent entity. A non-profit, independent
		  Pilchuck School was incorporated in 1976 ("Glass" would be added later), and a
		  permanent campus was constructed on land deeded to the school by Hauberg. Yet
		  for the remainder of the 1970s and throughout the 1980s, even as an
		  administrative and fund-raising structure developed, Hauberg remained deeply
		  involved in the school's operations. His personal leadership and financial
		  support eased Pilchuck's growing pains and laid the foundation for the school's
		  long-term success.</p><p>Following the example of his parents, Hauberg assumed an active role
		  in Seattle's civic life and took a keen interest in public policy issues. He
		  was a long-time member of The Diet, a select group of community opinion leaders
		  who met monthly to hear speeches by fellow members. With the assistance of
		  Christopher Bayley and Camden Hall, he authored a lengthy report entitled "The
		  Present State of Future Problems-Project 1965." This widely read document
		  examined sources of Washington state revenue and expenditures and recommended a
		  course of action for the state's political leadership.</p><p>Hauberg has served on the boards of numerous educational, community
		  and professional organizations with a diversity of missions. He has shown a
		  special interest in the needs of the developmentally disabled. Hauberg was
		  instrumental in the establishment of what became the Child Development and
		  Mental Retardation Center at the University of Washington and founded Victoria
		  Ranch, Inc., a residential training center for the developmentally disabled in
		  Stanwood, Washington.</p></bioghist><scopecontent encodinganalog="5202_" id="a3"><p>Photographs relating to the life of John Hauberg.</p></scopecontent><accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="a14"><p>No restrictions on access.</p><p><extref href="https://uw.aeon.atlas-sys.com/logon/?Action=10&amp;Form=31&amp;Value=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv23867/xml" role="text/html" actuate="onrequest" show="new" id="aeon">Request at UW</extref></p></accessrestrict><userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="a15"><p>Status of creator's copyrights is unknown; restrictions may exist on
		  copying, quotation, or publication. Users are responsible for researching
		  copyright status before use.</p></userestrict><acqinfo encodinganalog="541" id="a19"><p>Gift of Fay Hauberg Page in 2002 and 2003.</p></acqinfo><processinfo encodinganalog="583" id="a20"><p>Unprocessed.</p></processinfo><separatedmaterial><head>Material Described Separately:</head><p> <extref show="new" actuate="onrequest" href="http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcoll/findaids/docs/papersrecords/HaubergJohn2850_7.xml">John
			 H. Hauberg Papers (Manuscript Collection 2850)</extref> </p></separatedmaterial><controlaccess id="a12"><persname source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" encodinganalog="600" role="subject" authfilenumber="2408442">Hauberg, John H. (John Henry), 1916-2002--Photographs</persname><subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">World War, 1939-1945--Veterans--United States--Photographs</subject><subject source="uwsc">Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)</subject><subject altrender="nodisplay" source="archiveswest" encodinganalog="690">Photographs</subject></controlaccess><dsc id="a23" type="combined"><p> </p><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">1</container><unittitle type="series">Scrapbooks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1943-1957</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes clippings, postcards, photographs, and ephemera from time
				spent stationed in Europe with the military.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">2</container><unittitle type="series">"War Years"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944-1946</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes b/w photographs, negatives, slides, postcards and other
				ephemera. Content is mainly from military service in Europe including Germany,
				Austria, Portugal and Spain.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">3</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1965-1957</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes color and b/w photographs, color slides, negatives and
				ephemera. Contents include images from Oregon, North Cascades, Portugal, Spain
				and Pilchuck Tree Farm.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">4</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961-1968</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes color and b/w photographs, color slides, negatives and
				ephemera. Contents include images from Olympic Park, North Cascades, Pioneer
				Square, Bainbridge Island, California, Hawaii and Pilchuck Tree Farm.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">5</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958-1966</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes b/w and color photographs, color slides, negatives and
				ephemera. Contents include images from Haiti, New York, Philadelphia,
				Bainbridge Island and Pilchuck Tree Farm.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">6</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967-1968</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Color slides. Contents include images from California, Sun River,
				Bainbridge Island, Oregon.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">7</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967-1968</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Color slides. Contents include images from Ghana, California, New
				York, Oregon, Washington DC, 67 Expo in Montreal, Canada.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">8</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968-1987</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes b/w and color photographs, color slides and negatives.
				Contents include images from Tikal, Bainbridge Island, Pilchuck School, Maui,
				Butchart Gardens.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">9</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958-1997</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes b/w and color photographs, color slides, negatives and
				ephemera. Contents include images from Salmon River, China Reunion, Haystack in
				Deer Island, Maine, Greece, Haiti, Hawaii, Pilchuck School.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">10</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1983-1987</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes photographs, color slides and negatives. Contents include
				images from Hawaii, Pilchuck Tree Farm, Alaska.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">11</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1985-1987</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes photographs, color slides and negatives. Contents include
				images from France, England, Ireland, Hawaii, Bainbridge Island, Portland, OR
				and Pilchuck School.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="series"><did><container type="box">12</container><unittitle type="series"/><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1985-1987</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Includes photographs, negatives and ephemera. Contents include
				images from Pilchuck School and other miscellaneous and assorted.</p></scopecontent></c01></dsc><dsc type="combined"><p> </p></dsc></archdesc></ead>

