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Oral history interview with Barbara A. Mackenzie, 1999 September 27-2001 June 1

Overview of the Collection

Interviewee
Mackenzie, Barbara A. (Barbara Amanda), 1905-2002
Title
Oral history interview with Barbara A. Mackenzie
Dates
1999 September 27-2001 June 1 (inclusive)
Quantity
.1 cubic feet, (5 audiocassettes (4 hr., 46 min., 9 sec.) + transcript (106 pages))
Collection Number
SR 1936
Summary
Oral history interview with Barbara A. Mackenzie conducted by Katy Barber from September 27, 1999, to June 1, 2001. Mackenzie was director of the U.S. government project that relocated Native Americans displaced by the construction of The Dalles Dam in eastern Oregon and Washington state.
Repository
Oregon Historical Society Research Library
1200 SW Park Avenue
Portland, OR
97205
Telephone: 503-306-5240
Fax: 503-219-2040
libreference@ohs.org
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research.

Languages
English
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Biographical Note

Barbara Amanda Mackenzie, nee Tudor, was born in Colorado in 1905. She grew up in Sutherlin, Oregon, and later attended St. Mary's Academy and Lincoln High School in Portland. She earned a teaching degree from the Oregon Normal School (now known as Western Oregon University). In 1926, she and Thomas T. Mackenzie were married; they later had two children. Mackenzie was director of the U.S. government project that relocated Native Americans displaced by the construction of The Dalles Dam in eastern Oregon and Washington state. She also worked as a teacher in California and Oregon, working primarily with marginalized populations, and as a caseworker for the Red Cross in Arlington, Virginia. Barbara Mackenzie died in 2002.

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Content Description

This oral history interview with Barbara A. Mackenzie was conducted by Katy Barber at Mackenzie's home in Portland, Oregon, from September 27, 1999, to June 1, 2001. Barbara Mackenzie's son, Thomas R. Mackenzie, and Jan Dilg were also present during the sessions recorded in 2001. The interview was conducted in four sessions. The first part of session one was not recorded.

In the first interview session, conducted on September 27, 1999, Mackenzie discusses working as a teacher in Oregon and California, including working with marginalized groups in the San Francisco Bay Area and opposition she faced. She also talks about her work with the Red Cross in Virginia. She speaks about her role in relocating members of the Warm Springs, Yakama, Umatilla, and Nez Perce tribes during the building of The Dalles Dam at Celilo Falls. She talks about her relationship with Chief Tommy Thompson and Flora Cushinway Thompson of the Wyam people and shares stories about the Wyam way of life. She also talks about her work with Navajo people near Palm Springs, California.

In the second interview session, conducted on September 30, 1999, Mackenzie continues discussing her role in the relocation of members of the Warm Springs, Yakama, Umatilla, and Nez Perce tribes. She talks about her relationship with Flora Cushinway Thompson of the Wyam people, some of her advocacy on behalf of indigenous people, and where she felt the local authorities were neglecting indigenous people's needs. She also talks about Temmingway Moses, a Yakama woman who tended a cemetery near the Maryhill Museum in Washington; the attitudes of the population at The Dalles towards Native Americans; and her working relationship with the Bureau of Indian Affairs. She talks about Abe Sholoway, a Umatilla man who acted as interpreter; her efforts to get Native American marriages legally recognized; and attending the Pendleton Round-Up. She also talks about the processes of the relocation project and how she got involved. She shares her opinion about assimilation and the U.S. government's practice of tribal termination. She talks about her brother, Ralph Tudor, who served as undersecretary of the Interior under President Dwight D. Eisenhower and worked as an engineer on the Bay Bridge and Bay Area Rapid Transit in the San Francisco Bay Area. She also discusses some of her secretaries and revisits the topics of working as a teacher with marginalized groups in California and her work with the Red Cross in Virginia. She then talks about serving as executive for the Red Cross in Lincoln County, Oregon.

In the third interview session, conducted on January 16, 2001, Mackenzie discusses her family background and her early life and education in Sutherlin, Oregon. She also talks about the career of her brother, Ralph Tudor. She discusses her education at St. Mary's Academy and at Lincoln High School in Portland, her relationship with her mother, and her first teaching job near Bend. She talks about her college experiences at Western College for Women (now known as the Western Campus of Miami University) and at the Oregon Normal School (now known as Western Oregon University).

In the fourth interview session, conducted on June 1, 2001, Mackenzie discusses serving as executive for the Red Cross in Lincoln County, including organizing blood drives and working with veterans. She closes the interview by describing the town of Newport.

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Use of the Collection

Alternative Forms Available

Audio and transcript available online in OHS Digital Collections.

Preferred Citation

Oral history interview with Barbara A. Mackenzie, by Katy Barber, SR 1936, Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Restrictions on Use

Joint copyright for this interview is held by the Oregon Historical Society and the Oregon Military Museum. Use is allowed according to the following statement: In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-NC/1.0/.

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Administrative Information

Acquisition Information

Gift of Portland State University, care of Katy Barber, November 2002 (Lib. Acc. 24814).

Related Materials

The Celilo Falls Indian Relocation Project records, Mss 2678, and the Celilo Falls Indian Relocation Project photographs collection, collected by Barbara Mackenzie, Org. Lot 17, are also held at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Related Materials

Barber, Katrine. Death of Celilo Falls. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2005.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

  • Description: Interview session 1
    Dates: 1999 September 27
    Container: Cassette 1
  • Description: Interview session 2
    Dates: 1999 September 30
    Container: Cassette 2
  • Description: Interview session 2
    Dates: 1999 September 30
    Container: Cassette 3
  • Description: Interview session 3
    Dates: 2001 January 16
    Container: Cassette 4
  • Description: Interview session 4
    Dates: 2001 June 1
    Container: Cassette 5
  • Description: Transcript of oral history interview with Barbara Mackenzie
    Dates: 1999 September 27-2001 June 1
    Container: Folder SR1936

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Blood--Collection and preservation
  • Indians of North America--Oregon
  • Indians of North America--Relocation--Oregon--Celilo
  • Teachers--California
  • Teachers--Oregon
  • Wyam Indians

Personal Names

  • Mackenzie, Barbara A. (Barbara Amanda), 1905-2002
  • Thompson, Flora Cushinway, 1893-1978
  • Tudor, Ralph A. (Ralph Arnold), 1902-1963

Corporate Names

  • American Red Cross
  • Celilo Falls Indian Relocation Project

Geographical Names

  • Celilo (Or.)

Form or Genre Terms

  • interviews

Other Creators

  • Personal Names

    • Barber, Katrine (interviewer)
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