logging

Meet Our Guests: Gwen Trice

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Gwen Trice

Founder and Executive Director, Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center

Joseph, Oregon

8/23/21

 

     Gwen Trice’s father never told her about being one of the first Black people to live or work in the state of Oregon. During a time when the state’s constitution barred Black people from the entire state, he worked as a logger in Maxville, a small company town in Wallowa County, Oregon. After spending time away from Wallowa County, a hostile environment for Gwen growing up, she learned of her family history and decided to return to save space for people of color, both culturally and literally.

     Gwen is the founder and Executive Director of the Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center, a local nonprofit located in Joseph, Oregon, that is dedicated to telling the story of her family and the other families that made up the town of Maxville. The museum showcases artifacts and stories from the residents, but Gwen did not stop there. She channels her seemingly boundless creativity into multiple storytelling ventures including a musical about Maxville performed around Oregon, and multiple documentaries interviewing residents of the town and their decedents.

    Gwen is currently working to rebuild the original administrative building from Maxville to use as an interpretive space to celebrate and share her family’s history while educating visitors about the history of this often-overlooked Black community. Gwen believes in telling these forgotten and erased stories because she wants to give everyone a story, including the people who didn’t know about their histories and those whose voices were lost when Maxville became a ghost town.

 

By Haley Post

Meet our Guests: Brian Kelly

Brian Kelly

Restoration Director, Greater Hells Canyon Council

Lostine, OR

8/22/21

 

The Lostine River Corridor is a place of great tension for many residents of Wallowa County. For Brian Kelly, Restoration Director for the Greater Hells Canyon Council, a regional environmental advocacy group, this is an area of devastation and disappointment. Brian is a transplant to northeastern Oregon, the native New Yorker discovered his love for the West on a hitchhiking trip straight out of high school and came back to his home state eager to return. He soon got his chance in the form of a full-time position with the Bureau of Land Management in Oregon; however, after a year with the federal agency he became disillusioned with its forestry practices.

Brian believes in a holistic and forward-thinking approach to forest management that emphasizes minimal intervention and natural aesthetics. Much of Brian’s work revolves around advocating for land managers to follow those principles, but it can be a struggle to convince them. Recently he has advocated against the Lostine Corridor Project, a tree-thinning project conducted by the Forest Service meant to reduce fire danger along a heavily-trafficked forest road. The Forest Service exempted this project from a full environmental analysis for public safety reasons, but Brian argued that it deserved a thorough assessment. Looking over stumps and debris between the remaining trees, he said “this would be a great treatment for a dry, pine forest. Unfortunately, it’s not a dry pine forest.” The transition from the thinning site to the wet undisturbed canopy further from the road provides confirms Brian’s assessment of the forest. In most of the clear-cuts that Brian has worked on, he believes it was unnecessary to clear the area in the first place. “If you’re doing that kind of forestry, let’s just say that I don’t agree with you”.

 

By Elio Van Gorden