Annual Holiday Meeting

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After hosting one of the best annual meetings in the 50 year history of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation, we deserve to celebrate!

Instead of our usual potluck dinner, the Oregon Chapter of the Lewis and Clark Heritage Foundation will hold our Annual Holiday Meeting at the Bridgeside Restaurant in Cascade Locks, Oregon.

When:   Saturday, December 1, 2018 4:00 to 7:00 pm
Where:  
The Bridgeside Restaurant  ( http://bridgesidedining.com/ )
               745 NW Wa Na Pa St, Cascade Locks, OR 97014
               telephone: (541) 374-8477
Dinner Cost:  $10.00 pay at the door, includes dinner and dessert. There will be a no-host bar.
Please RSVP to: Thelma Haggenmiller (SlowPokeTours@gmail.com ).  Or call her at: 503-659-5590
Lodging:
 If you want to stay overnight Saturday, December 1 in Cascade Locks, we have obtained a group rate:
                Best Western Plus Columbia River Inn  (Next door to the restaurant)
                Please call the booking agent at 541-374-8777 and mention group code "Lewis&Clark".

Note:   
2019 LCTHF-OR chapter dues are also coming due soon and can be paid at the Annual Dinner or send your $$’s to Treasurer: Ellie McClure, 17760 SW Cheyenne Way, Tualatin, OR  97062 or call her at 503-692-5489 (Home).  
Dues are: Individual – $10.00 / Family – $16.00 / Student – $5.00

  • Please bring something for our annual silent auction.
Our featured speaker this year is Tom Cramblett, Captain of the Sternwheeler and Mayor of Cascade Locks

We are looking forward to another fun gathering!
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Roger Wendlick Recognized

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In June, the Camas-Washougal Post-Gazette wrote:

“Award-winning Lewis & Clark historian Roger Wendlick dresses as George Drouillard, the ‘third most important member of the Corps of Discovery’ for a day of outdoor education at the Doetsch Day Use Area near Beacon Rock, in the Columbia River Gorge, on June 14.”

https://www.camaspostrecord.com/ news/2018/jun/21/explore-the-gorge/.

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Columbia Gorge Sternwheeler – Adventure Cruise

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One-way Repositioning Cruise from Cascade Locks to The Dalles Oregon

THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 2018
8:30 AM BOARDING TIME
CRUISE FROM 9:00 AM – 3:30 PM

MOTORCOACH RETURN TO CASCADE LOCKS BY 4:30 PM

Complimentary parking provided at the Visitors Center in Cascade Locks OR.

This cruise fills up fast so call now to make your required reservations.

The Oregon Chapter of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation (OR-LCTHF) has arranged for a special group passage price on this Repositioning Cruise. Call Kelli at 503-943-9115 and use reference #158164. Provide the names of guests, an email address for confirmation and your Form of Payment. Please have your photo ID available when boarding the Sternwheeler.

Cruising is from 9:00 am – 3:30 pm and then Motorcoach Transportation is provided for the return to Cascade Locks. 

 You can relax and watch the scenery change from beautiful wooded forests to desert scape and enjoy the views of Wind Mountain and Hood River. You get the Captain’s narration plus Costumed Re-Enactors sharing stories of Lewis and Clark and Pioneer adventures on this stretch of the Columbia River. 

 The Cruise price includes a continental breakfast, buffet lunch, dessert, coffee and hot tea.
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Revisiting Clatsops & Killamox: The Corps of Discovery and the Villages of the Ocean Coast

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Who: Dr. Doug Deur
What: Revisiting Clatsops & Killamox: The Corps of Discovery and the Villages of the Ocean Coast
When: 5:00 PM, Saturday March 3rd, 2018
Where:
Cannon Beach History Center and Museum
1387 S Spruce St, Cannon Beach, OR 97110
(503) 436-9301
http://cbhistory.org
RSVP: Thelma at SlowPokeTours@gmail.com

Douglas Deur, Ph.D. is an internationally recognized researcher on the Native American cultures and environmental history of Northwestern North America. He has served as the lead researcher on tribal cultural documentation efforts for tribes and First Nations in many parts of the American and Canadian West, including tribes of western Oregon – assisting in efforts to preserve their heritage and their distinctive knowledge of the land. He has also served as the principal researcher on similar topics for the National Park Service in the western United States, documenting historical and cultural uses of the land in roughly thirty national parks. Though interested in the past, much of his work is forward-looking, resulting in educational plans for tribal youth, for example, or natural resource protection and restoration plans that apply historical information in modern times.  His writings on Northwestern history, cultural heritage, and natural history have received state, national and international writing awards – from the Oregon Historical Society’s “Joel Palmer Award” to the New York Times Best Seller list. He is a research professor in the Portland State University Department of Anthropology, Adjunct Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Victoria School of Environmental Studies, and a Commissioner to the Oregon State Parks and Recreation Department. Born and raised in northwestern Oregon, he is a full-time resident of the northern Oregon coast.

You can even choose to make a weekend of it and visit Les Shirley park with us, so we can discuss Clark’s trip to the whale and McNeal’s Folly. This is a good chance for people to become familiar with the area if they want to volunteer as docents/guides during the October annual meeting!
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Promised Land

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LCTHF (Lewis and Clark Trails Heritage Foundation) has partnered with the EOTIC (End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center) to have an afterhours showing, in the EOTIC theater, of the film “PROMISED LAND” as a benefit for the Chinook Indian Nation.  “PROMISED LAND” is a social justice documentary that follows two tribes in the Pacific Northwest, the Duwamish and the Chinook, as they fight for the restoration of treaty rights they've long been denied.  The date of the showing, Saturday, February 10, 2018 may seem like a long way off but the theatre only holds 80 people so, to be assured of a seat, it would behoove you to make your reservations as soon as you can before this announcement goes out to the general public.  See the press release for this showing in the attachment to this email.  Here are the basic details:

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2018
DOORS OPEN AT 5:00 PM
SCREENING BEGINS AT 5:30 -PM
SHOWING OF FILM “PROMISED LAND”
          Theater at EOTIC (The End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center)
1726 Washington St. - Oregon City, OR 97045
Tickets are $10 per person.  All proceeds will go to the Chinook Nation to support their Cultural Committee and on-going tribal recognition efforts.  Additional donations for the cause are welcome.
Please reserve your tickets in advance by calling 503-657-9336 or by visiting historicoregoncity.org/calendar
More information about the film can be found at promisedlanddoc.com and on the film's Facebook page: facebook.com/promisedlanddoc.
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