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Oral history interview with Dick K. Harmon

 Collection
Identifier: SR 2459

Scope and Contents

This oral history interview with Dick K. Harmon was conducted by Kay Reid in two sessions, on December 15 and December 22, 1998, as part of the Legacy of Hope: Catholics and Social Justice Project, which collected interviews with Catholic clergy and social justice activists in Oregon about their work on social action in the Roman Catholic tradition.

In the first interview session, conducted on December 15, 1998, Harmon discusses his involvement with the Portland Organizing Project, an alliance of churches in Portland, Oregon, that was founded in 1985 to further social justice. He talks about the organization’s work lobbying the Oregon Legislature to fund worker training programs, and about how the organization changed in the late 1990s. He speaks about the history of the post-World War II labor movement and how changes in the working class lifestyle are related to changes in social justice organizing by churches. He shares his thoughts about the importance of the church to American social life. He discusses his family, their lives, and their careers. He speaks about pollution in the Willamette River and talks about solutions to the issue that would also create jobs.

In the second interview session, conducted on December 22, 1998, Harmon discusses his work in family therapy, speaks at length about the Portland Organizing Project’s work on affordable housing during the development of Portland’s River District in 1995, and describes the organization’s relationship with journalists. He reflects on his accomplishments as a social justice organizer in Chicago, Illinois, in Brooklyn, New York, and in Portland, Oregon. He shares his reasons for moving to Portland in the mid-1990s. He describes how he became involved in social justice organizing while in college in the 1950s, talks about the staff and volunteers of the Portland Organizing Project, and discusses the organization’s current focus on public education. He closes the interview by talking about the growth of the POP.

Dates

  • Creation: 1998 December 15-22

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

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

Biographical note

Richard Keylon Harmon was born in Colorado in 1937. He attended Colgate College in Hamilton, New York, and the University of Chicago. In 1959, he and Carol Joyce Williams were married; they later had two children. Harmon worked for approximately 20 years as an organizer for the Industrial Areas Foundation, based in Chicago and founded by Saul Alinsky. He then moved to Brooklyn, where he assembled a coalition of more than 40 churches, the Brooklyn Ecumenical Cooperatives, which worked against housing abandonment. In the early 1990s, Harmon became an organizer for the Portland Organizing Project, a church-based group in Portland, Oregon, advocating for social and economic justice.

Sources: Information provided by Harmon in this interview, an additional interview (SR 2406) at the Oregon Historical Research Library, and an interview (Ms.2015.06) held by the Brown University Library in Providence, Rhode Island.

Extent

0.1 Cubic Feet (3 audiocassettes (2 hr., 36 min., 49 sec.))

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Oral history interview with Dick K. Harmon conducted by Kay Reid in two sessions, on December 15 and December 22, 1998, as part of the Legacy of Hope: Catholics and Social Justice Project. Harmon discusses his involvement with the Portland Organizing Project, a church-based group in Portland, Oregon, advocating for social and economic justice.

Existence and Location of Copies

Related Materials

Harmon, Dick, Community Organizer Genealogy Project oral history interviews, Ms.2015.016, Brown University Library, Providence, Rhode Island.

Related Materials

An additional interview with Harmon, SR 2406, is also held at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

General

Forms part of the Legacy of Hope: Catholics and Social Justice Project.

Title
Guide to the oral history interview with Dick K. Harmon
Status
Completed
Author
Sarah Stroman
Date
2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English.

Repository Details

Part of the Oregon Historical Society Research Library Repository

Contact:
1200 SW Park Ave.
Portland OR 97205 United States
5033065204
5033065240