A Photographic History of Oregon State UniversityMain MenuA Photographic History of Oregon State UniversityWelcome to A Photographic History of Oregon State UniversityOSU's Early Years, 1858 - 1889Architectural Harmony and Function: Development of OSU's CampusAcademics at OSUProducers of KnowledgeCampus Life and CultureCampus Organizations at OSUStudent Athletes at OSUThe West Point of the WestProminent Faculty and AlumniLarry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896OSU Libraries & Press
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12015-08-20T20:19:49-07:00Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896562910plain2015-09-25T22:39:35-07:00Korey Jackson94cd93e587a0b4a5263c90ec4f2facaa0c913083Browse OSU's portrait history.
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1media/Cover.jpg2015-08-06T22:31:06-07:00Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896Welcome to OSU's Pictorial HistoryKorey Jackson19plain2015-09-25T23:36:44-07:00Korey Jackson94cd93e587a0b4a5263c90ec4f2facaa0c913083
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12015-07-25T00:15:31-07:00Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896Portrait of Sarah Latimer Finley, ca. 18744Portrait of Sarah Latimer Finley, ca. 1874. Finley was the daughter of a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Despite her health concerns that precipitated the Finleys’ return to California in 1872, she lived to be 89 years old, passing away in 1937. Finley was a leader of the suffrage movement in Sonoma County, California. Thomas Houseworth & Co. was one of the leading photography studios in San Francisco in the 1870s and 1880s. (HC 225)plain2015-09-23T21:56:49-07:00HC0225_Sarah_Finley.jpgLarry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896
12015-09-22T20:51:17-07:00Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896Dean of Forestry Paul M. Dunn Observing a Pinecone, 19502Dean of Forestry Paul M. Dunn observing a pinecone, November 1950. Dunn (1898-1988) was OSC’s dean of forestry from 1942 to 1955. He was instrumental in OSC obtaining the 6,200 acre Adair Tract from the federal government after World War II. A large portion of this tract became the Paul M. Dunn Research Forest. Prior to coming to OSC, he had been dean of forestry at Utah State College from 1931 to 1938. After leaving Oregon State, Dunn worked for the St. Regis Paper Company until 1968. He was a 1975 recipient of the Society of American Foresters’ Gifford Pinchot Award. (HC 200)plain2015-09-23T21:59:12-07:00HC0200_Paul_Dunn.jpgLarry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896