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Change Your Day

A revitalized blog with one mission: to present a moment that jolts your day, triggers new thinking, gets you through traffic tangles, and relieves job stress. Or, more prosaically, accompanies you through the early miles of bike touring through France and Italy. Wherever you are, I aim to change your day.

Credit to @illuminatethearts for lighting the skies from the Ferry Building down Market Street. 

​Beautiful Day at Bancroft Library Roundtable

10/26/2016

 
Every venue for my book talks this past year has offered something unique and, often, exceptional. My engagement on October 10 at the University of California Berkeley was definitely one to remember. I was a guest speaker before the Bancroft Library Roundtable located at the campus Faculty Club. My talk, titled “Whose Story Gets Told? Constructing a Biography When Sources Seem Too Limited,” relates my experience writing the first full biography of Dr. Marie Equi, the fiercely independent lesbian physician and political radical.
 
It was a remarkable day of sunshine to walk across the campus. Fortunately, Dale Danley, my husband and collaborator for my talk, is a UC Berkeley graduate (Masters, Public Health). He easily maneuvered our way from the BART station to campus, then along Strawberry Creek paths to the Faculty Club. The building (more information here) is an architectural treasure of the Craftsman tradition. Architects Bernard Maybeck and John Galen Howard saw the building’s completion in 1902. From the Faculty Club website: “The carved beams, the fireplaces, the stained glass windows all reflect Maybeck’s awareness of a special northern California aesthetic that still arouses a warm response in visitors and members alike.”
The Lewis-Latimer Room seats about 30 people at a long table. The talks begin at noon, and many regular members and visitors bring their cafeteria or home-made lunch for the occasion. The room was packed. They were a Berkeley audience of returning attendees – interested, engaged, and knowledgeable. One of the best audiences an author can hope for.
 
In the talk I described Marie Equi’s life story and then shifted to how I overcame the seeming lack of primary sources. What I found in my research was that troves of materials actually did exist; they simply required dogged efforts and more than a few serendipitous discoveries. I relied on dozens of archives with documents appearing in California, Oregon, Massachusetts, New York, Michigan, Indiana, and, the furthest afield, at the National Library of Ireland. All these established Equi’s considerable historical voice and footprint.
 
Archives at the Bancroft Library helped me confirm Equi’s one-year attendance in 1900 at the University of California San Francisco and provided me with background information about the relief efforts in San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake and fire. (Equi was the only woman doctor who volunteered as part of an Oregon Doctor Train to rush relief to the Bay Area). Bancroft’s holdings also helped me see Equi through the eyes of her contemporaries: the poet Sara Bard Field (an oral history) and the radical Charlotte Anita Whitney (newspaper clippings).
 
Questions for the audience were terrific: “Did Equi or her contemporaries use the word “lesbian”? (Not in the first two decades of the 20th century). “Did I search through tax records?” (No but I searched real estate documents in Oregon and Massachusetts, voting registrations, church records, and directory listings). “Was I a member of Biographers International Organization (BIO)?” (Not yet, but my good friend and author Dona Munker urged me several times to do so). “Was I able to establish a meeting between Emma Goldman and Equi?” (UC Berkeley houses the amazing Emma Goldman Papers) “No, but I’m sure they met in Portland during one of Goldman’s annual lecture stops."
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Left, Kathryn Neal and right, Baiba Vija Strads
I am indebted to Kathryn M. Neal, Associate University Archivist of Bancroft Library, and to Jose Adrian Barragan-Alvarez, co-coordinator of the Roundtable series and the new Latin Americana curator for their expert arrangements and support for the lecture. And to Randal S. Brandt, Principal Cataloger at Bancroft, for initiating the contact for the Roundtable series; and Baiba Vija Strads, retired librarian in the Bancroft Serials & Reference division, for her insight and conversation following the talk.
 
Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions, Michael Helquist, 2015, Oregon State University Press. Available at bookstores and online. ​

On "Girl in the River," a novel of real-life Portland characters

10/6/2016

 
I just finished Patricia Kullberg's wonderful page-turner "Girl in the River," a novel of Portland OR's less than good-ole-days of the 1930s, 40s, and 50s when the city was corrupt in so many ways. The protagonist is a young woman forced as a teenage to fend for herself on the streets. Her story is one of struggle and determination, coinciding with a few real-life characters like Ruth Barnett, the most successful, if notorious, abortion provider in Portland. (Barnett nicknamed her friend Dr. Marie Equi -- also an abortion provider -- "Queen of the Bolsheviks").

If you want to know the practical means of providing a safe, clean abortion during the first half of the 20th century, read this book. Kullberg demystifies the procedure while presenting the realities in the dark days before Roe v. Wade. Kullberg's account is an essential resource for anyone interested in the history of medicine, Portland and PNW regional politics, women's history, reproductive rights and feminism, and LGBTQ history. All that, and it's a great read.

Kullberg is completing a new work, this time non-fiction, "On the Ragged Edge of Medicine," and I'm eager to read it. I'm pleased to see that Oregon State University Press will publish it Spring 2017.

Kullberg worked much of her career as the Medical Director and staff physician for Multnomah County Health Dept. (Portland) and served marginalized men and women struggling with homelessness, mental illness and addiction. She knows of what she writes.
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Taking Marie Equi to Her Hometown: an AM Radio Interview

10/4/2016

 
For years my husband Dale Danley and I have looked forward to taking Marie Equi’s life story to her hometown: New Bedford, Massachusetts. Very few people there had heard of her, yet she is one of the city’s notable historical figures. As a child of working-class Italian-Irish immigrant parents, a child laborer in the city’s burgeoning textile mill industry, and a determined agitator for social and economic justice, Equi was someone who applied the values she had learned in New Bedford and applied them throughout much of her adult life.
 
During a September book tour of Massachusetts, we talked about Equi and the biography before audiences at several sites, including the New Bedford Public Library and the Rotch-Jones-Duff House and Garden Museum. I was also interviewed on the area’s top Morning Radio Program by popular WBSM 1420 host Phil Paleologos. Here’s a clip with me discussing Equi’s importance to New Bedford, her adventure in Oregon, and my own identification with this fierce agitator for justice. (My reflections on Equi's impact on me are located at the end of the interview at about 20 minute mark)
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​Click here to stream the interview

Portland's Water, A Hot-Hot Japanese Restaurant, and the Cannery Strike that Radicalized Marie Equi -- All in One Post

10/4/2016

 
The new Afuri Ramen restaurant chose Portland because of the city's water. Located at 923 SE 7th Street this much-sought-after foodie outpost will be located in the "new" Industrial Southeast. It happens to be 1 1/2 blocks from the site in 1913 of a labor strike at the Oregon Packing Company at 8th and Belmont. 100 years ago the area was just the working-class Eastside with "industrial" a given. A strike by women workers at this cannery is what drew Dr. Marie Equi into her first labor dispute. She was radicalized by a cop's club during the strike.

A quick sentence from Equi's bio: "Some of the strikers called out to her to help them, and Equi mounted their tar barrel and urged the women still working inside to join the walkout. With that simple act, she altered the course of her life."

As you inevitably wait in line at Afuri Ramen, consider the life of these blocks a century ago.
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"Marie Equi: Radical Politics and Outlaw Passions" at bookstores and online

​Book Reader Remarks on “Incredible Woman” Who Sacrificed for our Benefits Today

10/3/2016

 
Today I received a sweet note from a reader about her discovery of my biography of Marie Equi. She agreed to allow me to share it with you:
“I am a native Oregonian born with an insatiable curiosity that often keeps me up at night. I just cannot turn my mind off and must read just one more page before I turn off the lights and go to sleep.
 
“I had not heard of your book until I visited the Oregon Historical Society and saw a small display this past June. Your book intrigued me because I had never heard of Dr. Equi. I have been unemployed since January and was disappointed I could not afford to purchase your book at that time. I showed the flier I picked up about your book to my sister and was delighted when she gave it to me for my birthday.
 
“I could not put it down. First, I think it is incredibly sad that Dr. Equi is not more well- known and has been hidden in the shadows until now. What an incredible woman. She was inspirational. We should never take for granted the sacrifices women like Dr. Equi made for those of us here today.

“I thank you so very much for writing such a wonderful book and introducing us to Dr. Equi.”
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    Michael Helquist

    Author Historian Activist 

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