By Elizabeth Nielsen
Title: Oregon Countryman, 1908-1922
ID: PUB 010-14a
Primary Creator: Oregon Agricultural College. Agricultural Club.
Extent: 0.15 cubic feet. More info below.
Arrangement: This collection consist of one series.
Languages of Materials: English [eng]
The Oregon Countryman was written, edited, and published by students in agriculture and home economics at Oregon Agricultural College from 1908 through 1929. The initial issue of the magazine was published in June 1908. Beginning in October 1908, the Oregon Countryman was published monthly during the academic year. The final issue was published in October 1929. More than 150 issues were published during this 21-year-period. This archival collection consists of 11 unbound issues of the magazine published between June 1908 and February 1922. These issues are available online.
The intent of the publication was to share information about research activities underway in agriculture and the domestic sciences and arts at the College; course work offered in those areas; student activities; and alumni news. In the inaugural issue the editors write, “We expect to place this publication on the reading table of every farm home of the state.” In addition to articles by faculty and students, the magazine included poetry, recipes, and advertisements from local Corvallis businesses and agricultural enterprises throughout Oregon. The full range of agricultural topics are addressed in the magazine, including livestock, poultry, field crops, fruits and vegetables, irrigation, soil improvements, plant diseases and pests, and farm management.. Articles pertaining to foods and nutrition, clothing, household furnishings and rural life are also part of the magazine.
An index for the magazine was prepared in the 1970s or 1980s and is available online and in the History of Oregon State University book collection.
A complete run of the magazine is available in the History of Oregon State University book collection (S537 . O7 O7).
More Extent Information: 1 box
Statement on Access: Collection is open for research.
Acquisition Note: These issues of the Oregon Countryman were received by the former University Archives in multiple accessions through 2003.
Related Materials: The Special Collections and Archives Research Center has hundreds of collections pertaining to agricuture, home economics and rural life in Oregon. The records of the College of Agricultural Sciences (RG 158) and the College of Home Economics and Education (RG 141) provide documentation of the instructional programs at Oregon State College in agrictulure and home economics during the time period that the Oregon Countryman was published.
Preferred Citation: Oregon Countryman (PUB 010-14a), Oregon State University Special Collections and Archives Research Center, Corvallis, Oregon.
Processing Information:
We acknowledge that materials in SCARC collections and the language that describes them may be harmful. We are actively working to address our descriptive practices; for more information please see our SCARC Anti-Racist Actions Statement online. SCARC describes the contents of its collections using the language and terminology of the collections themselves. Since culturally acceptable terminology shifts over time, some of the terms that appear in these materials are currently outdated or offensive. The term “gypsy” is considered derogatory by many Roma people. It comes from the word “Egyptian,” where many Europeans mistakenly believed the Romani came from. In 1971, at the First World Roma Congress, a majority of attendees voted to reject the use of the term “gypsy,” however some still use it to self-identify.
In this collection, the term “gypsy” refers to the “Asian gypsy moth” or “gypsy moth,” a group of invasive moth species that includes Lymantria dispar dispar, Lymantria dispar asiatica, L. d. japonica, L. albescens, L. umbrosa, and L. postalba. In 2021, the Entomological Society of America (ESA) voted to change the common names, and in 2022, the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) announced new names for these species. Lymantria dispar dispar is now known as the “spongy moth,” and the rest are now the “flighted spongy moth complex.” There are no references to this term in the finding aid, but it does appear in materials that have been scanned and uploaded to Oregon Digital.
In order to provide historical context and to enable standardized searching and access across our collections, we have retained the original wording. We acknowledge the racism represented by the term “gypsy” and the harm it may cause our users. Providing access to these historical materials does not endorse any attitudes or behavior depicted therein. For more information, please see our blog post.
[Date of Acknowledgement: November 2024]
Oregon Agricultural College. Agricultural Club.
Oregon Agricultural College. Home Economics Club.
Agricultural education--Oregon--Corvallis.
Agriculture--Oregon.
Agriculture--Study and teaching (Higher)--Oregon--Corvallis.
Farm life--Oregon.
Home economics--Oregon.
Home economics--Study and teaching (Higher)--Oregon--Corvallis.
Home economics students--Oregon--Corvallis.
Natural Resources
Oregon Agricultural College. Agricultural Club.
Oregon Agricultural College. Home Economics Club.
University History