In the 1860s and 1870s, only a handful of Black residents lived in Oregon. Now, newly digitized photographs provide a rare and unique view into some of their lives. The two collections feature personal and professional images of the Dixon and Flower families, who arrived in Oregon beginning in the 1860s. Both families stayed in the region for decades and operated some of the earliest Black-owned businesses in the state.
Oregon Historical Society Digital Collections
The images are part of the website. Digital Collections Manager Mathieu Deschaine said via email, “The Collections launched in 2017 as a platform to share items from our research library collections.”
Since then, OHS has added nearly 40,000 items, including manuscripts, photographs, films, maps and oral histories, with new content added almost weekly.
“We try to provide a diverse spectrum of content in both type and topics,” Deschaine said.
Rare images show early Black residents
This particular batch of photographs offers a rare glimpse into the lives of Oregon’s earliest Black residents.
The 1860 census only lists 128 Black residents in Oregon out of a population of over 52,000.
At the time, racist banned Black people from living in the state, but some settled here anyway — including Allen Flowers.
Allen Flowers arrives in Portland
Flowers was born in Ohio in 1847, and his family traveled to California during the Gold Rush.
As a young man, he worked as a cabin boy on the . When it arrived in Portland in 1865, he jumped ship. That probably saved his life.
Later that year, the Brother Jonathan sank near Crescent City in what was the West Coast’s deadliest passenger wreck of the time, killing over 200 people.
In 1934, the Oregonian reported in Flowers’ obituary that for several years, he “worked on the boats plying rivers to The Dalles, Umatilla and Lewiston.”
Flowers family operates several businesses, spanning decades
Allen Flowers married Louisa Matilda Thacker in British Columbia in 1862. Lousia Thacker (spelled Thatcher in some sources) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1849. Allen and Louisa had four sons who would go on to operate several family businesses in Oregon.
In 1900, the Flowers family bought a 20-acre farm on the slopes of Mount Scott in Southeast Portland, where they grew raspberries and raised horses. The family was also active in several community organizations, including the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Williams Avenue Young Women’s Christian Association.
Images in the collection show the Flowers family farm, the Flowers automotive repair and sales lot, a jitney bus operated by Ralph Flowers and beach cottages in Oceanlake, Oregon.
The entire collection consists of 27 images dating from around the 1860s to 1955.
Roscoe Dixon settles in Astoria
The other recently digitized collection consists of six images of the from 1870 to 1945. They lived in Astoria and Seattle.
Roscoe Dixon was born into slavery in Virginia in 1843, eventually escaping through the Underground Railroad.
In the 1880s, he opened Roscoe’s First Class Oyster Saloon in Astoria. Advertisements in the from 1883 describe it as a “first class Oyster Saloon for Ladies and Gents.”
The group credits Dixon as the first known Black business owner in Astoria.
In 1892, he married Theresa Townes Brown of Georgia. They had three children and eventually moved to Seattle.
Additional historical treasures to be available soon
According to Deschaine, OHS is on the verge of adding the first uploads of original images. Drake was a popular photographer from Silverton in the early 1900s. Deschaine said, “I anticipate we’ll be adding new Drake items over the course of the year, but when completed, the project will be around 3,800 negatives.”
Other items in the works include digitizing and translating items from the Yasui Family papers. This year that will include excerpts from ’s diaries of his experiences immigrating to the United States and establishing his family in Hood River, documentation of the family’s incarceration in WWII and their attempts to rebuild after regaining their freedom.
Deschaine added that they are continually adding more Oral Histories and currently have well over 550 interviews featuring thousands of hours of audio recordings available online.
“Oregon Experience” behind the scenes: Solving a mystery?
When I first saw the new Dixon and Flowers Collection online, I was immediately intrigued by an image of Roscoe Dixon. To my eyes, it looked remarkably similar to another mystery image of an unknown man found among a scrapbook listed as “” at the Oregon Historical Society library.
The scrapbook contains 523 lithographs, cyanotypes and black and white photographs, including people like early Portland mayor and real estate developer William Ladd, Fort Vancouver’s John McLoughlin and Judge Matthew Deady.
Among the collection are images of two unidentified Black men. With few Black residents in the region in the 1870s, I found the unnamed photos an interesting mystery, and we produced a about images.
Could Roscoe Dixon be one of the men from the mystery images?
OHS dates the newly digitized image of Dixon to about 1881. The unnamed image is thought to be from the 1870s.
Unfortunately, neither image is ideal quality for this type of scrutiny, and there do appear to be some differences. Roscoe looks to have a slight widow’s peak, while the unidentified man does not. The noses aren’t quite the same. Or maybe that is due to the different angles of the head. I’m unsure.
I reached out to OHS Photographs Librarian Laura Cray to ask her opinion. She was more skeptical, saying only “it could be” the same person, but more research is necessary. She’s right, of course.
What do you think? Could both of these men be Oregon businessman Roscoe Dixon, taken a decade or so apart?
For now, the mystery continues.
Copyright 2024 Oregon Public Broadcasting. To see more, visit .