News Release

The Land Remembers: Fort Vancouver National Historic Site hosts Rich Bergeman for photography exhibit and talk on Rogue River War sites

A black and white photo of a landscape with trees on the banks of a river.
Rich Bergeman's photographs documents sites of Rogue River War battles, like this photograph of the location of an 1856 battle that ended the war.

Rich Bergeman

Subscribe RSS Icon | What is RSS
News Release Date: April 26, 2023

Contact: Theresa Langford, Cultural Resources Program Manager, (360) 816-6252

Contact: Meagan Huff, Museum Curator, (360) 409-3737

The National Park Service is pleased to announce that Rich Bergeman, a photographer based in Corvallis, Oregon, is the guest curator of an exhibit in the Fort Vancouver National Historic Site Visitor Center. The photography exhibit will run from April 24 through September 25 in the visitor center's theater. Bergeman will give a public talk on Saturday, May 20, at 1 pm. Both the exhibit and talk are free, but advance reservations are recommended for the talk. After the talk on May 20, Bergeman will be available to sign copies of his book, available for purchase from the Friends of Fort Vancouver Bookstore, also located in the Visitor Center.

The exhibit features a dozen black and white infrared photographs from Bergeman's two-year project exploring Southern Oregon in search of landscapes where the Rogue River Indian Wars took place in the 1850s. "My goal was to bring this largely forgotten war back into our collective consciousness by reflecting on the beauty of the landscapes that played host to those tragic events," Bergeman said.

Called one of the least remembered and yet bloodiest of the Oregon Territory's Indian wars, the conflicts ranged over a broad swath of rugged territory between the Rogue River Country and the South Coast between 1851 and 1856. The war traces its beginning to the passage of the Oregon Donation Land Claim Act in 1850 and the nearly simultaneous discovery of gold in the region. As settlers and miners streamed in, the Tribes who lived there suddenly found their way of life under threat. Skirmishes, murders, and atrocities on both sides inevitably followed, until the conflict erupted into all-out war involving the US Army. The conflict ended with the forced removal of the Tribes to newly created coastal reservations at Siletz and Grand Ronde in 1856 in what descendants today memorialize as Oregon's "Trail of Tears."

What: The Land Remembers: Landscapes of the Rogue River Wars

When: The exhibit is open during the Visitor Center's operating hours, April 24 to September 25, 2023. The public talk will take place Saturday, May 20, 2023, at 1 pm.

Where: The Fort Vancouver National Historic Site Visitor Center, 1501 East Evergreen Blvd., Vancouver, WA 98661

Cost: Free. Advance reservations are recommended for the talk. Reservations will be available starting May 2. To reserve a spot, please go to the Friends of Fort Vancouver website.



Last updated: April 26, 2023

Park footer

Contact Info

Mailing Address:

800 Hatheway Road, Bldg 722
Vancouver, WA 98661

Phone:

360 816-6230

Contact Us