Racism in Oregon

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A sign on a business stating that they will only cater to white customers

The history of racism in

African, Mexican, Hawaiian, and Asian descent.[2] Portland
, the largest city in the state, continues to have one of the largest proportions of white residents of major U.S. cities.

History

Initial genocide and land theft of Indigenous people

John Beeson, an English expatriate, arrived in

miners. The Donation Land Claim Act of 1850 was authorized by the US Congress before any land deals had been made with the Indigenous people, which insured only the best land to unmarried white males over 18 years of age willing to move to Oregon, undesirable land would be utilized for the reservation system
for Indigenous people after their forced relocation.

Pictured: Two unknown African-Americans living in Oregon in the mid to late 1800s

First arrival of black people: 1788

The first known person of African descent to arrive in Oregon was a sailor named Markus Lopeus. Lopeus arrived in 1788 alongside merchant sea captain Robert Gray. Lopeus later died in an altercation with the local Native Americans.[6] In the following years, black fur trappers and explorers settled in Oregon.[6]

York, an enslaved man, was the only African American on the Lewis and Clark Expedition, which reached Oregon in 1805.

Anti-Black Exclusion Laws and Chinese immigration 1844–1859