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Where
Will They Go?
If
it is necessary to bring in large numbers of Negro workers,
locate them on the edge of the city. . . It would be
much better for all concerned. If they are allowed to
fan out through the city it soon will [be] necessary
to station a policeman on every corner. President
of the Central East Portland Community Club, 1942
Front page of the June 11, 1948 Northwest
Clarion Flood Special. 
At the war's end, approximately
11,000 African Americans remained in Portland, nearly half
of whom lived at the "temporary" city of Vanport.
On May 30, 1948, a railroad dike at Vanport burst, and the
flood waters of the Columbia inundated the city leaving nearly
17,000 people homeless. Although Portland received national
recognition for severing the "color line" during
rescue efforts, segregation patterns persisted. Schools and
churches "strategically" located near Vanport provided
refuge to the 5,000 Black flood victims and some people opened
their homes.

Flood
evacuees at Trinity Episcopal Church in 1948. This image
demonstrates that although the Oregonian declared
"No Color Line Here" during and after Vanport
days, at least some segregation efforts continued during
evacuation. Courtesy of the Oregon Historical Society
Flood refugees of all
colors registered with the Red Cross, and the agency dealt with
the "negro dilemma" by insuring hotels and shelters
provided space for African Americans. Guilds Lake reserved two
hundred one-bedroom units for whites, and forty or fifty segregated
single room and kitchen units for Blacks. As emergency shelters
closed, the Jewish Neighborhood House and the VFW opened their
doors until Swan Island and other public housing areas could accomodate
displaced Vanporters.
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