Legacy of the Yale Union Building

Our historic headquarters has a fascinating history and role in the 1919 Portland laundry workers’ strike.

History of the Yale Union Laundry building Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

The Yale Laundry building was built in 1908.

The city block where the Yale Laundry building is situated was a sloping wetland within the traditional homelands of the Multnomah, Chinook, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Tualatin Kalapuya, Molalla, and other peoples Indigenous to the Lower Columbia River Basin.

Yale merged with nearby Union Laundry Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

1. Yale Laundry opens

The laundry industry was a particularly nefarious corner of the industrialized world. Related to the textile industry in that it paid extremely low wages for repetitive and dangerous work, it was one of the few heavy industries that permitted women to work in its factories.

New Systems Laundry 1935 Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

2. A highly gendered and racialized industry

Commercial laundries used the rhetoric of whiteness to simultaneously sell their services and to denigrate Chinese- and Japanese-owned laundries, which were established as a result of discriminatory hiring practices that barred non-whites from working in the major industries.

Portland laundry workers strike was inspired by Seattle's Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

3. The 1919 Portland laundry workers' strike

A powerful propaganda campaign against the strikers was launched in the press by the Laundrymen’s Association, which took out weekly ads in The Oregonian warning the public about the “Bolshevik” spirit disrupting and raising the cost of laundry services.

A powerful propaganda campaign against the strikers Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

3. Washing machine manufacturers seize an opportunity

Home washing machine manufacturers capitalized on the strike, taking out ads in newspapers that advocated for a consumerist political disengagement: “Laundry Strike Settled—as far as you are concerned if you install Crystal Electric Washer & Wringer.”

Women's History moment Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

4. The Strike ends and is a success

The strike continued through December, and the unionists declared victory in early 1920 when they opened the union-owned and operated Victory Laundry on SE 69th and Foster Rd.

In 2021 ownership transferred Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

4. Yale Union to NACF

In the 1920s, Yale Laundry merged with Union Laundry—a misnomer; it was not unionized—to become Yale Union Laundry. In 2021 the owner of Yale Union a nonprofits arts organization transferred ownership to our organization as an act of Rematriation

This historic building will be renovated Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

4. The Center for Native Arts & Cultures

We are deeply grateful to the board and staff of previous owner YU and late Executive Director Yoko Ott for their vision and courage in affording this  transformative opportunity  to NACF.

NACF Staff (2022-12-08) by Robert Franklin Native Arts and Cultures Foundation - Center for Native Arts and Cultures

Our vision for the Center

Our vision for the Center includes spaces for exhibitions, events, places to practice culture and make art, and areas for cultural ceremonies and celebrations to create a vibrant gathering place for Indigenous artists.

Credits: Story

Images sourced from the Oregon Historical Society, City of Portland Archives, Wikimedia Public Domain, and yaleunionlaundrystrike.net.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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