Oregon Experience

Oex_wine_main Oregon Wine: Grapes of Place
May 08, 2012, 8:00 PM

In the1960s a new breed of pioneers began arriving in Oregon’s Willamette Valley determined to grow Vitis vinifera, the fine wine grapes of Europe. They were told it couldn’t be done and were amply warned that Western Oregon was too cold and wet for vinifera to flourish.

But they came anyway with a dream of producing fine premium wines – in particular Pinot noir, made from the delicate red grape of Burgundy, France.

The pioneers’ risky experiment would create a new industry in Oregon and change the world of wine forever.

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May 8, 2012 Oex_wine_main
Oregon Wine: Grapes of Place

In the1960s a new breed of pioneers began arriving in Oregon’s Willamette Valley determined to grow Vitis vinifera, the fine wine grapes of Europe. They were told it couldn’t be done and were amply warned that Western Oregon was too cold and wet for vinifera to flourish.

But they came anyway with a dream of producing fine premium wines – in particular Pinot noir, made from the delicate red grape of Burgundy, France.

The pioneers’ risky experiment would create a new industry in Oregon and change the world of wine forever.

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February 21, 2012 Classroom_sized
Wayne Morse

Wayne Morse served four terms (1945 -1969) in the US Senate. He represented Oregon with brilliance and bravado and followed a vision of “principle above politics.” He could be quick to criticize, and he rankled many opponents. But he wrote and sponsored legislation that was well ahead of its time.

Morse also warned of an American war in Viet Nam -- a full decade before an incident in the Gulf of Tonkin formally started it. He was one of just two members of Congress to vote against it. And for the rest of his career, Morse led a national outcry to end the war and bring the troops home.

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November 8, 2011 Oex_modoc_main2
The Modoc War

The Modoc War of 1872 to 1873 was one of the costliest American Indian wars in U.S. history, considering the number of people involved. For nearly seven months, a handful of Modoc Indian warriors and their families held off hundreds of U.S. Army soldiers.

The war is largely forgotten to most of the nation, but at the time of the conflict, the story made headlines from London to San Francisco. People were enthralled as one of the last real-life, Wild-West battles unfolded on the American frontier.

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Funding Provided by:
James F. and Marion L. Miller FoundationOregon Cultural Trust
Production Made Possible by:
Oregon Public Broadcasting Oregon Historical Society OREGON EXPERIENCE is a co-production of Oregon Public Broadcasting and the Oregon Historical Society.


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