USDA Northwest Cannery Survey Collection, 1914-1915

Overview of the Collection

Creator
United States. Office of Markets and Rural Organization.
Title
USDA Northwest Cannery Survey Collection
Dates
1914-1915 (inclusive)
Quantity
1.00 cubic feet, (2 oversize boxes)
Collection Number
MSS Cannery
Summary
The USDA Northwest Cannery Survey Collection consists of materials pertaining to a 1914 survey of fruit canneries in Oregon and Washington. The survey was conducted by the USDA Office of Markets and Rural Organization in cooperation with Oregon Agricultural College.
Repository
Oregon State University Libraries, Special Collections and Archives Research Center
Special Collections and Archives Research Center
121 The Valley Library
Oregon State University
Corvallis OR
97331-4501
Telephone: 5417372075
Fax: 5417378674
scarc@oregonstate.edu
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research.

Languages
English

Historical NoteReturn to Top

In 1911, the 26th legislative assembly created the office of the Oregon State Immigration Agent, appropriating $20,000 for immigration advertising work. An additional $5,000 was allocated for statistical research and collection work to be done by the Oregon Statistical Bureau (OSB), under the direction of Dean J. A. Bexell of Oregon Agricultural College’s Department of Commerce. The initial mandate of the OSB was completion of a general survey of statewide agricultural operations in order to “determine the opportunities in each locality for new settlers and, if possible, to find some of the difficulties in agricultural development.” Though the Oregon Statistical Bureau was not funded to continue its work after completing the survey, the resulting publication, The Oregon Farmer: What He has Accomplished in Every Part of the State, laid the foundation for subsequent agricultural surveys.

In his report for the School of Commerce in OAC’s 1912-1914 Biennial Report, Bexell suggests that it is the “aim of the department of Economics to be of the utmost possible service” to farmers’ organizations. Referencing Dr. Hector MacPherson’s recommendations in the Oregon Farmer, Bexel argued the OSB should be funded to continue its work under the umbrella of the proposed state Bureau of Markets, and that future efforts should “[attack] certain definite problems” of agricultural operations in the state. With regards to “Business Efficiency,” concerted efforts should be made to “work towards a uniform system of accounting for all farmers’ organizations,” and progress should be monitored more uniformly by providing organizations with standardized “forms for a series of reports from month to month, and from year to year.” Finally, in order to help streamline, standardize, and modernize methods and costs of production, Bexell argued that a “cannery survey covering the complete operations of the canneries of Oregon for the season of 1914” should be conducted.

The subsequent cannery survey, undertaken between 1914 and 1915, was commissioned by the United States Department of Agriculture’s Office of Markets and Rural Organization, and was done cooperatively between the USDA and the OSB, working out of Oregon Agricultural College’s School of Commerce under the continued direction of J. A. Bexell. The surveys were overseen and submitted by Certified Public Accountant J. W. Boies of New York, who reported to H. W. Kerr, Investigator of Business Practice at the Bureau of Markets and Rural Organization. Typical suggestions made by the Auditing Committee – comprised of J. A. Bexell, T. A. Logsden, and Harry Asbahr – included introducing “simple, labor saving methods under a practical, but concise, cost system,” a “modern…method of distributing the Pay Roll,” and the purchase of “modern” Cash and Sales Books.

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

The collection includes correspondence, financial records (e.g. bookkeeping methods, salaries, etc.), photographs, historical notes and essays, equipment lists, blank forms used in timekeeping and production, and can labels. Roughly half of the information in these records is in the form of "outlines," using data supplied by the canneries or by Regional Fruit Growers Associations. The survey contains cannery information from the following cities and towns: Albany, Brownsville, Cottage Grove, Corvallis, Creswell, Eugene, Forest Grove, Junction City, Newberg, Springbrook, Woodburn, and Puyallup/Sumner in Washington.

In addition, there is a file containing a short report for “points south” of Eugene, including Creswell, Cottage Grove, Drain, Roseburg, Grants Pass, Talent, and Ashland; a survey for an unidentified cannery; and a report on rent costs, profit, and loss for Multnomah, Washington, Lane, Columbia, Coos, Willamette, Tillamook, Polk, Linn, Benton, Clatsop, and Marion counties.

Of special note are the can labels contained in the first folder for the Eugene Fruit Growers Association (Box 1, Folder 7), and a photograph of the exterior of the Creswell Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association plant (Box 1, Folder 6). Additionally, the financial "outlines" for several canneries call out the labor and salaries of women specifically, speaking to the gendered division of labor in cannery work.

The final report generated by this survey is not found in the collection. All materials are dated between 1914 and 1915.

Use of the CollectionReturn to Top

Preferred Citation

USDA Northwest Cannery Survey Collection (MSS Cannery), Oregon State University Special Collections and Archives Research Center, Corvallis, Oregon.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

Arrangement

Collection is arranged alphabetically by city.

Acquisition Information

The materials were transferred to the Archives by Oregon State University Libraries Special Collections in 2001, and processed after the merger of the two departments.

Related Materials

Other collections documenting cannery operations include the Experiment Station Communications Films, the Extension Bulletin Illustrations Photograph Collection, the Horticulture Department Photographs, the Extension and Experiment Station Communications Photograph Collection, and the Food Science and Technology Department Photographs. These collections document machinery and methods used in canning produce and, in some cases, the labor force of canning plants. The Food Science and Technology Department Photographs additionally document relief cannery work done during the Great Depression.

Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top

Series 1:  Surveys, 1914-1915Return to Top

This series is comprised of surveys conducted by the USDA Office of Markets and Rural Organization in cooperation with Oregon Agricultural College that document cannery operations, accounting methods, and financial data.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box/Folder
1.1
Albany: Albany Creamery Association
1.2
Brownsville: Brownsville Canning and Preserving Company
1.3
Corvallis: Benton County Growers Association [1 of 2]
1.4
Corvallis: Benton County Growers Association [2 of 2]
1.5
Cottage Grove: Cottage Grove Cannery
1.6
Creswell: Creswell Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association
1.7
Eugene: Eugene Fruit Growers Association [1 of 2]
1.8
Eugene: Eugene Fruit Growers Association [2 of 2]
2.1
Forest Grove: Forest Grove Fruit Growers Association [1 of 2]
2.2
Forest Grove: Forest Grove Fruit Growers Association [2 of 2]
2.3
Junction City: Eugene Fruit Growers Association
2.4
Newberg: Newberg Co-Operative Growers Association [1 of 2]
2.5
Newberg: Newberg Co-Operative Growers Association [2 of 2]
2.6
Puyallup and Sumner (Washington): Puyallup and Sumner Fruit Growers' Association
2.7
Springbrook: Springbrook Fruit Growers Union
2.8
Woodburn: Woodburn Canning Company
2.9
Points south: Creswell, Cottage Grove, Drain, Roseburg, Grants Pass, Talent, Ashland
2.10
[Survey for unidentified cannery]
2.11
Statistics on Rent, Profit, and Loss, Organized by County [except Willamette]: Multnomah, Washington, Lane, Columbia, Coos, Willamette, Tillamook, Polk, Linn, Benton, Clatsop, Marion

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Canneries--Oregon.
  • Canneries--United States--History--20th century.
  • Fruit processing plants--Oregon.
  • Fruit processing plants--Washington (State)
  • Fruit--Harvesting.
  • Fruit--Marketing.
  • Women employees--United States--History.

Corporate Names

  • United States. Department of Agriculture.

Other Creators

  • Personal Names
    • Bexell, J. A. (John Andrew), 1867-1938. (creator)
    Corporate Names
    • Oregon Agricultural College. School of Commerce. (creator)