Villages Northwest and Oregon's Military History

Published: Oct. 13, 2017, 11:14 p.m.

b'Oregon\\u2019s military heritage goes back thousands of years, including native people\\u2019s warrior traditions. Most of the cultures in this region were relatively peaceful, even welcoming visiting strangers, such as the Lewis and Clark overland Army expedition in 1805\\u20131806. Then, overwhelming numbers of fur trappers, merchants, settlers, and miners began taking over traditional native grounds.\\n\\nOregon military historians Warren W. Aney and Alisha Hamel draw their service with the Oregon Army National Guard, including years spent as organizational historians. Images come from the collections of the Brigadier General James B. Thayer Oregon Military Museum, the Oregon Historical Society, county historical societies, other regional and national collections, and the authors\\u2019 personal collections. \\n\\nHost John Shuck discusses their "Images of America" series book, Oregon Military. \\n\\nAlso, what happens when you or an aging parent finds it more and more difficult to maintain a home? Is the only choice moving to a retirement home or placing a burden on family members or others to do the things around the home that cannot be done any longer? \\n\\n Lyn Trainer, Bonnie Barksdale, and Kathy Fradkin are actively involved in the village movement, a movement that is sweeping the country and is now firmly established as Villages Northwest in the Portland Metro. This village movement that started in Boston enables people to age in their homes. \\n\\n2:20 - 29:34 Oregon Military\\n29:36 - 56:00 Villages Northwest'