This item below is out of stock, but another example (left) is available. To view the available item, click "Details."

Details 1967 Hayes Pictorial Placemat Map of Oregon
1967 (dated) $150.00

1967 Hayes Pictorial Map of Oregon

KeepOregonGreen-hayes-1967
$100.00
Keep Oregon Green. The Beaver State. - Main View
Processing...

1967 Hayes Pictorial Map of Oregon

KeepOregonGreen-hayes-1967

Charming pictorial map of Oregon.

Title


Keep Oregon Green. The Beaver State.
  1967 (undated)     11.5 x 14 in (29.21 x 35.56 cm)

Description


This is a charming 1967 pictorial map of the state of Oregon by Hugh Hayes. It covers the entire state with countless illustrations throughout referencing the history, topography, places of interest and fun facts about the state. Some of these include ‘Mt. Mazama, once a 14000 ft. active volcano collapsed and caused the formation of crater lake’, ‘Oregon Territory first sighted by Capt. Cook March 7, 1778 at Cape Foulweather’, ‘Prehistoric Oregon Fossil Beds formerly semi tropical climate’, etc. Some of the illustrations depict cowboys, Native Americans, wagons, animals, fruits and vegetables, cattle, fish, logging activity, horses, etc. The map roper is surrounded by vignettes of historical events, including ‘Fort Astoria founded in 1811 by John Jacob Astor fur traders’, ‘First white men to see Oregon were Spanish seamen from Mexico in 1543’, ‘First continental railroad service – Portland – East 1883’, ‘Battleship Oregon’, among others. An inset in the top center also features an almanac.

This map, issued in the centennial year of the Oregon’s statehood, was published by the Keep Oregon Green Association in the interest of forest fire prevention. The Association, an environmental conservation and educational organization, is still active today. This map was originally copyrighted and drawn by Hugh Hayes in 1959. This is the 1967 revised version.

Cartographer


Hugh John Hayes Jr. (August 1, 1914 - June 25, 2013) was an American mapmaker, draftsman, and illustrator who spent most of his career working for the Oregon State Department of Forestry. Born in Bear Creek, Oregon, Hugh attended public schools in Wallowa, Washington, and graduated from high school in 1934. He then served in the Civilian Conservation Corps before finding a job as a draftsman with the Oregon State Board of Forestry in Salem, Oregon. During World War II, Hayes entered the U.S. Army on January 16, 1942, served in the 340th Engineer Regiment, and attained the rank of Master Sergeant. He spent sixteen months in Alaska and the Yukon Territory working on the construction of part of the Alaska-Canada Highway. While there, he also created maps, undertook surveys, and drew structural plans. Then he was transferred to the South Pacific, where he spent twenty-one months in Australia, New Guinea, Morotai, and Luzon designing bridges and drawing maps. After receiving an honorable discharge from the Army in November 1945, Hayes returned to the Oregon State Department of Forestry, where he worked until he retired in 1993. During his years at the Department of Forestry, Hayes illustrated field guides of Oregon trees, drew fire protection maps and safety cartoons, and designed plans for bridges and guard stations. Over the course of his career, Hayes also helped illustrated an entomology textbook for Oregon State University drew forest shrubs and plants for the Walt Disney movie 'Bambi.' Hayes married Florence Wilson Ruffner on May 14, 1957, and were married thirty-five years before she died of a heart attack in 1992. More by this mapmaker...

Condition


Very good. Minor wear along centerfold. Minor creasing and spotting. Top margin includes stamp of the Forest Cafe in Sisters, Oregon.

References


Rumsey 8809.000.