Seufert Brothers Cannery

Seufert Brother's Canneryv2020.07.26.007Google Earth Imagery Date: September 3, 2018

"This photograph, believed taken by Benjamin Gifford around 1928, shows the Seufert Brothers Company Salmon and Fruit Cannery in The Dalles. At the left of the photo is a sign painted by Francis A. Seufert (1853-1929) on the roof of his horse barn in response to an initiative that banned fishwheels on the Oregon side of the Columbia River. The sign reads: 'To build this business it took 47 years. The initiative law of Oregon destroyed it in one day. Sponsored by the Oregon State Grange and Federated Trades Union. The Oregon law does not protect invested capital'.”


Sign at Seufert Brothers Company, c. 1928 Photo by Benjamin Gifford (?)The Oregon History Projecthttps://oregonhistoryproject.org/articles/historical-records/sign-at-seufert-brothers-company/?fbclid=IwAR08dDIXQlWRcriTEpQUoi2Of1l5uj-bIyvP_CjO4fEa4TgYWQKKTV6-P8o#.Xx3jsJ5KjtR

July 26, 2020

There is a lot going on in the cannery photo above. I'll be breaking it down over the next few pages.

Oregon Encyclopedia: Seufert Brothers Cannery

Seufert Brothers Company was the leading salmon packer on the Middle Columbia River from the mid-1890s to the mid-1950s. Beginning in 1867, industrial processing and canning techniques had transformed the river’s anadromous fish runs into a valuable commodity. At first, the swift currents of the Mid-Columbia confined commercial fishing interests to the estuary, but in 1879 the introduction of fish wheels made it possible to catch salmon in the upstream rapids, where traps, seines, and gillnets generally could not function. Wheels, either fixed to the bank or attached to scows, scooped fish from the river with shocking efficiency. When the Northern Pacific Railroad reached The Dalles in 1883, making it a feasible site for canneries, packers rushed to establish operations there.

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Seufert Brothers occasionally ran afoul of organized labor, which resented the company’s employment of Chinese butchers, and Native Americans who traditionally fished The Dalles-Celilo reach. During the 1880s and 1890s, fish wheel owners had aggressively displaced Indians from many of the “usual and accustomed places” reserved in their 1855 treaties with the U.S. government. Although the case of U.S. v. Winans (1905) upheld the right of Native Americans to access the fisheries, Seufert Brothers did not hesitate to challenge Indian fishing when it conflicted with company interests. In addition to blasting tribal sites to make way for fish wheels, the company tried to drive away Native competitors such as Sam Williams, an enrolled Yakama who operated a scow from a moorage on company land. In the resulting lawsuit, U.S. ex. rel. Sam Williams v. Seufert Brothers (1919), company attorneys tried to establish that the Yakama Nation had no fishing rights south of the Columbia River. Seufert Brothers lost the case but ultimately succeeded in forcing Williams to work for them.

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After Oregon outlawed fish wheels in 1926, followed by Washington in 1934, the company relied more heavily on Native fishers to supply the canneries. Seufert Brothers sold supplies and extended credit, provided scrap lumber for scaffolding, and allowed Indians to camp on company land. In 1930, the company began building aerial cableways to provide easier access to the islands at Celilo Falls. Indians who used the cables had to sell their catch to Seufert Brothers, however, and they occasionally complained about low prices. Even so, this economic relationship gave the company a vested interest in preserving the fishery, and Seufert Brothers was one of the few non-Indian organizations to protest construction of The Dalles Dam. Having lost that fight, the company shut down in 1954.


Oregon Encyclopedia: Seufert Brothers Canneryhttps://oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/seufert_brothers_cannery

Seufert Cannery Foundation on the Ledge, Just above the ravine...


Suefert Brothers CanneryThe Dalles, OregonPhoto by A. F Litt, February 27, 2020

These foundations in the area, below, are apparently not part of the main building...

"A very unusual stone building. It looks like it may have been a salmon-drying place."


Photo by Kirk J. PoolePosted July 26, 2020Past and Present Views Along the Columbia River Highwayhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/483015922488601/permalink/765633544226836

"The stone building is 135' long and right next to The Dalles Dam Visitor Center and next to Seufert County Park."


Kirk J. Poole, July 27, 2020https://www.facebook.com/groups/483015922488601/permalink/765817737541750

"Indian salmon-drying stone building?"


Photo by Kirk J. PoolePosted July 26, 2020Past and Present Views Along the Columbia River Highwayhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/483015922488601/permalink/765633544226836

Links

Oregon Encyclopedia: Seufert Brothers Cannery

https://oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/seufert_brothers_cannery

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