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Dr. John D. Marshall Building |
In 1952, Dr. John D. Marshall, one of Portland’s few Black
doctors, erected a modest, one-story, flat-roofed building in the heart of
Albina. Given that Blacks could not be
treated at the time at nearby Emanuel Hospital, Dr. Marshall’s clinic quickly
became a busy medical hub for Albina’s heavily Black community.
Dr. Marshall practiced at the N. Williams building until
1970. During that time, he also leased
space to o a Black-owned pharmacy and dental clinic. Then,
from 1970 to 1979, the Dr. John D. Marshall Building housed to medical
facilities run by the supposedly “radical” Black Panther Party, the Fred
Hampton Free Health Clinic and the Malcolm X Peoples’ Dental Clinic.
While the Black Panthers operated medical clinics in several
other cities, Portland was the Panther’s only dental clinic, according to
research in a National Register of Historic Places nomination. The Portland Historic Landmarks Commission
has recommended the nomination for state and national consideration.
“It was the hub of Black medical care. Nothing else like it existed,” said Caity
Ewers, an architectural historian who helped write the National Register nomination. The nomination is based on the building's significant involvement in Portland's ethnic heritage and Black healthcare and medicine.
Besides its medical tenants, the building also housed from
1959 to 1969 the law office of Aaron Brown, a lawyer who was the first Black
appointed to the Multnomah County bench in 1969. Judge Brown had a lengthy judicial career
that was well-recognized for his personable style in handling civil cases and
misdemeanor crimes.
The Dr. John D. Marshall Building is owned today by Bernie
Foster, publisher of The Skanner newspaper.
Foster ran his newspaper from the building for 10 years, starting in
1980. Even then, he said, “People would
come in and say, ‘Is the doctor in’?”
Ewers said one element of the building’s historical
significance was Dr. Marshall’s ability to finance its construction in an era
when racial discrimination was highly common among Portland’s lending
institutions. He was one of fewer than
five Black physicians in Portland at the time.
The National Register nomination reflects a trend in the
Portland Bureau of Planning and Sustainability to place new emphasis on
historic places involving Portland’s minority communities. “Even though we have only one building today,
we have others in the pipeline,” Brandon Spencer-Hartle, the city’s historic
resources manager, told the Landmarks Commission. The bureau’s efforts are supported by
consulting and research by Kimberly Moreland, who also is a Landmarks
Commission member. She did not
participate in the commission’s deliberations favoring the nomination.
The Marshall Building continues its connection with the
Black community today as the home of the Terry Family Funeral Home, a
Black-owned firm. The building has
undergone a few significant changes over the years, but its basic shape and Roman
bricks retain the building’s original character.
The National Register nomination will be considered next
month by the Oregon State Advisory Committee for Historic Preservation. The
final step after that would be consideration by the National Park Service,
which administers the federal National Register program.
-----Fred Leeson
Join Building on History’s email list by writing “add me” to
fredleeson@hotmail.com
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