John Darling: A love letter to Oregon

John Darling teaching high school in 1967.
April 11, 2022

‘I was not escaping urban life or California when I found Oregon’

By John Darling

Without getting too sentimental about it, I’d like to confess my love for Oregon and say that when I fell in love with her (I think Oregon’s a she), I had little idea she even existed and no idea how good she was. And I had no idea I could love a place as if she were a living being.

I was not escaping urban life or California when I found Oregon. They just sent me here for a job. That’s what I thought I needed right after college. They said it was in the capital, which was named Salem. I’ll take it, I said.

John Darling in 1999

It was the start of the rainy season, in October 1967. It was like she wanted me to see her at her worst first. On the wall of the office of my job in the capitol building was a huge state highway map which mesmerized me with its half-dozen long highways dotted with these towns and rivers with amazing names I immediately loved to pronounce — Bend, Tillamook, Cascade, Eugene, Ashland, Owyhee, Willamette, Rogue, LaGrande.

Early on, Don, my boss and reporting partner at UPI wire service, told me that Oregon was kind of different. What was going on here, he said, was that Oregon was the type of place which had, many decades ago, invented the presidential primary and the initiative petition process and also made the ocean beaches public in perpetuity.

Coming up soon, he explained, was a legislative battle called the “bottle bill,” which would put a nickel deposit on pop containers so people would stop throwing them on roadsides. And there was going to be another battle to ban billboards on highways. And the governor, Tom McCall, was a Republican who had set out to clean up the pollution in the Willamette River and was succeeding. He became most remembered for daring to say, “Come visit, but don’t stay.”

Oregon’s two senators, Morse and Hatfield, a Democrat and a Republican, both opposed the Vietnam War and were practically alone at the time in doing it.

So. It was a place where people try to do the right thing. And they’re free to speak up. They have the courage to speak up.

Don threw me into the churning maw of the Ways and Means Committee, which is where they cut budgets and speak a dark, Byzantine language only the players understand. The chairman, Lyn Newbry of Talent, took pity on this extremely young man (me), who couldn’t possibly know what they were talking about. He introduced himself, then introduced me to the whole committee.

“You just take lots of notes,” he confided, “then come up and ask us what the hell we’re talking about and we’ll explain it all for you.” Which they did. He showed me his meat-cleaver tie tack and said all the members were wearing them. It was a joke, because agency heads always asked that they cut budgets with a scalpel, not a cleaver.

So. They were all nice people. Don said they all held actual jobs back home — farmers, teachers, lawyers — and they came here to the capitol only five or six months every two years to legislate and none of them were power-hungry or dishonest. They wouldn’t dare be dishonest. Everyone would know about it. Oregon just didn’t work that way. These were the descendants of the Oregon Trail pioneers. They had Midwest roots and so possessed that groundedness, good will and plain talk of farmers.

Then Don took me skiing and, from the top of the lift, I could see the sweep of the Cascade Range from Mount Hood down to Sisters. The peaks were stunning and rapturous and wild. And the air blowing up here was thin and dizzying in its purity. Three-Fingered Jack and Mount Washington snaked crazily and beautifully toward their summits. They were all volcanoes, Don said. What you are looking at is places where lava built up and blew out and kind of got frozen in mid-explosion.

This was all just too good. How come no one knows about this? No one ever says, “gee, I really have to move to Oregon.”

“It’s the rain,” Don said. “We have that as a bar to people who would love her just for her beauty.”

Oregon, he explained, was kind of laid out in four bands. Left to right, you have the coast, then the western valleys along I-5, which is what most people think of as Oregon (lots of firs and hills), then the mountains, then the two-thirds of Oregon which is desert, a fact which almost no one outside Oregon knows. Four beautiful worlds in one. I couldn’t believe my luck. And it held only 2 million people, or 1 percent of the U.S. population. It was a little square, but it was so darn nice.

And then — I remember the moment it happened, when I knew she had got me, that I would never leave her. Don said, “Let’s have dinner in Bend,” and, along the way, we drove through these high desert groves of juniper and sage with the Sisters perched roseate in the gathering dusk.

“I just can’t believe all this,” I said. Don just smiled. He knew he was creating an Oregonian. “Yeah, it’s pretty nice,” he offered, in a typically understated way of old Oregonians.

That was all then. “Then” lasted into the early ’80s.

Oregon’s still a fabulous place, but I got to experience her childhood’s end. “Now” happened when people started coming here to get away from something. They must have known that, by not solving the problems of where they came from, that they would only bring those problems here, and so were only buying themselves maybe a generation of time. Then their children would solve the problems.

They came here in large numbers, adding a million people and creating a big demand on housing, which went from about $10,000 then to about 20 or 30 times that now. Which is one of the problems they were getting away from. It used to be cheap to live in Paradise. Now it’s a piece of work.

It’s ironic. The things Oregonians had fought for and held — simplicity, natural beauty, availability of resources, honesty, community and just plain space — now became the lures for a nation which would flock to grasp them and, in grasping them, would find them slipping like water out of a fist.

John Darling lived in Ashland until he died at age 77 in January 2021. A U.S. Marine Corps journalist, he went on to write for the Oregonian, Mail Tribune, Daily Tidings, and United Press International, among others, along with stints as a news anchor at KOBI, executive assistant to the Oregon Senate President and press secretary of campaigns for Oregon governor and U.S. Senate. Ashland.news is, with permission, publishing monthly excerpts from his collection “The Divine Addiction: Essays Out of Oregon.”

Picture of Bert Etling

Bert Etling

Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland.news. Email him at [email protected].

Related Posts...

John Darling: The mystery of the journeyless journey

John Darling: The labyrinth affirms this right off by taking you straightaway nearly to the center, the goal, then diverts you away to these winding, Byzantine switchbacks to nowhere, which serve the purpose of frustrating the mind and ego and all its sense of right-wrong, good-bad, success-failure — and it’s oh-so-dear need for control.

Read More »

Our Sponsors

ScienceWorks Hands-on Museum Subterranean Science In the Dark Ashland Oregon
Camelot Theatre Hansel and Gretel Talent Oregon
Siskiyou Woodcraft Guild Harvest Show of fine woodworking OSF Hay-Patton Rehearsal Center across from Ashland Springs Hotel Ashland Oregon

Latest posts

Obituary: Janet Ligon

Obituary: It is with heavy hearts that we announce the death of our beloved wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother, Janet Ligon, after a brief illness. She will be greatly missed by all those who loved her. Janet had lived in Ashland since 1970.

Read More >

Ask Strider: Canine news and crosswords

Ask Strider: A reader asks whatever happened to Woody the Puppy Intern? Strider has news! Woody has landed on all four paws with a new gig. And Steve, the Ashland.news crossword editor, has a new canine crossword up for solving. The excitement is pupable!

Read More >

Mini Crossword #01

A mini (5 x 5) crossword debuts this week; it’s a smaller, more approachable puzzle for beginning solvers; an early mid-week (Tuesday) appetizer for cruciverbalists before the full-size Friday crossword; bespoke & human-crafted, usually with two or more local seed words or names; free for everyone — thanks to your support of Ashland.news. Solve the mini in your browser or download and print. More info about minis: FAQ: Mini. Next Friday’s crossword: Yule Be Puzzled #01.

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Conscious Design Build Ashland Oregon
Ashland Food Project Building Community Ashland Oregon
Siskiyou School's Winter Faire Festival and Holiday Market Ashland Oregon
Ashland Community Composting Ashland Oregon
Ashland Climate Collaborative Sreets for Everyone Ashland Oregon

Explore More...

The Oregon Legislature is meeting this week to consider some major cuts to current spending levels as a large revenue deficit looms. That’s because the state’s tax code automatically replicates new federal tax cuts, including ones passed by Congressional Republicans this summer that will reduce state revenue
Michael O'Looney: Trump and the Texas Legislature are responsible for a partisan power grab that has unleashed bitterness and partisan vindictiveness, all in an effort to subvert an electoral system for partisan ends.
Councilor Bob Kaplan: While the cost of delivering kilowatt-hours to our homes has risen, Ashland Electric has been able to hold our rates steady with just one increase of 5.1% in 2021. I’m sorry to say we’re due for an increase, but fortunately it’s not likely to match recent increases elsewhere.
A mini (5 x 5) crossword debuts this week; it's a smaller, more approachable puzzle for beginning solvers; an early mid-week (Tuesday) appetizer for cruciverbalists before the full-size Friday crossword; bespoke & human-crafted, usually with two or more local seed words or names; free for everyone -- thanks to your support of Ashland.news. Solve the mini in your browser or download and print. More info about minis: FAQ: Mini. Next Friday's crossword: Yule Be Puzzled #01.
An estimate for the cost to abate asbestos found in the shuttered Lincoln School recently should be available as early as sometime this week, according to Steve Mitzel, operations director for Ashland School District. The cost to remove asbestos would be separate from the as yet-unknown cost for structural repair.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)