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Les AuCoin Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS-147

Scope and Contents

The Les AuCoin Papers document AuCoin’s 22-year career in public office, including his time in the Oregon House of Representatives (1971-1975) and the US House of Representatives (1975-1993). The bulk of these materials were produced by AuCoin and his office during his time as a Representative, with a small number of materials produced before and after his legislative career. The collection is organized into seven series and includes speeches, campaign materials, legislative files, media releases, press clippings, and audiovisual materials. A personal addition to the collection was donated in 2020 and includes mementos from AuCoin’s time in office as well as materials related to his work after 1993, including his time teaching at Southern Oregon University and development of his 2019 memoir.

The collection provides a detailed overview of AuCoin’s time in office and his work on a variety of political issues that remain significant, including abortion rights, tribal soverignty, the nuclear freeze movement, environmental protections, and gun control. From his seat on the House Appropriations Committee, AuCoin was also directly involved in a number of political issues of the 1980s, including international relations with China and the Soviet Union, the Iran-Contra Scandal, and the Spotted Owl Crisis of the Pacific Northwest.

Dates

  • Majority of material found within 1968-1993
  • 1942-2022

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research. Collection includes sound recordings and moving images on obsolete media to which access may be limited based on playback equipment limitations and preservation concerns. One folder (Box 69: Folder 5) is restricted from reproduction due to graphic content; please contact the Archivist with any questions.

Conditions Governing Use

The copyright status of materials in this collection varies. Works prepared by officers or employees of the United States Government as part of that person's official duties are in the public domain. Other materials, such as letters or other works created by third parties, may be the intellectual property of their creator(s) or heir(s) Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.) beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Works not in the public domain cannot be commercially exploited without permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.

Biographical / Historical

Walter Leslie “Les” AuCoin was born October 21, 1942 in Portland Oregon to Alice Audry Darrar and Francis Edgar AuCoin. In 1946, his mother moved Les and his younger brother Leland to Redmond, Oregon, where she supported the family on her own. AuCoin attended Redmond High School, where he joined the school newspaper and developed an interest in journalism. In 1960, he graduated from high school, the first man in his extended family to do so.

In the fall of 1960, AuCoin enrolled at Pacific University to study journalism and began working for the sports department at the Oregonian on the weekends. In 1961, he left Pacific University to enlist in the United States Army. For 3 years, he served as a public information specialist for the 2nd Infantry Division and the 10th Mountain Division, writing dispatches from his postings in California, New York, Kentucky, Georgia, and West Germany. In 1964, AuCoin was discharged from the Army and returned to Redmond, Oregon. That summer, he worked for the local newspaper, the Redmond Spokesman, and married Susan Swearingen. AuCoin returned to Pacific University in the fall, where he was hired as the director of the public information department while he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism. Before AuCoin graduated in 1969, he and his wife had two children: Stacy in 1965 and Kelly in 1967.

In 1968, Les and Sue AuCoin began volunteering for Eugene McCarthy’s presidential campaign, eventually becoming volunteer campaign managers for Washington County, Oregon. Even after McCarthy lost the election, the AuCoins continued to work in local politics, and in 1970, Les AuCoin declared candidacy for an open seat in the Oregon House of Representatives. Sue, who had previously worked as a page in the House, and helped introduce Les to incumbent members of the House. AuCoin hired Bob Crane, a fellow Pacific University alum, as his campaign manager. This partnership would last for AuCoin’s 22 years in office, and Crane would go on to be the chief of AuCoin’s congressional staff for 12 years.

AuCoin won the 1970 election and was reelected in 1972, serving a total of 4 years in the Oregon House. During his time in office, he focused on environmental policy, consumer protections, mass transit, and civil rights. In 1973, AuCoin was elected the House Majority Leader and chaired the committee on the Equal Rights Amendment.

After serving four years in the Oregon House, AuCoin decided to run for the US House of Representatives from Oregon’s 1st district. Representative Wendall Wyatt, the Republican who held the seat for the previous six years, retired and left the seat empty. In 1974, AuCoin won a five-way Democratic primary and ran against Republican Diarmiud O’Scannlain, the state public utility commissioner, in the general election. When AuCoin won the election with 56% of the vote, he became the state’s youngest ever congressman and first Democrat ever elected to Oregon’s 1st district. Nixon’s Watergate scandal had resulted in a backlash against the Republican party, and AuCoin was one of 49 newly elected House Democrats in 1974. The Republican Party assumed that they could win the seat back in the next election, but AuCoin was reelected another eight times. The seat has remained Democratic ever since.

As a new member of the House of Representatives, AuCoin served on the House Banking Committee and the Subcommittee on International Institutions. AuCoin was a leader in the effort to normalize trade relations between the US and the People’s Republic of China. When the two countries normalized relations in January 1979, AuCoin led the first trade delegation to China just one month later, traveling with a group of Oregon business leaders.

In 1981, AuCoin joined the House Appropriations Committee. While working on the Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, AuCoin worked on bills related to tribal sovereignty and reservations for the Confederated Tribes of Siletz and the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. AuCoin also championed both local and national environmental protections, including the Oregon Wilderness Act, the National Wild and Scenic Rivers, and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

From his position on the Defense Subcommittee, AuCoin worked to limit US spending on nuclear weapons, encouraging investment in conventional weapons instead. He traveled with House Speaker Jim Wright's 1987 congressional visit to the Soviet Union, where he advocated for bilateral arms control. In the 1980s, AuCoin was also a vocal critic of US involvement with Contras in Nicaragua, even traveling to Central America to investigate human rights abuses.

AuCoin was a member of the US House of Representatives for eighteen years, serving during the presidencies of Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush. Throughout his eighteen years in office, AuCoin was a vocal advocate for civil rights, environmental issues, and nuclear arms control.

When AuCoin left the House in 1992 to run for the Senate, he was 84th in House seniority, dean of the Oregon House delegation, a majority whip at large, and a veteran member of the House Appropriations Committee. He ran against Republican Senator Bob Packwood, who had held the office since 1969. Both the Democratic primary and the general election were expensive and contentious, and Packwood eventually won the election with 52% of the vote. Shortly after the election, the Washington Post published a year-long investigation about sexual assault allegations against Packwood. Further investigation revealed that the allegations were true, and in 1995, the Senate Ethics Committee voted to expel Packwood from the Senate.

After leaving Congress, AuCoin joined the faculty at Southern Oregon University in 1998 as a visiting professor of political science and business ethics. He taught until 2004, and he was later named to the inaugural board of trustees. He also served as vice chair of the board of trustees of Pacific University. AuCoin continued to be active in politics, campaigning in 2008 Barack Obama’s presidential run. He continues to write on national issues, and in 2019 published his memoir Catch and Release: An Oregon Life in Politics.

Extent

98.5 Linear Feet (190 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Walter Leslie “Les” AuCoin served two terms in the Oregon House of Representatives (1971-1975) and nine terms in the United States House of Representatives from Oregon’s 1st District (1975-1993). The Les AuCoin Papers document his 22 years in public office, and includes speeches, campaign materials, legislative files, media releases, press clippings, photographs, and audiovisual materials.

Arrangement

Because the collection was frequently moved and rearranged before arriving at Pacific University in 2019, it was impossible to maintain the original order of the materials. Instead, the collection has been arranged into seven series, with Series 3, 4, and 6 containing additional subseries.

Series 1: Speeches and Statements Series 2: Campaign Materials Series 3: Office Files Subseries I: Oregon House of Representatives Subseries II: US House of Representatives Series 4: Media Releases Subseries I: Press Releases Subseries II: Mailings Series 5: Press Clippings Series 6: A/V Materials Subseries I: Videocassettes Subseries II: Audio cassettes Subseries III: Reel to Reel Series 7: Personal Addition

The majority of the collection is arranged into chronological order, with a few exceptions. Series 3: Office Files, and Series 7: Personal Addition, are both arranged alphabetically by topic.

Processing Information

Shortly after AuCoin left office in 1993, his office donated 79 linear feet of documents, photographs, and audiovisual materials to the Oregon Historical Society (OHS). During the late 1990s, these materials were moved to Southern Oregon University, where they were partially processed before being returned to OHS in the early 2000s. In 2019, the collection was moved to Pacific University Archives, and between 2019 and 2022, AuCoin donated 2 linear feet of additional materials to the collection. In 2022, all the collection were processed by project archivist Caroline Kinsley.

Source

Title
Les AuCoin Papers
Status
Completed
Author
Caroline Kinsley
Date
2022
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Pacific University Archives Repository

Contact:
2043 College Way
Forest Grove OR 97116 United States