
| 1900-1901 | Founding meetings and incorporation in Portland as a "city association." |
| 1900-1904 | Rented rooms at MacClay building for classes, meetings, and dormitory purposes. Opened lunchroom at Wortman & Olds Department store for outreach to female clerks. Opened school of Domestic Science and developed job placement service. |
| 1905-1906 | Built a "Headquarters" at the Lewis & Clark Exposition. Events and recruitment throughout the Fair, exclusive for native-born white Christian women. Funds generated went toward a new buiding project in downtown Portland. |
| 1908 | After joint fundraising with the YMCA of Portland, YWCA lays cornerstone for building at Taylor and Broadway that includes pool. Stays clear of movement for protective labor legislation in Salem and among unionized workers which is upheld by Supreme Court in Muller v. Oregon. |
| 1912 | Suffrage for women citizens in Oregon passed by state legislature. |
| 1918 | Supports federally-funded war work through the "War Camp Community Service" program, especially housing for women war industries workers through a local "rooms registry" service. Property bequeathed to YWCA in Gearheart, Oregon, used for summer camp. "Girl Reserves" instituted, a patriotic, service-oriented club program for school-aged girls. |
| 1919 | African American women organize to meet needs of black women and girls through the YWCA. With support of Mrs. E.S. Collins, a temporary structure opens in Northeast to begin programming. Mrs. Caroline Kamm donates funds for construction of downtown residence for white working women and "Kamm Apartments" opens. Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution gives women citizens full suffrage rights. |
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| 1920s | "Girl Reserves" flourishing in Portland, annually enrolling around up to 2,000 members. Clubs usually organized within individual public schools. Membership reflects segregated housing in the city, with separate clubs for African American, Japanese, Chinese, and native-born/foreign-born white girls. |
| 1926 | Under leadership of local African American women, new Williams Avenue Branch opened at 704 Tillamook, serving women and girls in Northeast Portland. |
| 1930s | Discussions with Portland YMCA regarding merger due to Depression-era economic conditions. Proposal rejected. Camping expands to Rock Creek in summers. |
| 1937 | St. John's Branch opened in North Portland. Camp Westwind purchased in Otis, Oregon. |
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| 1942-46 | YWCA joins "United Service Organization" (USO) along with the YMCA Red Cross. Under pressure to maintain Jim Crow in Portland, Williams Avenue Branch turned over the USO for the use of African American soldiers. Programming for African American women and girls moves into downtown building and into the homes of neighborhood women in Northeast. Japanese Americans interned; YWCA submits one of the few letters of protest to the Governor of Oregon but fails to resist the order. |
| 1947-59 | Portland's Williams Avenue Branch begins "interracial" programming. |
| 1948 | "Veleda Club" for Japanese American women organized |
| 1949 | Girl Reserves changed to "Y-Teens" |
| 1946-59 | YWCA Board of Directors undertakes major capital campaign to build a new building at Tenth and Main streets in downtown Portland. Downtown's programming for employed women falls off in favor of reaching married women moving to suburbs. |
| 1959 | Building at Tenth and Main opened. |
| 1959 | Williams Avenue Branch building closed and sold. |
| 1960s | Japanese American women participate in YWCA Board of Directors. Residence program in new building flourishing. |
| 1970 | "Young Women Committed to Action"--youthful group of activist-minded members--make themselves heard and felt in the organization locally and nationally. |
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| 1970s | In Portland, YWCA opens a Women's Resource Center, a job bank, and "TOPS" program assisting women in transition out of prison. |
| 1970s | YWCA programming in Northeast restarted in Mallory Avenue Christian Church |
| 1978 | YWCA Northeast Center opened at 5630 NE MLK Boulevard. |
| 1980s | Health and Fitness programs at Downtown flourishing, especially programs focused on seniors and people with disabilities. Better visibility for lesbian women through antihomophobia campaign begun in 1985 by National. |
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| 1990s | Plans adopted for a new complex of buildings around the Tenth and Main site, centered on supportive housing and the special needs of elderly and youth in downtown Portland. |
| 2000 | One Million Dollar Grant from Microsoft for redevelopment plan. |
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