News Gallery 2: Hermiston in the Early 1940s Northeast Oregon Now - Monday, July 15, 2013 0 2191 Share on Facebook Tweet on Twitter Construction workers are seen here in front of an igloo under construction at the Umatilla Army Depot. The Library of Congress has dozens of photos taken by photographer Russell Lee during the depot's construction in the early 1940s. PHOTOS COURESY OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Housing was scarce in the early 1940s. Tertle Town, where Victory Square Park is now, was home to temporary housing for depot workers. Not everyone who came to work in Hermiston had housing to live in. Russell Lee took this photograph of a depot worker who slept in his car. Cabin court in Hermiston was built in two weeks for workers at the depot. Each unit of one room rented for eight dollars per week. Some of the more industrious men took it upon themselves to build their own homes. Here a depot worker nears completion of his home. In other instances, existing buildings were used for housing. Here a depot construction worker is shown in a converted wood shed used as shelter. “All the modern amenities.” Here a depot worker installs plumbing in his house. In many instances, however, bathrooms were not included. Gallery 3 [spacer size=”15″]