Pasco’s Past, Preserved One Story at a Time
Museo Histórico del Condado de Franklin
Housed in a restored 1911 Carnegie Library, the Franklin County Historical Museum brings the story of Pasco’s wartime transformation to life; with a focus on migration, labor, and community resilience.
Exploring Pasco’s Role on the WWII Home Front
During World War II, Pasco experienced a dramatic population boom as workers arrived to support the Hanford Site and related military efforts. The museum’s exhibits chronicle this influx, especially the stories of Black laborers who were recruited for wartime work but faced segregated housing and services upon arrival.
Photographs, oral histories, and documents shed light on both opportunity and exclusion. East Pasco, in particular, became a cultural and economic center for Black residents building lives in the face of systemic discrimination.
By highlighting these layered histories, the museum expands the narrative beyond science and infrastructure to include the communities shaped by the war effort; people whose labor powered the Manhattan Project even when their names were left out of official accounts.