Winter 2008 - Vashon-Maury Island Heritage Association
Transcription
Winter 2008 - Vashon-Maury Island Heritage Association
VASHON-MAURY ISLAND HERITAGE ASSOCIATION DEDICATED TO THE PRESERVATION OF VASHON HISTORY VOLUME 23 ISSUE 1 Winter 2008 A LITTLE HISTORY ON DOCKTON PARK Part II By Richard Warren Dockton Park swimming program during 1946 – 1951. The years I was at Dockton Park, there was a custodian named Berger Gord. On cold days Berger would keep a fire going in the two wood stoves in the cook shack, so the kids and the instructors could thaw out; that felt good! I am sure some of our students remember it well. Swimming lessons were divided into several skill levels: Beginners, Advanced Beginners (those who could dog paddle), Intermediate and Advanced and Life Saving, usually one class per session. There were four weeks per sessions. The first two classes learned to swim from the beach, which was a mix of sand and mud, the water was pretty murky. At the start of each season, we would line everyone up, march them down the beach at low tide and pick up the rocks with barnacles and toss them out of the lesson area. Imagine, having to reach down to the mud and put your face in that cold murky water! Somehow they all made it. Now and then I had to do it to demonstrate; only once per session, if possible. We did it rain or shine, they were great troopers. After learning to put their faces in the water, mud-crawl, float and finally to dogpaddle the students were ready for the final exam; out to the dock, jump off the float and swim to the ladder. What a day! They were always eager to reach this level so they could become intermediates. Some were so eager, they faked dogpaddling or talked me into letting them try. Off the float they would go without hesitation only to flounder and I would have to pass them the pole or jump in and take them to the ladder where they would immediately ask to do it again! Continued on Page 3 PAST REMEMBERED III Mary Jo Barrentine and Barbara Steen have completed the project—PAST REMEMBERED III. It is now in the final stages of being printed and bound. th Save the date, April 13 for the book selling and a brief memorial, honoring two wonderful ladies, Garland Norin and Blanche Caffiere, who started the plans for the book. The time will be at 2:00 pm and held in the Gordon Building, which is located directly behind the Museum on 10105 SW Bank Rd. Contact Either Mary Jo or Barbara, if you wish to pre-order the book. Until all costs are in, the price of the book is yet undetermined. Inside this issue: Looking Back 2 Officers and Board of Trustees 2 Betty MacDonald ~ Happy 100 th Birthday 3 Driftin’ 5 Memorials & New Members 5 Request Wanted 6 Membership Form 6 Brick Order Form 7 DUES FOR 2008 Thank you to those who responded to the reminder letter . For those who haven’t done so yet. PLEASE, WE DO NOT WANT TO LOSE YOU AS A MEMBER! VASHON-MAURY ISLAND HERITAGE ASSOCIATION Page 2 INTERESTED IN VOLUNTEERING? CALL TODAY! LOOKING BACK: 125 Years Ago—Vashon Island’s first Post Office opens on April 12, 1883. Samuel C. Herriott is the first postmaster. History Link I00 Years Ago—If Pierce and King County Commissioners grant the franchises, within eight months electric cars will be in operation on Vashon Island. Practically all of the right-of-way has been secured and the residents have offered to buy $50,000 worth of stock. Promoters expect to make the Vashon route a competitor of the present boat and electric railway lines between Seattle and Tacoma. The water route is 29 miles, the interurban is 39 miles and the Northern Pacific is 42 miles. The Vashon route is expected to be about 24 miles. Tacoma News Tribune 75 Years Ago—The Island was visited by the most destructive fire in its history, said the April 20, 1933 News-Record. “About half of Vashon was destroyed and half of the business concerns left without a place to carry on.” The fire started on the east side of the street in a hotel in the Martin Building, The blaze spread southward, then jumping the street to the England & Peterson Feed store; continuing north it consumed half the block before it was contained. Vashon Maury Island Beachcomber BOARD MEETING TIME CHANGE FOR 2008 The December 4th Board Meeting confirmed that the 2008 Board Meetings will be held on the first Tuesday of every month at 7:00 pm. OFFICERS PRESIDENT: Bob Fetterley Vice President: Laurie Tucker Treasurer: Steve church VASHON-MAURY ISLAND Recording Secretary: Carolyn smith jones HERITAGE ASSOCIATION Correspondence Secretary: Barbara steen Newsletter Editor: Barbara cooper BOARD OF TRUSTEES Frank Davis Bill Palmer Barbara Steen Gene sherman Tom Sherman Charlie hanson Reed Fitzpatrick Bruce Haulman Rebecca wittman Yvonne Kuperberg PO BOX 723, VASHON, WA 98070 206-463-7808 www.vashonheritage.org Email: [email protected] Winter 2008 Page 3 The kids invented a new stroke called the “Quartermaster Crawl” where you picked up seaweed and threw it aside with each stroke. We once took the group to Seattle to race the Green Lake Mile. Everyone had fun, but also caught the infamous Green Lake itch. For the final exam we took the students to the Coleman Pool in West Seattle, as it had heated salt water and lights. What a luxury after the water at Dockton Park. Advanced Class on the float at Dockton Park ~ 1946-1951 Photo from Richard Warren Continued from Page 1 History of Dockton Park Part II In 1952, I had to report to Ft Lewis for ROTC summer camp, so I turned my wonderful job over to Dave and said goodbye to a wonderful way of life and the greatest job ever. Betty MacDonald Happy 100th Birthday By Rebecca Wittman Once they passed the float test they were Advance Beginners. The next step, Intermediate, where they learned the basic swim strokes, how to tread water and how to dive standing up. The more advanced swimmers worked on what was then known as the “Australian Crawl”, now called “Freestyle”. Each year on the Labor Day weekend we put on our version of the “Aqua Follies”, like the one at Green Lake. We had precision swimming, ballet, races, comic events and I would stand on the paddle board and jump rope and stand on my head. We drew a crowd of family and friends. It was a great way to end the season. The Life saving students, normally older; had a great time. We followed the Red Cross requirements to the letter. Unfortunately, we taught the then current form of artificial respiration using applied back pressure. Think, if I could have shown the girls the present standard: mouth-tomouth!! We also tried to develop some competitive swimming and had frequent races off the float. We even organized the “Quartermaster Harbor Mile”, like the Green Lake Mile. The course was from Dockton Park to the Burton Baptist Assembly Grounds (now Camp Burton). We had a row boat with each swimmer and everyone made it across and were rowed back, shivering! As Stratford-on-Avon had William Shakespeare and Key West had Ernest Hemingway, so Vashon Island had Betty MacDonald. Initially known for her entertaining and hilarious The Egg and I, a recollection of her earlier life as a chicken farmer’s wife in Chimicum, Washington on the Olympic Peninsula, MacDonald also preserved indelibly the textures and memory prints of life on our unique island in her lush Vashonera autobiography, Onions in the Stew. This down-to-earth, charmingly talented writer who called Vashon home for 14 years would have celebrated her 100th birthday March 29th 2008, and even though she lost her battle with cancer over fifty years ago, the Vashon community along with her adoring readers worldwide will be taking up the celebration in her memory. On March 16th, the Vashon Island birthday celebration will take the form of collaboration between Vashon Heritage Museum and the Vashon Library. The schedule includes storytelling from the Mrs. Piggle Wiggle books, performed by Jennifer Carroll at the Museum; special Betty MacDonald exhibits at both the Museum and Library; a “Betty MacDonald Slept Here” discussion about the homes in which the author lived, guided by Paula Becker who is a staff historian for historylink.org, the online encyclopedia of Washington; and film reminiscences about the MacDonald’s, featuring family and friends. Anne Elizabeth Campbell Bard MacDonald first settled on Vashon with her family in 1942, at the age of 34, variously Continued on Page 4 Page 4 VASHON-MAURY ISLAND HERITAGE ASSOCIATION Continued from Page 3 Betty MacDonald ~ Happy 100th Birthday describing the island in her writing as a place that “looks like a stout gentleman taking a Sunday nap under a wooly dark green afghan… (that) reminds me of a nice girl who doesn’t know how to dress… plethoric with views… (where) everything grows with insane vigor.” Once she and her husband Donald MacDonald and her daughters (from her first marriage) Anne and Joan had nestled into their Dolphin Point home (which at the time did not enjoy the luxury of a road) the muse began to stir. In1945 her first book, The Egg and I, which had found its first readers as a serial in the pages of Atlantic Monthly, had rocketed to worldwide fame selling over a million copies in less than a year. The Egg and I was shortly thereafter adapted for film, starring Claudette Colbert and Fred MacMurray, and the success of the film spun off the zany Ma & Pa Kettle films based on those characters in the original story. This all firmly launched MacDonald’s writing career, one that included another successful franchise, the equally beloved Mrs. Piggle Wiggle books, and ultimately four more autobiographical works, along with a children’s story modeled on her two daughters, entitled Nancy and Plum. With few exceptions, critics hailed enthusiastically MacDonald’s writing, for its intelligent wit, innocent mischief and entertaining introspection. As an island resident, MacDonald’s reminiscences captured and authenticated for posterity a time that, in the reading now, seems simpler yet richer than our modern age, a way of life formed within a natural human scale that has begun to feel elusive to many of today’s islanders. An island brimming with lush still-cultivated farmland, beaches rife with the sea’s delicious bounty, evergreens measured in circumference in dimensions rarely findable today – these were the treasures Betty MacDonald saw and celebrated in her generous writing about our place. The home the MacDonald’s paid $7000 for (furnished!) in 1942 changed hands in 2007, selling for nearly $1.5million dollars. It’s approvingly rumored that a writer bought it. The beautiful gambrel roofed barn the MacDonalds built after the success of The Egg and I is now a bed and breakfast, providing a “footsteps” link for travelers looking for the quintessential Betty MacDonald experience. But the smells and feels of the island life she made famous will have to be found in her books because many of those sensory thrills and island institutions are but distant memory. It’s fitting to consider that Betty’s maiden name was Bard. Though rhyming couplets were not her mode, Betty MacDonald could fairly be crowned the Bard of Vashon. Translated into more than 30 languages and cherished by devotees of all ages, her literary works live on and make any visit to Vashon Island a meaningful pilgrimage for generation after generation of her readers. Happy Birthday, Betty. Thank you for all the beautiful gifts you’ve given US! Winter 2008 Memorials Reported by Barbara Steen IN MEMORY OF Lorraine Kimmel Dick Nortness By: Sue Knight Ladd & Sun Bacchus John VanDevanter By: Clayton & Elsa Mae Williams Cashmere Chamber of Commerce Clayton Williams By: Beachcomber February 17, 1977 Beachcomber, May 25, 1977 Bonnie Shride By: Driftin’ George Endlich whose friends have been known to note that he has penchant for practical jokes, wants to sell the Island dehydrated water for the summer season if our supplies run short. It comes in a quart can, easily storable for summer, lightweight and easy to handle, concentrated and naturally processed. Just mix with a gallon of water to reconstitute it. Makes one gallon. Joe Milligan By: Page 5 Max & Barbara Steen Barry & Nancy Graham Gordy & Peggy Steen Barbara Perkins & Family Robert & Dorothy Jacobson William C. Palmer WELCOME NEW MEMBERS Rebecca Wittman Patron Zubine Mary Goldman Individual Mary Alice Sanguinitti Individual Jodi Abbott Senior Bert Hutchinson Senior Kelly Robinson Senior Anita Halstead Senior Jane Rosen Senior Bob Norin Life Kevin Britz Life Nick & Anna Martinsen Family Looking back, George McCormick recalled how the Alibi restaurant really got started. He’d opened Vashon Hardware about six years before, but because he lived some distance from the store he commonly took meals in a little coffee shop in town. One day he wanted more than the “two little rolls” offered with the soup he’d ordered. But the woman running the place said that’s all he could get. “To hell with you,” he recalls saying, “I’ll start my own restaurant .” He lined up Elmer Harmeling (“he was a good cook, everybody liked him, and he’d lost almost everything in the Depression”) and opened a restaurant. There’s a lesson there, I think, for us all. Elmer’d turn over If my Dad, Elmer Harmeling, could read the article about how the Alibi Restaurant got started he would turn over in his grave. The Alibi got started when George McCormick decided he was not getting enough to eat at the local eatery. My Dad at that time, during the early thirties, had lost everything except an old model A truck and had nothing to do. So, George asked Dad if he would be interested in starting a lunch counter business. George borrowed the money and became a silent partner. The old building was just north of its present location. It was used as a warehouse and feed store. Anyway, the front of the building became the lunch counter. My mother and Mrs. McCormick would occasionally cook a special dish for the lunch trade. It just naturally evolved into a restaurant. For the name, my Dad listened to many suggestions and finally opened the dictionary one night and started with the A’s. When he came to alibi the word seemed to fit, so that was it! Continued on page 6 VASHON-MAURY ISLAND HERITAGE ASSOCIATION Page 6 Elmer’d turn over Tentative Events for 2008 Continued from page 5 I am unable to come up with the opening date. I was just a couple years out of High School and had other things on my mind. · Betty MacDonald‘s100th Birthday-March 16th Vashon Celebration and March 26th BBC Radio Documentary aired that week George McCormick cannot remember the date. My sister, Joyce Green and my brother-in-law, Joe, who remembers most everything, even the day he earned his first nickel, cannot remember for sure. Collectively we put the opening during the spring of 1936. · April 13th—Release of Past Remembered III · May 17th & 18th Norman Edson Exhibit and My Dad eventually bought out George and the building. He sold to Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smyth in September, 1943. Dick Harmeling - Beachcomber, May 25, 1977 Presentation at VMIHM · July 2nd and 3rd Tall Ships visiting Tacoma’s Waterfront for the 4th. Ships will gather in Quartermaster Harbor a day or two before. · July—Strawberry Festival · August—Virginia V Annual Cruise Request Wanted: What would you like to see in your newsletter? Do you have a request for an article and/or pictures, please let us know. This is your newsletter—”A Link to the Past for You and Your Family”. Also, If you have an interesting short story or pictures you would like to share; please send to the address (Email or PO Box) listed on page two. Thanks for your help! MEMBERSHIP FORM Annual Membership Dues* Return to: VASHONMAURY ISLAND HERITAGE ASSOCIATION PO BOX 723 VASHON, WA 98070 NAME: Seniors and Students $15.00 Individual $20.00 Family $50.00 Supporting $75.00 Patron $100.00 Life* $500.00 Benefactor* ADDRESS: $1,000.00+ *Life and Benefactor Memberships are a one time only, others are paid annually, January thru December. CITY: STATE: ZIP: paid members are entitled to a 10% discount in our gift shop and discounted rates for special occasions. Email: Page 7 Winter 2008 HISTORY BRICKS PRESERVE YOUR FAMILY’S HERITAGE! Yes, I want to help support our HERITAGE MUSEUM, My order is: □ ONE HISTORY BRICK I HAVE ENCLOSED A CHECK FOR $60.00 □ TWO HISTORY BRICKS I HAVE ENCLOSED A CHECK FOR $120.00 □ THREE HISTORY BRICKS I HAVE ENCLOSED A CHECK FOR $150.00 Please use additional forms if ordering more than three bricks. Three or more bricks are priced at $50.00 each. Bricks previously purchased apply to your total. Each Brick may have up to three (3) lines with no more than 14 characters/spaces per line. INSCRIPTION FOR BRICK # 1: INSCRIPTION FOR BRICK # 2: INSCRIPTION FOR BRICK # 3: Name: Address: State: City: Phone ( ) Zip: Email: Return Service Requested PERMIT NO. 120 VASHON, WA VASHON, WA 98070 US POSTAGE PAID PO BOX 723 BULK RATE VASHONMAURY ISLAND HERITAGE ASSOCIATION Coming in April 2008 “Past Remembered III” Museum Hours Wednesdays: 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm Saturdays: 10:00 am to 1:00 pm www.vashonheritage.org Email: [email protected]
Similar documents
Spring 2010 - Vashon-Maury Island Heritage Association
Quartermaster Harbor indent the south end of Vashon Island to a depth of about five miles. Lined with the high wooded banks on either side and towering over the purple rand of mountains to the east...
More informationFall 2010 - Vashon-Maury Island Heritage Association
the coons and the lazy damp days of a decade ago.
More information