February 1997
Transcription
February 1997
'"'Pacific Nonhwest S H E LL CLT]B The Pacific Nonhwest Shell Club in 1960with its purwasestablished poseto promotethe study of molluscs,the hobby of shellcollecting, and the preservationof molluscan specres. VOLI.JME3T O SPECIALISSUE FEBRUARY1997 Profile of a Sheller: Frrl /^ I nomas \-,. Rice By Aretta McClure MEETINGS presenMeetingsfeatureeducational tations and are held on the third Sundayof eachmonth at the Lake City Christian Church, 1933NE 125th,Seattle,Washington(seeexceptionsbelow).Meetingsbeginat 2 pm, but many membersarrive shortly after1pm to talk, trade,and buy shells.Visitors arewelcome. Specialregularmeetingsare: May .. Of SeaandShoreMuseum August ShellAuaion December.........ChristmasParty OFFTCERS (1996-97) hesident Aretta McClure o 360-765-4A34 I Co-Wce-hesidma Helen Grosso 432-0480 ElsieMarshallt 206-363-3219 t) x Treasurer Ann Smileyo 360-887-3688 RecordingSecretary Amy Fortson o 206-324-3649 Corresponding Secretary ShariAlmasi o 206-323-6637 2306l2th AvenueEast, Seattle, \trA 98102 to Pleasesend dl correspondence the CorrespondingSecretary.All to correspondence andsubmissions TheDredgingsshould be mailedto: Roben Forsyth Box 37, 1700- 56th Street,Delta, BC, CanadaV4L 2N4 Phone/fax: 604-948-9965 [email protected] Ne' v Aoonrss! OctoberafternoonTom finthe (7 had arr:angedforme to in""dI terview him, I droveacrossthe Hood Canal Bridge in slashi''g rain and, a mile further nofth, slowedto accommodate the 25 M.P.H.sign at the entrance to Port Gamble. Notby, another sign reads: Sept.1853 Establisbed Historic Northuest Lumber Toam Autumn leaves,tattered bngues of flame, dattcedon wet branchesof trees tossedby a fresh wind. Once again, I felt transported back one hun&ed years or mor€ b a slower and quieter time. The town, too, seems transported from an early New England site. 'Wood-framed houses rise, beautifully proportioned and mellow, from spacious parls of green.Those in the cemetery sleepup on the hill. Tourisa had departed and I seemedto have the towrr to mlaelf. There was a choice of parkingplacesin front of the Gener:alStore,and when I turned offthe engine, I could hear tle rain falling. I tucked a writing tablet r:nder my jacketand madea dashfor the door. THEDREDGINGS . 1997 'smany of us shell enthusiasts koo*, from having been there chatdngwithhim, Tom'sofficeison the secondfloorof the oldPon Gamble GeneralStoreandis locatedat the baclcof the building behind his Shell Museum displays.It was there that we met to begin this interview. Tom wasworking at his computerbut immediatelystoppedandwith his usual gendecourt€symadesureI wascomfortable before we began. And, having begun with the customary question, "'Wherewerc you born?", I was brought up short when Tom replied, "Oh, about 150 feet fiom here." Tom wasborn at the old Port Gamble hospital. The interview immediately veeredinto reminiscence, becausemy father helped razethe old hospital which, beforeit was a hospital, had been t:he home of A.G. Ames who succeededCyrus \falker, the first manager of the mill. o rt ^o X o ( Abooe:The Manager'sFlouse becamePort Gamble Hospital where Tom was born. kft:Thomas C. Rice-probably beforemost of us knew him. - I7hether the sory is apocryphal or not, I do not koo*, but my father old me that when dipper shipssailed aroundthe Horn m pick up lumbeq they ofren carried as ballast bricks made in New England. This brick was used in the foundation of the home t"hatlater beca-e the hospital. As part payment for his labon in dismandingthe old building, myfather had beengivenloadsof thesebricks. Yearslater, I helped unearth hundredsof them fiom my parent'sfield wheretley had becomecoveredwith turf and wild and rangy blackberry bushes.I cleanedone thousandfive hr:ndredof them for the r,nrcfireplaces in our home in the San Juan Islandsand for the fireplacein our prcsenthomeon t.heToandosPeninsula. Though I had never seenit, I felt I knew that old hospital- intimat€ly. Tom's mother's grandparents cameto'WashingtonTerritory from EastMachias,Maine, the town fiorr which also came Pope and Talbot founden of the oldest continuall. operating lumber mill in Nortl America (sadly closed this year ( 7996andevennow in the process being nznd). Tom's great grand ther, Thomas Pierce,sailed arou Cape Horn in 1859on the sail vessel Toandq. It was a trip of months.In 1860,Mary Ellen Pie Thomas'swife, with tieir son, ( ton, followedherhusbandwest; sailed to the Isthmus of Pan, crcssedthelsthmusinacovered on, and then sailed to San Frar and up the coast ot Seabeck' i l I h lc th bc k1 Tf Du tior falli onI 'l eigf,t VOLUME3T O SPECIALISSUE Edith Pierce,on May 8, 1901,married Henry Cotter, a man who had cometo the regionfrom Birkenhead, England, and they in turn parented seven children, one of whom was Edith, who would become Tom's mother. Edith had a brother also named Thomas. He was killed in a tragic accident in the 1o-lg1 mill, and Tom was named for this uncle and hence only indirectly honored his great grandfather. Tom'spatemalgrandfathercame from Missouri and his paternal Abwe:Tom's first day of school.Below,right: Tom with a real Indian princess. Thomas had talren up logging. He wasconsideredtobe wealthy,having arrived on Hood Canal with $2,000! MaryEllen wasthesixth white woman in Seabeck,home to many Indian people who must have seemed strange to her since they still wore blankets and had feathers in their hair. The Pierceslater moved to the Duclcabushar€aaclossHood Canal from Seabeckwherethey bot'ght old Mr. Brinnon's 200 acre homestead. F{ere, with the help of o:ren which he shodhimself, Thomas continued loggog and sold tle logs to mills on the Canal, including Pope and Talbot which, in those early days, was known as tfie Puget Mill Company. Tho-as Pierce'sloggingcampon the Duckabushhadtle dubious distinction, when two workmen had a fdling out, of being the fint murder on Hood Canal. Thonas and Mary Ellen had eight children; one of them, Ma-ie grand-other was bron in Canada and raised in Minnesota. The two met in Bremerton.Both his grandfa thers, on his mother's and father's side, worked in the Port Gamble GeneralSorg and everlrcnein Tom s family, on both sides,until his generation,worked at one time for Pope and Tdbot. The fint shells Tom ever really sawwerein a curio cabinetin his matemal grandparent'shome, and tlis cabinetis now in his own home. Pope and Talbot had their own ships THE DREDGINGS . 1997 which put in at Port Gamble and were provisioned through the GeneralStore.Henry Cotter, Tom's mother's father, often received srotic gifts brought fror- far away placesby the ships' captains.Among thesewereshellsand evenan ostrich egg from Africa with designspainted on it. A memorablefamily acquisition came to them through one of the more colorful episodesof Pon C'amble history. A group of Russian Alaska Indians attacked the setlers at Port Gamble and the USSMassacbusettsarrived in their defense. 'When conciliation failed, the ship's hovritzer fired severalcattt'tonballs at the Indian encampment and tle Indians surrendered and returned nonh. Later,a local Indian, friendly to the town, found a ctnnon ball embedded in a cedar log he was sawing, and he brought it to Henry Cotter whosedaugh- maternal grandparents. Tom'spatemal grandmotherwas named Tillie, and he remembers helping her weedthe garden,gather eggs,and pick berries,all the while listening o 'Stella Dallas" and "One Man's Family" on the radio. It was with Tillie that he first started walking on tle beach.Shebelongedto a GardenClub and wo"ld g in search of driftwood for flower arrangements,and Tom would gatler shells. He had a particular penchantfor the small Littorina scutulataGould, 1849- the checleredperiwinklewhich werefound on rccks high in the intertidd zane. He would glue in geometricdesignson the botoms of empty greeting card boxes and attach his linorinas. This. Tom enplains, is his one claim o artistic fame. He attendedhigh school at North Kitsap in Poulsbo. T o m' s p a re n t s we re in t h e s c h o o l' s f irs t freshman class a n d T o m' s classwasthe lasto go dl t h e wa y through to gradu a t io n . had He someof the sameteachershis parena had In biology-taught by the basketball coach-everyone had to havea project.Tom'sfirst projectwas "I€aves,oan arranging and nattting of them. His secondproject,however, was on "Pr€servedMarine Life," a project on which he worlred with his friend Bernie fixmliq and this was to rekindle his interest in shells. Afur graduadon, Tom went to Olympic Collegewhere a major in- 49r or*iq- r$as te r s , Tom n s a u n t s , su b se quendy gaveit to a local museum. Henry Cotter was later to serve on the school board and beca-e a justice of the \oL'tt"' peace.He purchaseda twenty-acre ranch near lofall, about four miles south of Port Gamble, at a place called "Four Conters" (from which a short road also leads to my own fxmily's propercy).This is wherethe family home was still located when Tom attended grade school in Port Gamble. He lived next door to his paer:ral grandparentsand, ashe puts it, within "spitting distance"from his x E F o X o r) The high schoolstudent-as drum major. terest was zoology, and his adviser was Lynnwood Smit}. Lynnwood lent Tom a cory of Oldroyd's Marine Shelkof Pug* Sound,and Tom proceededtomake acow brtypi"g the entire book! Llmnwood'sfattreE Mr. Stephen J. Smith, is a valued member of the Pacific Northwest Shell Club, and he visits Tom at his Museum severaltimes a year o obtain shells with which he makesup collections for children as part of a programin which SeniorVolunteers help in schools. Tom and his friend Bemie later enteredtheir'PreservedMarine Life" project in a contest in Tacoma and won a pire.In t957, Tom had a car and, filled witl enthusiasm,the two friends headedfor Makah where, as Tom states simplS they went "cnzy' o'trerthe number of shells. They must have been keen, because it snowedwhile they were there and they were camped under plastic wrapped arounda tree.\7hi1e rdlecting on it all, Tom comments wit"h.a VOLT'ME37 o SPECIALISSUE *very touch of nostalgiathat is was primitive." He is not altogethersurehow he beganb getin touch with other shell collectors,but he doesrememberhis fint shell exchangewith a man who worlredat a resort on CaptivaIsland" Florida. Even oday, he feelsthe ex- citementof openingthe paclcage and seeingthe variery of shell shapesand colors. He alsorememben joining a group at this time, but it was not in the \Tashingtan area.. Tom cameinto contact with \7. Jackson(]ack)SalleeandJoanShields in Seatde and together they went O z X I o The Linotype machineon which early issuesof.the NortltaestShellNaas (forerunneroI The Dredgings)werepublished.It's now storedin the basementof Tom'shome. collecting to Neah Bay.The ttrreeof them decidedthey neededto form a club, and it was with them that the Pacific Northwest Shell Club originated the fint meetingbeingheld on September18,1960at Sdlee'sappfiment on Capitol Hill. The second meetingtook placein Tacomaat the old aquarium (no longer extant) by the boat house.The Smileys,long time Pacific Norchwest Shell Club members,traveled from fudgefield" 'Washingtonfor this meeting. The Club acrually formed asthe Nonhwest Shell Club, but this posed a problem becauseclubs in the east thought of the oldnonhwest and envisioned the new club in someplace like Minnesota. Sally Snyder (now Sally Crittenden) had a lawyer friend who madeup the papersof incorporation and this problem was solved when the club incorporated as the Pacific Northwest Shell CIub. \Tithin a War after the club was formed"the needfor a newslefierwas felt and with Tom asits first editor, a newsletrcrat that time untitled, was producedonthe dito machinein the Pope and Talbot office. Production wasthen movedto the ditn machine '\tr7'ingard's living room. in Cookie Tom later mimeographedthe paper andthen bought a Linotype machine and printing press.(Afur seeingthe Linorype in the basementof Tom's home andhearinghisexplanationof how it functioned, I felt enormous relief at seeingthe computer in his office.) During the L962'World's Fair, the Shell Club was askedto place a display in the JonasBrothers' taxidermy store. Jonas Brothers had displaycasesthat the club used,and" afterthe FaiE Tom purchasedtwoof thesecasesand arrangedshell displays in the basementof his home where Scout groups were invited to come and view the shells. THE DREDGINGS . 7997 Tom's editorship of the club's early newslener was a modest but fertile beginning for the many publications he has produced.The fint of these was The Catalog of Dealer's Pricesfor Marine Shellspublished in 1965. \(/hen Abbott and 'Wagner cameout with the StandardCatalog of Shells,they included values. Tom rorcd that some Pacific northwest shellswhich wereuncommon !o rare were only priced at about 10 cents each whereascommon shells from elsewherewere priced much higher, and he wished to rectify this. His catalogisnow in its 14th edition and is published annually.'Worldwide,it has become known familiarly as *Rice'sPrices." FIis next project was the Marine Gastropods frcm tbePugetSound Region which,appearedin 1968.It was a record from memben of the club stating where they had found certain species.Also in 1968, Tom edited Additions and Revisionsto A. Mya Keen's Sea Shells of Tiopical West Amqica. He did not further pursue updating this list, however, when he learned that Dr. Keen herself was working on a gready expandedand revisedsecondedidon. In close sucDirectory cessionfollowed,4 Sheller's of Clubs,Boohs,Periodicak and Dealers first published in t969. The publication resultedfrom people'sinquiries about shell clubsin their areas and available books as well as whereto buy shells.The Sheller'sDirecnryisnowin its 20ttr edition and, lilce the Catalog of Dealer'sPrices,is published annually. At this same time, Tom was continuing his collecting trips to Mexico - trips which he started making n L964- and there he was meeting collectorsfrom other parts of the couutry. Repeatedly,he heard them orpresstle needfor a magarine g >. a A displayof abalones,one of manydisplaysin Tom'sOf Seaand ShoreMuseum. devoed to shells.There had beenan attempt with a publication entided "Shells and Their Neighbors" by a 'womanin California an{ of course, matry clubs had their newsletters. Duringhis 1968triptoMexicq Tom waswith EveretandMabelStiles,and they wrote up an idea of how to start '\il?'henTom returned a magazine. home, he contactedpeople to submit articles, and he also contacted prospectiveadvertisers. Spring of L970sawthe first issue of Of Seaand Shoremagazi"e. This first issue was mailed free to anyone interestedin shells for whom Tom had an address.He soon discovered that costs far exceededavailable funds, so he borrowedJerry'Ward's electric mimeog:zph which, unforftnately, proved not to be practical fiom an electrical point of view, becauseit fed too fast and causedthe transfet of ink onto finished pages. Un&unted, To- hand crankedthe mimeographwith his left hand while handfeedingeactrpagewith his right, and he did this for 2,000copieswith 52 pagesin eachcopy! If that wasn't enough,he hadto placea blank sheet betweeneach pageas it came fiom the machine to ensurethat no ink transferredonto the cleanpagesand therefore, later, had to separatethe printed sheetsfiom ttre blanls-also by hand. This first effort, howwer, did bring 500 subscriptions.Tom recalls that he received the munifi cent sum of $3.50 d,year for each subscription. The magazinepealred in the early 80's with 1,500subscribers. Also in 1970, Tom ventured briefly into the world of shell dealers. On August 1, L970,he issueda 53 page catalog of Specimm Sbells. The shells were fiom the west coast of the United Statesand from Mexi co, and the catalog cost 50 cents. 'I"d"y, his shell selling effort is relegated to specimens offered at the Museum. Ellis Robinson of Edmonds, \fxshingron had developeda t"hreecolor separationprocessfor printing, andhe andhis wife, Gayle,haddone a book on Pacifcnonhwest wildflowen andGayle'slnrents hadproduced one on rocks and minerals of the VOLI.IME3T o SPECIALISSUE o E j X o 6 Abwe: Of Seaand ShoreMuseumis locatedin historicPort Gamble'sold GeneralStore.Belou: The museumdisplays:the GeneralStore'sold shelveswereusedand fitted with glassdoorsto Drotectthe shells. Pacific nofthwest. G"yl. was from Poulsbo,a town situatedonly a few miles from Pon Gamble, and knew Tom. Sheand her husbandEllis approachedhim witl the requestthat he do a book on seashellsfor tleir series.Also in this serieswasa book on starfishby Virginia Pill and Marjorie Fulong - the Furlongs had an aquarium and a gift shop at Hoodsport where they also displayed shells;tleir shells,and other marine specimens,arenow pan of Bert and Dorothy Harrison's Shellflair Shell and Marine Museum in 'Westport. Tom's book in this serieswas published in 197LasMarine Shelkof tbe PacificNorthwest.In 1922,Robinson alsopublishedTom's book on lVbat kA Shell?Thissameyear,Ellis Robinson sold his book line to another >\ THE DREDGINGS . 1997 company who changedthe title of Tom;s book to Marine Shelk of the Pacifi.cCoastta include California and increasethe book's marketing base.Unfornrnately out of print, it is still of tremendoushelp in identifying shells in tle field, and second hand copiesare quickly purchased. Ag"io, from the relativelY humble beginnings of two shell display caseswhich scout grouPs came to view, Tom began to think about a Shell Museum. FIe did not originallv tlink of Port Gamble but began to lookfor alocalein Port Townsend. Popeand Talbot wasplanning to Plt in the uPPerfloon of the "General -ot.o- Store. 'S7henthey decided insteadto placeit in the basementof the building, Tom beganconsidering ttreseupperfloon - actudlY' atthat time, just the secondfloor. PoPeand Tdbot thought he would be Placing the mill manonly a few cases.'S(/hen son and his wife, Larry and "g.i" Peck,becameinterestedin helpJudy ing, they started extending the efibits. The GeneralSorehadoPen shelveson which merchandise had been stored and displa)'e4 originally, these shelveswere usedto display the shells, and heavy Plastic was placed over them for Protection. j"dy Peckpainted wo murals for the one of a Puget Sound M*.o*, beach and another of.a coral reef. Vith the help fo Jerry and Agnes \fard, Tom was later able to enclose the displays in glass wittr interior lighting. The \(rards and Herb and \7ilma Young wit[ their son andhis wife helped lay carpet in the museum section. The Shell Museum openednear Memorial DaY of 1973. Tom has lrept a guest book over the pars and continues to be amarnd to findthat peoplevisit fiom all parts of t.heworld. He mentione4 bY vraY of example,visiors fiom Saudi Ara- FrenchPolynesia bia, tle Galapagos, Actor and Chile. John \ilaYne and Chuck Connors of "The Rifleman" T.V. serieshave come to view the shells.Raymond Burr of the 'Perry Mason" T.V. serieswas an avid collector and he and Tom visited bY phone; it was he who advised'fom to make the Museum a non-Profit corporation, advicewhich Tom immediately put into effect. By ttre mid 8O's,the Museumdis- bineshis rwo interestsand limits his earlier collection to stamPswith shellspictured on them. This interesrled b his publication of A Chqhlist of Mollusks on PostageSarnps, {irst published n Of Seaand Shoremagaandnow in its 5tl edition which "i"e cameout in Septemberof this year, l996.Tomcunently writes a column for the Italian shell journal la' Con' cbigliaon tlis samesubjectof shells on stamPs. r) 9) boxes. The Muszum'sstoreroom:shellsnot curently on displayarekept in banker's plap hadextendedo the thirdfloor. Also on the t.hirrdflooris a room directly over Tom's office which contains copies of his publications and is chockablockfrom floor o ceiling, wall to wall with books and magazines.One has visions of its massi'veweigbt all caving in on Tom and leavinghim pressedflat asa charac in a BugsBunnY caroon. Tom allays this fear by Pointing to the beamacross&s geiling of his office, a beam that would Prcve the metde of any worthwhile lumber mill. BeforeTom wasa shell collecor, he collected stamPsand now com- Many shellerswho subscribedto Of Sea and Shore magazin'e have wondered about the hiatus in its continuity. It all has to do with bridges.Tom wasa bridge tender on the Hood Canal Bridge from 1961 when it openedto 1964when he beca-e the oll collectoron t.hebtidg.. In tg6g, he returned to bridge tending andheld ttris position until Febrv^ry of.L979when the bridge blew down in winds which neared 100 miles an hour. Afurthe bridge sank, there were plans within the Year to replaceit with a Bailey btidg., at€mporrry floating Pontoon bridge, VOLUME 3Z O SPECIAL ISSUE which would later be replacedby a permanentbtidg.. Becausethis proposed*"itiog period was not long, Tom decided to decline a Position with the ferry system. Before the t€mporary btidg" was built, however, a lawsuit was brought over the bidding procedure,and this resulted in Tom being unemployedfor four yearsinsteadof one, four yean which he bore at his own expense.Vhen the rebuilt bridge opened in November o{ t982,the position of Permanent bridge tender had been replacedby a part time position which Tom resumed.Vithout full time income to help supporr the magazine and with increasedprinting costs' Tom was forced to suspendpublicaof 1984,Tom tionin 1983.InJanual.y was again assignedto be mll collector; ttris position lastedbut a short time when another lawsuit resulted in the removalof tolls, and Tom was transferred as bridge tender to the Blair Bridgein Tacoma.In the fall of 1990, Tom was able to once again resumepublication of the magazine, and the current issue,as we write, is Volume 19,number3. The magazlns has dways been a quarterly and has usually aver:agedabout 60 Pagesin leng&. TIte international Sheller'sDirec' tory wasfint published by Joho Q. Burch and later by M. E. Young,but it ceasedpublication with her death in the early 9O's.The directory listed shellersworldwide and alsolisted their areasof interest. After a lapse of time, Tom felt there was a need for a similar publication and hence was born the Directoryof Conchologists/Mahcoloy"* in L993.The 3rrd edition will be c.llt'rnL997. Tom's experiencesas tour director for shelling trips is a storY in itself. In' L972,heled his first tour to Costa Rica with members mostlY from Florida and the eastcoast.He becameinvolvedwhenaman in FIorida gavethe trip to him if he would be the tour leader.This samePerson whq Tom decidedwithgoodreason, shall remainnameless,organizedthe nerft trip to New Zealand and Australia. FIe sent only enough money and said for the first week's a(Penses he would then meet the grouPwhich he did not do. He did send enough money for another week of hotels in New Zea,land.The grouP wassupposedto visit the Great Barrier Reefin Australia,but, when they checkedwith airline personnelin New Zealand, they discoveredthat by the time they reachedthe reef they could spendonly a half daYbefore they had to rurn around and retum home. The tour was somewhat rescuedwhenthe grouPtumed in their tickets for refunds which covereda four day stay in Tahiti. After this experience,Tom decided I O P The boolstore sectionof the Mu sew. Abooe, ight:Tomand"B.C." o x I he could do a better iob of organizing and resolvedm do his own tours. Subsequenttours have taken Tom to Australia, Senegal,Costa Rica (again), Palau, Mauritius, Kenya, Egypt, the Comoro Islands, Madagascar,Bonaire, Fiii, Tahiti (again),Philippines, Thailand, Hawaii, Majuro, Guam, Bora Bora, Huahine, Mexicq Guatemala,llonduras,El Salvador,Nicaragua,Alaska and western Canada.The thrill of exoticplacesis sometimesnot without its down side. Tom remembers the 16 mile trek back to town when the car he was in brolcedown while he was in Alaska, and the flight on 'Air Madagascar'acrossthe Mozambique Channel to Kenya when the plane flew from cool to warm air and suddenly shot up severd hun&ed feet. On the sametrip, the group was alsoto fly 'Air Ethiopia,' and it was just afrcr the last Arab-Israeli war. It wasfar from galming to notice,asthe plane lifud on take off, that along the sides of the runways were wrecled hulks of Arab planes shot down by Israelis. Tom's tour grcuP wascompletelysurrcundedbyArab passengers.The plane suddenlY veered off course and over the intercom camethe theme from "Exodus." Tom'si--ediate thought was, "This is it- we'rebeinghijackedby Israelis!" As things turned out, how- l0 that come to the fore during this day'smemoriesareV'alterEyerdam, 'Mr. Nontrwest Naturalist,' publisher of many articles who had a mountain aswell asshellsnr-ed for him; Trevor Kincaid, Universiry of 'Washingtonprofessorwho started the Fri&y Harbor labs; Franl<Bernard" deep water bivalve specialist from the Biologicd Station at NanThe Pacific Northwest Shell aimo; Lola Griffith, who wrote Club has traveled vicariouslY on about intenidd univalves of British many of thesetours. Tom hosts the Columbia; Ian McT. Cowan,ProfesMay meeting in Port Gamble and sor at the UniversitY of British speaksabout his travelswhile illusColumbia who describedthechion trating t-hemwith er<cellentslides.He Mopalia spectabilis;Allyn G. Smi& alsosenresplatter-sizndcookies.Unof the California Academyof Sciencderstandably,it is usually one of the es; G Dallas Hanna, who srudied best attended meetings of the year. introduced mollusks of the west organizato several Tom belongs coast;A. Myra Keen, author of Sea tions dedicatedtothe studyof shells. Shelk of Tropical \YestAmerica; RuHe is a ctrartermember and first pres- dolph Stohler,initiator and editor of i&nt of the Pacific Nonhwest Shell The Veligerfor many years; Tucler Club - he also serveda secondtime Abboa, probably the most famous aspresident;he is a charter member U.S.shell specialistand author; \7iland waspresidentof the Marine Sci- liam Clench, Curator of tle Museum enceSocietytlat meetsin Poulsbo; of Comparative Tnotogy at Harr-and; he is a charrcr member of the'West- Bill Old of the American Museum ern Societyof Malacologists;he is a of Natural History in New York member since 1970of tle Concho- ciry; and Gary Rosenburg,Presentlogical Society of Great Britain and ly at the Academy of Sciencesin Ireland and is also a member of the Philadelphia and also an authorMalacologicd Society of Australasia Tom rememberswith pleasurethat ({ormerly Australia). when Gary was in college he was a of Tom'stours. On the tlird floor of the Muse- member of one Last year (1995), in addition to um, aswell asthe hun&eds of shells ttre soris, opposire the magazineandthe work he brings on display,tlere agercom for bools and Periodicals, out annually, Tom Published a whimsical litde recipe book entitled a largeroom filled with banler's borBeachBan4uet,aworkthat wascones which are, in turn, filled with sPecies ceived as early as L978.He also shells.Tom hassome20, 000 and over a million shells. He has no invircd to the Muszum, where theY favorite families but hasa particular meet{or informd discussion,a gloup of people interested in shells and fondnessfor micro mollusks. He marine life. The grouPmeetsat 1:00 claims that for him, ttre best pan of his interestin shellshasbeenthe peo- pm on the first SaturdaYof the ple he has been privileged to know. month, and anYonewho is interestThe number is legion, but the names ed is welcome to attend. ever,the plane changedcourseonlY to avoid a slorm. 1n"72, while night collecting in CostaRica, Tom helped a woman turn a rock where she for:nd a Conusebraeus,a normallY Indo-Pacific shell which is rarely found in the easternPacific.Tom did not collect one until 7 trips and20 yean later. THE DREDGINGS . 1997 Despite the impressive,almost overwhelming, impact of Tom's it is a recorrd recordof achievements, He is workclosed. is far from that ing on a revisedand updatedversion of his book which first appearedas Marine Shellsofthe Pacifi.cNorthwest. He is also working on a Cbechlistof theSbelledMarine Molluscaof theOre' gonia.nFaunalPwrtince whichwould cwer CapeMendocino,Ca1i{orniato Queen Charlote Strait, British Columbia. In his plans is a Sheller's Almanac, a generalreferenceon shell collecting- where b go, what to ta}e, how to start a club, put on a show, do a newsletter,etc.- and a book with the intriguing title of Doun East, Out W'est:Story of Port Gamble,W'asbington. My note taking to an end, and my farewells alsq I returned to the car. The rain had lessened,but the wind had strengthened and already divestedthe trees of some of their auturnnal glory. I felt tired but extremely gratified at Tom's generous efforts to be helpful and informative. As I drove away,I ttrought I should have wished him long life. He's going to need it to finish all that work. * In addition to the information given me by Tom Rice, some facts were obtained frcm the section on the family's history n Ki'tsapCounry History: A Story of KitsaP CoantY and hs Pioneers,Book II, 'North Kitsap County," ed. Rangvald Kvelstad(Seanle,L977),p. L43. I wish dso to thank Tom's Parents, Frank and Edith Rice for welco-ing me to t[eir home to take photographs - especiallY of the monolithic Linorype.