"Ferry Boat at Friday Harbor. The Ferry Boat is the principal means of transportation to and among the San Juan Islands. The incomparable beauty is apparent to all who make the trip by ferry. Friday Harbor is the county seat of San Juan County, which includes all islands west of Rosario Strait. For additional information, write Department of Commerce and Economic Development, Olympia, Washington. Albert D. Rosellini, Governor."
Gov. Rosellini served from 1957-1965, which should help narrow the date here. This postcard was printed by Deers Press but was "not for sale," apparently distributed free by DCED.
Showing posts with label Albert D. Rosellini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albert D. Rosellini. Show all posts
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Bumper Stickers - State Campaign - 1960-1964
We're for Rosellini, Democrat
A bumper sticker for Washington State Gov. Al Rosellini's 1960 or 1964 re-election campaigns. This was given to me by my old friend Rex Munger a few years ago.
Labels:
Albert D. Rosellini,
bumper stickers,
Democrats,
Elections,
Rex Munger,
Washington State Governor
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Phone photo 1454
Olympia, Washington
This WWI memorial is in the center of the Washington State capitol campus. In the background you can see the Insurance Building on the left and the dome of the Legislative Building on the right.
When my Mom was a young adult, ca. 1950, she was hoisted up the front of this pedestal and into the group of figures in the sculpture. Needless to say it was very late at night.
I shook hands with Gov. Rosellini, ca. 1960, as he stood in front of the state seal at the base and hosted the annual Easter egg hunt.
This phone photo was taken shortly after sunrise.
Labels:
Albert D. Rosellini,
Jeanette Willis,
Legislative Building,
Olympia,
Phone photo,
Winged Victory Memorial
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Bezango: Ted Bundy-- Elected Official?


Olympia Power & Light # 39 (July 27-August 9, 2011).
Ted Bundy was not only politically active in Olympia, he was a rising star in the Washington State Republican Party. It is chilling to consider the potential of how far he could've gone in government policymaking if his campaign shenanigans had not been uncovered.
Labels:
Albert D. Rosellini,
Bezango column,
Dan Evans,
Elections,
George McGovern,
Olympia,
Olympia Power and Light,
Republicans,
Ted Bundy
Friday, June 3, 2011
Bezango: Still Life With Woody at the Head Loader


Olympia Power & Light, July 14-27, 2010
My salute to the Washington State I knew and loved, now almost all gone.
State Route 9 (now 8) between Mud bay and McCleary was actually still under construction as late as 1964. As I remember the very last part of that stretch where all four lanes were completed was around the neighborhood of the current Ranch House BBQ.
There were parts of the obsolete old Highway 410 that were still very visible after SR 9 opened. Today some of those ribbons of concrete are hard to see.



























I liked the wordplay in naming a bar the "Head Loader." Well, we never did find that bar on this trip. Maybe next time.
Labels:
Albert D. Rosellini,
Bezango column,
Elma Chronicle,
McCleary,
Mud Bay,
Olympia Power and Light,
Ranch House BBQ,
State Route 8,
Summit Lake,
Woody Barker
Sunday, May 29, 2011
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Bezango WA 985 #3











1st ed., Feb. 24, 2002, 36 copies, parchment cover.
2nd ed., June 2, 2002, 9 copies, blue cover.
3rd ed., July 21, 2002, 6 copies, orange cover.
Print-on-demand, for a brief time starting in Aug. 2002.
1st Danger Room Reprint Ed., June 2005, 5 copies (1 red, 1 green, 1 yellow, 1 pink, 1 blue)
All editions were digest size.
This issue explored the politics and government of Bezango.
Trivia: Page 3: Morty, obviously. Page 5: Even though we live in one the wettest parts of the United States here in Grays Harbor County, men around here don't use umbrellas. We just don't. Page 6: I notice many mayoral losers in my town over the last couple decades move away after their defeat. Interesting. Page 9: Actually based on a specific person, but I have a feeling we all know someone like this. Page 10-11: In real life the brothers were merely twins. We really did have undetonated Japanese balloon bombs in the woods around here as late as the 1960s. A local hunter was killed when he tripped over one and set it off 20 years after the War.
Page 13: The lawn ornament caper really happened here in McCleary in the late 1980s/early 1990s, and the gathering of the ornaments in the Municipal Courtroom for reunions with their owners was a pretty funny sight. Page 14: "Head Loader" is an occupation in the woods, but I thought it would make a nice double-meaning name for a logger's bar as well. Page 17: My Dad's generation of oldtimey troublemakers. Page 18: The portrait of Gov. Rosellini, who served from 1957-1965, could still be seen in a place of honor in McCleary City Hall as late as the 1990s in thanks for all the State help he had given us.
Labels:
Albert D. Rosellini,
Bezango Wa 985,
Elections,
Grays Harbor County,
Head Loader (Tavern),
Japanese balloon bombs,
lawn ornaments,
McCleary,
Morty the Dog,
Umbrellas
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