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booth gardner - Washington Secretary of State

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Chapter Two: The curve ball<br />

At the fashionably late hour <strong>of</strong> 9 o’clock on the evening <strong>of</strong> June 1, 1933, Evelyn<br />

Beatrice Booth, chastely elegant in an ivory satin gown with a high neckline and mediumlength<br />

train, entered the living room <strong>of</strong> her parents’ Seattle home on the arm <strong>of</strong> her<br />

proud father. The groom, Bryson R. Gardner, awaited her at “an improvised altar <strong>of</strong> white<br />

blossoms.” She carried three calla lilies, “their golden stamens being the only bit <strong>of</strong><br />

color about this exquisite white wedding ensemble.” Virginia Boren, the popular society<br />

columnist for The Seattle Times, gave her readers all this and more in minute detail the<br />

next day under a banner headline: BOOTH-GARDNER NUPTIALS HELD AT BRIDE’S HOME<br />

Evelyn was thrilled when the columnist asked if she could attend the wedding,<br />

and happier yet when the paper followed up with a photo and another story that Sunday,<br />

hailing it as “one <strong>of</strong> the loveliest<br />

weddings <strong>of</strong> the year.” The guest<br />

list was “limited to members <strong>of</strong> the<br />

bride’s and bridegroom’s families<br />

and a circle <strong>of</strong> intimate friends who<br />

had watched the couple grow from<br />

childhood into womanhood and<br />

manhood.” They were all enchanted<br />

by the flower girl – Beverly Booth<br />

<strong>of</strong> Wenatchee, the bride’s niece –<br />

“an exquisite wee figure” in ruffled<br />

organdy. “With a reverent hush falling<br />

over the assembled guests,” the<br />

Rev. Theodore Ryan conducted the<br />

rites. Mr. Fred Lynch sang “Ah, Sweet<br />

Mystery <strong>of</strong> Life,” accompanied by Miss<br />

Frances Kelly, a cousin <strong>of</strong> the bride.<br />

“At the reception which followed, Mrs.<br />

William Gardner <strong>of</strong> Tacoma, sister-inlaw<br />

<strong>of</strong> the bridegroom, poured.”<br />

Like a Shirley Temple movie,<br />

Society page readers surely found<br />

Boren’s write-ups – classics in the<br />

genre <strong>of</strong> 1930s journalistic gentility –<br />

a pleasant respite from the real world<br />

down by the tracks. A couple <strong>of</strong> miles<br />

Evelyn Booth on her wedding day. Madeleine Sheahan, right, was the maid <strong>of</strong><br />

honor. Evelyn’s niece, Beverly Booth, was the flower girl. McBride & Anderson<br />

Studio ©The Seattle Times (Seattle, WA) 1933 Reprinted with permission.<br />

17

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