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booth gardner - Washington Secretary of State

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in 1941. Evelyn Booth had moved to Coeur d’Alene two months earlier, preparatory<br />

to seeking a divorce under Idaho’s more expeditious laws. The decree was granted on<br />

Jan. 14 on grounds <strong>of</strong> “extreme cruelty.” Evelyn told the judge that Brick’s job kept him<br />

“away from home a great deal and that when home he refused to participate … in the<br />

usual social affairs customary to their station.” She said he had “a jealous disposition”<br />

and “continuously nagged and unjustly charged her with neglect <strong>of</strong> the home duties and<br />

has accused her <strong>of</strong> having no affection for him.” The newspaper described the Gardners<br />

as “prominent members <strong>of</strong> Tacoma’s younger set,” adding that Evelyn had “taken an<br />

active part in Little Theater dramatics,” while Brick was “active in business and club<br />

circles.” Evelyn was granted custody <strong>of</strong> their two children, Gail, 3, and Booth, 4½. “She<br />

receives permanent custody <strong>of</strong> Booth until he is 6, when custody will go to his father,” the<br />

newspaper reported. “A trust fund provides for permanent maintenance <strong>of</strong> the children.”<br />

Evelyn also was to receive a thousand dollars in cash “and various other property.”<br />

The rest <strong>of</strong> the story was revealed on the next day’s front page under a Missoula<br />

dateline: “Norton Clapp, secretary <strong>of</strong> the Weyerhaeuser Timber company and prominent<br />

Tacoma civic leader, was married here today to Mrs. Evelyn B. Gardner, Tacoma socialite,<br />

in the chambers <strong>of</strong> Montana Supreme Court Justice Leif Erickson, who is a cousin <strong>of</strong> Mr.<br />

Clapp. Mrs. Edwin Booth <strong>of</strong> Wenatchee, sister-in-law <strong>of</strong> the bride, was the only attendant.”<br />

The ceremony was witnessed by “several intimate friends <strong>of</strong> the couple.” Clapp, the paper<br />

added, had received a final decree <strong>of</strong> divorce from his wife Mary in Tacoma two days<br />

earlier. “After an extended trip,” the couple planned to make their residence in Tacoma’s<br />

tony Interlaaken district. For the time being, Booth and his sister went to Wenatchee to<br />

stay with their Aunt Lou and Uncle Ed. “That boy cried and cried on the train,” she recalled<br />

years later. “He just kept sobbing, ‘I want to go home to C Street (in Tacoma).’ ” Brick was<br />

also “crushed” by the divorce. “He never got over her,” Booth says.<br />

Clapp had more expensive attorneys, but Brick was not without connections <strong>of</strong> his<br />

own. He had a friend who was a judge in Pierce County and managed to retain custody <strong>of</strong><br />

his son. Gail Gardner went to live with her mother, her stepfather and Clapp’s sons from<br />

his first marriage. Mary Clapp moved back to California where she and Norton had grown<br />

up. She placed on the market the “picturesque Colonial mansion” she and Clapp had built<br />

“at an original cost <strong>of</strong> $130,000. It featured “five acres <strong>of</strong> natural and landscaped beauty<br />

with 333 feet <strong>of</strong> the finest frontage on exclusive Gravelly Lake – one <strong>of</strong> the most beautiful<br />

estates in the Northwest.” The asking price was $35,000, “one <strong>of</strong> the most tremendous<br />

bargains ever <strong>of</strong>fered,” the Realtor said in large newspaper ad.<br />

* * *<br />

With the outbreak <strong>of</strong> World War II, Norton Clapp and Brick Gardner joined the Navy<br />

as <strong>of</strong>ficers. Booth got the news abruptly when he was 5. “My father woke me up at 6 o’clock<br />

in the morning, standing at my bedside in full uniform. That surprised me, but I was even<br />

23

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