Bibliography Books, articles and manuscripts: Andrews, Ralph W., Historic Fires of the West, Bonanza Books, New York, 1966 Bancroft, Hubert Howe, History of Oregon, Vols. I and II, The History Company, San Francisco, 1888 Barker, Doug, The Spotted Owl, from On The Harbor, From Black Friday to Nirvana, The Daily World, Aberdeen, 2001 Blankenship, Mrs. George E. (Georgiana), Early History of Thurston County, Olympia, 1914 Booth, Laurence S., Unpublished Interview conducted on May 26, 1936, by Adele Parker for the <strong>Washington</strong> Pioneer Project, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Library Manuscript Collection, MS 31, Box 5, Tumwater, WA. Booth, Laurence S., Seattle the Glorious, American Mercury magazine, January 1933 Boswell, Sharon A., and McConaghy, Lorraine, Raise Hell and Sell Newspapers, Alden J. Blethen & The Seattle Times, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> University Press, Pullman, 1996 Brazier, Don, History of the <strong>Washington</strong> Legislature, 1854-1963, and 1965-1982, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Senate, 2000 and 2007 Brewster, David, and Buerge, David M., (editors), <strong>Washington</strong>ians, a Biographical portrait of the state, Sasquatch Books, Seattle, 1988 Clark, Malcolm Jr., Eden Seekers, The Settlement of Oregon, 1818-1862, Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, 1981 Corning, Howard McKinley, Willamette Landings, third edition, Oregon Historical Society Press, Portland, 2004 Crawford, Samuel L., and Conover, Charles T., <strong>Washington</strong> the Evergreen state, and Seattle: its metropolis, Crawford & Conover Realtors, Seattle, 1890, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Library Rare Book Collection, Tumwater, WA. Cross, Charles R., Room Full of Mirrors, a biography of Jimi Hendrix, Hyperion, New York, 2005 Dobbs, Caroline C., Men of Champoeg, Metropolitan Press, Portland, 1932; reprinted 1993, Daughters of the American Revolution, Oregon Society. Dodds, Gordon B., Oregon, a Bicentennial History, W.W. Norton & Co. Inc., New York, 1977 Dolan, Kathleen Adair, We Lived in the Ghetto of Mental Retardation, Oral history transcript, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Department of Social & Health Services, Olympia, 1991 Duncan, Don, <strong>Washington</strong>, The First 100 Years, 1889-1989, The Seattle Times, 1989 Ficken, Robert E., and LeWarne, Charles P., <strong>Washington</strong>, A Centennial History, University of <strong>Washington</strong> Press, Seattle, 1989. 204
French, Hiram Taylor, History of Idaho, Lewis Publishing Co., Chicago & New York, 1914 Friedman, Ralph, Tracking Down Oregon, The Caxton Printers, Caldwell, Idaho, 1984 Gardner, William Booth, Gubernatorial Scrapbooks (microfilm), 1985-1991, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>Archives</strong>, Olympia. Hodgins, Randy, and McLellan, Steve, Wet and Wired, a pop culture encyclopedia of the Pacific Northwest, Taylor Publishing Co., Dallas, 2000 Hunt, Herbert, Tacoma – Its History and Its Builders, Vol. lll , S.J. Clarke Publishing Co. Chicago, 1916, rare book collection, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Library, Tumwater, WA Hussey, John A., Champoeg: Place of Transition, Oregon Historical Society, Portland, 1967 Hutchison, Sheryl, The Gardner Years, <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Printer, 1993 Johansen, Dorothy O., and Gates, Charles M., Empire of the Columbia, second edition, Harper & Row, New York, 1967 Kershner, Jim, Carl Maxey, A Fighting Life; University of <strong>Washington</strong> Press, Seattle, 2008 Kink, Steve, and Cahill, John, Class Wars, The story of the <strong>Washington</strong> Education Association, 1965-2001; WEA and History Ink, Seattle, 2004 Lewis Historical Publishing Co., <strong>Washington</strong> Northwest Frontier Volume IV, New York, 1957 Lujan, Herman D., The Gardner Transition: The Changing of the Guard in <strong>Washington</strong>, from Gubernatorial Transitions: the 1983 and 1984 Elections; Beyle, Thad L., editor, Duke University Press, 1989 Meany, Edmond S., Living Pioneers of <strong>Washington</strong>, a collection of columns that first appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 1915-1920, Seattle Genealogical Society, 1995 Morgan, Murray, Skid Road, Revised edition, The Viking Press, New York, 1960 Morrison, Dorothy Nafus, Outpost, John McLoughlin & the Far Northwest, Oregon Historical Society Press, Portland, 1999 Newell, Gordon, Rogues, Buffoons & <strong>State</strong>smen, Superior Publishing Co., Seattle, 1975 Newell, Gordon, and Sherwood, Don, Totem Tales of Old Seattle, Superior Publishing Co., Seattle, 1956 Oakley, Obadiah, Expedition to Oregon, Ye Galleon Press, Fairfield, WA, 1967 Sale, Roger, Seattle Past to Present, University of <strong>Washington</strong> Press, Seattle, 1978 Schwartzberg, Susan, Becoming Citizens: Family Life and the Politics of Disability, University of <strong>Washington</strong> Press, Seattle, 2005 Scott, George W., A Majority of One: Legislative Life, Civitas Press, Seattle, 2002 Seattle Genealogical Society, Seattle Fire Department, 1889, Seattle, 1989 Seeberger, Edward D., Sine Die, A Guide to the <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Legislative Process, 1997 Edition, University of <strong>Washington</strong> Press, Seattle, 1997 205
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BOOTH WHO? BOOTH GARDNER A BIOGRAPH
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Who’s who (In order of appearance
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Richard A. Davis, whom Booth named
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Introduction If you go to see Booth
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No public figure in Washington Stat
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the trenches during the WEA’s fir
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Dan Evans disagrees. Not long after
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Chapter One: Booth’s roots He loo
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in 1874 and served from 1875-1881.
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to soak the smoking roof, which was
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with their son, William Jr., with w
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Chapter Two: The curve ball At the
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A few days later they had his birth
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21 Brick had moved up to sales mana
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in 1941. Evelyn Booth had moved to
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one because he’s very smart. And
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ecord on the turntable. It was play
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your energies.” He managed to be
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Chapter Three: Alone in the world I
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the divorce, was also mourning a da
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I ran away.” He walked to town an
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student body vice-president, the re
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Booth fondly remembers another game
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with the Oakland A’s. “I’m su
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when he became Pierce County execut
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Norton Clapp, by now president and
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Chapter Six: Orphaned Booth Gardner
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unsurprised but relieved the scanda
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Baarsma was an activist Democrat wi
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“So what did you think?” “You
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the big league he found himself in.
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Chapter Eight: On-the-job training
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On November 28, 1978, federal agent
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outcome for Pierce County would be
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With the battle fully joined, Faulk
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Faulk says he muttered something un
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taken office in January, capping hi
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its most important roles was to pro
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administration’s ticklish negotia
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$100,000,’ he says. “In short,
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“Why do I want to do it?” Booth
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In the beginning was The Message:
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store, didn’t want to write big c
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campaign manager says, leaning forw
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ordered a batch of T-shirts that sa
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With four days to go, McDermott’s
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candidates spent an hour answering
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Chapter 12: Transitions & Lessons
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In agency after agency, I’ve seen
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commander of McChord Air Force Base
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eform was “doable.” He was abou
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downturns, state government was bal
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unpleasantries. “…[T]hey just p
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lood sugar. He routinely started wo
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Critics said the press was overly s
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speech or having to meet with someo
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in the state’s prisons and severa
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In the closing hours of a hectic se
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all economic development efforts is
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The Republicans had also lost sever
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abilities and the nature of the U.S
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that without hiking taxes. He also
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Harris says the Gardner team undere
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“governmental operations director
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65 percent favorable vs. 61 percent
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Booth said she was going there to u
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Despite a dozen years as a county c
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mechanic and a cook whose grandpare
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vote. Maleng, who many believe woul
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the best years of our lives ahead o
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“Booth Gardner is the antithesis
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get over that phobia of public spea
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was doable. Apparently it was heard
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lanket of snow. Three-thousand Seat
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comprehensive growth-management reg
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in “a global, historical, human c
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out. McDonald and Locke were worrie
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term limits proposal on the Novembe
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Its centerpiece -“play or pay”-
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