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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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110 sLAde goRton: A hALf centuRy in poLitics<br />

trucks. Never bike at night, Call said, adding that she <strong>and</strong> her kids had<br />

also discovered that small-town churches were happy to put them up. An<br />

active Episcopalian, Slade began making calls. He also pinpointed post<br />

<strong>of</strong>fices. About every other day along the way the Attorney General’s Office<br />

would send him anything he had to sign or review, together with the<br />

next set <strong>of</strong> maps. He’d sign the papers, stuff the old maps into a big envelope<br />

<strong>and</strong> they’d be back on the road again, bisecting every state bordering<br />

Canada except Maine.<br />

It took them 11 days to pedal across Montana, from the cool mountains<br />

to the sizzling flatl<strong>and</strong>s. Slade routinely brought up the rear with 11–yearold<br />

Becky, the youngest rider. When the wind gusted, the sun blazed <strong>and</strong><br />

rattlesnakes slithered across their path, he’d get her talking about the<br />

horse she was going to have. <strong>The</strong> sights <strong>and</strong> smells <strong>of</strong> that trip are still<br />

with them all—the trees, the flowers, the crops <strong>and</strong> critters, including<br />

the jackrabbits, prairie dogs, sheep <strong>and</strong> cattle who observed their progress<br />

with curiosity.<br />

With a 25–mph tailwind, they covered 140 miles one memorable day,<br />

from Carrington, North Dakota, to Moorhead, Minnesota, whizzing<br />

along a road that was as smooth <strong>and</strong> flat as a pool table. <strong>The</strong> road seemed<br />

to stretch forever, <strong>and</strong> the only traffic they encountered gave them a wide<br />

berth <strong>and</strong> a friendly beep. At tiny road-stop cafes they feasted on pancakes,<br />

fried chicken <strong>and</strong> homemade pies. 8<br />

What Becky remembers most—other than the “horrifyingly huge”<br />

mosquitoes at a Wisconsin campsite—is the kindness <strong>of</strong> strangers. “We’d<br />

meet someone <strong>and</strong> they’d say ‘You need to stay at our house tonight!’ I<br />

can still picture us pulling into a Midwestern town with wide, tree-lined<br />

streets <strong>and</strong> Dad knocking on the door <strong>of</strong> a church to see if we could stay<br />

there for the night. It was an amazing way to see America. That whole<br />

trip personified my Dad’s enthusiasm <strong>and</strong> eagerness to do everything to<br />

the fullest,” Slade’s youngest says. “<strong>The</strong>re’s a great bit <strong>of</strong> child in him. I’m<br />

not saying ‘childish’; it’s his love <strong>of</strong> life. <strong>The</strong> bitter liberals have never<br />

been able to grasp that.” 9<br />

Her sister’s strongest, not fondest, memory <strong>of</strong> the trip is that “every<br />

darn time we couldn’t find a church or someplace else indoors to spend<br />

the night, it just poured. We’d be sleeping on picnic tables <strong>and</strong> we’d try to<br />

take cover underneath, only to emerge soaking wet the next morning.” 10<br />

Everywhere they stopped they met people who were amazed at the feat<br />

they were attempting. Soon the wire services began tracking their progress.<br />

Slade attempted to pull rank only once.<br />

It was a sunny Sunday afternoon in Ohio. As they were leaving Michi-

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