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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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the goRtons And sLAdes 15<br />

not Tom or Tommy. He had a small hole in his palate, the source <strong>of</strong> the<br />

distinctive little cough that punctuates his speech to this day. By first<br />

grade, when his nose was buried in books, they also discovered he was<br />

blind as a bat. He acquired his first pair <strong>of</strong> thick glasses, a Gorton trademark<br />

in the years to come.<br />

When Slade was a year old, his father founded his own wholesale fish<br />

business with $1,200 in working capital. He set up shop at 735 West Lake<br />

Street, in the cold gray shadow <strong>of</strong> Chicago’s elevated railway—the “El”—<br />

six weeks before the Stock Market crash <strong>of</strong> 1929. Gorton’s net pr<strong>of</strong>it for<br />

that first year was $148. Gr<strong>and</strong>father Gorton was mad as hell that he’d left<br />

the company, predicting he’d lose his shirt. Eventually the two stubborn<br />

Yankee fishermen made up. Gorton-Pew Fisheries was less forgiving. It<br />

tried to put Tom Gorton out <strong>of</strong> business by dumping seafood in Chicago.<br />

He outsmarted them. Friendly with the fish broker, he promptly cooked<br />

up a dummy firm, XYZ Company, <strong>and</strong> bought frozen <strong>and</strong> salt fish right<br />

back at below-market prices. <strong>The</strong> broker didn’t care. Gorton also made<br />

friends with the bankers, who were delighted to have someone making<br />

deposits rather than withdrawals. He prided himself on having friends <strong>of</strong><br />

all ethnicities. Jewish merchants particularly admired his work ethic <strong>and</strong><br />

his fish.<br />

senAtoR goRton’s MAteRnAL gRAndfAtheR, Edward Everett Israel, was<br />

a hard-shell prohibitionist Presbyterian <strong>of</strong> Welsh extraction. He is also<br />

the only other documented elective <strong>of</strong>fice-seeker in the history <strong>of</strong> Slade’s<br />

family. Gr<strong>and</strong>pa Israel ran for senator <strong>and</strong> governor several times in Louisiana<br />

as a c<strong>and</strong>idate <strong>of</strong> the Prohibition Party. “He got maybe 3,000 votes<br />

in a statewide election,” Slade says, but was undeterred.<br />

Gr<strong>and</strong>pa was a huge baseball fan. He had a tryout as a major-league<br />

catcher in the 1890s. His major weakness in the secular world, in fact,<br />

was the St. Louis Cardinals. But he couldn’t go to a baseball game—even<br />

listen to one—on Sunday. <strong>The</strong> Sabbath was a holy day. Slade’s kid brother,<br />

Mike, says gr<strong>and</strong>pa used to fudge. He’d turn down the volume <strong>and</strong> put his<br />

ear right next to the radio so gr<strong>and</strong>ma wouldn’t know what he was up to.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Israels also believed fervently in the power <strong>of</strong> education. Slade’s<br />

mother <strong>and</strong> Aunt Dorothy were graduates <strong>of</strong> Louisiana <strong>State</strong> University in<br />

an era when few women finished college. Slade’s mother had a strong<br />

independent streak. “First, she left Louisiana, went to New York City <strong>and</strong><br />

became a medical technician. Second, she left the Presbyterian Church<br />

<strong>and</strong> became an Episcopalian. And third, we would occasionally have wine<br />

with dinner when we were growing up,” Slade remembers. When his

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