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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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Acknowledgements<br />

whAt A pooReR pLAce the world would be without librarians <strong>and</strong> archivists.<br />

How would historians determine whether it snowed on a winter’s<br />

day along Cape Cod in 1637? Or locate a 30-year-old political commercial<br />

<strong>and</strong> find a Betamax player to view it? One floor below me at the <strong>Washington</strong><br />

<strong>State</strong> Library, which <strong>Secretary</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>State</strong> Sam Reed saved from closure,<br />

is a repository <strong>of</strong> priceless books, manuscripts <strong>and</strong> micr<strong>of</strong>ilm—<strong>and</strong> the<br />

people who ensure it’s all accessible. <strong>The</strong> <strong>State</strong> Archives is another trove<br />

for historians, history buffs <strong>and</strong> genealogists, as well as lawmakers <strong>and</strong><br />

their staffs. You can pore over documents <strong>and</strong> touch artifacts or access<br />

100 million documents on line for free. <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong>’s archives are<br />

in the forefront <strong>of</strong> the digital revolution. I am also indebted to the staffs <strong>of</strong><br />

the <strong>Washington</strong> <strong>State</strong> Law Library, the Tacoma Public Library <strong>and</strong> the historic<br />

Hoquiam Timberl<strong>and</strong> Library, my second home for the past 45 years.<br />

Invaluable to telling Slade Gorton’s life story were six books you ought<br />

to read: Art Thiel’s Out <strong>of</strong> Left Field, How the Mariners Made Baseball Fly<br />

in Seattle; Philip Shenon’s <strong>The</strong> Commission, What We Didn’t Know About<br />

9/11; William L. Dwyer’s <strong>The</strong> Goldmark Case, An American Libel Trial; Senator<br />

Trent Lott’s memoir, Herding Cats, <strong>and</strong> Mary Ellen McCaffree’s autobiographical<br />

Politics <strong>of</strong> the Possible, written with Anne McNamee Corbett.<br />

In On the Harbor, From Black Friday to Nirvana, Doug Barker, my former<br />

longtime colleague in journalism, <strong>of</strong>fers the best account <strong>of</strong> what it was<br />

like to be at ground zero in timber country during the spotted owl war.<br />

In my biography <strong>of</strong> Booth Gardner, I mentioned the famous observation<br />

by Phil Graham, the late publisher <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Washington</strong> Post, that<br />

journalism is a “first rough draft <strong>of</strong> history.” While Gorton, like Gardner,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten groused about the media’s “negativism,” his career was insightfully<br />

chronicled by some <strong>of</strong> the most talented newspaper people<br />

the state has ever seen, notably David Ammons, Ross Anderson, Joni<br />

Balter, Knute Berger, Les Blumenthal, Rebecca Boren, David Brewster,<br />

Peter Callaghan, Joel Connelly, O. Casey Corr, William Dietrich, John<br />

Dodge, Adele Ferguson, John Hendren, Henry Gay, David Horsey, Dean<br />

385

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