History, politics, people of Oly WA

Author: Emmett O'Connell (Page 47 of 176)

Westboro Baptist Church bothering to picket both Olympias

Westboro Baptist Church (yes, those guys) are coming to Olympia next week.

There is going to be a response, seemingly especially to their second day protest at Olympia High School on Thursday (sorry, you have to log in to FB).

The reason they’re coming is pretty simple, the passing of the marriage bill last year in the legislature. It also makes sense that their first protest will be up at the capitol campus. But, what is surprising to me, is that they’re also bothering to protest at Olympia High School (and the auditors office).

They not only protesting Olympia as a name for the entire state government, but they’re also protesting Olympia as a home.

I’m not sure I’m going to bother to show them any attention, but I’ve heard through FB that some local churches will respond in person. Which, I feel is great. Its much better for actual people of faith to stand up to emotional haters like Westboro.

Olyblogosphere links for May 22, 2012 (Special web video edition)

1. This is the video that made this update happen. I just could not wait. Jim Foley running for judge in the city of Oly. I kid you not.

2. Then two updates from Your Daily Hour With Me. First, just to nod of appreciation that they’ve made it to 600 episodes.



Then, their epic interview with the 10 Minute Show’s David Scherer Water.



3. And, I suppose to round out this web video themed update, Evergeen is 40 years old. And, they’re adding “Greener Stories.” This is a pretty interesting one, if also pretty quiet.

Olyblogosphere links for May 18, 2012 (Nature! Nature! Nature!)

1. Protect Nature (or an empty lot with trees) with the new Save LBA Woods blog.

My first impression is that they could’ve thought of a different name. LBA stinks as a park name to begin with (Little Baseball Association), but LBA Woods implies the area they’re trying to save has anything to do with the park, other than being next door.

2. Starhill Farm has Seedings!!

3. A sort of old update from the Bees, Birds and Butterflies blog on some infosheets they posted. Its a good blog, so worth the almost month old link.

4. Super cool post from Nick Strite on Capitol Lake:

What I think is just another example of we self-centered humans is the concern for the aesthetic values of the lake. People who are for the lake staying a lake value it for its appearance.

The lake is aesthetically pleasing and people firmly believe that it does bring in business and boost Olympia’s appeal. The strongest argument for the “keep the lake” side is that if an estuary were developed that it might destroy business downtown because of the loss of this attractive body of water. That is something no one can predict. It is moderately plausible that business would be affected but it is not possible to predict unless it were actually made into an estuary.

5. And the Accidental Naturalist on Vaux’s Swifts in Olympia.

Abe Lincoln, Facebook and the Satsop News

News item from the 1854 Washington Pioneer in Olympia. Local lawyer Ruddell with massive foreign turnips! Read all about it!

Wait, this is news?

The fake news that Abraham Lincoln filed a patent for a newspaper like Facebook in the 1840s is funny in the sense of how many people fell for it. Its also interesting in how its actually true in one sense.

It wasn’t so much Abraham Lincoln leading the charge, but Facebook was something that existed in the 1840s in newspaper form.  There is a certain type of content that newspapers were full of through the early 20th century that today’s papers ignore.

What we look back on today as “social columns” cover the same territory that our social networks today do.

I’ve had this blog post in me for awhile. In the late 90s, I worked at the Montesano Vidette. One of my weekly, late-deadline jobs was (including the police reports for Elma and McCleary) was sometimes to type up the “Satsop News.”

Through at least the 1970s, the Vidette ran columns from most of the small non-town communities in eastern Grays Harbor County. Satsop, Brady and a few other places each had their own “news” column written by a local.

These columns would include typical social news. Someone came for a visit, someone went to Seattle. Lunch was had at Mrs. Smiths.

By the time I was at the Vidette, the Satsop correspondent had moved five miles down the road to a mobile home park in Elma. The news came hand written on note pad paper. Sometimes a young relative of our correspondent would drop the news off and at least once I drove to Elma to pick up three hand written pages.

I wish now I’d kept one original version as a keep sake, but at the time I resented having to edit the copy to a version that I thought was usable. I resent my own memory now of not leaving it be.

I don’t now how she came about the news from people who still lived in Satsop. Seeing briefly where she lived and how she seemed, I can’t imagine she got around easily on her own. I imagine her calling a handful of friends each week, asking about what they and their families were up to.

The similarity between her columns and the social columns from years ago that I come across from time to time when doing research is striking. Maybe its my memory conforming to my current thoughts.

This sort of soft news, the sort of self-supplied social lubricant is something that newspapers have been walking away from for a long time. It seems to have been replaced with gossip-centric celebrity news. Facebook doesn’t seem to be doing too bad though making it a central part of their business.

It seems like that in the era since reporting and editing became professionalized and newspapers became corporate and seperated from their communities, they also forgot the vital role of the social column.

Its not that the generation growing up on social networks is narcissistic. Sharing news of yourself and your own family and friends is not an act of narcissism. It is an act of a healthy social world and civic culture. It may not be interesting at all to people who don’t know you, or your children. Posting pictures of your family out to dinner isn’t at all striking to people who don’t track your daily life. But, to your friends who know your middle child just got over a sore throat that kept you at wits end for a week, a dinner out is big news.

And, big news is big business. It was to J.W. Wiley and A.M. Berry, who ran the Washington Pioneer in 1854. We aren’t now no more narcissistic than S.D. Ruddell and his massive fifteen pound turnips.

Olyblogosphere links May 7, 2012 (Mega Arts Walk edition)

1. Calavara.com has a pre and two post (one and two) Arts Walk posts. The best part is the in-Arts Walk art.

2. Mark over at Notes on the State of Olympia states the obvious. But, its worth repeating a lot:

The Arts Walk on the Friday night before Procession is the realization of Olympia’s potential.


Tonight, we’ll embrace standing on the sidewalk; we’ll experience something new, unexpected; and we might even find that elusive place downtown to have a glass of wine with one’s friends.

3. The Flat Win Company was on hand, selling something.

4. OlyMEGA was open.

5. Trixy was there.

6. Lots going on at Kitzel’s too.

7. Doris at Thurston Talk posts up a short piece on encounters.

8. And, boy, we haven’t even gotten to Procession yet. Here’s Mojourner Truth’s Insect Sect.

9. Walt Jorgenson, who of late has been the guy who goes around town and takes long videos and posts them on Youtube, does just that with Procession. Part 1 and Part 2. Here’s another one by katyoneil.

Athletic Park: Olympia’s minor league ball park 1903-1921

If you’re a serious baseball nerd and a serious local history nerd, you probably know that Olympia was a member of the national minor league system from 1903-1906. Sadly, you’re also misinformed, as the Southwest Washington League didn’t make it into 1906, but current records (incorrectly) indicate otherwise.
But, most important to me isn’t really how the team played, but where exactly they played.
The above image shows the best guess of where at least the grandstands for the baseball field were. The map (from a great history on the Thurston County Fair) is a failed proposal for expanded county fair grounds on the site of Carlyon Park, where the baseball field was housed. The black triangle in the middle of the image indicates the grandstands of Athletic Park.
This article from the 1903 Morning Olympian points to a stop on the trolley line between Olympia and Tumwater run by the Olympia Light and Power Company. This piece in 1920 chronicles the end of life of “Athletic Park” right before it was torn down for the current residential neighborhood and replaced by what would become Stevens Field.
After the Olympia Senators (or Maroons, I’m not really sure) folded after 1905, Athletic Park played home to several semi-pro town team, industrial league teams and local school teams. The image below from the 1920 Olympia High School Annual, towards the end of Athletic Park.
Throughout 1903-1920, the grandstands of Athletic Park are almost totally absent from the pages of the Olympus (except for here), but these images show clearly the outfield wall and bleachers added to the park to round it out. The best image of the looming grandstands can be found here.
By the way, I was already working towards this conclusion a week or so ago, but a great discussion over at the Olympia Historical Society’s Facebook page pushed me over the top.

Olyblogosphere links for Thursday, April 27, 2012 (home sick edition)

1. I could’ve mentioned this in the last update, but Terrence Knight (remember “The Sitting Duck?”) is back.

Remember when he left? I wasn’t too impressed. I’m still not all that impressed, his website is pretty bad. Needs some work. Like, its not 1999 sort of work. It seems like it would be harder to update html page like the one he’s working on than update a wordpress.com page like the one he has set up here.

But, the videos themselves (shooting ordinance, Jim Lynch reading) and this article deserve praise. Good effort,  but help your readers and get the with the times.

2. Olympia Food Bloggers Bake Sale! For the Food Bank! Tomorrow (Friday, April 27) Both the Plum Palate and Pure Hunger are pointing this one out. Get yourself down there.

3. Its spring time, so its then time for Griffin Neighborhood to talk all about Scotch Broom.

4. And, shoot, everyone listen to this: a pilot podcast from David Raffin. Technically speaking Raffin does have podcast already, but its typically short clips from comedy shows.

But, this one is a proper podcast, with Raffin and a straight-man, topics and the whole thing. Its still very much David Raffin, but its the sort of long form podcast that I wish he’d do more of.

And, this is just me talking, but if Mathias Eichler were to start some sort of Maximum Fun podcast empire, this sort of long form Raffin is something I could get behind. Mathias is a busy man already, though.

McCleary, you already had your canal

Its not my fault they were around 14,000 years ago.

This is very close detail of a map of the spillways of the Puget Lobe from this amazing document:

Sarah from McCleary Chronicles brings us the backup pipe dream of a shipping canal that would’ve passed through McCleary. The problem with the Puget Sound to Grays Harbor/Columbia River canals was always a lack of water and a lack of a good reason. Railroads and then highways sufficed.

In 1907 the Corps of Engineers pointed out that there just isn’t enough water (sans glacier) for such a canal system to be realistic:

The quantity of water required at the summit would probably be nto less than 300 cubic feet per second, if the canal were used at all, and the problem of finding that quantity of water during the dry season would be a rather serious one. There is no stream of sufficient capacity in the neighborhood and a feeder would have to be brought many miles. While the percipitation in tehis section of the country is large, there is annually a dry season of two or three months, during which the streams become very low, and ample provision for water, either by storage or by a long feeder, would be required.

But, if you add one ice age with spillway rivers flowing through the Black River, Chehalis and Moxlie Creek basins, you suddenly have three entire waterways connecting Puget Sound (now as a glacial lake) with the Pacific Ocean. And, McCleary sitting almost dead center as a axis of trade. In this case, sight sears to the big glacier.

Baseball in Portland (really, but DIY)

The joke of this is that if Portland had a baseball team…

Well no, that’s not the joke. The joke is that urbane Portlanders’ understanding of sport in general (and baseball in this case) is closer to that of theater or the arts than of actual baseball or sports.

Its also a slight nod in the direction of the off again, on again fascination some have had in Portland to bring a MLB team to Portland. Horrible idea, by the way, if you’re a Mariners fan. It might also be a nod to the city losing its minor league baseball team, in effect because the city went all in for soccer.

That said, it isn’t like there isn’t baseball already in Portland. Baseball in there in the form of not one, but two independent wood bat adult baseball leagues.

I suppose my point is that when people talk about bringing a sport to town, they often forget about these independent and local outposts of the sport. Typically, these leagues are amateur efforts. But, to me, they seem a lot closer to the town ball origins of baseball that people are really trying to get in touch with when they make the effort to go to a minor league game.

Olympia blogosphere links for April 22, 2012 (rarity edition)

1. Rock show at the library. Isn’t exactly a rare thing, but man, only in Olympia, right? Snazzy Bouquet: Now I want a donut.

2. Happens so rarely, but this blog has something worth linking to. Thurston Pundits: Honoring local greatness

3. Steven Willis, of Evergroove Fame, goes back to Evergreen for a lecture. This sort of thing, when a local Evergreen alum connects back to the campus, happens too rarely. Morty the Dog: Evergreen Lecture.

4. Rare thing that a local business (thanks to Mathias) comes up with a blog posting idea that isn’t just “hey look at this not so interesting project. Eyes of South Sound.

This is cool too me especially because for some reason I’ve been the guy in my family that was sent up on the roof for chores. Those roof shots are super cool.

5. And, something that doesn’t fall into the rare theme at all, Janine Unsoeld writes an exhaustive post about the Scott Yoos thing. Little Hollywood: Scott Yoos Trial Scheduled For August 13

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