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Henry George in Washington State |
| [From the Memoirs
of Eldridge Morse, Jr., published in 1892] |
As I remarked of my boyhood situations, that I always knew where I was
going next, so when San Francisco discharged me I had another place in
sight. It was Snohomish, Washington, where as city editor of a weekly
and tri-weekly small-town paper called The Eye, I began life in
circumstances about as new to me as when I came into atmospheric
existence in 1857 or to New York in 1875. An account of that will begin
in Chapter One, Volume II.
My newspaper partner in Snohomish, 1891-1893, was Clayton H. Packard,
who still survives. Mr. Packard has read the fifty-odd pages of
manuscript covering our association in Independent Journalism, and
returned it with few corrections. This is a story of wide-open spaces,
surrounded by tall timber, where men wore mackinaws. The moccasin tracks
were there visible, as well as the Indians who made them. -- G.E.M.
All the economic reformers brought their doctrine to the Liberal Club,
perhaps the only open forum in the city. Henry George, author of "Progress
and Poverty," made a speech there on the 14th of January, the club
having met to hear a lecture by Henry Appleton on Ireland. That was the
first time I saw Henry George. His book, published two years earlier by
the Appletons, New York, was then in its fourth edition, and coming out
in London, Paris and St. Petersburg. Mr. George's head looked large for
his body; he wore a presentable red beard, and spoke English with a
pronunciation acquired abroad -- perhaps of his mates on British sailing
vessels. His book was reviewed in The Truth Seeker, April 16, by the
lawyer and author, Edward W. Searing, who married the deaf and voiceless
Laura Catherine Redden ("Howard Glyndon"), poet and newspaper
correspondent.
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