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D10341-6

The premiere of the film "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" was held in Tacoma on October 18, 1940. As part of the festivities, the stars were given the key to the historic City of Steilacoom, on Steilacoom's dock. Shown left to right are: Marjorie Cain, wife of Tacoma mayor Harry P. Cain, Ronald Reagan, Alan Hale, Sr., Marjorie Rambeau, Donald Crisp and Mrs. Margaret Rust. The actors were transported on the Rust yacht to the Foss tug, the Peter Foss, and then onto the Coast Guard cutter Atlanta. (TNT 10-19-40, p. 1, T.Times 10-19-40, p. 1) ALBUM 6. TPL-2291.


Motion picture premieres--Tacoma--1940-1950; Actors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Presidents; Reagan, Ronald Wilson, 1911-; Cain, Marjorie Dils, 1908-1994; Hale, Alan; Rambeau, Marjorie; Crisp, Donald; Rust, Margaret;

D10341-4

Cast members of "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" at Steilacoom dock, about to sail for Tacoma for the film's world premiere, shown simultaneously at three theaters, on October 18, 1940. Left to right: Marjorie Rambeau, Steilacoom mayor Willis E. Morris, Ronald Reagan, Donald Crisp, Alan Hale, Sr. Behind the actors and assorted city officials is a large billboard listing the City of Steilacoom's achievements. A large key to the city was presented to the famed visitors. ALBUM 6. TPL-947.


Motion picture premieres--Tacoma--1940-1950; Actors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Presidents; Reagan, Ronald Wilson, 1911-; Hale, Alan; Crisp, Donald; Rambeau, Marjorie; Morris, Willis E.; Signs (Notices);

D10341-38

Publicity for "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" premiere on October 18, 1940. Marjorie Rambeau chats with unidentified woman and man. Miss Rambeau was a well-known actress who was a two-time Academy Awards nominee. She replaced Marie Dressler in the role of "Tugboat Annie" following Miss Dressler's death a short year after the first film's release. The MGM picture also starred Alan Hale, Sr., and Ronald Reagan, both of whom made the trip to Tacoma to celebrate the film's premiere. ALBUM 6.


Motion picture premieres--Tacoma--1940-1950; Actors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Rambeau, Marjorie;

D10341-28

Mayor Harry P. Cain, far left, watches actors laying a commemorative plaque in front of Roxy (Pantages) Theater before the premiere of "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" on October 18, 1940. L to R: Donald Crisp, Ronald Reagan, Marjorie Rambeau , Hedda Hopper and Alan Hale, Sr. Tacoma was the site of the world premiere of the movie. Other activities included in this whirlwind visit were official receptions and tugboat rides. ALBUM 1


Motion picture premieres--Tacoma--1940-1950; Actors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Reagan, Ronald Wilson, 1911-; Hale, Alan; Rambeau, Marjorie; Crisp, Donald; Hopper, Hedda; Plaques--Tacoma; Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979;

D10341-40

Mayor's reception at Hotel Winthrop for "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" premiere on October 18, 1940. Marjorie and Harry P. Cain seated below Life Ring, center. Henry and Wedell Foss flank the glass case holding tugboat model to the right of the Cains. Five hundred local residents capped off an exciting day of Hollywood stars, promotional events, and the premiere of "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" with a celebratory dinner held at the Winthrop. Bagpipes, singing, and reminiscences by Cpt. Oscar V. Brown, former lighthouse keeper at Browns Point were among the evening's highlights. ALBUM 6. (TNT 10-19-40, p. 1)


Motion picture premieres--Tacoma--1940-1950; Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Cain, Marjorie Dils, 1908-1994; Foss, Henry O., 1891-1986; Foss, Wedell; Model ships; Banquets--Tacoma--1940-1950;

D10341-35

Publicity for "Tugboat Annie Sails Again" premiere. Marjorie Rambeau, Donald Crisp, Hedda Hopper (mostly hidden) and Alan Hale, Sr., on a boat, likely the "Arthur Foss" on October 18, 1940. Women at front are believed to be Mrs. Chance Wiman, Dolly Lewis and Anna Grimison, real life tugboat skippers. Miss Rambeau and Mr. Hale starred in the sequel to "Tugboat Annie" while Miss Hopper, a longtime friend of Miss Rambeau, made a trip to Tacoma to interview the stars on live radio. Mr. Crisp, although not appearing in the film, decided at the last minute to attend the premiere. ALBUM 6.


Motion picture premieres--Tacoma--1940-1950;Tugboats--Tacoma; Actors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Rambeau, Marjorie; Hale, Alan; Crisp, Donald; Hopper, Hedda; Lewis, Dolly; Grimison, Anna;

D10909-5

Pauline Martin, age 18, born in a Montana log cabin, sits on stage with bouquets of daffodils after being named 1941 Daffodil Queen during pageant at Sumner High School. (T. Times, 3/1/1941, p.1)


Puyallup Valley Daffodil Festival (1941 : Sumner); Martin, Pauline;

D10170-11

The Julius Gius wedding party poses in front of the Rainbow Inn in Bremerton on their wedding day August 24, 1940. Mrs. Gius, the former Elizabeth Gail Alexander, stands in the center of the group. Julius Gius was the editor of the Bremerton Sun.


Weddings--Bremerton--1940-1950; Gius, Elizabeth Gail; Alexander, Elizabeth Gail--Marriage; Brides--1940-1950; Grooms (Weddings)--1940-1950; Wedding costume--1940-1950; Rainbow Inn (Bremerton);

D10262-10

On September 18, 1940, a young fair goer looked up amazed as he was awarded his carnival game prizes. He had won two inflatable bunny balloons, almost as big as himself. The unidentified boy was one of 42,500 people attending the 41st annual Western Washington Fair in Puyallup on Tacoma Day. In 1940, the fair ran from September 16 - 22nd. TPL-9803


Western Washington Fair (Puyallup); Fairs--Puyallup--1940-1950;

D10262-8

A crowd is pictured on the midway at the 1940 Western Washington Fair at Puyallup. Busily turning are the Ferris Wheel, Tilt-A-Whirl, Merry-Go-Round and an airplane ride. In addition, people stand in line to take their turn at the games. The midway was ten acres, filled with over 25 rides plus side shows and carnival attractions. (T. Times 9/16/1940, pg. 1; 9/19/1940, pg. 1)


Western Washington Fair (Puyallup); Fairs--Puyallup--1940-1950; Crowds; Amusement rides--Puyallup--1940-1950;

D10262-3

On September 18, 1940, five year old Barbara Madsen, left, and her sister Marilyn, 7, of Tacoma enjoy a visit at the Western Washington Fair with Chief Sky Eagle of Michigan. The girls are out of school for Tacoma Day at the Fair. Each year, Tacoma's students were given a day off to enjoy the exhibits and other attractions at the fair. Chief Sky Eagle sits cross legged on a hay bale explaining to the two blonde youngsters the workings of his bow and arrows. (T. Times 9/19/1940 p.1)


Western Washington Fair (Puyallup); Fairs--Puyallup--1940-1950; Madsen, Barbara; Madsen, Marilyn;

D11829-6

On September 5, 1941, Lois Elizabeth Nelson and Dean Gifford Thompson were married in a romantic candlelight ceremony at the First Lutheran Church. The glowing bride is pictured with her attendants on the church's altar. Mrs. Thompson was attended by (in no particular order) her youngest sister Doris Nelson as maid of honor in a "rose dust" gown and four bridesmaids attired in aqua gowns, Mrs. Marco Magnano (also a sister), Charlene Anderson, Virginia Jones and Mrs. Victor Bernard Gunderson (matron of honor.) (T. Times 9/6/1941, pg. 5)


Brides--1940-1950; Weddings--Tacoma--1940-1950; First Lutheran Church (Tacoma); Lutheran churches--Tacoma; Nelson, Lois Elizabeth--Marriage; Wedding clothing & dress--1940-1950;

D11880-B

Hundreds of Tacomans lined up on the sidewalks outside the Western Auto Supply store at the northeast corner of South 8th Street and Pacific Avenue in September of 1941 to catch one of the special busses that would carry them to the Western Washington fair grounds. Despite the gray skies and light drizzle nearly 50,000 people passed through the turnstiles at the Puyallup Fair on "Tacoma Day". The grandstands were filled almost to the last seat and all the rides on the fairway were kept busy into the night.


Crowds; Western Auto Supply Co. (Tacoma); Western Washington Fair (Puyallup); Fairs--Puyallup--1940-1950;

D11418-8

The 1941 graduating class of the St. Joseph School of Nursing boasted two male nurses. Male nurses were still enough of a rarity that the story was given front page coverage. Pictured are Vincent Otis (seated) and Kenneth Vaughn. The standing nurses are Norine Taylor (left) and Mary Justice. The seated nurse is not identified. (T. Times 6/4/1941, pg. 1)


Graduation ceremonies--Tacoma--1940-1950; Medical students--Tacoma; Nurses--Tacoma; Nursing--Tacoma; St. Joseph's Hospital & School of Nursing (Tacoma); Otis, Vincent; Vaughn, Kenneth; Taylor, Norine; Justice, Mary;

D11418-8A

In the 1940's, male nurses were still rare but their numbers would be increasing with the ongoing military expansion. Vincent Otis, left, and Kenneth Vaughn, right, were the only male members of the St. Joseph Nursing School June 1941 graduating class. Vaughn would be working at St. Joseph Hospital during the summer before continuing his medical education. Otis would be working at Providence Hospital in Seattle. The other graduates pictured in the background are, left to right, Norine Taylor, Helen Luffey and Mary Justice. (T. Times 6/4/1941, pg. 1)


Graduation ceremonies--Tacoma--1940-1950; Medical students--Tacoma; Nurses--Tacoma; Nursing--Tacoma; St. Joseph's Hospital & School of Nursing (Tacoma); Otis, Vincent; Vaughn, Kenneth; Taylor, Norine; Luffey, Helen; Justice, Mary;

D8076-16

Sixth Annual Daffodil Parade. "Spirit of Electricity" float. Three nymphs with lighting bolts for arms decorate front of float; young woman wearing crown and ermine coat and two men in uniform are at rear of float. (T. Times, 4/1/1939, p. 1)


Parades & processions--Tacoma--1930-1940; Puyallup Valley Daffodil Festival (1939 : Tacoma); Floats (Parades)--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D8076-3

Sixth Annual Daffodil Parade. Pick-up truck pulls float for "Tacoma Parks" decorated with fir tree, flowering trees, daffodils and white doves. In the background: Tacoma Cut Rate Auto Supply, Cut Price Drugs, Strand Market (T. Times, 4/1/39, p. 1).


Parades & processions--Tacoma--1930-1940; Puyallup Valley Daffodil Festival (1939 : Tacoma); Floats (Parades);

D8076-18

Sixth Annual Daffodil Parade, April 1, 1939; prize winning "Sons of Italy" float. Couple seated under gondola canopy with a singing gondolier at front of float portraying the city of Venice, Italy. Italians were among Tacoma's many ethnic groups in the 1930s. The 1939 parade took 40 minutes to pass and was nearly 2 miles long. There were 18 bands and 24 floats using 750, 000 daffodils. (T. Times 4/1/1939, pg. 1)


Parades & processions--Tacoma--1930-1940; Puyallup Valley Daffodil Festival (1939 : Tacoma); Floats (Parades); Sons of Italy (Tacoma);

D8238-17

A spaniel dog being shown at the second annual All Breed Dog Show sponsored by the Tacoma Kennel Club and held at the old Sears and Roebuck building April 29-30, 1939. (T. Times, 5/1/1939, p. 1)


Tacoma Kennel Club (Tacoma); Dogs; Dog shows--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D8238-2

Champion Playfair Rockefeller, a Boston Bulldog, took first place in Group 6, Non-Sporting Dogs, at the two-day dog show held in the former Sears Roebuck Building, April 29-30, 1939. Over 50 varieties of dogs participated in the second annual All Breed Dog Show. The show was co-sponsored by the Tacoma Kennel Club and the Young Men's Business Club. (T. Times, 5/1/1939, p. 1).


Tacoma Kennel Club (Tacoma); Dogs; Dog shows--Tacoma--1930-1940; Bulldogs;

D8824-2

The Morton Logger Jubilee jug band and friends. Cities all over the state were pulling out all the stops to celebrate Washington's 50 year anniversary of statehood and Morton was no exception. The Morton Loggers' Jubilee, scheduled to open September 2nd and end on Labor Day, however had a decided hillbilly flair. Some 3,000 Southern mountain people, mostly from Kentucky & West Virginia, would dramatize real old style hill life of the upper South. They would be trekking to Morton, leading hound dogs, carrying rifles and wearing coon skin caps. One of the highlights of the celebration would be a public hillbilly wedding, with food, dancin' and gun totin'. Morton, a logging and sawmill town, is on the Tilton River thirty-three miles east of Chehalis in central Lewis County. (T. Times 8/24/1939, pg. 8)


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Morton; Bands--Morton;

D8630-3

From this viewpoint of 7th and Broadway looking south, Broadway looks like automotive row. To the right are Pease Brothers wholesale automotive supplies at 708 Broadway, Titus Used Cars at 714, Mueller Harkins Motor Co. at 722 and Irwin Jones Motor Co. at 728. Across the street are Packard and Pontiac dealers. Broadway is decorated with bunting and banners in preparation for the July 22, 1939 Golden Jubilee Parade. All of Tacoma had been celebrating Washington state's 50th anniversary of statehood since July 16th. July 23rd would be the last official day to celebrate. TPL-6464


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Decorations--Tacoma; Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D8602-1

1906 Ford Model N belonging to Titus Motor Company outside the State Vehicle Safety Inspection Station during 1939's Washington Golden Jubilee celebration. The men are, left to right, Larry Pritchett of Associated Oil Co., Leon Titus at the wheel, Titus' business partner Lloyd Raab and Dick Frayne, superintendent of Titus Service Department. The vehicle is the personal property of Mr. Titus, who obtained it in a trade in for a new Ford in 1914. The vehicle will be featured in the pageant "Saga of the West" and the Jubilee Parade. (T. Times 7/26/1939, pg. 10) TPL-10133


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Automobile dealerships--Tacoma--1930-1940; Titus Motor Co. (Tacoma); Ford automobile; Titus, Leon E.; Vehicle Safety Inspection Station (Tacoma); Raab, Lloyd; Frayne, Dick; Pritchett, Larry;

D8602-3

As a joke on July 20, 1939, Titus Ford Service Department superintendent Dick Frayne, behind the wheel of Leon Titus's 1906 Ford Model N, drove the antique into the State Vehicle Safety Inspection Station. Joe Thomas, director of the Station and veteran race driver, scratched his head wondering where would he put the red sticker if the car passed; the vehicle had no windshield. Enjoying the joke were white uniformed inspectors, as well as Lloyd Raab, behind vehicle in western hat, Leon Titus, second from right, and Larry Pritchett, right. All of the men not on duty were photographed in their Washington State Golden Jubilee hats. (T. Times 7/26/1939, pg. 10)


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Automobile dealerships--Tacoma--1930-1940; Titus Motor Co. (Tacoma); Ford automobile; Titus, Leon E.; Vehicle Safety Inspection Station (Tacoma); Thomas, Joe; Raab, Lloyd; Pritchett, Larry;

D8529-1

Gyro Club members pose on the roof of the Winthrop Hotel after their luncheon on July 5, 1939, showing off their various styles of Jubilee Hats. They are, left to right, Tacoma Chamber of Commerce manager T. A. Stevenson, Sheriff John Bjorklund, County Superintendent of Schools Mrs. Louise S. Taylor, County Commissioner John Schlarb,and County Commissioner A.A. Rankin. The Club promoted the wearing of hats as a show of support during the Golden Jubilee activities July 16-23, 1939. Some of the county's most prominent citizens model the various styles of headgear.


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Bjorklund, John; Taylor, Louise S.; Hats; Schlarb, John; Rankin, A.A.; Stevenson, T.A.;

D8529-3

On July 5, 1939, some Gyro Club members pose on the roof of the Winthrop Hotel modeling their diverse styles of Jubilee Hats. They are promoting the wearing of humorous hats to boost the Golden Jubilee celebration, July 16-23. The hats will be available in all colors, shapes and sizes in styles popular 50 years ago to add a little levity to the celebration. The prominent Pierce County residents are, left to right, Tacoma Chamber of Commerce manager T. A. Stevenson, County Commissioner John Schlarb, County Superintendent of Schools Mrs. Louise S. Taylor, Sheriff John Bjorklund and County Commissioner A.A. Rankin.


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Bjorklund, John; Taylor, Louise S.; Hats; Schlarb, John; Rankin, A.A.; Stevenson, T.A.;

D8124-1

Civic leader Harry P. Cain with famous handwriting analyst Andrienne at the office of the Golden Jubilee Festival committee in April, 1939. Andrienne had some very kind words to say about Mr. Cain's character based on his handwriting. For a dime and a self-addressed envelope, she would analyze interested readers' writing on a Tacoma Times newspaper coupon. Mr. Cain was the general chairman of the Golden Jubilee festival which celebrated Washington's fifty years of statehood. The following year he would be elected mayor of Tacoma. (T.Times, ad, 4-11-39, p. 5, 4-21-39, p. 3) ALBUM 12.


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Fortune telling--Tacoma; Andrienne;

D8628-4

Harry P. Cain at Golden Jubilee office on July 21, 1939. Mr. Cain, later to become the city's mayor and U.S. senator, successfully coordinated the event-packed Jubilee celebration, commemorating Washington's fifty years of statehood. Massive parades, pageants and water carnivals kept residents busy for nearly a week. ALBUM 12.


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Offices--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D8628-5

Even the chairman wears a nametag! Harry P. Cain appears to be gesturing with a pipe as he coordinates the massive Golden Jubilee celebration from Jubilee headquarters on July 21, 1939. He has a Washington Golden Jubilee badge pinned to his three-piece suit; his name can faintly be seen on the top part of the badge. Mr. Cain would later be elected mayor of Tacoma in March of 1940. ALBUM 12, 16.


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Offices--Tacoma--1930-1940;

D8588-7

Pacific Avenue showing improvements. Grand opening of new $73,000 paving work on July 17. New, unblemished street looking north from South 12th. Golden Jubilee signs and banners hang from wires strung across avenue in preparation for the big parade. Bank draped with flags.


Washington State Golden Jubilee, 1939--Tacoma; Commercial streets--Tacoma--1930-1940; Decorations--Tacoma;

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