The Walkers, 1980 |
This is a piece I prepared for a public reading scheduled for this spring in Seward. That reading, of course, never happened, so I offer it here.
Back in the Day, before cruise ships, tour boats, and kayak guides, people came for the fish. They came in wooden halibut schooners older than the town, and they came in limit seiners and gillnetters converted for longlining.
Back in the day before the oil spill of 89, the flood of ’86 and the quake of ’64, people came for the jobs. They came for longshoring on the pipe ships for the oil patch, herring stripping, and salmon canning, jobs that fringed the waterfront like beachgrass, beholden to the sea.
Back in the day, we had the railroad, the Tustumena, the Army Rec Camp, and the Skill Center to pay our wage. Seward Fisheries and Anderson Seafoods let you squeeze herring until your wrists froze up like a rusty pump. The fish meal plant cooking —That’s the smell of money!
Back in the day, churches and bars were running neck and neck. We had Tony’s, the Yukon, the Pioneer, the Showcase, Breeze Inn, The Pit, and the FlamingO to take our money and ease our pains. We had the churches too: Episcopalian, Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Church of Christ, Lutheran, and even the Mormons and the Pentecostals showed up to save our souls on Sunday after Saturday’s debauchery.
Back in the day, the most variety of groceries was at Seward Trading Company but the best produce was always at Bob’s Market. The best meal was breakfast at the Pioneer or the crab salad sandwich at the Harbor Dinner club. Yeah, we had Apollo Pizza too, Back in the day.
Back in the day, we had charge accounts at Mcmullen's and Seward Hardware and Seward Building Supply. Just sign the ticket and away you go, we’ll send you a bill. If you can’t find what you are looking for you probably don’t need it.
The author with brother Dave and Father-in-law on a moose hunting trip. |
Back in the Day, we had TV but not much: PBS, WGN (Chicago) and RATNET. Only sinners and old women watched daytime TV back then, Soap operas and Jim Baker’s PTL Club. PTL stood for Praise the Lord but it looked more like Pass The Loot.
Back in the day, the four seasons were winter, breakup, fishing season and hunting season. In the fall it didn’t quit raining it just changed to snow. Then it snowed so much that come Fourth of July we had to pile it up and burn it.
Back in the day, Seward had Seward Bakery, and a barbershop, Dreamland Bowl, Lechner’s Machine Shop, the Liberty Theater —Family Night on Wednesdays, and First Video, the best video rental in the state. Highlights of the year were the 4th of July, the Salmon Derby, and the Purple Bubble Ball, the winter gala at the Elks club.
Brian Walker on the Maxine |
Way back in the day, we had a Dairy on Dairy Hill and Lumber mill on Bear Lake, and Mark Walker ran the Breezin’ Along and then the Maxine, big wooden boats that chugged out the bay a hundred days a summer take Army Rec Camp people fishing. One day each summer, one day, he loaded the boat with birders and the fishing rods stayed in the racks. “Who would think,” he said, “that people would pay perfectly good money to go for a boat ride and look at birds.”
Way back in the day, a school teacher named Monty Richardson took his buddies fishing in his fourteen-foot skiff if they brought the beer. Then he found out strangers would pay money and bring the beer to go fishing, so he let them until the Coast Guard said he needed a license, so he studied, took the test and had a legal charter boat. Not the first man to say, “I’m going to need a bigger boat.”
Our first house in Seward,1978 |
Back in the day, Herman Lehrer said, “We oughta have a road out to that glacier up the valley, and he made a road with his dozer and stubbornness —Permits are pending. That’s how they say it happened. Then people went to see the glacier and said, “Wow, they oughta make this a national park.” The Feds did make a national park west of town and at first, nobody noticed. When they did notice, people said, “Where is Kenai Fjords?” Because there was the Bay (capital B) and the Gulf (capital G) and the Sound (capital S) but where in the Hell was the Fjords (Fa-jords, capital F)?
Back in the Day, Don and Pam Oldow saw those people willing to spend good money to look at birds and whales and glaciers. They were glad to take that money and give ‘em a ride on their boat. And then they needed a bigger boat, the Spirit I think, and Pam said, “Let’s call our business Kenai Fjords Tours.”
Back in the day, we found out there was a fifth season, tourist season. Don’t know how we were able to fit that in because the calendar hasn’t changed since back in the day, so it must have been cut out of fishing and hunting season.
That’s how it was back in the day when we came for a visit and stayed forever.
Excellent piece, Dan. Next year will be 50 years since I arrived in Alaska, and 49 years since I arrived in Seward. You've captured what it was like "Back in the day..."
ReplyDeleteSo much has changed and so much is still the same.
DeleteI grew up on Bear Lake Road. Left in 1981 to go to UAF. Your article brings back good memories.
ReplyDeleteThe lake is still quiet most of the year and feels wild. Glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteLove that you mentioned my dad, Monty, in the genesis of the charter fleet!
ReplyDeleteMonty was a great fellow. I had the fortune to sit in his living room and here him tell this story.
DeleteTony Banic here, thanks for writing this, loved it. Great refresh on old memories. And thanks for being a great teacher. People have always asked if I was named after the bar, still not sure on that.
ReplyDeleteHey Tony! You can just say the bar was named after you! Good to hear from you.
DeleteExcellent article. I remember it all fondly. Seward has changed so much in the 40 plus years that I've been here. Kind of sad, in my opinion.
ReplyDeleteLuckily Seward still has great people.
DeleteBorn here in 1948. An incredible town to grow up in. Thank you for mentioning Harbor Dinner Club.
ReplyDeleteMany great memories were made there.
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ReplyDeleteGreat article. And thanks for mentioning Lechner's Machine Shop! I remember the Walkers as being a very cool family. I bet you still are. :-)
ReplyDeleteLechner's Machine Shop was like a museum for machinery. I enjoyed studying the belts running across the ceiling to drive the machines. DW
DeleteAmazing Dan. Just amazing. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Look in the May Alaska Magazine for an excerpt from my book, Letters from Happy Valley.
DeleteDW
This is a great article. Thanks for writing it.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed it. I'll try to be more regular with my posts.
DeleteThat was great. It was a great place to grow up. My dad Richard owned Mattson Market before the earthquake. My aunt, uncle lived there all there lives.
ReplyDeleteBack in the day Wayne Heinbaugh would take his station wagon to the dump to exchange the magazines he had finished for the car parts he needed. Back in the day Phil Hardy would text how sharply he could cut the intersection between the Seward Highway and the gravel Nash Road. Back in the day Chris Sorenson would buy his wife Millie a vase and silk flowers from Kawabi’s every year. Back in the day waters taken from Methuselah Springs would keep us all young and healthy. Back in the day the Go Go Grannies won every game by scoring on style points for their baseball uniforms.
ReplyDeleteGreat stories hide back in our memories. I remember well that turn at Nash Road before the pavement.
DeleteGreat story. I lived down Nash Road most of the 9 years we were there, except a couple of years on 1st Ave. Is Kathy your sister?
ReplyDeleteKathy's dad and my mom married when we were grown. We were already Walker's when Mom married Mark Walker. Thanks for reading.
DeleteGreat writing! Really enjoyed reading this! I am Kathy’s cousin. Her mom and my mom were sisters
ReplyDeleteLoved reading this. Thank you for sparking those incredible memories.. I have not been back since 1998. Life happens. But I did hike, climb and walk so much of it. In Seward and all of Kenai Pen. The formative years are 14-21, and I spent them in Seward. Gaining lifetime friendships. My Aunt Lois was the Health Nurse til just recently. Love Apollo pizza. The amazing images that I have carried thru life are from Seward. My love of hiking climbing mountains learned there, took me around Canada, Lower 48, Central America and Europe. I cannot say enough about the teachers and people whom love you no matter that you danced down the street.. I was given freedom to become who I am instead of crammed into a space they thought I should occupy.
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