Region's historian Tacoma
native Murray Morgan helped others appreciate his beloved home
By Bart Ripp; The
News Tribune, June 23, 2000
Reprinted with the permission of the News Tribune.
Photographs courtesy of Mary Randlett.
Long
after he stopped writing a Sunday column for our newspaper, there
was a mailbox in the newsroom for Murray Morgan.
Only recently,
when the new faces asked us old-timers about this Morgan guy, did
we remove that mail slot, but not the memory of Murray Morgan.
 Morgan,
historian of our South Puget Sound and a treasure for generations
of Pacific Northwest readers, died Thursday morning in the native
Tacoma he loved. He was 84 and a writer for life, always curious,
always a shy gentleman interested in yarns about anyone but
himself.
"Murray
could talk about any subject. He was omnivorous in his appetites
for our area," Gary Fuller Reese said. Reese is director of
the Tacoma Public Library's Northwest Room, where Morgan donated
his collection of history books and the papers accumulated in a
life of writing 20 books and thousands of stories, and teaching,
always teaching.
"Murray
was," Reese said, "the kind of man who proved you could
be a scholar as well as a great teacher. His wit and charm made
his classes and lectures a real joy. He was the greatest historian
Tacoma has yet produced."
Although Morgan traveled the globe as a correspondent, was a
CBS Radio personality in New York, and earned a master's degree in
communication from Columbia University, he preferred to teach
history at Tacoma Community College.
"Murray
might have held a chair in any of the distinguished professorships
of history," said Washington State History Museum director
David Nicandri, "but he reached more people on the subject of
Northwest history than any other historian. People valued what
Murray Morgan wrote."
 This
spirited historian of the people was born Murray Cromwell Morgan
on North 31st Street in 1916. His father, Henry Victor Morgan, was
a minister at the Unitarian Universalist Church and published his
poetry and the theatrical plays of his wife, Adda Camille Layne
Pearne Morgan.
Murray Morgan
was a 1933 graduate of Stadium High School. Four years later he
graduated from the University of Washington, where he was editor
of the UW Daily and distinguished himself by getting suspended for
running a story about venereal disease on campus.
Morgan married
Emma Rose "Rosa" Northcutt at his father's church in
1939. They instantly left on a freighter for Germany, where they
paddled the Danube in a kayak and found themselves briefly
immersed in World War II.
Always a
maverick, Morgan wrote for such august institutions as Time, CBS,
the New York Herald Tribune and Hoquiam's Daily Washingtonian. But
he kept returning to the Puget Sound he celebrated in definitive
history books about Tacoma ("Puget's Sound") and Seattle
("Skid Road"). "Skid Road" marches on in its
54th year, the longest-running Pacific Northwest book in print.
"We have a
steady demand for Murray's books," said Larry Jezek, owner of
Tacoma Book Center, the South Sound's biggest secondhand
bookstore. "Pretty much all of Murray's books still sell, to
old-timers and kids. His work spans the generations."
The Murray
Morgan Bridge spans Thea Foss Waterway as a graceful gateway to
downtown Tacoma. The 89-year-old relic, originally called the 11th
Street Bridge, where Morgan worked as a bridge tender in the
1940s, was renamed for him in 1997.
There is a
literary prize named for Morgan at Tacoma Public Library. The
library's Web site maintains a collection of his stories. Called
Murray's People, it can be accessed at
www.tpl.lib.wa.us/v2/NWRoom/MORGAN/Intro.htm.
Morgan's books
explored Tacoma, Seattle, Grand Coulee Dam, the Olympic Peninsula,
the Columbia River, St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co., the Alaska
Gold Rush, the 1962 Seattle World's Fair and a topic that
constantly fascinated him - Alaska's Aleutian Islands.
 "My
books reassure me when I have writer's block," Morgan said in
a 1990 interview. "I look at them and I know it'll wear off."
Murray and Rosa
lived in Auburn, in a log house that once was Trout Lake Dance
Hall. It was known for its proximity during Prohibition to a
bootleg liquor joint called Mickey's Chicken Dinner Inn.
Hamburger was
Morgan's meal of choice - for health, not flavor. In 1964, while
researching a Saturday Evening Post story about cancer, Morgan was
told he had stomach cancer and less than a year to live. After
surgery, after conquering cancer, Morgan went on a medically
mandated burgers-for-breakfast diet and resumed writing. Only
death halted Morgan's quest, at an ancient Smith-Corona manual
typewriter, to finish his long project about sea otter fur trade
in the Aleutians.
A memorial is
pending. He is survived by his wife, Rosa, and their daughter Lane
Morgan of Sumas, Whatcom County.
Murray Morgan
loved lighthouses. He loved libraries. He loved Tacoma's
Tideflats. He loved scavenging for huckleberries in woods behind
his Trout Lake cabin.
"He was
curious about everything," Lane Morgan said. "He was
convivial and he was generous. He was a gifted friend, as well as
a gifted writer.
"He loved
scavenging for something - bark from a tree, wood from the
Tideflats, mushrooms from somebody's yard - and giving them to
someone. He loved the serendipitous."
Murray Morgan's
most serene spot was two acres of rhododendrons, alders, maples,
cedars, firs, ferns and forget-me-nots behind the cabin at Trout
Lake. Trilliums, his favorite flower, bloomed under a thicket of
vine maples. His family called the place Druid's Grove.
A swift, clear
stream runs beyond the trilliums. It bubbles loudly through spring
and now summer. Like Morgan and his curiosity for a place he
loved, the creek meanders through the woods, refreshing everyone.
A
Murray Morgan Reading List
- "Puget's Sound: A
Narrative History of Early Tacoma & the Southern Sound"
(1981)
- "South on the Sound: An
Illustrated History of Tacoma & Pierce County" (1984)
- "Skid Road: An Informal
Portrait of Seattle" (1951, 1960)
- "The Mill on the Boot: The
Story of the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co." (1985)
- "One Man's Gold Rush: A
Klondike Album" (1995)
- "The Pike Place Market:
People, Politics & Produce" (1982)
- "Over Washington"
(1995)
- "The Last Wilderness: The
Olympic Peninsula" (1976)
Northwest
Room | Intoduction to Murray's People
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