As published in the
Queen Anne Cobblestone, January 2008
Passages
at the New Year
t is the New Year and changes are already heavily in motion.
Richard Jameson is leaving his position as editor of the Queen
Anne News.
Former editor and publisher John Murray died last year. Hideous
new "town houses" are replacing comfortable, older
single family dwellings all across the hill, and one of my favorite
relatives,
who lived for a time on Queen Anne Hill, my aunt Dorothy Jane
Hull, died in December at the age of 90.
My first memories of her at the house at 910 Third Avenue North
were in the mid-1940s. My cousin Adrienne had died shortly after
starting first grade at old John Hay School, after contracting
measles from another student. Hers turned into encephalitis,
and she never came out of it. My cousin Julie was born to my
aunt while
they were living with us. This was the old house and had more
than enough bedrooms for the group of us. During the night, especially
in winter, you could hear the high whine of the old coal furnace
come on, sounding something like a ghost should sound. I was
never
comfortable with that sound.
The Hulls moved to Fairbanks, Alaska in 1947, and when my Dad,
Reg Turner, died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1949, Dorothy
immediately flew back down to Seattle, helping my Mom regularly.
By 1955, we had relocated to the house at 1207 Sixth Avenue North,
and I spent many happy years there. I do miss its space today,
but that will hopefully change this year as I continue to downsize
some of the 1500 boxes of books, magazines, and papers which
I have carried from place to place for the last 27 years.
2008 brings the same problems as we had in 2007: traffic, disappearing
affordable housing, and consumers who don't believe in global
warming as a facet of human production. Another year, and hopes
that my
friends will manage to stay reasonably healthy, as two more have
been diagnosed in terminal condition, and I'm afraid of becoming
callous about death and dying. Still, I am at the time in my
life where it is a fact that I will continue losing a growing
number
of friends and acquaintances to death. So I am thinking on the
ways in which I can help to slow those losses, and it won't be
easy.
I wish all of you the best that this New Year can bring, and
please, stay healthy!
Kim R. Turner, Researcher, QAHS
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