B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2022 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2022 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2012 M cGOWAN, Wash. — Middle Village and Sta- tion Camp Park held its grand opening Satur- day after more than a decade of planning and collaboration. The park is part of the National Park Service’s Wash- ington expansion of the Lewis and Clark National His- torical Park. Located between the north end of the Astoria Bridge and Chinook, Washington , along U.S. Highway 101, the park has been in the works since 2002, during the preparation of the Lewis and Clark Expedi- tion’s Bicentennial. “For some of us, it’s a miracle that it’s happening,” said Jim Sayce, the Middle Village and Station Camp project liaison with the Washington State Historical Society. “To build a park in the middle of a recession is just amazing. It just tells you that there are things worth doing. This is for the future. This has incredible worth across cultural lines.” The project is the result of a partnership between the Chinook Indian Nation, the Washington State Histori- cal Society, the McGowan–Garvin family, the National Park Service, the Washington State Parks and Recre- ation Commission and the Washington State Department of Transportation. It was a “thanks, but no thanks” moment at the Astoria City Council meeting Monday night, when the council was asked to accept a gift from Foss Maritime of the former pilot boat, Arrow No. 2, and declined unanimously. The Columbia River Maritime Museum sub- mitted a request to the city of Astoria to accept the gift, because the museum cannot aff ord to handle the donation at this time of a vessel that will require some maintenance and restoration. The U.S. Coast Guard c utter Alert, the 210-foot medium-endurance cutter homeported in Astoria and often seen moored near the Columbia River Maritime Museum, recently received a much-needed overhaul on its hull and shipboard equipment at the Fairhaven Ship- yard in Bellingham, Washington. After representing the Coast Guard at the Portland Rose Festival, Alert’s crew arrived in Bellingham in early June for a 62-day maintenance period. During this period, new equipment was installed that improved the crew’s ability to perform damage control, including fi ghting fi res and combating fl ooding, offi cers said. WARRENTON – Several local schools and a few from outside the area got a jump on the fall sports season over the weekend, as Astoria hosted a soccer tournament scrimmage at the Warrenton Soccer Complex. The Lady Fishermen and Lady Gulls staged an unoffi cial, 60-minute “Clatsop Clash” scrim- mage Saturday afternoon. Seaside’s Emily Becker scored two goals and Hannah Garhofer added a third to help Seaside defeat Astoria, 3-0. 50 years ago — 1972 One of the original writer-producers for the television series “Mission Impossible” scoured Astoria last week looking for a fi lming location for a new series about mis- sions that sometimes seem impossible. Allan Balter said he and his writer-producer partner, William Read Woodfeld, are preparing a 90-minute tele- vision pilot fi lm for the CBS network on the U.S. Coast Guard. Unlike “Mission Impossible” which portrayed some outlandish adventures, “Erickson’s Log” will chronicle the real-life adventures of a Coast Guard troubleshooter. The U.S. Navy Seventh Fleet will be rep- resented at the Astoria Regatta by the USS Wallace L. Lind, an Allen M. Sumner class destroyer. The Lind cruises the western Pacifi c waters and carries a crew of 275 offi cers and enlisted men. The HMCS Chaleur will also visit Astoria during the Regatta celebration Aug. 24 to Aug. 27. The Chaleur is a Bay-c lass minesweeper which is employed in a training role, giving navigation experience to junior offi cers and sea- manship training to seamen both reserve and regular forces. The waterfront park in Astoria is going to get its 90-foot aluminum alloy fl agpole thanks to the Angora Hiking Club of Astoria. The c lub gave $11,000 for the pole to the Columbia River Maritime Museum last week. The money is from the sale of Angora Hiking Club property on Tillamook Head several years ago. 1972 — The USS Wallace L. Lind. 2012 — From left, Sam Robinson, Chinook Indian Nation vice chairman; Jane Pullman, council member; Joan Wekell, tribal elder; Natalie Elliott with her mother, Kate; Carol Shepherd, tribal member; and Jeremy Wekell, council member, sing a song of gratitude following the dedication ceremony of the Middle Village and Station Camp project in McGowan. prize of $50. Once, when the little brass cannon boomed, all of Astoria fl ocked to the docks to watch the arrivals of infrequent steamships from San Francisco, California, bearing oranges, fresh fruits and news of the world to this Northwest port. The little brass cannon still draws attention as it keeps silent watch over a number of pio- neer treasures in the front window of the Pacifi c Power & Light Co . The window is one of two displays sponsored by the Clatsop County chapter of the Oregon Historical Society. 2012 — Seaside’s Whitney Westerholm, left, sends a shot past a Banks defender that rolls just wide of the goal during a match at the Warrenton Soccer Complex. The Astoria Regatta started in 1894 as a pro- motional idea to create more enthusiasm in the community. The idea apparently was that of E.J. Smith, editor of T he Morning Astorian, who had read of similar activities in Australia. In the early days, fl ags and buntings were placed in residential areas on homes and on downtown places of business. The fi rst Regatta queen was selected in 1897. In later years, the girl who sold the most Regatta buttons wore the Regatta crown. The Regatta was postponed in 1916 during World War I , in 1940 when a fi re destroyed the Regatta Pavilion and again during World War II . Featured in 1908 were sail boat races, where Gyro Field now stands. A “Bridge of the Gods Pageant” was held in 1910 at the city park. It featured a burning canoe fl oating down Youngs River, depicting Chief Multnomah’s canoe, and a red ball of fi re on Green Mountain to simulate the eruption of Mount Hood. CANNON BEACH — Some residents of this com- fortable coastal beach community were apprehensive when the doors of the Cannon Beach Youth Hostel swung open in late May. But for the most part, say hostel organizers, the town has accepted the project, located in a cozy, comfortable old home at Hemlock and Washington streets. So have hundreds of young travelers, who fi nd an inexpensive evening’s respite at the experimental hostel. The word is spreading via the traveler’s grapevine that the hostel is a unique experience. 75 years ago — 1947 Crowds lined Seaside’s Broadway Street at 2 p.m. Saturday to see a parade of more than 350 costumed schoolchildren on fl ower-decked bicycles, tricycles, wagons and fl oats, while adults observed the city’s annual Dahlia Festival at a county wide fl ower show Sat- urday and Sunday. A fl oat depicting Cleopatra and her court, entered by Earsom’s Jewelry Store, was awarded the sweepstakes Sports fi sherme n’s luck prior to the Salmon Derby has been the “limit” on salmon during the past two weeks near the bar, according to Dave Lawson, who with other sportsmen have caught the limit twice. Most fi sh caught have weighed around 25 pounds. Over 150 boats are expected to participate daily during the six-day Salmon Derby, to be staged Aug. 30 to Aug. 31 and Sept. 1 to Sept. 4. Seventy boats have registered with the Chamber of Commerce and over 50 free lance boats will participate. Pacifi c County Pioneers elected Roy Whit- comb, of South Bend, Washington , president at its annual picnic Sunday at Bush State Park in Bay Center. Al Gile, of Chinook, was cho- sen vice president with Mrs. Roy Moore of Bay Center as secretary-treasurer. Six hundred peo- ple attended the picnic. John T. Welsh, of South Bend, 56 years a county resident, was speaker at the afternoon program. Welsh paid high tribute to the beauty and ability of the real aristocrats of the 1,100 miles of Pacifi c County land and water and the Indians of the local tribes. An ordinance prohibiting the erection of a fi sh can- nery and conducting of a fi sh receiving and processing business within an area near the center of Astoria was up for a fi rst reading at the Astoria City Council meet- ing Monday. This ordinance may have been inspired by reports in the fi shing industry that a New York fi sh broker is seek- ing to acquire a site from Clatsop County on the water- front in the vicinity of 10th Street for the purpose of erecting a cannery. Among reporters and special correspon- dents swarming to Astoria to cover the Salmon Derby is Irv Blumenfeld, photographer for Life Magazine. He reported to the Astorian-Budget today. He is planning to cover the derby from land, water and air. Blumenfeld is interested in the housing of derbyists and their off -the-river recreation. He wants to get pictures of them in action with rod and salmon. He will take to the air for pictures of the army of derbyists. Blumenfeld became acquainted with salmon fi shing on the Columbia River in 1932 when he was a star reporter on the Daily Messenger, a defunct Astoria newspaper. He came to the Messenger fresh from being dismissed by the University of Washington as associate editor of the smart and gay monthly Sun D odger. 1972 — Cannon Beach Youth Hostel director Ron Burns, in chair, sits with travelers.