A4 • Friday, February 12, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints Faith led Cragin to Seaside SEEN FROM SEASIDE R.J. MARX For Reginald Cragin, everything about coming to Seaside seemed like destiny. “I got here at the age of 50,” he said. “I took a look at this place and I go, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me.’ I lived in the east, but there were no mountains. I love the mountains. I lived in Colorado, but there was no ocean. I love the ocean.” The now 55-year-old musician spent most of his life on the East Coast, growing up near the beach on the end of Long Island surfi ng Ditch Plains Beach and attending school in Connecticut. “I was a wild child,” he admits. He chose to play the drums when he was young. At 13, he played the full drum set, reading sheet music at the front of the stage with an 18-piece jazz band behind him. At the University of Colorado, he con- nected with fellow musicians also going to school in Boulder, like Big Head Todd and the Monsters and The Samples. He branched into the visual arts, earning a bachelor’s degree with a major in fi ne arts. After college, he considered moves to New Orleans or Manhattan. He chose Man- hattan, getting a job at Cheap Jack’s, a vintage clothing store in Union Square frequented by artists, musicians and downtown characters. “When I got to Manhattan, I met every musician possible,” he said. While “no one made any money,” he said, the scene was thriving and Cragin worked with legends of downtown rock. He returned to Connecticut to help his father, who was suffering from depression. After his father’s death fi ve years later, Cragin started to become depressed and began to pray. A year later, Cragin, turning 50, “needed something amazing,” he said. Photos by R.J. Marx ABOVE: Reginald Cragin plays drums at Quatat Park on Jan. 18. BELOW: Cragin enjoys the outdoor life in Seaside. Originally an Episcopalian, he was intro- duced to the rosary, a form of devotion to the Virgin Mary, by a woman named Sister Mary while attending a Bible study meeting. “The rosary came into my life 10 years ago,” Cragin said. “I thought, ‘Why haven’t I known about this before?’ I loved it. Every single day became an opportunity.” Not long after, a chance encounter changed his personal direction. Cragin was working in a package store when a customer came in and said he needed someone to drive a car west. Cragin saw providence in the opportunity. He left his job and apartment the next day. “I had been praying for so long for some- thing to happen that it seemed that this was what I had been waiting for,” he said. “I took it as a sign and went with it. I shut my eyes, and when I opened them, God put me here.” The Oregon Coast was everything he was looking for.Cragin arrived in Septem- ber 2016. He found a job as a night auditor at a Seaside hotel and an apartment within a week. “I had no place to live. I had no job. One place called me in and said they would like to talk to me. ‘Can you come back for an inter- view?’ I said sure. I started the next week.” He’s had the job ever since. The night hours remind Cragin of his New York City days. He goes to sleep at noon and wakes up two hours before his shift at 11 p.m. “I wake up every night, pray the rosary, go to my shift and then come home at 7 a.m. and I can spend each morning surfi ng. I love Seaside.” He’s now playing his drums every Sun- day and Monday at Quatat Park from noon to 3 or 4 p.m. “I’d been depressed and suffering for so long and praying each and every day, that when I showed up at Seaside it was like all my dreams and all my prayers had come to fruition,” Cragin said. “I thank God each and every day for liv- ing in Seaside. All the people are so wonder- ful and I love it here so much.” Blake: ‘We were at home safe, healthy and blessed all the way to the end’ Continued from Page A1 1918, in Denver, Colorado. She was 13 when her mother died from a heart condition at age 42. Her father, a phar- macist, raised her and her much older brother, Stanley. She attended college at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, where she met and “married the big man on campus,” Walter Pershing Blake, a veterinary student and football, basketball and track athlete. They married in 1941, the day after Walter Blake grad- uated from Colorado State. He taught veterinary medi- cine and surgery at the Uni- versity of Missouri, and then the couple moved to Phoe- nix, Arizona, where he had a small animal clinic. Mar- ion worked in the practice with her husband as surgical assistant and girl Friday. Moving to Seaside to be closer to family, she ad- justed to circumstances after the loss of her husband and two daughters. She found a Colin Murphey/The Astorian Marion Blake, right, with her daughter, Mary Blake, at home in Seaside in 2018. happy home with her daugh- ter Mary, living an active lifestyle well in her 90s and beyond. “Marion Blake was an avid golfer, before age caught up with her,” Chelsea Gorrow wrote in a 2014 pro- fi le in The Daily Astorian. “She now uses a cane with four feet to get around. But that’s the only visible sign that she’s 96 years old. The petite and fi t woman wears glittery nail polish, stylish white-framed glasses, pink lipstick and gold jewelry, including a beautiful ban- gle bracelet and fashionable rings.” At 100, she did stretch- ing exercises every day, and weighed the same as she did in college. Her busy schedule included duplicate bridge at the Astoria Golf & Country Club, at the Bob Chisholm Community Cen- ter once a week and twice a week in Astoria at the senior center. She contin- ued to sip an occasional dry “martooni,” which, she said in an interview with the Seaside Signal two months before her 100th birthday, “was good for partying.” Marion loved football and cheered for the Den- ver Broncos. She watched Rachel Maddow and Ste- phen Colbert. She went to bed at 1 a.m. and woke up at “6 or 7 ... I don’t waste a lot of time sleeping too much,” she said. Last year she professed a desire to be a police detec- tive, and the Seaside Police Department drove up to make her a dream come true with an honorary badge. Marion lamented that she was “always the oldest one in the crowd,” and said she had no regrets over the years. At age 100 her goal was to “just play more bridge and kick butt.” She achieved a wish of living her last years at home. “Heaven forbid assisted liv- ing!” she said. “You know, there are a lot of old people there.” Marion regretted that the coronavirus pandemic reduced her bridge-playing and was “heartbroken” by the U.S. Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6. “She did feel that after the (Biden) inauguration we would make our way back to a more truthful and connected society,” Mary Blake said. “She was espe- cially excited to see the fi rst woman of color become the vice president.” She wants her moth- er’s message of positivity to survive her. “There wasn’t a day that went by that we didn’t thank our lucky stars that we had each other’s company. We were at home safe, healthy and blessed all the way to the end. Mud- der watched as her genera- tion was so vulnerable and that they went through such an unimaginable lonely and painful crossing, without family holding each other close and heart to heart. “She would always sign off with ‘Happy trails to you,’” she added. “‘Aloha, xoxo — moi.’ Please, always remember to love your mother.” the Oregon State Police, Clat- sop County Sheriff’s offi ce, Seaside, Gearhart, Astoria, Cannon Beach and Warren- ton police departments and the Seaside, Astoria, Jewell, Knappa and Warrenton-Ham- mond school districts. For more information, con- tact Angel Escobedo at esc- obedoa@careorgeon.org. annual scholarship program. Awards up to $1,000 will be granted to one or more high school seniors who reside in Clatsop County and whose further education at college, university, vocational school, or training program will help them develop skills that con- tribute to the advancement of sound gardening practices. Applications can be obtained by contacting high school counselors’ offi ces, downloaded at www.clatsop- mastergardeners.org/CCM- GA-Scholarship, via email at lindabrim@gmail.com, or 503-325-0916. BRIEFS Applications invited for grant funding Seaside is now accepting tourism grant applications for the 2021-22 fi scal cycle. Up to $50,000 in grant funds are expected to be available. Those with a proposal encouraging overnight stays in Seaside between July 1 and Dec. 31, 2022 are encouraged to apply. The application deadline is May 7. For more information, visit the city’s tourism grant program webpage. Last year this program funded: Seaside Chamber of Commerce, Pouring at the Coast Brewfest; Sun- set Empire Park and Recre- ation Foundation, Art in the Park ... Naturally and Virtu- ally; the Seaside Downtown Development Association, Halloween Happenin’s; Sea- side Museum and Historical Society, Lewis and Clark Salt Makers and Seaside Prom Centennial Photo Exhibit; North Coast Land Conser- vancy, CoastWalk Oregon; and Knights of Columbus, Oktoberfest. ‘Handle With Care’ addresses childhood trauma A new initiative, “Han- dle With Care,” partners local school districts and law enforcement agencies in an ini- tiative to support children who experience traumatic events. When law enforcement encounters a child at the scene of a traumatic event, the child’s name and three words, “Han- dle With Care” are commu- nicated to the child’s school before the school bell rings the next day. This enables teachers and school personnel to offer support, rather than discipline to a student. For example, the teacher might provide extra help with coursework, refer the child to the school counselor, be fl exible with deadlines or delay or reschedule exams or projects. The initiative protects the child’s privacy as no details of the traumatic event are shared with the school. Handle With Care is pre- sented through Columbia Pacifi c CCO and the Resil- ient Clatsop County network, to prevent and heal child- hood trauma and build fam- ily resilience. Partners include Master gardeners seek applicants The Clatsop County Mas- ter Gardener Association is accepting applications for its PUBLIC MEETINGS Contact local agencies for latest meeting information and atten- dance guidelines. TUESDAY, FEB. 16 Seaside School District, 6 p.m., www.seaside.k12.or.us/meetings. cityofseaside.us. THURSDAY, FEB. 18 MONDAY, FEB. 22 WEDNESDAY, FEB. 17 Seaside Planning Commis- sion, 6 p.m., work session, Seaside Tourism Advisory Com- mittee, 3 p.m., cityofseaside.us. Seaside Transportation Adviso- ry Committee, 6 p.m., cityofsea- side.us. Seaside City Council, 7 p.m., cityofseaside.us. CIRCULATION MANAGER Jeremy Feldman ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx PRODUCTION MANAGER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John D. Bruijn Skyler Archibald Darren Gooch Joshua Heineman Rain Jordan Katherine Lacaze Esther Moberg SYSTEMS MANAGER Carl Earl Sunset Empire Park and Rec- reation District Board of Direc- tors, regular meeting, 5:15 p.m., 1225 Avenue A. TUESDAY, FEB. 23 Seaside Signal Letter policy Subscriptions The Seaside Signal is published every other week by EO Media Group, 1555 N. Roosevelt, Seaside, OR 97138. 503-738-5561 seasidesignal.com Copyright © 2021 Seaside Signal. Nothing can be reprinted or copied without consent of the owners. The Seaside Signal welcomes letters to the editor. The deadline is noon Monday prior to publication. 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