![]() The Women's Legacy Project of Snohomish County, Washington seeks to honor our foremothers by recording and sharing their personal histories, their ability to adapt to the forces of change and their constant vigilance as stewards of the diverse cultures of our society. |
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WLP Story Number 16 ~
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Marian Harrison~ She Never Let Color, Gender or Age Stop
Her
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| Marian started school in Arlington, but during the war went to Marysville for fourth and fifth grade. She describes a different experience than many might expect about growing up the only black child in her grammar school class. She says, “There wasn’t much teasing, perhaps because I wasn’t as dark, but I think it was more that I grew up in an area that was mainly Norwegian, Swedish, Danish and German. They didn’t come from a prejudiced society. Also, it was the Depression and it was neighbor helping neighbor.” | ||
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She attended Catholic school for awhile, went back to Marysville High School in tenth grade, graduated in 1949 and then attended the University of Washington for a few months. She married Lyman Lewis and had a son her husband never got to see. “Before I knew it,” she explains, “I was the 19-year-old widow of the Korean War.” |
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A few years later she wed Van Harrison, but the couple
eventually divorced, leaving Marian with a son in college
and six children at home. She says her older children had
less difficulty growing up black in Arlington than the
younger ones. “It was at the time when all the civil rights
stuff had gone on,” she says. “Boeing was laying everybody
off, and they were all leaving, while people from the rest
of the country started flooding the area, bringing their
prejudices with them. One year’s time can make a lot of
difference in a high school, but it didn’t stop my kids from
doing what they want to do.”
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| It was hard, honest work and Marian did it and more. She was required to join the Public School Employees of Washington Union, and at one time or another held every chapter position there was, became zone director for all chapters in the county and sat on the statewide board of directors. Two-time recipient of the Employee of the Year award, she is a lifetime member of the union and still represents it on the state retirement advisory committee and the employee retirement benefits board. | ||
| Marian is pleased that her children are also productive citizens. “I’m so proud of them,” she says. “One went to college on his dad’s GI Bill. The others got scholarships and student loans. One child was an exchange student to Japan, another to Iran. They are all very accomplished.” Best of all, Marian says, is that they learned to know themselves, and to be themselves. | ||
| And they have much reason to be proud of the woman who says, “My children went much farther than their mother ever did.” Marian has never used her gender or color as an excuse for anything. Yes, she has encountered prejudice, but she refuses to let it make her bitter. She volunteers her time and expertise for the good of others. She works with the State Family Policy Council and is on the Snohomish County Health and Safety Network and the Snohomish County Children’s Commission. She is also on the board of Evergreen Manor, a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center. | ||
She works tirelessly on the Foster Care Review board,
which she describes as “A bunch of citizens trained to look
at out-of-home placements of children and make
recommendations to the court for disposition.” The main
focus, she says is to see if parents are following the court
order and getting into court-ordered services. “We don’t let
these kids languish going from foster home to foster home,”
she says. “I am passionate about monitoring so kids don't
get shuffled around."
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| While working on the county’s Black History Project, she and fellow researchers discovered an old Ku Klux Klan membership form and an article about a gathering of 10,000 Klan members in Arlington. She learned about black ball players, military men, barbers and others who came to the Northwest after the demise of slavery looking for a chance to own property and make a fresh start. Her research has led her to become a member of Snohomish County Women’s Legacy Project, which seeks to recognize the contributions that women, including women of color, made, and are still making to the county. | ||
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Even with all this volunteering, Marian still finds time to enjoy her 11 grandchildren, be active in church, root for the Seattle Mariners and go to the symphony. She loves music and was a member of Everett Chorale until a car crash in 1994 broke several of her bones, including her spine, taking her five-foot-six frame to four-foot-eleven. But she hasn’t let even that become an excuse to sit back and become idle either. How could anyone dare stereotype such a woman! |
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| Source: Interview with Marian Harrison, February 2005 © 2005 Theresa (Teri) A. Baker All Rights Reserved |