History article written for Granite Falls website,Politics
Whew! The campaigns are over and the votes have been counted! I didn’t
know many of the candidates
personally (have met only two or three), but it got me thinking about
politicians in general, and how they
develop. Did we have any in Granite Falls? Were we a "power" in
County or State politics? Then, in
another museum "coincidence", on Nov 11th a museum visitor
brought in a perfectly preserved metal
stencil from a long—ago campaign season that he found in a house on E.
Union St. It says:
C. H. VOORHIS
LIBERTY PARTY
NOM
COMM. 1st DISTRICT
GRANITE FALLS
Clearly, it was intended for making signs and placards to
support the campaign of Charles Voorhis, one of our City
Council members who apparently ran for a County
Commission position. A quick check of our newspapers
provided a couple short articles mentioning his candidacy
(: . V l in 1932. Oddly enough, it was Frank Ashe (well-known
~» T , Granite Falls businessman) who was famous for being a
L I E T\ Ill) . ‘ popular County Commissionerfrom District #1 through
most of the 305 and 405. How did that happen?
We have a handwritten history of Frank’s career, given to
us by his daughter Lois Jorgensen. She describes the
Granite Falls arrival of the Ashe family (Frank Sr and wife
Martha), with three sons (James—oldest, Frank—12yrs old,
and Bernard—youngest) in 1906. Frank won an essay
contest in 1907, garnering 3 dollars, enough to buy a used bicycle that he
repaired. In 1910, at the age of
16, he quit school to open a bicycle repair business, which quickly turned
into City Cyclery. Selling Excelsior
motorcycles was a mainstay, and that progressed into Model T Fords. The
garage building on W. Stanley St
stood where today stands Mark’s Country Store, and we have a great
picture of a multitude of Granite Falls
young men on their Excelsiors in front of the business.
on S. Granite, built originally for the Granite Falls Mercantile Co, but
for decades serving as Ashe Bros
Garage. Today it serves as our firehouse! For a while selling both Fords
and GMC trucks, they were forced
to choose, and ultimately chose GMC/Chevy/Oldmobile. In 1926, they built a
new building on their
property on W. Stanley, opening it as the Mountain Loop Service Station
with Bernard as the proprietor
(but it said Ashe Bros) on the overhang. That became the Chevy and GMC
dealership Frank operated until
1969.
, Accession/Object ID: No accession number, Object Name: , Title: Back in the Day article, Author: Fred Cruger, Description: History article written for Granite Falls website, Date: , OCR Text: Politics
Whew! The campaigns are over and the votes have been counted! I didn’t
know many of the candidates
personally (have met only two or three), but it got me thinking about
politicians in general, and how they
develop. Did we have any in Granite Falls? Were we a "power" in
County or State politics? Then, in
another museum "coincidence", on Nov 11th a museum visitor
brought in a perfectly preserved metal
stencil from a long—ago campaign season that he found in a house on E.
Union St. It says:
C. H. VOORHIS
LIBERTY PARTY
NOM
COMM. 1st DISTRICT
GRANITE FALLS
Clearly, it was intended for making signs and placards to
support the campaign of Charles Voorhis, one of our City
Council members who apparently ran for a County
Commission position. A quick check of our newspapers
provided a couple short articles mentioning his candidacy
(: . V l in 1932. Oddly enough, it was Frank Ashe (well-known
~» T , Granite Falls businessman) who was famous for being a
L I E T\ Ill) . ‘ popular County Commissionerfrom District #1 through
most of the 305 and 405. How did that happen?
We have a handwritten history of Frank’s career, given to
us by his daughter Lois Jorgensen. She describes the
Granite Falls arrival of the Ashe family (Frank Sr and wife
Martha), with three sons (James—oldest, Frank—12yrs old,
and Bernard—youngest) in 1906. Frank won an essay
contest in 1907, garnering 3 dollars, enough to buy a used bicycle that he
repaired. In 1910, at the age of
16, he quit school to open a bicycle repair business, which quickly turned
into City Cyclery. Selling Excelsior
motorcycles was a mainstay, and that progressed into Model T Fords. The
garage building on W. Stanley St
stood where today stands Mark’s Country Store, and we have a great
picture of a multitude of Granite Falls
young men on their Excelsiors in front of the business.
on S. Granite, built originally for the Granite Falls Mercantile Co, but
for decades serving as Ashe Bros
Garage. Today it serves as our firehouse! For a while selling both Fords
and GMC trucks, they were forced
to choose, and ultimately chose GMC/Chevy/Oldmobile. In 1926, they built a
new building on their
property on W. Stanley, opening it as the Mountain Loop Service Station
with Bernard as the proprietor
(but it said Ashe Bros) on the overhang. That became the Chevy and GMC
dealership Frank operated until
1969.
, Granite Falls Historical Society,Documents (articles, clippings, letters, papers),Local History Articles,Back in the Day (local),Ashe_politician (1).pdf,Ashe_politician (1).pdf Page 1, Ashe_politician (1).pdf Page 1