Victor Aloysius Meyers

Victor Aloysius Meyers

Victor Aloysius ("Vic") Meyers (September 7, 1897May 28, 1991)Michael Hood, [http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=8392 Meyers, Victor A. (1898-1991)] , HistoryLink, December 4, 2007] . Accessed online 23 August 2008] known as "The Clown Prince of Politics" and "The Pagliacci of Politics",Don Duncan, [http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19910529&slug=1285853 Vic Meyers' Main Legacy Is Laughter -- Quick Wit, Wild Stunts Marked His Long Career] "Seattle Times", May 29, 1991. Accessed online 23 August 2008] was a Seattle, Washington, jazz bandleader and Washington State Democratic Party politician. He served 20 years as Washington's lieutenant governor and 8 as Secretary of State of Washington.

Youth and musical career

Born in Little Falls, Minnesota, Meyers was the fifteenth of sixteen children. His mother was a pianist; his father Morrison County treasurer. Meyers became a multi-instrumental musician, with drums as his first instrument.

His family moved to Oregon. In his teens, Meyers played drums professionally at a Seaside, Oregon.(Anonymous), "The Late Hotel Butler", "Seattlife", April 1939. Page unknown, this was in a clipping file on Meyers at the Seattle Public Library.] At age 21 he put together a 10-piece band, recorded for Brunswick Records and toured nationally before settling in Seattle, where he played on the radio and where his band first got a residency at the Trianon Ballroom in the Belltown/Denny Regrade area north of downtown and later for many years at the Rose Room at the Butler Hotel, Seattle's leading dance venue of the time, well-known for its flouting of Prohibition.

Meyers' compositions as a musician included "Ada", composed with Harold Weeks and Danny Cann; "Isle of Dreams", composed with Weeks and Oliver Wallace; and "I'm Happy Now That You're Gone", composed with Al Thompson and Harry Von Tilzer. [Don Duncan, [http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19900409&slug=1065610 Musical Tribute To Vic Meyers: Public Servant And Funny Guy] , "Seattle Times", April 9, 1990. Accessed online 24 August 2008.]

Meyers enters politics

By 1932, Meyers had left the Butler Hotel and was holding forth at his own Club Victor back up in the Regrade, often nearly broke, and continuing to get in trouble with the authorities enforcing the Prohibition laws. Covered constantly by the local press, he was one of the city's best-known figures. That year was a local election year, and assistant city editor Doug Welch and some other newspapermen at the "Seattle Times" decided to urge Meyers to enter the city's nonpartisan spring 1932 mayoral race against business candidate John F. Dore (a trial lawyer) and a field of "fatuous has-beens and never-wases"." [http://www2.tacomapubliclibrary.org/v2/nwroom/morgan/Meyers.htm Vic Meyers Enters Politics] ", p. 263-267 Murray C. Morgan, "Puget's Sound: A Narrative of Early Tacoma and the Southern Sound", University of Washington Press, 1979. Accessed online on the site of the Tacoma, Washington Public Library, 23 August 2008.] Welch saw Meyers as a joke candidate he could use as an anchor for satiric stories on the race. Meyers was, of course, happy to have the publicity.

The "Times" trumpeted Meyers entry into the race with an eight-column page one headline, and gave him daily coverage. Meyers chose the meaningless campaign slogan "Watch 'er Click with Vic". He drove a beer wagon around town—this in the midst of Prohibition—with his band playing "Happy Days Are Here Again"; he started out campaigning in shirt sleeves, to prove he was not a representative of the vested interests; later he campaigned in a tuxedo, silk scarf, top hat, velvet-lapeled overcoat, and kid gloves. His speeches were often parodies of Dore's. He came out in favor of graft. His answer to the problems of Seattle's ailing streetcar system was to add hostesses. He appeared at a Shriners' candidates' forum at the Olympic Hotel dressed as Mahatma Gandhi, leading a goat, sipping goat's milk and munching raw carrots, and wearing gold-rimmed eyeglasses.

Somewhere along the way, though, Meyers decided he had ideas every bit as good as the other candidates'. Also, he got tired of the complaints of the "Times's" rivals, the "Post-Intelligencer" and "Star", that he was degrading the electoral process. Increasingly, he ignored the "Times's" gag writers and began to campaign seriously, but still finished only sixth in a field of ten.

After briefly going back to being a full-time bandleader, he decided to run for lieutenant governor in the fall 1932 election, this time without Welch and the "Times". Actually, he originally decided to run for governor, but didn't want to pony up the $US60 filing fee; the filing fee for lieutenant governor was only $12. He continued to use humor (for example, repeating the Gandhi bit) and music (playing saxophone at his own campaign appearances), but also campaigned more seriously. He appeared on an Indian reservation talking about how the Indians weren't allowed to vote. He came out for pensions, child welfare, and unemployment compensation. He gained the Democratic nomination in the September primary, thereby becoming the running mate to Clarence D. Martin; both went on to win in November in conjunction with Franklin D. Roosevelt's landslide victory in the presidential election. Meyers and his band played at the inaugural ball.

Career politician

While Meyers first ran for lieutenant governor without even being clear on the duties of the office, he soon became adept at those duties, the most important of which was to preside over the Washington State Senate. He became known as a leader of the left wing of the state Democratic Party, often putting him at odds with the more centrist Governor Martin, but getting on well with rising star Albert D. Rosellini. When, in the midst of the Great Depression, the left-wing Unemployed Citizens' League marched to Olympia, Washington to confront Governor Martin, Meyers opened his home to the marchers. He was re-elected five times before finally losing in 1952 in the Eisenhower landslide. During that time, he twice again ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Seattle, losing to Arthur B. Langlie in 1938 and to William F. Devin in 1946. He later ran successfully for Secretary of State of Washington in 1956 and served two terms in that office before being defeated in 1964 after a scandal related to the mishandling of the petition for an anti-gambling initiative.

He had one last hurrah, entering the 1976 race to regain his position as secretary of state, but withdrew for health reasons. Meyers' son Victor Aloysius Meyers, Jr. served two terms in the state legislature (elected from the 31st District in 1958 and 1960) and ran unsuccessfully for state secretary of state in 1980, before dying in 1981 at the age of 57. ["Victor A. Meyers, 2nd" (obituary), "Seattle Times", June 18, 1981, p. B5.]

Pre-fab houses

In the years after World War II, Meyers also took a shot at the prefabricated housing business, partnering with his brother Joseph Meyers and State Senator Howard Bargreen of Everett, Washington in a venture selling "Honeymoon GI homes". Many of these still stand in Tacoma, Washington.

Late in life, he managed a golf course and apartment complex in Kent, Washington. His last years were spent in a nursing home.

Honors

In 1977, the Washington legislature designated the golf course at Sun Lakes State Park as the "Vic Meyers Golf Course" and renamed Rainbow Lake as "Vic Meyers Lake". [ [http://apps.leg.wa.gov/RCW/default.aspx?cite=79A.05.260 RCW 79A.05.260] . Accessed online 23 August 2008] The park had been a pet project of his. Considered too out-of-the-way when Meyers first backed it, "Vic's Folly" is now one of the busiest parks in the state.

Meyers is a member of the Northwest Music Association Hall of Fame.

Partial discography

* "Mean Mean Mama / Shake It and Break It", Brunswick 2501 (1923) [http://settlet.fateback.com/BRN2500.htm Brunswick 2500 series] , [http://settlet.fateback.com/discography.html The Online Discographical Project] . Accessed online 24 August 2008.]
* "Helen Gone / Springtime Rag", Brunswick 2630 (1924)
* "Beets and Turnips" / "Weary Blues", Brunswick 2664 (1924)
* "Heartbroken" / "Burmalone", Brunswick 2685 (1924)
* "Mean Looks" / "Tell Me What To Do", Brunswick 2733 (1924)
* "The Only, Only One For Me" / "No Wonder (That I Love You)", Brunswick 2774 (1924)
* "Sad" / "Shimmy", Brunswick 2800 (1924)

Notes


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