Remember when cattle were driven through downtown Sequim? This pioneer does!

SEQUIM — If you like your history topped with a pitchfork-ful of prairie-dry humor, Doug McInnes is your man.

And clearly, he was Mr. Right for Tuesday’s birthday party for the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce.

McInnes is 80 and a Sequim native, and so is the chamber.

So, with sparkling apple-grape juice flowing beside the birthday cake, McInnes and Sequim’s business people got together at the SunLand Golf & Country Club for a quick Dungeness Valley history tour.

McInnes started the trip in 1930, the year he was born and the year the movie “Untamed,” starring Joan Crawford as a girl raised in the jungle, was playing at Sequim’s Olympic Theater; adult admission 40 cents, kids 20 cents.

• Also in 1930: the U.S. Census was under way, and would count 534 Sequim residents.

• 1933 was a wet year, with 25 inches of rain on Sequim and the end of Prohibition.

• In 1934 you could get lunch in the Sequim school cafeteria for 7 cents.

• In 1936 Hugh McCrorie would drive his cow herd through downtown, while out in the fields, tractors were replacing horses and milking machines were gaining popularity.

• 1937: Elk hunting is begun in order to thin the population, and 800 elk were killed — plus two men; that same year a sign went up on the east end of town announcing “Sequim: Where Water is Wealth.”

• 1941: After the bombing of Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, brought this country into World War II, blackouts and coastal patrols got under way on the Olympic Peninsula, with gasoline and food rationing soon to follow.

• 1945: The war ended, with 58 service members from Clallam County killed in action.

• 1949: McInnes’ bride-to-be, Bonnie, was crowned queen of the Irrigation Festival.

• 1950: Some Sequim residents acquired their first television sets, and an especially snowy winter hit; “That was a toughie,” said McInnes, who was 20 that year.

• 1953: Sequim’s single traffic light became a full-service stoplight as the population reached 1,125 — and the town got house numbers.

• 1958: The Three Crabs Restaurant — now at 11 Three Crabs Road — opened in the back of the Dungeness Tavern.

• 1959: Some 13,000 cows lived on dairy farms in and around Sequim.

• 1966: With the population up to 1,325, Sequim’s railroad depot closed, but visitors began to find out — and spread the word — about the “Sequim lifestyle,” with its sunshine, fertile farms and good fishing and hunting.

“And the rest is history,” McInnes said, before serving up a reading list of his own invention.

“I promised the library I would plug some of the lesser-known books,” he joked, before touting such fictitious titles as “A High Tide’s High Tide,” by Sue Nami; the sequel to Walt Whitman’s “Leaves of Grass,” known as “Confessions of an Early-Day Pot Smoker;” and “Don’t Start the Evolution Without Me!” the prequel to Charles Darwin’s “The Origin of Species.”

McInnes’ own actual book, “Sequim Yesterday,” is available at the Museum & Arts Center, 175 W. Cedar St., and at Pacific Mist Books, 121 W. Washington St.

McInnes, honored as a grand pioneer in the 2007 Irrigation Festival, is the member of a family with deep — and ongoing — roots in this community.

He likes to be known as dad to David McInnes, who teaches math at Sequim Middle School and has starred in many Olympic Theatre Arts shows.

His great-niece, Vickie Maples, is the executive director of the Sequim chamber of commerce.

And he’s been married for a mere 57 years to Bonnie, a farmer’s daughter whose family, the Robbs, worked the land until the 1970s.

Their farm, McInnes said, is now the site of Sequim’s Walmart.

________

Sequim-Dungeness Valley Reporter Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-681-2391 or at diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Two dead after tree falls in Olympic National Forest

Two women died after a tree fell in Olympic National… Continue reading

Sue Long, left, Vicki Bennett and Frank Handler, all from Port Townsend, volunteer at the Martin Luther King Day of Service beach restoration on Monday at Fort Worden State Park. The activity took place on Knapp Circle near the Point Wilson Lighthouse. Sixty-four volunteers participated in the removal of non-native beach grasses. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Work party

Sue Long, left, Vicki Bennett and Frank Handler, all from Port Townsend,… Continue reading

Portion of bridge to be replaced

Tribe: Wooden truss at railroad park deteriorating

Kingsya Omega, left, and Ben Wilson settle into a hand-holding exercise. (Aliko Weste)
Process undermines ‘Black brute’ narrative

Port Townsend company’s second film shot in Hawaii

Jefferson PUD to replace water main in Coyle

Jefferson PUD commissioners awarded a $1.3 million construction contract… Continue reading

Scott Mauk.
Chimacum superintendent receives national award

Chimacum School District Superintendent Scott Mauk has received the National… Continue reading

Hood Canal Coordinating Council meeting canceled

The annual meeting of the Hood Canal Coordinating Council, scheduled… Continue reading

Bruce Murray, left, and Ralph Parsons hang a cloth exhibition in the rotunda of the old Clallam County Courthouse on Friday in Port Angeles. The North Olympic History Center exhibit tells the story of the post office past and present across Clallam County. The display will be open until early February, when it will be relocated to the Sequim City Hall followed by stops on the West End. The project was made possible due to a grant from the Clallam County Heritage Advisory Board. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Post office past and present

Bruce Murray, left, and Ralph Parsons hang a cloth exhibition in the… Continue reading

This agave grew from the size of a baseball in the 1990s to the height of Isobel Johnston’s roof in 2020. She saw it bloom in 2023. Following her death last year, Clallam County Fire District 3 commissioners, who purchased the property on Fifth Avenue in 2015, agreed to sell it to support the building of a new Carlsborg fire station. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
Fire district to sell property known for its Sequim agave plant

Sale proceeds may support new Carlsborg station project

As part of Olympic Theatre Arts’ energy renovation upgrade project, new lighting has been installed, including on the Elaine and Robert Caldwell Main Stage that allows for new and improved effects. (Olympic Theatre Arts)
Olympic Theatre Arts remodels its building

New roof, LED lights, HVAC throughout

Weekly flight operations scheduled

Field carrier landing practice operations will be conducted for aircraft… Continue reading