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Peter Callaghan is a local columnist. He’s covered the statehouse and state politics since 1981. Before joining The News Tribune in 1985, the Stadium High grad worked for newspapers in Everett and Lewiston, Idaho, and for The Associated Press in Olympia and Seattle. Email Peter

Joe Turner has covered state government and transportation issues since 1990. Since the Bellarmine grad’s arrival in the newsroom in 1978, he’s covered police, suburban cities, Tacoma City Hall, Federal Way City Hall and the Pierce and King county governments. Email Joe

David Wickert covers Pierce County government. Before coming to The News Tribune in 1998, he covered local government for newspapers in Illinois, Virginia and Tennessee. Email David

Ian Demsky is a general assignment reporter who specializes in database-driven reporting. He's been at the News Tribune since 2007 and has previously worked in Nashville, Tenn. and Portland, Ore. When he's not at work, he enjoys hiking and science fiction. Email Ian
Les Blumenthal has been covering Washington, D.C. for The News Tribune since 1990, focusing on issues and politicians involving the state. Before joining The News Tribune, he spent 13 years working for The Associated Press in Seattle, Illinois and Washington, D.C. Email Les

John Henrikson is a local news editor who oversees political coverage. He's worked as a journalist in the Northwest for 19 years, supervising coverage and reporting on local and state government, the environment and growth. Email John

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Let's talk politics.
Thursday, March 26th, 2009
Posted by Joe Turner @ 06:50:18 am

She was, after all, the first woman on the Washington Supreme Court. And now she is the subject of an oral history.

(Boy! Former reporter John Hughes is really cranking out stories! Slow down, John. You're a historian now, not a reporter on a daily deadline.)

Here is a link to the legacy project:
http://www.secstate.wa.gov/legacyproject//

Legacy Project honors first woman Supreme Court justice

OLYMPIA – Before Sandra Day O’Connor was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court 28 years ago, Carolyn Dimmick was already getting used to breaking the glass ceiling in the judiciary in this Washington.

As the state and nation commemorate Women’s History Month, Dimmick, the first woman justice on the state Supreme Court, is being honored with a new oral history and profile. Her riveting story is the fourth in a newly launched series called The Legacy Project. These free online publications tell the life lessons and personal histories of some of Washington’s most interesting daughters and sons – and more installments are on the way.

The Legacy Project is part of the Washington State Heritage Center planned for the Capitol Campus in Olympia and online for the children and families of Washington and beyond.

The earlier trio honored by the series were rocker Krist Novoselic, pioneering newswoman Adele Ferguson and the state’s first African-American Supreme Court justice, Charles Z. Smith. All are on the Legacy Project site, along with photos and other materials, at no charge to the users. The Novoselic story has gotten thousands of “hits” after being written up in Rolling Stone magazine, The Associated Press and other media outlets.

[More:]

The Legacy Project, covering former governors and members of Congress, jurists and other movers and shakers, represents a re-launch of oral histories on a shoestring budget – and done with a sense of urgency since so many good stories are being lost with the passage of time. The Legislature is operating a separate program for former legislators.

“We are delighted to bring to the public the inspiring story of Carolyn Dimmick, a true heroine whose long and distinguished legal career is all the more noteworthy because she was constantly taking on the role of bringing more gender balance to our state and federal bench,” says Secretary of State Sam Reed, whose office sponsors the project.

The chief historian and author of the series, John Hughes, says the new oral history and profile describe the blend of sexism and full acceptance that Dimmick encountered. Dimmick was one of only three women in her graduating class in law school and later endured “cutie-pie” blonde lawyer comments as she rose in her profession and on the bench.

“A role model for her own generation and all since, Judge Dimmick had to run a gauntlet of those `She’s a woman and a judge -- imagine that!’” stereotypes before she became Washington’s first female Supreme Court justice in 1981,” writes Hughes. “Even then, her old boss … introduced her after her swearing-in as `the prettiest justice on the Supreme Court.’”

Dimmick, now 79 and on senior status on the federal bench, has been a judge since 1965, when she was tapped for the King County District Court, also known as the Northlake Justice Court. Then-Governor Dan Evans appointed her to the King County Superior Court in 1976. In the last days of her administration, the state’s first female governor, Dixy Lee Ray, elevated her to the state high court, in early 1981. In 1985, Dimmick received a White House appointment-for-life to the U.S. District Court in Seattle. President Reagan appointed O’Connor to the U.S. Supreme Court later in 1981. Ray’s successor, John Spellman, appointed Dimmick’s good friend, Barbara Durham to her vacancy on the state bench.

The oral histories and biographical profiles are posted at www.secstate.wa.gov/legacyproject//</blockquote>