|
Galen Alvord Biery (1910-1994) was one of Bellingham’s most well-known
local “armchair” historians.
During the summer of 1930, Biery was introduced to Beverley B. Dobbs, who had become famous for
filming some of the first motion picture travelogues of the Alaskan Gold Rush.
In Fairhaven Biery began working for Dobbs as he photographed the fish processing operations at Pacific American Fisheries
during the 1930s. Biery later travelled
with him to Seattle to learn more about motion pictures and photographic
techniques.
Galen Biery set up a newsreel laboratory in Bellingham in 1932 and captured the Nooksack River floods
on film which was aired
nationally. In 1935 Biery’s inventiveness, with the help of Bob and Joe Dunn,
led to a patent for a
post-card printing machine. Later, Biery and Erwin Hube invented a revolutionary
salmon skinning and boning machine used in a Pacific American Fisheries cannery in Alaska.
Throughout his career, Biery worked as a machinist, mechanic, researcher and
cannery foreman at Pacific American Fisheries.
After his retirement in 1976, Biery was able to concentrate on his passions of
history, photography, film and gardening. He shared both his knowledge of local
history and the thousands of photographs he had taken through his famous “Magic
Lantern” slide shows. The “Magic Lantern” slide shows began in 1958 for the
Fairhaven Lions’ Club and expanded to include historical societies, museums,
community clubs and local elementary schools. The shows presented Biery’s
recollections and research on local history, including Lake Whatcom, Pacific
American Fisheries, local theaters and the Mount Baker country.
Biery collaborated on many books, including Looking Back, with Dorothy Koert,
wrote several newspaper columns titled, “Bellingham…A Look Back,” in the
Bellingham Buyer, and had photos published in the Bellingham Herald. His historic photos grace
almost every newspaper in the region, as well as several books. In 1984, Biery was named
“Whatcom County’s Living Treasure” by the Bellingham Arts Commission, and
proclaimed “Honor Citizen” by the City of Bellingham.
Although Galen Biery died on September 26, 1994, his heritage is deeply
ingrained in the residents of Bellingham and Whatcom County, Washington. His
“Magic Lantern” slide shows have been carried on by several friends and most
recently by his grandchildren. The Galen Biery Papers reflect his
commitment to the history of Bellingham.
References:
Bellingham Herald. 9 July 1991; 5 May 1994; 1, 28 September
1994.
Biery, Galen. personal biography, October 12, 1959, Galen Biery
Collection, Center for Pacific Northwest Studies.
Koert, Dorothy, and Galen Biery. Looking Back. Vol.
2. Lynden: Lynden Tribune, 1982.
Seattle Times. 31 March 1957.
|