Business Week article: "The Politics of Prosperity"
Scope and Contents note
James E. Carty’s great-granduncle (James), arriving with the Hudson’s Bay Co. in 1837, and grandfather (James N. Carty), arriving in 1858, were among the first non-Native American families to settle in Clark County. Among the family papers in this collection are title abstracts of property owned by the Carty family as well as receipts and accounting ledgers documenting the family’s daily business, which included a rock and gravel quarry. A small number of personal letters and a scrapbook of clippings and poetry are also included.
As an attorney, James E. Carty encountered many interesting cases in his career. One of the more notable cases was his involvement in the parole of the legendary gangster Alvin “Creepy” Karpis, a leader of the depression-era’s Barker/Karpis gang who had already served several decades in prison at Alcatraz for the kidnapping and ransom of Hamm’s Brewery president, William Hamm Jr. During the late 1960s Carty became parole attorney for Karpis. While serving time at McNeil Island Corrections Center, Karpis was introduced to Carty by a fellow inmate who was a client of the attorney. Carty and Karpis became good friends and continued a regular correspondence. Karpis was successfully paroled after spending over 30 years behind bars, 25 of which at Alcatraz with some of the nation's most notable criminals. The James E. Carty Collection contains over ten years of correspondence between Karpis and Carty, photographs documenting the parole and release, a manuscript and galley proof of Alvin Karpis book The Alvin Karpis Story, clippings and other items, and ephemera relating to their legal and personal relations.
Although much of Carty’s political career had ended in the early 1980s, he remained politically active in the Democratic Party until his death in 2001. The collection includes a large number of copies and clippings of editorials written to local newspapers expressing concern over political and social issues of the day. Correspondence with regional and national political figures are also contain in the collection as well as a number of news articles, research data for political strategy and a collection of jargon for political speeches.
In his later life, Carty exercised his abilities as a historian. In 1994 he published a book called A Territorial Anthology of the Oregon Territory 1792-1860, an historical survey revealing the early voyages, settlements and business of immigrants in the Northwest, the life of American Indians in the area and the ensuing wars and conflict with white settlers. The collection includes typed drafts and notes of the book with revisions and finalized copies. Also included are a number of other historical writings Carty composed during and after the creation of the book. Some of these writings uncover little known histories about Clark County and the Pacific Northwest. Other miscellaneous writings are interspersed among the historical papers, revealing Carty’s reflections and opinions of his own history, his politics and observations on the present state and future of Clark County and the nation.
Dates
- 1873-1915; circa 1966-1980; 1984-2001
Language of Materials
English
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is available for research access.
Extent
From the Collection: 10.6 Linear Feet
Creator
- From the Collection: Carty, James E., 1920-2001 (Ridgefield, Washington) (Person)
Repository Details
Part of the Washington State University Vancouver, Archives and Special Collections Repository
