Site Index
The statue artist, Anna Burke Harris, describes the bond she
developed with Patsy Ann as she brought the sculpture to life in her New
Mexico workshop.
You are here.Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.
But not forgotten. A free memorial page, dedicated to our friends who have Gone to Dogstar (and who wait for us there).
Patsy Ann lives on, in a new fiction book, DogStar. Short listed for two major awards!
Check your age in dog years, learn about Juneau, Alaska or visit with the authors and their dog, Cato.
Links to bullies from around the world - organizations, home pages and merchandise.
Patsy Ann T-Shirts and Dog Books from Amazon online bookstore -- including many bull terrier books.
Just for fun - Weekly horoscopes by astrologer Georgia Nicols, as
seen in the National Post and the Vancouver Province. Join Patsy Ann's
horoscope by email club!
|
|
Photo by Derek Reich, many thanks
|
atsy Ann, a Bull Terrier, was born in Portland, Oregon on October 12, 1929 and came
to Juneau as a pup. She died in Juneau on March 30, 1942.
On the following day, a small crowd watched
as her coffin was lowered into Gastineau Channel just a short distance from where her sculpture now sits,
watching and waiting with eternal patience, whether shrouded in fog, bathed in
sunshine or covered with snow.
ecause of her unerring sense of
the imminent arrival of each ship that visited Juneau and her
faithful welcome at wharfside, Juneau Mayor Goldstein dubbed
Patsy Ann "Official Greeter of Juneau,
Alaska" in 1934.
Patsy Ann was stone deaf (from birth), but she somehow "heard" the whistles
of approaching ships -- long before they came into sight --
and headed at a fast trot for the
wharf. She was never wrong. In fact, on one memorable occasion, a crowd was
given erroneous information and gathered at the wrong
dock. Patsy Ann gazed at the crowd for a long moment,
then turned and trotted to the correct dock.
etween ship's visits, Patsy Ann made the rounds of her friends at local businesses.
She had a vast number of friends, most of whom slipped her bits of food, including a daily
candy bar from one fan. Patsy Ann was as much a fixture of beer parlors and hotel lobbies as any
paying guest.
Old Juneau's Ambassador was the most famous
canine west of the Mississippi, more photographed
than Rin Tin Tin.
During the 1930's her image adorned post cards sold by curio
shops and for many visitors, she was
the highlight of their visit to Juneau. Local author Carl Burrows published a "little book" in 1939,
simply titled Patsy Ann.
er distinctive gait slowed over the years due to rheumatism brought on by unscheduled dives into
the cold waters of the Gastineau Channel and she grew overweight
from the high living of the ships' cooks. Still, she always headed for the docks, on the double,
whenever steamship whistles shook old Juneau's boardwalks.
Of no fixed address, Patsy Ann spent most of her nights in the Longshoreman's hall where,
surrounded by kindred souls, she could run safely down the alleys of her
bull terrier dreams. Fittingly, it was there she died gently on March 30,
1942. The next day, a crowd gathered as her tiny coffin was lowered
into Gastineau channel.
Patsy Ann captured the hearts of Juneau's
citizens with her dignity, honesty, and devotion to her duties as "Official Greeter of Juneau,
Alaska".
Photo by Derek Reich, many thanks |
ifty years after her death, her statue was commissioned by the "Friends of Patsy Ann"
and installed on the wharf she knew so well.
Sculpted by New Mexican artist Anna Burke Harris, clippings of dog hair from all over the world were included in the
bronze at the time of casting, symbolically uniting the spirit of dogs everywhere. On July 3, 1992 at
7:30 p.m., Patsy Ann, in her new incarnation, was presented to the world under blue skies with a balmy
breeze in the air.
Photo by Derek Reich, many thanks
|
atsy Ann sits at North 58 degrees,
17 minutes and 91 seconds North Latitude and 134 degrees, 24 minutes and 17
seconds West Longitude.
Each year, hundreds of thousands of tourists visit Juneau from cruise ships and
are welcomed on the dock by Patsy Ann, as they would have been in the 1930’s.
They are encouraged to
"greet her and touch her and in leaving, carry with you the blessings of friendship through your
life's journey". |
No comments:
Post a Comment