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Masonic journey would take him to the Grand East on September 23, 1875.

            Thomas Minor became a leader in the Republican party, regularly  attending the party’s territorial
            conventions and representing the territory at national conventions in 1876, 1880, and 1888. In 1880 he
            was elected (by 98 votes out of 107 total) to the largely ornamental post of Mayor of Port Townsend. He
            was re-elected the following year to a second one-year term.

            Minor  married  Sarah  Montgomery  on  August  20,  1872,  in  Oregon.  Sarah  (born  May  21,  1840,  in
            Pennsylvania;  died  June  11,  1931,  in  Seattle)  was  the  daughter  of  William  Montgomery  and  Eliza
            Moorhead. Thomas and Sarah were the parents of two daughters: Elizabeth Montgomery Minor, born on
            May 14, 1874, in Port Townsend, Washington; died November 24, 1958, in Seattle; and Judith Strong
            Minor, born December 2, 1876, Port Townsend; died July 19, 1959, Philadelphia.

            In 1883, he moved his family and medical practice to the larger city. The Minors immediately became as
            active in Seattle civic life as they had been in Port Townsend. Sarah Minor, whom he married on August
            20,1872, was a co-founder of the Ladies Relief Society and Thomas Minor became a leader in Seattle’s
            recently established Chamber of Commerce.

            In 1886, Minor was part of a group of conservative Seattle business and civic leaders who organized a
            "law and order" party known as the Loyal League in response to the labor unrest and anti-Chinese riots of
            1885-1886 and the city’s depressed economic condition. Their candidate for mayor, Seattle founder Arthur
            A. Denny (1822-1899), was defeated in the 1886 election. In the following year’s election, the Loyal
            League supported Minor, who won the mayor’s office with a substantial majority. Minor’s one- year term
            as mayor appears to have been successful, helped no doubt by the fact that Seattle was on its way to
            economic recovery.

            In addition to his term as mayor, Minor served three terms as president of the Seattle school board. He
            presided over the start of a major school-building program and initiated reforms in school management.
            With Washington territory preparing to become a state in 1889, Minor spent the summer as a delegate to
            the convention that drafted the new state’s constitution. He was touted as a likely candidate for statewide
            office. However, soon after the statehood celebrations in November 1889, Minor and his companions set
            out on their ill-fated duck hunting trip.

            Minor, his friend Morris Haller (son of M⸫W⸫  Granville Haller), and Haller’s brother-in-law Lewis Cox
            hunted near Stanwood for several days without much success, so on December 2, 1889, they decided to
            cross Saratoga Passage to Brann’s Point on Whidbey Island, a distance of 12 miles. Not finding a sailboat
            to tow their canoes across, the three hunters set out across the often-treacherous passage paddling a large
            Indian cedar canoe and a smaller canvas one. They were not seen alive again. Search parties set out when
            they had not returned within a few days.

            Once the empty canoes were found washed up on a Whidbey Island beach, it was apparent the men had
            drowned. Seattle came  to a standstill on Sunday, December 15, as huge memorial services  and a
            procession were held in honor of Minor and Haller. Morris Haller’s body was found on January 4, 1890,




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