Biographical Note
Al Rochester, a lifelong Seattle resident, was a New Deal Democrat who
served twelve years on the Seattle City Council and became an influential
booster of the 1962 Seattle World's Fair. Rochester was born in Seattle,
Washington, on March 28, 1895, one of four children from a pioneer Seattle
family. His parents, Judge George Alfred Caldwell (G.A.C.) Rochester and Julia
Gwynn Smith Rochester, came to Seattle from Kansas City in the late 1880s.
G.A.C. followed his brothers, Junius and Percy, to what was considered the
bountiful Pacific Northwest. Despite the fact that the three brothers found
themselves caught in the 1893 depression, they prospered in business (Percy)
and the Law (Junius and G.A.C.).
Al Rochester graduated from Broadway High School and served in World War
I (1917-1918), seeing action in the second battle of the Marne and at Meuse
Argonne. Following the Great War, Rochester served a short stint as a Wall
Street bond salesman. However, he soon returned to Seattle and at age 36
married Marguerite Reynolds; they had two children, Junius and Mary Ellen.
During World War II, Rochester served as state director of the Office of
War Information. In the mid-1940s, having been bitten by government service and
by Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal, he ran for elective office – the Seattle
City Council. To his surprise, he was a winner and served on the Council from
1944 to 1956. Among his proudest contributions during that time were his
chairmanship of the Parks and Streets and Sewers committees; his leadership in
the adoption of daylight savings time, one-way streets, and special street
parking for the physically handicapped; and his advocacy for construction of
the Alaskan Way Viaduct. During his City Council tenure, Rochester served as
"official greeter" to more than one-half million U.S. military personnel
returning from the Korean War.
At the age of 14, Rochester had operated a bread-slicing machine at a
restaurant in the “Pay Streak” carnival section of the 1909
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition exposition. Nearly five decades later, he
proposed a golden anniversary commemoration of AYPE. At a small, informal
Washington Athletic Club luncheon during the mid-1950s, Rochester proposed a
Seattle “world’s fair.” His luncheon mates seconded the idea and Rochester
returned to his City Council office to draft a Memorial to the state
legislature suggesting such an event. In 1957, the State Legislature allocated
$7.5 million for a fair and authorized creation of the World's Fair Commission.
Rochester served for a time as Executive Director of the Washington State
World’s Fair Commission. The eventual result of his idea was Century 21, the
1962 “Seattle World’s Fair.”
Besides his civic work, Rochester threw himself into non-profit and
charitable endeavors. He was an officer of the Pioneer Association of
Washington State, chairman of the King County U.S.O., and chairman of the
Easter Seal campaign for crippled children. He also served as organizer and
chairman of the local Infantile Paralysis Foundation chapter, was director of
Red Cross and Heart Association campaigns, and was twice president of the Young
Men’s Democratic Club of Seattle and King County.
Rochester died in Seattle at the age of 93, on February 4, 1989.
Content Description
This series is comprised of two scrapbooks relating to the life and work
of Al Rochester, compiled by Rochester's daughter, Mary Ellen Rochester. Each
volume is described more fully below.