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Wallace G. Mullis

December 1919 – March 2007

Wally Mullis passed away on March 24, 2007. He was active to the day of his passing. Wally was a true native San Juan Islander.  After graduating from Friday Harbor High School – class of 1938, he attended technical school in Bellingham where he learned diesel mechanics – an occupation he followed for many years. He met and married Vivian Wade Brietzkreitz, and they settled in a little cottage overlooking Jensen Shipyard. He was a PT boat engineer in the navy during World War II.  After returning from the war, he moved his family to Bellingham where he worked in the shipyards. They moved to Mt. Vernon in the 50’s, where he was employed by Columbia Valley Lumber Company. His second son Jerry was born there in 1954.

Around 1958 Wally headed north to Alaska for a career in the seafood industry. He was a foreman in  canneries on Kodiak Island and various mainland sites. Among the many stories he had to tell his friends was being an eyewitness to the devastating Alaska earthquake/tsunami of 1964.  Wally played an active role in rebuilding the canneries after that event. He was also a pioneer in the new king-crab industry that started in the 1960’s.  He returned home to Friday Harbor for retirement in 1985.

Wally’s wife Vivian passed away on the island in 1989. He married Evelyn Davis, an island resident. Evelyn passed on in 2001. A few years ago Wally married Giovanna Bianca Kirby.  “GB” has the gratitude of the family for her devotion to Wally during these past few years.

Wally’s ancestral roots go deep in island history. His grandfather George Mullis was one of the islands earliest white settlers. George was a master carpenter, and passed down his skills and business to Wally’s dad, Frank H. Mullis. Frank was a well-know island builder and contractor from the 20’s through the 50’s. Frank was the one-time proprietor of Davis Lumber Company, now known as Browne’s Lumber. The family’s home on Argyle Street, where Wally grew up, is still called the ‘old Mullis house’. The field just behind the former location of the Mullis workshop is now the location of the Mullis Community Senior Center, a gift to the community by Wally’s brother Don.

Wally was a modest man who did not want a formal memorial service.  An informal remembrance luncheon hosted by Wally’s family at the Senior Center is planned for April 16th starting at noon. Instead of flowers the family asks donations be made to the Mullis Community Senior Center or charity of your choice.

He will be remembered and loved by many islanders as well as his two sons and their families, his grandchildren, and an extended family.