Linda Tessner
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I did not love living in the Middle West, the Midwest, and I really wanted to move.
And I thought, what the heck is this?
And at the time, there was no internet in 1983.
There was no way to kind of check it up or look at their website.
I had no idea what this museum was about.
Maryhill Museum is in the middle of nowhere.
The closest town is Goldendale, Washington, which is 13 miles away.
It's a very curious place because you drive to it and the museum just unfolds like a castle on the banks of the river surrounded by basically nothing but hills.
Glamour was kind of my Bible for a long time.
I mean, as a teenager, I read every single issue of Seventeen magazine.
A friend of mine said that she gave me a year because I couldn't live among cowboys.
My husband was a research glaciologist, and he was on expeditions about nine months out of every year.
So even before our marriage fell apart, I was living alone mostly.
So it was mostly just me living there with a big dog.
When I was a little girl, the boxes of sugar in our kitchen were always Spreckles Sugar.
Some of them were taken apart, so you'd see a mannequin, a wire mannequin with a disembodied head.
You'd see these parts, little shoes, little purses, these wire bodies, these very blank, ghost-like faces.
Frankly, there were so many things that had to be done at Maryhill.
I mean, absolutely everything was in some sort of disrepair or dysfunction.