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Ivar Haglund

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Cause of death
  
heart attack

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Ivar Haglund

Nationality
  
United States


Ivar Haglund The ten weirdest highway spills


Born
  
March 21, 1905 (
1905-03-21
)
Seattle, Washington

Known for
  
Folksinger, restaurateur

Title
  
"Flounder" of Ivar's Port Commissioner of Seattle

Died
  
January 30, 1985, Seattle, Washington, United States

Education
  
University of Washington

Ivar haglund on recordiodisc 11 28 1948


Ivar Johan Haglund (March 21, 1905 – January 30, 1985) was a Seattle folk singer and restaurateur, the "flounder" of Ivar's.

Contents

Ivar Haglund Our Story Ivar39s

Acres of clams lee traveler sings a song by ivar haglund


Background

Ivar Haglund wwwivarscomimagesourstoryivarivar1png

Ivar Johan Haglund was born in Seattle, Washington, the son of pioneers Johan Ivar Haglund, a Swedish immigrant and Daisy Hanson Haglund, daughter of Norwegian immigrants. His maternal grandparents had purchased Alki Point in 1869 from Seattle pioneer David Swinson Maynard. The house was Seattle's oldest house, now located at 3045 64th Avenue SW in West Seattle. His mother died of starvation when he was only three on February 26, 1908, while under treatment by Linda Hazzard, a so-called fasting specialist. However, following autopsy, it was determined that his mother had been suffering from terminal stomach cancer, possibly for years, and that she would have died without Hazzard's "treatment". The official cause of death was reported as stomach cancer. Ivar himself was treated by "Dr." Hazzard several times after his mother's death, likely due to his father's belief that Hazzard's treatment had eased his late mother's suffering and extended her life.

Career

Ivar Haglund The Seattle Review of Books Portrait Gallery Ivar Haglund

In 1938, he opened Seattle's first aquarium along with a fish and chips counter on Pier 54. Friends who visited him included novelist Thomas Wolfe (1900–1938), one of whose last photographs was taken in the company of Haglund in July, 1938. In 1946, Haglund opened a full restaurant on Pier 54, Ivar's Acres of Clams, which with the fish and chip counter survives to this day (although they have been thoroughly remodeled). He coined its motto, "Keep Clam." He expanded the fine dining and fish and chips restaurants into a regional chain. In 1965 he bought Pier 54. Ivar's Salmon House opened in 1971. The 1980s saw the addition of multiple Ivar's Fish Bars. Today, there are 24 Ivar's fast casual Seafood Bars, three Fish Bars, and three full-service restaurants: Ivar's Acres of Clams, Ivar's Salmon House and Ivar's Mukilteo Landing.

Ivar Haglund Haglund Ivar 19051985 HistoryLinkorg

After his neighbor on Pier 56 put up a sign reading "Don't Feed Sea Gulls, Health Regulation" in 1971, Haglund responded with his own sign encouraging customers to feed the seagulls. In 1976, Haglund bought the Smith Tower, a Seattle landmark that was once the tallest building in North America west of the Mississippi River. In 1983, he was elected port commissioner after filing as a prank. He died of a heart attack just over a year later. With no direct heirs, he left his estate principally to the University of Washington School of Business in support of the University Restaurant Program .

Ivar Haglund Ivar Haglund begins Ivars Fourth of July fireworks on Elliott Bay

In 2009, the Ivar's restaurant company enlisted local historians to conspire in a hoax, in which historic billboards were placed underwater, ostensibly by Haglund before his death, and then "rediscovered."

Ivar Haglund What Ivar Haglund could teach us now

  • Stephens, Dave Ivar: The Life and Times of Ivar Haglund (Seattle: Dunhill Publishing, 1986)

  • Ivar Haglund Two Sisters In Seattle Better Know A Seattleite Ivar Haglund

    Ivar Haglund PI archive Ivar Haglund seattlepicom


    References

    Ivar Haglund Wikipedia