Anonymous ID: f4f76e Aug. 26, 2020, 6:51 a.m. No.10425081   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5120

Jim Caviezel's wife Kerri Browitt is part of the family. Her parents are from Roslyn, WA and Cle Elum. It's an old coal mine community and her family has been there since at least 1900. Kerri's brother David Browitt was an attorney who served as council for the town. Lots of TV shows were filmed in Roslyn most notably Northern Exposure. What I find interesting is that SCOTT FREE productions filmed "The Man in the High Castle" there. Much symbolism in that show. David Browitt's office is caddy corner to the Roslyn Diner that is often shown in Northern Exposure. Attached is a picture of his office. Masonic Lodge.

 

Kerri's other brother is named Jim Browitt. He is an attorney in Idaho who Specializes in "Watching the Water".

 

https://www.water-law.com/jim-browitt-counsel-attorney/

 

As I have noted previously Kerri, Jim and Kerri's parents met with the Pope.

 

Andrew Browitt was a member of the Spokane Red Men League in 1900

 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_in_the_High_Castle_(TV_series)

Anonymous ID: f4f76e Aug. 26, 2020, 6:56 a.m. No.10425120   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10425081

David Browitt died in 2013

 

David James Browitt, 74, a lifelong resident of Roslyn whose career and personal involvement impacted numerous facets of the Upper Kittitas County community and beyond, died April 26, 2013, of complications related to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease. A funeral Mass will be held on Tuesday, May 7 at 11a.m. at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in Roslyn. A rosary will be recited on Monday, May 6 at 7p.m. at the same church. Dave was born June 25, 1938 in Roslyn, the middle of five children of Harold and Elizabeth (Franciscovich) Browitt. He attended the Roslyn School through 8th grade and graduated from Cle Elum High School in 1956. He graduated with a B.S. in biology from Central Washington State College in 1961 and a B.S. in forestry from the University of Washington in 1964. In 1962 he married Jean Vandetta, whom he had met when they were both students at CWSC, and they had four children – the first of whom, David, was born while he completed his studies at UW. Throughout his life, Dave was inextricably linked to the mountains and forests of Washington's eastern - slope Cascades. As a youth he was introduced to his family's customary summertime haunt – Fish Lake – and happily imbued that tradition on his grandchildren, not to mention his four kids. As a teenager he took his first job in the woods, maintaining telephone lines to the various fire lookouts within the Cle Elum Ranger District. And after 10 years with the U.S. Forest Service, most of which was spent in fire control, Dave accepted a position with Boise Cascade and served that company in several capacities – among them logging supervisor, federal sales specialist and area manager – for almost 40 years. Along the way, he directed crews that planted several million trees, thinned hundreds of acres of overgrown forestland and maintained untold miles of trails. In the years leading up to his retirement from Boise Cascade and thereafter, Dave engaged in some far-ranging pursuits: He and Jean traveled internationally, visiting venues where one son-in-law happened to be on film location (they were granted an audience with Pope John Paul II in 2004); they became devotees of the various collegiate and NFL teams for whom their other son-in-law coached; and Dave fished for steelhead in the rivers of Washington and Idaho, and for salmon off Vancouver Island's Pacific coast. But his favorite endeavors were always those for which he had an enduring association and occurred close to home. Dave relished hiking into Hyas Lake, especially in the spring when runoff-swelled creeks were difficult to cross, and casting a line for eastern brook; he loved spending a summer evening beside a campfire at Fish Lake, chatting with friends and family while watching the grandkids make s'mores; he savored the brisk fall mornings in hunting camp, meticulously glassing remote, rugged Cascade hillsides in search of a nice mule deer buck; and though he would be loathe to admit it, he enjoyed shoveling snow. He was a snowmobiler, a boater, a sports fan, a little league coach, a berry picker, a seeker of wildflowers, an admirer of autumn colors, and an ardent walker of the streets of Roslyn as well as the paths that dissect the wooded terrain above town.

 

https://www.dignitymemorial.com/fr-ca/obituaries/cle-elum-wa/david-browitt-5521320