File:Seattle Mail and Herald, v. 7, no. Progress, Dec. 19, 1903 - DPLA - 86766e2958f27c46f6ee4c9267f9e82c (page 18).jpg
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Summary
[edit]Seattle Mail and Herald, v. 7, no. Progress, Dec. 19, 1903 ( ) | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Creator InfoField | Hampton, Edgar L | ||||||||||||||||||||
Title |
Seattle Mail and Herald, v. 7, no. Progress, Dec. 19, 1903 |
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Description |
This edition (labeled "Progress Edition" rather than a number) was a special 66-page edition of this weekly newspaper, which normally only ran to 16 pages. Page 8b includes Edward S. Curtis portrait "Type of the Puget Sound Aborigines." Additional Curtis photos appear on pages 28 and 31a. Page 9 article "Seattle's Fifty Years of Progress" by Edmund S. Meany discusses Seattle history. Article includes several historical photographs. Page 12 article "City Building" discusses Seattle's industries. and growth. It includes a historical photos and photos of private residences. Photos of the Washington Hotel appear on pages 13, 31 and 33. Photographs of Railroad Avenue and the Seattle harbor appear on page 16. Photographs of the Moran Brothers Ship Yard appear on page 17. Pages 18-21 include portraits of prominent Seattle men including James A. Moore, Robert Moran, Jacob Furth and James J. Hill. Page 23 article "A Girl's Opportunity in the West" discusses options for young women to homestead land in the west. Page 24 article "Logic and Lumber" discusses the lumber industry in Washington and includes photos. Page 26 article "The Rural Northwest" discusses farming. Page 29 article "Politics in the Northwest" discusses the political climate and includes photos of Native Americans. Page 32a includes panoramic photograph of the Seattle tide lands. Page 34 features article "Seattle Street Railroads" with photographs. Page 26 article "The New Garden of Eden" discusses travel in the Puget Sound area. Article on Three Tree Point appears on page 41. Page 32 article includes portraits of prominent Seattle businessmen. Page 44 article discusses the Seattle-Tacoma Interurban. Page 53 includes a Butterworth Mortuary advertisement with photos of the mortuary. Articles on pages 46 and 55 discuss mining in Washington. Page 58 includes photos of the Pidduck-Ross grocery store on 2nd Avenue and its employees. The three bottom houses on this page were all on West Highland Drive, on the south side of Queen Anne Anne Hill. All but the Stimson house are still extant as of 2022. |
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Date |
19 December 1903 date QS:P571,+1903-12-19T00:00:00Z/11 |
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Collection |
institution QS:P195,Q7442157 |
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Source/Photographer |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
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Standardized rights statement InfoField |
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Annotations InfoField | This image is annotated: View the annotations at Commons |
This appears to be 171 Lake Washington Boulevard East in the Denny-Blaine neighborhood, at that time the home of Elbert F. Blaine, probably now best known as the last home of Kurt Cobain.
This house, no longer extant, was also on Highland Drive on Queen Anne hill, either number 405 or 415. A.k.a. "Stimson-Griffiths House", "Captain James Griffiths House". Designed by Bebb & Mendel.
Still extant 2022, now known as the Ballard-Howe House.
Albert S. Kerry, Sr. House; 421 West Highland Drive, Queen Anne Hill, Seattle. Still extant 2022.
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