File:The Town Crier, v.15, no.50, Dec. 11, 1920 - DPLA - 37f26783bbd274eca9a46efa6e846211 (page 30).jpg
Original file (3,802 × 5,152 pixels, file size: 1.34 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Captions
Summary
[edit]The Town Crier, v.15, no.50, Dec. 11, 1920 ( ) | |||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Creator InfoField | Wood & Reber, Inc | ||||||||||||||||||||
Title |
The Town Crier, v.15, no.50, Dec. 11, 1920 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Description |
Annual Christmas number. Page 1 features artwork by Irene Ewing. Page 10 features advertisement with illustration of the New Washington Hotel and Apartments along with the Moore Theatre. Page 15 has advertisement with photos for the Carolina Court Apartments on Eastlake. Page 18 features sketch by artist Stuart Morris. Page 24-32 article "A City of Homes" features photographs of homes of George T. Myers, Charles D. Stimson, Eliza Ferry Leary, Moritz Thomsen, A.J. Rhodes, F.H. Osgood, Mrs. John Collins, Frederic Struve, John T. Heffernan and Helen Igoe. Page 25 article "Outdoor Dancing" contains photographs by Wayne Albee. Page 41 article "A Seattle Library" highlights rare books in the collection of George W. Soliday. Page 71 article "The Cornish Orchestra" discusses the Cornish School Symphony Orchestra, directed by Francis J. Armstrong. Page 73 article "The Orchestra: Today and Yesterday" discusses the history of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra and includes photographs. Interior pictures of the John Collins and Frederic Struve houses on First Hill in Seattle. Both are now demolished. The Collins House at 702 Minor Ave (a street named after an earlier resident of the house, Seattle Mayor T.T. Minor) was built in 1887 and torn down in 1951; the Struve house at 1221 Minor Ave., across the street from the still-extant Stimson-Green house, was torn down in 1958. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Date |
11 December 1920 date QS:P571,+1920-12-11T00:00:00Z/11 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Collection |
institution QS:P195,Q7442157 |
||||||||||||||||||||
Source/Photographer |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Permission (Reusing this file) |
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Standardized rights statement InfoField |
|
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 04:17, 19 August 2022 | 3,802 × 5,152 (1.34 MB) | DPLA bot (talk | contribs) | Uploading DPLA ID 37f26783bbd274eca9a46efa6e846211 |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage on Commons
The following page uses this file:
Structured data
Items portrayed in this file
depicts
some value
Reference
The Town Crier, v.15, no.50, Dec. 11, 1920 (English)
Reference
Annual Christmas number. Page 1 features artwork by Irene Ewing. Page 10 features advertisement with illustration of the New Washington Hotel and Apartments along with the Moore Theatre. Page 15 has advertisement with photos for the Carolina Court Apartments on Eastlake. Page 18 features sketch by artist Stuart Morris. Page 24-32 article "A City of Homes" features photographs of homes of George T. Myers, Charles D. Stimson, Eliza Ferry Leary, Moritz Thomsen, A.J. Rhodes, F.H. Osgood, Mrs. John Collins, Frederic Struve, John T. Heffernan and Helen Igoe. Page 25 article "Outdoor Dancing" contains photographs by Wayne Albee. Page 41 article "A Seattle Library" highlights rare books in the collection of George W. Soliday. Page 71 article "The Cornish Orchestra" discusses the Cornish School Symphony Orchestra, directed by Francis J. Armstrong. Page 73 article "The Orchestra: Today and Yesterday" discusses the history of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra and includes photographs. (English)
Reference
Reference
spl_tc_915126_1920_15_50
Reference
image/jpeg
- The Town Crier, 1920
- Interiors of houses in Washington (state)
- Building interiors in Seattle
- Furniture in Washington (state)
- Rugs
- Minor Avenue, Seattle
- Houses in First Hill, Seattle, Washington
- Destroyed buildings in Seattle
- Built in Washington (state) in 1887
- Destroyed in the United States in 1951
- Built in Washington (state) in 1907
- Destroyed in the United States in 1958