This history of streetcar service into the northern reaches of Seattle’s Capitol Hill was about three years in the making. I pieced it together through…
1 CommentCategory: Data
Waning Days of One Woman’s War
We segue from a nearly-forgotten use of a nearly-forgotten building, to final memories of a veteran. The structure would have been a good candidate for…
Leave a CommentSeattle’s First Korean War Parade
On May 5, 1951, Seattle welcomed 1,500 soldiers back to the US from the war in Korea. It was a raucous celebration with a 105mm…
Leave a CommentMan as Oversimplified Data
One man stood out from the rest. I looked up about 100 men who died in the Korean War, all supposedly from Seattle or King…
1 CommentMapping Seattle and the Forgotten War
Earlier this week I posted a series of photographs and the story of a troop transport arriving in Seattle on August 2, 1951. This article…
1 CommentSeattle’s Second Seafair
August 2nd, 1951. Seattle’s Seafair summer festival was just getting underway. It was the first day of Gold Cup races on Lake Washington. But a…
Leave a CommentLife of Iconic Internment Family
Social media and web historians do a disservice to the memory of Seattle’s Shigeo and Chiseko Nagaishi. Photographs of racist vandalism that their family endured…
1 CommentSeattle Street Clock Inventories, 1920s
I have a thing for Seattle’s clocks. The ones in the sidewalk that are about fifteen feet tall. I’ve got this database of old photographs…
Leave a CommentSeattle Mayoral Residences, 1869-1998
Where did Seattle’s mayor’s live? It’s a simple, honest question. But apparently no one has ever assembled the data together in one place. It started…
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