• Municipal Plans Commission of the City of Seattle map showing Ballard Waterfront District, 1911

    Municipal Plans Commission of the City of Seattle map showing Ballard Waterfront District, 1911

    Bogue, Virgil B.

    Map showing proposed city improvements under the Plan of Seattle, commonly known as the Bogue Plan. Designed by Virgil Bogue, Seattle's municipal plans director, the Bogue Plan proposed a series of improvements aimed at beautifying the city and making it making it more cohesive after years of rapid growth and industrialization. The plan worked in tandem with the Olmsted Brothers new system of parks, begun in 1903, and proposed new government buildings, an improved city center and an interurban road connecting the city together. The plan was rejected by voters in 1912.

    Identifier: spl_maps_2465533_11

    Date: 1911

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  • Municipal News v. 55, no. 7, Apr. 12, 1965

    Municipal News v. 55, no. 7, Apr. 12, 1965

    Identifier: spl_mn_818362_55_07

    Date: 1965-04-12

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  • Industrial, Commercial, and Residential Map, 1926

    Industrial, Commercial, and Residential Map, 1926

    Schmid, Calvin F. (Calvin Fisher), 1901-1994

    Map depicting industrial, commercial and residential zones along with parks and cemetaries. Also marked are areas predominently populated by African Americans, Japanese, Chinese and Italians.

    Identifier: spl_maps_2479649

    Date: 1926

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  • Unknown man in Waterloo, Iowa, ca. 1880

    Unknown man in Waterloo, Iowa, ca. 1880

    H.S. & J.W. Hoot; Hoot, Howard S., 1857-1941; Hoot, Jerome W., 1859-1943

    Photograph taken by H.S. & J.W. Hoot in Waterloo, Iowa.

    Identifier: spl_lj_024

    Date: 1880?

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  • Unknown woman in New York, ca. 1880

    Unknown woman in New York, ca. 1880

    Hayden, C.

    Photograph taken by C. Hayden in New York City.

    Identifier: spl_lj_026

    Date: 1880?

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  • Enjoy the Beauty of Old Seattle and Some of Today's Existing Treasures, 1971

    Enjoy the Beauty of Old Seattle and Some of Today's Existing Treasures, 1971

    Fredericksen, Neil M.

    Map depicting historic buildings in downtown Seattle including the Smith Tower and Maynard Building.

    Identifier: spl_maps_2445994

    Date: 1971

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  • Spanish ships departing from Neah Bay

    Spanish ships departing from Neah Bay

    McAllister, Parker S. (1903-1970)

    Parker McAllister, born in 1903 in Massachusetts, was a Seattle Times artist from 1924 to 1965. McAllister started his career as an illustrator at 14 for a Spokane publication; he joined the art staff at the Seattle Times in 1920. His first Sunday magazine cover was a poster-type illustration celebrating the University of Washington crew races in spring 1924. During McAllister's career, he created illustrations depicting “local color” events and situations now routinely handled by photographers. As the technology improved, he expanded his repertoire - he illustrated articles, drew covers for special sections and the weekly Seattle Sunday Times Magazine, and drew diagrams, comics, cartoons, and portraits for the Times’ editorial page. In 1956, an exhibition of his watercolor and oil paintings of Pacific Northwest scenes and historical incidents - including some paintings from the “Discovery of the Pacific Northwest” series - were exhibited at the Washington State Historical Society Museum in Tacoma. He was also a member of the Puget Sound Group of Men Painters. McAllister retired from the Seattle Times in 1965; he passed away in Arizona in 1970.

    Identifier: spl_art_291985_17.167

    Date: 1965

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  • Municipal News v. 55, no. 12, Jun. 28, 1965

    Municipal News v. 55, no. 12, Jun. 28, 1965

    Identifier: spl_mn_818362_55_12

    Date: 1965-06-28

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  • Narcissa Latimer letter to Alexander and Sarah Latimer, November 17, 1884

    Narcissa Latimer letter to Alexander and Sarah Latimer, November 17, 1884

    Denny, Narcissa Latimer, 1851-1900

    Narcissa Leonora (Nora) Latimer Denny was the daughter of Alexander and Sarah Latimer. She had four sisters: Eliza Alice Latimer Fowler (1856-1934), Harriet Ellen Latimer Stephens (1859-1938), Clara Latimer Bickford (1861-1934), and Emma Chesney Latimer Reynolds (1864-1946). Narcissa married Orion Denny on April 1, 1889. The letter is addressed to Alexander and Sarah Latimer and is written from Seattle. It discusses Seattle's climate, her duties as a teacher, women's suffrage, the recent presidential election and Denny family matters including the birth of Roland Denny's third daughter (Edith Denny). Narcissa writes that one of Roland's daughters' was upset that the baby was a girl and notes that ""Cousin Arthur"" (Arthur Denny) consoled the child by telling her that a girl is worth as much as a boy because ""She can vote."" (Washington Territory women were granted the right to vote in 1883 but the right was repealed in August 1888 when a court ruled that the territorial government did not have the authority to enfranchise women voters. Washington became a state in 1889 but women did not regain the vote in Washington until 1910.)

    Identifier: spl_lj_004

    Date: 1884-11-17

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  • Blind Aaron's wife, ca. 1899

    Blind Aaron's wife, ca. 1899

    Pillsbury, Arthur C. (Arthur Clarence)

    Identifier: spl_ap_00131

    Date: 1899?

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