Preview up to 100 items from this collection below. Read digital editions of this weekly Northwest construction and engineering publication from 1906-1910. Issues document notable construction news in the Pacific Northwest.
Pacific Builder and Engineer, v. 4, no. 25, Jun. 23, 1906
Identifier: spl_pbe_3022043_1906_04_25
Date: 1906-06-23
View this itemGourmet's Notebook, v.10, no.10, Nov. 1982
Includes index for volume 10; Alexis, pg. 75; Duncan's, pg. 79; Hana, pg. 74; Hidden Valley Ranch, pg. 79; Morgan's Lakeplace, pg. 77; Piecora's, pg. 78; Settebello, pg. 73
Identifier: spl_gn_928180_1982_10_10
Date: 1982-12
View this itemPacific Builder and Engineer, v. 9, no. 26, Jun. 25, 1910
Page 266 article features the interior of the National Bank of Commerce.
Identifier: spl_pbe_3022043_1910_09_26
Date: 1910-06-25
View this itemPacific Builder and Engineer, v. 4, no. 37, Sep. 15, 1906
Page 3 article discusses Seattle's water supply. Page 4 article "Canal Will be Built" discusses construction of the Lake Washington Ship Canal and includes a photograph of Salmon Bay along with a map of the proposed canal routes.
Identifier: spl_pbe_3022043_1906_04_37
Date: 1906-09-15
View this itemMunicipal News, v. 54, no. 2, Jan. 27, 1964
Election Issue: Primary Election, Tuesday, February 11, 1964.
Identifier: spl_mn_818362_54_02
Date: 1964-01-27
View this itemPacific Builder and Engineer, v. 5, no. 21, May. 25, 1907
Identifier: spl_pbe_3022043_1907_05_21
Date: 1907-05-25
View this itemUnknown woman in Abington, Illinois, ca. 1880
Photograph taken by C.H. Smith in Abingdon, Illinois.
Identifier: spl_lj_023
Date: 1880?
View this itemPacific Builder and Engineer, v. 9, no. 14, Apr. 2, 1910
Page 120-124 article discusses the Mendota Coal and Coke Company in the now extinct town of Mendota, Washington in Lewis County. Photographs and diagrams are included.
Identifier: spl_pbe_3022043_1910_09_14
Date: 1910-04-02
View this itemIris
Frank Asakichi Kunishige was born in Japan on June 5, 1878. He came to the United States via San Francisco in 1895. After graduating from the Illinois College of Photography, he opened a small photography studio in San Francisco. Kunishige moved to Seattle in 1917. In the same year, he married Gin Kunishige and began working in the studio of Edward S. Curtis where he became acquainted with Ella McBride who he worked for in later years. Kunishige was well known for his use of Pictorialism, a popular painterly style of photography. He developed his photographs on "textura tissue," a paper of his own creation, which allowed him to produce almost dreamlike prints. His work was featured nationally and internationally in exhibitions and publications such as Photo-Era and Seattle's Town Crier. In 1924, Kunishige became one of the founding members of the Seattle Camera Club, a group of local photographers including Kyo Koike, Yukio Morinaga, Iwao Matsushita and Fred Y. Ogasawara who gathered to share techniques and ideas, as well as their deep love of the medium. Although the group was initially solely Japanese, they soon welcomed more members including Ella McBride, their first female member. When World War II struck and the country's Japanese internment policy was put in place, Kunishige and his wife were forced to leave Seattle for Idaho where they were interned at the Minidoka camp. After their release, Kunishige spent two years working at a photography studio in Twin Falls, Idaho but eventually returned to Seattle due to his poor health. Frank Kunishige passed away on April 9, 1960.
Identifier: spl_art_367924_02
View this itemPacific Builder and Engineer, v. 8, no. 40, Sep. 25, 1909
Page 380-382 article discusses railroad stations in Tacoma and Spokane. Page 385 discusses use of the wireless telegraph at the Alaska-Pacific-Yukon Exposition.
Identifier: spl_pbe_3022043_1909_08_40
Date: 1909-09-25
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