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Diablo Dam incline railway climbing Sourdough Mountain, 1930. Courtesy Seattle Municipal Archives, 2306.
Children waving to ferry, 1950. Courtesy Museum of History and Industry.
Loggers in the Northwest woods. Courtesy Washington State Digital Archives.

This Week Then

8/17/2023

Green double-decker tour boat on calm stretch of Skagit River with face of Ross Dam in the background

News Then, History Now

Sherman Comes West

On August 21, 1886, General William Tecumseh Sherman -- one of the Union's most renowned military leaders -- arrived in Seattle for a five-day visit. This wasn't the first time that Sherman had been in the Northwest. In 1883, as one of his last acts as General of the Army, he inspected all of the forts in the West, including those in Washington, but this time the retired General was here on pleasure. While in Seattle, he enjoyed a steamer tour of Lake Washington and Lake Union, and was the honored guest at a clambake held at Alki Point.

Food Lover's Quest

On August 17, 1907, Pike Place Market opened in Seattle as an informal collection of horse carts and street vendors. The market soon blossomed into an eclectic emporium where local citizens could purchase everything from fresh fruits to flowers to folk crafts to fish from local vendors of Japanese and Italian descent, among other backgrounds. Over the years, the market survived the Depression, calamities, and world war, and then overcame a far more formidable foe – urban renewal.

Voted the Best

On August 19, 1909, attendees of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle eagerly awaited to see who would be named Carnival Queen in a popularity contest that began two weeks earlier. The winner was 16-year-old Miss Columbia, also known as Nancy Columbia and Columbia Eneutseak, an Inuit performer who had traveled with her family to expositions in the United States and abroad since her birth at the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893.

Union Workers' Woe

During the summer of 1917, IWW members in Spokane led a statewide loggers' strike demanding an eight-hour workday and better working conditions. Throughout the state, Wobblies were arrested, in many cases without due process of law. On August 19, 1917, things came to a head with a raid on the Spokane IWW office, the arrest of union leaders, and a declaration of martial law. Defeated, loggers returned to work in the fall, but kept up the fight.

Where Berries Used to Grow

On August 19, 1955, Medina officially incorporated in order to stave off annexation by Bellevue and maintain some autonomy. Three days later, Hunts Point followed suit for the same reasons. Both communities were once home to berry farms and orchards, but are now two of King County's most affluent residential areas.

For People on the Go

In the 1880s, a group of Seattle investors – led by Judge Thomas Burke and businessman Daniel Gilman -- established the Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railway, the first segment of which ran from downtown Seattle to Woodinville. On August 19, 1978, the original 12.1-mile stretch of the Burke-Gilman Trail opened along this former rail corridor.

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Image of the Week

On August 17, 1948, Carbonado incorporated in Pierce County.

Quote of the Week

"Water is the driving force of all nature."

- Leonardo Da Vinci

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