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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

8/10/2023

Mountain, lake, trees, meadow, sky

News Then, History Now

On Deadly Ground

Isaac Ebey was one of the earliest surveyors of the many waterways around Puget Sound. Seven years after he became the first white settler on Whidbey Island, Ebey met a grisly fate when a war party of Indians -- likely members of the Kake tribe of Tlingits and led by a woman warrior -- sought revenge for the killing the previous year of their chief and 26 others in a shelling by the American warship USS Massachusetts. On August 11, 1857, the Kake landed at Whidbey Island and, unable to find their primary target, chopped off Isaac Ebey's head, taking it with them.

Laughs All Around

In 1895, Mark Twain embarked on a year-long national lecture tour to help pay off his massive business debts brought on by the Panic of 1893. On August 13, he regaled a large Seattle audience in what the Post-Intelligencer called a "continuous laugh." The following evening he spoke in New Whatcom (now Bellingham) and later joined many attendees at a nearby club for cigars and drinks.

Plying the Sound

On August 12, 1926, Alexander Peabody took control of the Puget Sound Navigation Co. following his father's death. Within years he had a virtual monopoly on cross-Sound traffic, but after strikes, rate increases and shutdowns, civic groups and businesses urged state officials to create a state-run ferry system. After much political wrangling, the state bought most of Peabody's equipment and operations, and Washington State Ferries began running in 1951.

Smoky Descents

On August 10, 1940, two U.S. Forest Service fire guards, Francis Lufkin and Glen H. Smith, become the first smokejumpers to parachute into a forest wildfire in the state of Washington. Five years later, the North Cascades Smokejumper Base opened in the Methow Valley and has since served as one of seven smokejumper bases operated by the Forest Service for airborne firefighting across the Western states.

Sporting Events

On August 16, 1958, it was announced that the Seattle Americans hockey team had been sold to a local group led by Marvin Burke, owner of Sportcaster Corporation in Seattle and the developer of the Stevens Pass ski resort. Burke gave the team a new name, the Totems. The team won three championships during its tenure in Seattle, and in 1968 played in what was called "the wildest hockey game ever perpetrated."

Redhook Presents

On August 11, 1982, Redhook Brewery introduced its first beer at Jake O'Shaughnessy's, a popular Seattle restaurant and bar. This pivotal event helped to launch a craft-beer movement throughout Washington, and new craft breweries continue to open across the state.

Today in
Washington History

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Image of the Week

Floating bridge spanning Hood Canal

The Hood Canal Bridge opened on August 12, 1961.

Quote of the Week

"Over every mountain there is a path, although it may not be seen from the valley."

–Theodore Roethke

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