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12/19/2024
The Past as Presents
This week HistoryLink takes a look back at new content we added in 2024, and we've been very busy. Towns and cities that now have thumbnail histories include Bridgeport, Concrete, Othello, Rock Island, and there is an updated history of Renton. We also have new features about the Cowlitz Trail, Tacoma's Point Defiance Park, Spokane's Natatorium Park, Seattle's Duwamish Cemetery, Tacoma's Union Station, the Smith Island Lighthouse, Snohomish High School, and Mount St. Helens after the eruption.
Hungry for more? Than feast your eyes on some of our new essays related to food and drink, including Oyster Farming in Washington (Part 2), Garry Oaks and Acorns, Pike Place Market's famous fishmongers, Canlis Restaurant, Dick's Drive-In, and Spokane's Broadview Dairy. Then raise a glass to new biographies of notable people in the wine industry, including Paul and Judy Champoux, Gary Figgins, Doug Gore, Mike Hogue, Ron Irvine, Mike Januik, and Kent Waliser.
Other new features cover a wide variety of topics, including: Chinook Jargon, the Stickney Indian Boarding School; Bringing Postal Service to the San Juans; Women Workers in Everett Industries (1900-1950); H. C. Weaver Productions Company in Tacoma; Annals of Photography: The Boeing Company (1920-1933); Seattle to Seattle: The First Aerial Circumnavigation of the Globe; the Hoovervilles of Seattle; Redlining, Racial Covenants, and Housing Discrimination in Tacoma; World War II Internment of Japanese Americans in Washington; Top Secret Hanford: How Roosevelt Hid the Truth About the Bomb; the Mayors of Spokane; Salmon Recovery in Washington; the Grassroots Campaign to Save Baseball in Seattle; and Seattle's Turbulent Taxicab Industry.
That's quite a bit to keep you busy this week, but be sure to stop by next week when we highlight more of the new biographies we've added. See you then, and enjoy the holidays!
Holiday Happenings
On December 25, 1845, Esther Clark Short and her family became the first permanent American settlers near Fort Vancouver. Exactly 19 years later, in 1864, Job Carr arrived at the future site of Tacoma. Seattle's pioneers enjoyed a very humble Christmas in 1851, and delegates from the Suquamish Tribe celebrated a very special Christmas at Tulalip on December 25, 1876.
And who doesn't like receiving presents from Santa this time of year? On December 26, 1886, Tacomans saw their streets illuminated by electricity for the very first time. On Christmas Eve, 1888, residents of West Seattle enjoyed a ride on their new ferryboat. On Christmas Day, 1907, folks in Yakima welcomed their brand new electric trolleys. And on Christmas Eve, 1955, it was festive indeed when Seattle inventor and psychedelic pioneer Al Hubbard turned novelist Aldous Huxley on to LSD.
On December 22, 1852, the Oregon Territorial Legislature created both King County and Pierce County in what would become Washington Territory the following year. And on December 23, 1925, the Washington State Legislature changed the name of Clarke County to Clark County, fixing a spelling error that had been on the books since 1854.
On Christmas Day, 1855, the U.S. Coast Survey Ship Active arrived in Elliott Bay carrying munitions for the USS Decatur, which lay crippled at Seattle's wharf. Both ships readied for battle over concerns that Native American forces would soon attack the fledgling village. A month later, those fears proved accurate.
On December 21, 1891, crowds swarmed along the Everett waterfront hoping to get a close-up view of the uniquely shaped whaleback freighter Charles W. Wetmore. And on December 21, 1917, more than a few people in Seattle were apprehensive when the Russian steamer Shilka steamed into Elliott Bay, just weeks after the Bolshevik Revolution. Although there were concerns among some that the ship was here to aid the Wobblies and foment political unrest, it wasn't. Instead, the vessel carried licorice root, beans, and peas for trade.
On December 23, 1918, the residents of Edgewick, a small logging community along Boxley Creek below Cedar Falls, lost everything they owned when a dam burst in the Cedar River watershed and sent a wall of water crashing through their town. No lives were lost in what became known as the Boxley Burst, but a deadlier flash flood occurred there 14 years later.
In the 1920s, as jazz music grew in popularity, so did the backlash against it. Deemed a menace to civilization by some and an indicator of moral degradation by others, the crusade against jazz carried into the 1930s when on December 22, 1933, a "Jazz Intoxication" bill was introduced in the Washington legislature to combat the imaginary threat of this popular musical form. The bill never came to a vote. People danced on.
On December 20, 1966, Seattle made it into the big leagues with its own NBA franchise, which team owners chose to name after the supersonic transport -- a fast and high-flying jet plane of the future that was then under development at Boeing. Although the SST never left the runway, the Sonics (as the team was soon called) took off, soared to great heights, and eventually disappeared into the distance.
"American history is longer, larger, more various, more beautiful, and more terrible than anything anyone has ever said about it."
--James Baldwin