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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

4/3/2025

Team of 32 horses in wheat field pulling harvesting equipment; several people are standing on the equipment, a cowboy on a horse in nearby

News Then, History Now

Statehood Mediation

On April 9, 1889, Miles Moore was sworn in as the 14th and final territorial governor of Washington. He served seven months in a position that was more ceremonial than powerful, but steered the territorial government through several last-minute hiccups on its journey to statehood.

Waterfront Location

On April 8, 1903 – three years after Frederick Weyerhaeuser made one of the largest land purchases in U.S. history – the newly-formed Weyerhaeuser Timber Company opened its first sawmill in Washington in Everett. The company maintained a presence in the city until 1992. Its elegant office building is now owned by the Port of Everett.

Healthy Forestation

On April 6, 1908, 22 timber companies organized the Washington Forest Fire Association to suppress fires on private lands. For the next 50 years, the WFFA worked with state and federal land managers to organize fire patrols, create fire-suppression programs, and change the logging practices that led to most fires. Soon after the Washington State Legislature created the Department of Natural Resources in 1957, the WFFA became the Washington Forest Protection Association, which continues to advance sustainable forestry practices throughout the state.

Helping out the Nation

More than 50 years after the Civil War ended, Union veteran James Gillespie of Seattle offered to re-enlist following the United States entrance into World War I on April 6, 1917. Others responded to the war effort by knitting wool socks, sweaters, and other garments to warm American soldiers at home and abroad.

Tuning in the Station

On April 5, 1929, KIT became Yakima’s first radio station. By this time listeners throughout the state could listen to a variety of stations that weren't based in Seattle, such as KWSU in Pullman and KGY in Olympia.

Sports and Recreation

On April 8, 1969, the Seattle Pilots played their first Major League Baseball game, beating the California Angels in Anaheim. Cheers rang out three days later when they played their first home game. And on April 6, 1977, the Seattle Mariners played their first game, but lost to the Angels.

Today in
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Image of the Week

Ruins of turn-of-the-century apartment building destroyed by fire on steep Seattle hillside.

 On April 7, 1920, fire destroyed Seattle's elegant Lincoln Hotel, killing four.

Quote of the Week

"Wisdom, Power and Goodness meet
In the bounteous field of wheat."

– Hanna Flagg Gould

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