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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

10/3/2019

News Then, History Now

Sailing Away

Buoyed by $100,000 in community aid, Seattle's Moran Shipyard completed and launched the battleship Nebraska on October 7, 1904. Six years earlier, the boatbuilding firm made a name for itself when it punched out 12 steamships that traveled north to the Klondike.

Looking Up

On October 8, 1921, the first military plane to land at Sand Point in Seattle touched down. On October 5, 1931, Clyde Pangborn belly-landed his plane in Wenatchee after completing the first nonstop airplane flight between Japan and the United States. And on October 8, 1966, the Grant County Airport opened in Moses Lake, at what used to be Larson Air Force Base.

Left Out

On October 8, 1936, the Spokane Children's Home adopted a policy to exclude African American children from the orphanage. One of the two black children transferred to the custody of the county was a young Carl Maxey, who went on to become a lawyer and a civil rights leader. He also ran a lively but doomed anti-Vietnam War campaign against U.S. Senator Henry Jackson in the 1970 Democratic primary.

Today in
Washington History

New On HistoryLink

Image of the Week

Beginning on October 5, 1942, more than 500 Mexican nationals arrived in the Yakima Valley under the Bracero program.

Quote of the Week

“If your mother cooks Italian food, why should you go to a restaurant?”

—Martin Scorsese

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Alessandro Malaspina: Early Explorer of the Pacific Northwest Coast
Italian Immigrant Coal Miners in Black Diamond
Pizza in Seattle: A Slice of History
Rainier Valley -- Thumbnail History
Desimone, Joe: From Produce Farmer to Owner of Seattle's Pike Place Market
Pike Place Market (Seattle) -- Thumbnail History
P-Patch Program (Seattle)
Italian Immigrants: How They Helped Define the Wine Industry of Walla Walla
Wine in Washington
American Viticultural Areas (AVAs) of Washington
Giuseppe (Joseph) Cataldo: Pioneer Missionary and the Last of the Black Robes
Cabrini, Mother Francesca Xavier (1850-1917)
Duwamish Gardens (Ray-Carrossino Farmstead)
Gai's Northwest Bakeries: A Seattle Institution and Baking Powerhouse for More Than 50 Years
Oberto Snacks Inc. (Kent)
Prestini, Leno (1906-1963)
Croce, John (1924-2015)
John Croce, founder of Pacific Food Importers, receives one of the first Seattle Small Business Awards on May 10, 1984.
Petosa Accordion Company, the only American-owned accordion manufacturer, moves from Seattle to Lynnwood on January 24, 2018.
Petosa Accordion Company
First commercially sized sowing of the monachine, or Pellegrini bean, in the Northwest is scheduled to begin on May 15, 2013.
Pellegrini, Angelo (1903-1991)
Fassio, Virgil (1927-2018)
Bassetti, Fred (1917-2013)
Gio Solimene Ross: The first First Lady of Seattle Opera
Rosellini, Victor (1915-2003)
Rosellini, Albert Dean (1910-2011)
Bulosan, Carlos (1911?-1956)
Filipino Cannery Workers
Washington Governor Louis Hart signs stringent Alien Land Bill on March 8, 1921.
Filipino groundbreaker Pio de Cano wins right to own property on April 30, 1940.
Victorio Velasco begins publishing Seattle's first Filipino newspaper, The Philippine Seattle Colonist, in 1924.
Dolores Sibonga becomes first Filipina American to be admitted to the Washington State Bar on October 18, 1973.
Dolores Sibonga, Filipina American lawyer, is appointed to the Seattle City Council in August 1978.
Velma Veloria is elected to the Washington State Legislature on November 3, 1992.
Santos, Robert
President Bill Clinton appoints Filipino American community activist Robert Santos as HUD representative on April 14, 1994.
Filipino labor activists Gene Viernes and Silme Domingo are slain in Seattle on June 1, 1981.
Rizal Park (Seattle)
Rizal Park and Bridge in Seattle, named for Philippine national hero, are dedicated on June 7, 1981.
First Pista sa Nayon, Filipino community festival, is held in Seattle on August 4, 1990.
The Filipino Community of Seattle, Inc. celebrates the opening of the newly renovated and expanded Filipino Community Center on May 30, 2008.
Moran, Robert (1857-1943)
Moran shipyard in Seattle launches battleship Nebraska on October 7, 1904.
Moran Shipyard in Seattle completes 12 steamships on May 25, 1898.
Klondike Gold Rush
Military airplane lands at Sand Point for the first time on October 8, 1921.
Sand Point Naval Air Station: 1920-1970
Clyde Pangborn belly-lands a monoplane in Wenatchee to complete the first nonstop airplane flight between Japan and the United States on October 5, 1931.
Grant County Airport in Moses Lake opens on October 8, 1966.
Moses Lake -- Thumbnail History
Larson Air Force Base -- Grant County International Airport
Spokane Children
Maxey, Carl (1924-1997)
Jackson, Henry M. "Scoop" (1912-1983)
Senator Henry Jackson overwhelmingly defeats peace candidate Carl Maxey in the Democratic primary on September 15, 1970.
Crown Prince Akihito and Crown Princess Michiko of Japan visit Seattle on October 4, 1960.
The Dalai Lama arrives for three-day visit to Seattle on October 3, 1979.
Seattle University, 1891-2001 -- A Slideshow
Seattle University installs Fr. William J. Sullivan, SJ, as its 20th president on May 3, 1976.
Federal government recognizes the Snoqualmie Tribe on October 6, 1999.
Snoqualmie Casino holds Grand Opening on November 6, 2008.
E. Donnall Thomas named co-recipient of Nobel Prize in Medicine on October 8, 1990.
Aberdeen native Douglas D. Osheroff named co-recipient of Nobel Prize in Physics on October 9, 1996.
Dr. Leland H. Hartwell is named recipient of the Nobel Prize for
Linda Buck named recipient of Nobel Prize in
Yakima County -- Thumbnail History
Mexican nationals arrive in Yakima Valley under the Bracero Program beginning on October 5, 1942.