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Outlaw Thomas Blanck shoots and kills Charles H. Bridwell during a robbery in Seattle on October 3, 1894.

Late Wednesday evening, October 3, 1894, outlaw Thomas Blanck (1870-1895) enters a saloon in Seattle with a gun, intending to steal the day's proceeds. While the proprietor, William H. Codrick, tries ...

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Coal miners die in an explosion at Newcastle on October 9, 1894.

On October 9, 1894, four miners die in an explosion in the Oregon Improvement Company coal mine at Newcastle, Washington. The following day, coroner's jury rules that the explosion was "caused by a ch...

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Cumberland beginnings: Cumberland Post Office opens on October 13, 1894.

The opening of a post office is an important marker of the beginning of a community. On October 13, 1894, the Cumberland Post Office opens. Tyra F. Lawson is appointed postmaster. Cumberland is loc...

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Walla Walla Woman's Reading Club is organized on October 19, 1894.

On October 19, 1894, a group of women in Walla Walla meet and organize the Walla Walla Woman's Reading Club. The club is committed to the "critical study of such writings as may be deemed best to prom...

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Fire at the West Street Hotel in Seattle kills 16 lodgers on October 27, 1894.

Early Saturday morning, October 27, 1894, a fire in the West Street Hotel, located on the second floor of the Colman Block Annex, a commercial warehouse located at the foot Columbia Street in Seattle,...

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Everett Woman's Book Club petitions City of Everett for a free public library on November 12, 1894.

On November 12, 1894, the Woman's Book Club of Everett passes a resolution to petition the mayor and common council of Everett to create a free public library for the city. They will secure their firs...

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Seattle beginnings: Greenlake Post Office opens on December 5, 1894.

The opening of a post office is an important marker of the beginning of a community. On December 5, 1894, the Greenlake Post Office opens. Matilda S. Petersen is appointed postmaster. Green Lake becam...

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Jesuits dedicate Parish and School of the Immaculate Conception, now Seattle University's Garrand Building, on December 8, 1894.

On December 8, 1894, Fr. Victor Garrand, SJ, (1847-1925) formally dedicates the new home of the Parish and School of the Immaculate Conception near the intersection of Broadway and Madison Street on t...

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Thomas Edison's Kinetoscope -- a forerunner of projected motion pictures -- is demonstrated in Seattle on December 13, 1894.

On December 13, 1894, the Kinetoscope -- the latest wonder from famed inventor Thomas Edison (1847-1931) -- makes its Seattle debut in a storefront on the Occidental Block, at the corner of 2nd Avenue...

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John Edward Hawkins, King County's first Black lawyer to be locally trained, is admitted to the Bar in 1895.

In 1895, John Edward Hawkins, the first locally trained Black lawyer, is admitted to the King County Bar.

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Goldie Schucklin founds Ladies Montefiore Aid, a welfare organization, in 1895.

In 1895, in Seattle, Goldie Schucklin, an ardent fundraiser and dedicated Jewish community volunteer, founds the Ladies Montefiore Aid, a welfare organization. The Society was active until 1936, when ...

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Washington State Legislature amends the Public Accommodations Act in 1895.

In 1895, the Washington State Legislature amends the Public Accommodations Act, removing penalties for denying access to hotels, inns, and public conveyances for persons of color. This effectively nul...

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University of Washington moves from downtown Seattle to present University District campus in 1895.

In 1895, the University of Washington moves from a downtown Seattle site to its current site along the shores of Lake Washington and Lake Union.

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Newspaper reports eruption of Mount Baldy on January 10, 1895.

On January 10, 1895, a newspaper, the Buckley Banner, reports the eruption of Mount Baldy. Although unlikely, the story paints a vivid account of the "event." The peak in the foothills of the Cascade ...

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Bags of opium wash up on Vashon Island in the spring of 1895.

In the spring of 1895, J. E. Mace, a resident of Vashon Island, finds a bag of opium on the beach and reports it to the authorities. Weeks later he finds another one, but this time he falls under susp...

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The Bush Act, allowing for the sale of state tidelands for oyster farming, is approved on March 2, 1895.

Even before Washington was a state, legislation in the region reflected the importance of the oyster. A 1911 state senate committee report reviewing oyster legislation stated, "Washington, as a state ...

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Washington's "Barefoot Schoolboy Act" is passed on March 14, 1895.

On March 14, 1895, the Washington State Legislature approves what is commonly called the "Barefoot Schoolboy Act," which for the first time provides a uniform means of producing recurring income for t...

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Condemned murderer Thomas Blanck escapes from the King County Jail on March 17, 1895.

On March 17, 1895, notorious desperado Thomas Blanck (1870-1895) engineers a mass escape from the King County Jail, using an imitation handgun carved from pieces of wood. In October 1894, he had been ...

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Washington State Legislature passes law prohibiting the sale of alcohol on the University of Washington campus in Seattle on March 19, 1895.

On March 19, 1895, the Washington State Legislature unanimously passes a law prohibiting the sale of alcohol on the University of Washington campus in Seattle and within two miles of the campus, with ...

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Gold prospectors travel north by the hundreds through Puget Sound to Alaska and the Yukon beginning in April 1895.

Beginning in April 1895, prospectors flow north by the hundreds through the ports of Puget Sound to strike it rich in gold fields in Alaska and in the Yukon Valley of Canada. The travelers feed busine...

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Explosion in the Blue Canyon Coal Mine in Whatcom County kills 23 miners on April 8, 1895.

On April 8, 1895, a firedamp (methane gas) explosion kills 23 miners in the Blue Canyon Coal Mine located on the southeast shore of Lake Whatcom, about 10 miles southeast of Bellingham. Only two of th...

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Guitars made by Monte Cristo-based luthier W. O. Welch are noted in the Everett Herald on April 25, 1895.

On April 25, 1895, an article appears in the Everett Herald featuring rare details about one of the Pacific Northwest’s first guitar-makers, Mr. W. O. Welch. The story apparently was origin...

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Aberdeen businessmen lay their own tracks to connect to Northern Pacific Railroad on June 1, 1895.

On June 1, 1895, Aberdeen businessmen connect their own railroad to the Northern Pacific. In 1892 the Northern Pacific Railroad decided to bypass the town of Aberdeen. Local businessmen take matters i...

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Native Americans rebury Chief Leschi on tribal land on July 4, 1895.

On July 4, 1895, the body of Nisqually Chief Leschi (1808-1858) is reburied on the Nisqually Reservation in Pierce County south of Tacoma. One thousand people, mostly Native Americans representing the...

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