Roscoe C. Torrance photograph collection, approximately 1916-1979
Table of Contents
Overview of the Collection
- Collector
- Torrance, Roscoe C. (Roscoe Conkling), 1899-1990
- Title
- Roscoe C. Torrance photograph collection
- Dates
- approximately 1916-1979 (inclusive)19161979
- Quantity
- 2 boxes, (2 boxes and 17 folders containing approximately 1300 photographic prints and 26 slides; album and loose photographs)
- Collection Number
- PH0509
- Summary
- Album and photographs related to University of Washington sports and student activities from 1916-1926 and the 1970s, the Seattle Rainiers, the Salvation Army and other activities of Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance
- Repository
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University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu - Access Restrictions
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The collection is open to the public.
- Languages
- Collection materials are in English.
Biographical Note
Roscoe Conkling Torrance, nick-named Torchy because of his red hair, was an alumnus and supporter of the University of Washington sports teams known as "the Number One Husky." Torrance was born September 2, 1899 in Diamond, a small town in eastern Washington State. Later the family moved to Spokane where Torrance attended the Longfellow School. His interest in sports started early; he volunteered as a bat boy for the Spokane Indians baseball team. After moving to American Falls, Idaho, at the age of twelve, Torrance joined the American Falls High School baseball team. He attended high school in Spokane, where he was a football player, captain of the baseball team, and was voted "Yell King."
In 1918, during WWI, Roscoe Torrance became a student at the University of Washington. He volunteered for the Student Army Training Corps which was created at the University of Washington on October 1, 1918; however, the war ended before his intended training in Oklahoma could begin. While at the UW, Torrance was an athletic property manager for the athletic department, and was president of the Associated Students of the UW. While study body president, he raised funds for the building of a new stadium in 1920. Torrance played on the University's baseball team, which toured Japan during 1921.
After college, Torrance was employed as freshman baseball coach and assistant graduate manager for the UW athletics department. In 1924, he began to work as a billboard space salesman for Foster & Kleiser Company. In 1931, Torrance and his business partner William H. Seifert bought the Western Printing Company, and in 1938, the two acquired the Wood and Reber Advertising Agency, which later merged with Metropolitan Press. After Metropolitan Press' acquisition by Craftsman Press, Torrance was employed as vice president. Between 1926 and 1936, Torrance served in the Marine Corps Reserve. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he fought in the South Pacific as a member of the 3rd Marine Division, and he earned a Bronze Star.
Torrance's civic and sports-related activities in Seattle were numerous. As a member of the Washington Athletic Board of Directors, he helped create the 101 Club in 1933, an organization to provide support to athletes. After the purchase of the Seattle Rainiers professional baseball team by Emil Sick, Torrance was hired as executive vice president for the team. He took on this work for a small sum while continuing to work in the printing business. In 1936, Torrance became State Chairman for the March of Dimes and served in that capacity for twenty years. Torrance was also a founder of Greater Seattle, Inc., the originators of Seafair in Seattle. He was crowned King Neptune XIX of Seafair in 1968. In 1962, Torrance and his wife were co-chairs of the Century 21 Exposition's hospitality commitee, hosting such dignitaries as President John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Jonas Salk. Torrance chaired the boards of the Western Pacific Insurance Company, the Salvation Army, and the Boys Clubs of America, and was a post commander of the American Legion. He was a member of the National Association of Manufacturers and Association of Washington Industries and a director of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. In addition, Torrance was a member of the Rainier Club, the Seattle Rotary, Harbor Club, and Nile Temple of the Shriners.
During the 1950s, Torrance became involved in a public scandal due to his activities raising money for athletes. He was accused of running a "slush fund" that provided University of Washington players with more funding than the maximum financial aid allowed by the Pacific Coast Conference (forty dollars). Torrance and others felt that the maximum amount of funding allowed was far too little to assist the athletes with the cost of living and education. After the controversy, the University of Washington was placed on athletic probation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and the University's teams could not participate in any NCAA championships until the probation concluded. These events caused Torrance to remove himself from his official ties with the UW's athletics department.
Despite the unpleasantness during the 1950s, Torrance's efforts in supporting the University were honored in 1972 when he received the Distinguished Alumni Special Service Award. The Puget Sound Sportswriters and Sportscasters gave him their Charles E. Sullivan Award in 1974. He was inducted into the UW's Hall of Fame and the Washington State Sports Hall of Fame in 1980. In 1989, Torrance was the first awardee of the annual Seattle-King County Association of Realtors' First Citizen Award. In 2001, he was posthumously inducted into the UW's Baseball All-Century Team.
Torrance married Ruth Doris Inkster in 1924. The couple had three children, named Shirley, John and William.
After the death of his wife, Ruth, in 1971, Torrance married Madge True in 1976. He also remained active in the community throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and served as the chairman of the board of the Western Pacific Insurance Company, director of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, post commander of the American Legion, and board member of the Salvation Army and Boys Club of America, and was a member of the National Association of Manufacturers, the Association of Washington Industries, the Rainier Club, the Seattle Rotary, Harbor Club, the Seattle Golf Club, and the Nile Temple.
Torrance published his memoir, Torchy, in the 1980s. He died on November 24, 1990.
Content Description
Collection of photographs and newspaper clippings collected by Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance of University of Washington sports and other Husky activities and student activities, the Seattle Rainiers, and other Seattle-related events from 1916-1950s; 35mm slides from the 1970s of similar subjects; and personal photographs of Torrance, his family and friends, and figures of note in philanthropy, business, and the arts, many in the form of large collages. Includes photographs related to the Salvation Army, the March of Dimes, and military gatherings.
Use of the Collection
Restrictions on Use
Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication. Contact Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries for details.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information
Gift of Roscoe Torrance, probably 1977, 1982 and 1985.
Separated Materials
Roscoe C. Torrance Papers (Manuscript Collections 1326, 1361, 1951)
Detailed Description of the Collection
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Description: 1 album of over 1200 photographs and newspaper clippings collected by Torchy Torrance of University of Washington sports and student activities
Included are images of UW football teams (1921, 1922, 1924, UW-Stanford undated, UW-Cal. 1919, UW-Whitman 1919), UW baseball (1919- 1922, 1924), UW crew teams (1922, 1925), UW women's softball (1919), UW soccer (1919), UW track (1919, 1922), UW women's hockey team (undated), tennis (undated). Also included are pictures of individual sports players, "Hec" Edmundson, Edmond Meany with shovel.
Some of the images also depict buildings on campus 1918, Campus Day 1919, Glee Club 1926, military training 1917, student trip to the Orient on the "S.S. Kashima Maru" on August 1921 (probably to play baseball in Japan; includes images of the Waseda Baseball Team), the construction of the UW stadium (1920), trip to Yellowstone National Park 1917-1918. (Note: Stadium construction includes photographs by Asahel Curtis. Curtis 41137, 41160, 41153, 41132, 40871, 40825, 41139, 41002, 40866, 41138, 40941, 40872, 41005, 40645, 40873).
Dates: approximately 1916-1926Container: Box PH0509 Box 1 -
Description: 26 black and white snapshots of Torchy Torrance, family and friends, and 3rd Marine Division members, construction projectContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 1
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Description: 9 black and white photographs of University of Washington sports including crew, baseball and footballContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 2
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Description: 23 black and white photographs of social eventsContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 3
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Description: 19 color snapshots of social events, parades, etc.Dates: approximately 1960s-1970sContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 4
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Description: 20 35mm slides of University of Washington sports events
Includes images of football, baseball, crew, track and field, gymnastics, wrestling, cheerleaders, Husky mascot.
Dates: approximately 1970sContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 5 -
Description: 6 4x5 color transparencies of various images including architectural rendering of the Pacific Science Pavilion at Century 21 and the Seattle Golf ClubContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 6
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Description: 14 black and white photographs removed from posterboard collageContainer: Box PH0509 Box 2, Folder 7
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Description: Photographs
- Basketball team in jerseys with "I's" holding championship ball labeled with N.W.C. Champs '17 - I - '18, approximately 1918
- Seattle Rainiers, 1948
- Seattle Rainiers, 1950
- Seattle Rainiers, Coast League Champions of 1951
- Seattle Rainiers, 1952
- Signed photograph of Basil (Doc) O'Connor, 1963, co-founder with Franklin D. Roosevelt of Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation and March of Dimes effort
Container: Folder:oversize OS Folder 1-6 -
Description: 1 mounted group portrait probably of baseball team with Japanese dignitaries and students, Tokyo; Navy ship
Identication on verso: F. Setzek, Roscoe Torrance, B. Bakke, H. Miles, D. Gardner, G. Marriott, R. Leonard, B. Maloney, P. Land, G. Harper, G. McMahon M. McInnis, Coach L. Allison, R. Welts, R. Barrett
Dates: approximately 1921Container: Folder:oversize OS Folder 7-8 -
Description: Seattle RainiersContainer: Folder:oversize OS Folder 9
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Description: Seattle Rainiers, 1949Container: Folder:oversize OS Folder 10
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Description: 4 mounted collages containing photographs of Roscoe Torrance, his family and friendsContainer: Folder:oversize OS Folder 11
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Description: 4 collages containing photographs of Roscoe Torrance, sports teams and activities, personalities, etc.Container: Folder:oversize OS Folder 12-13
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Description: collages containing photographs of Roscoe Torrance, military officers, and celebrities including Bob HopeContainer: Folder:oversize OS Folder 14
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Description: Seattle RainiersDates: 1943-1945, 1947Container: Folder:oversize OS Folder 15
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Description: Photographs
WWI-era cadets, possibly the University of Washington's Student Army Training Corps, circa 1918; U.S. Navy Wireless Telegraph School, University of Washington, Summer 1918 (Webster & Stevens 504M); Fifth Seamen Company of U.S. Naval Training Camp in front of old Forestry building, University of Washington campus, 1918; 44th Convention of Union Label Trades Department of American Federation of Labor at Hotel Roosevelt, New York City, September 12, 1952 (Empire NY 17278)
Container: Folder:oversize OS Folder 16 -
Description: Collage containing photographs of Roscoe Torrance, man in Seattle Rainiers uniform, and celebrities such as Bob Hope and Bing CrosbyContainer: Folder:oversize OS Folder 17
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)
Family Names
- Torrance family--Photographs
Other Creators
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Personal Names
- Torrance, Roscoe C. (Roscoe Conkling), 1899-1990--Photographs
Corporate Names
- Seattle Rainiers (Baseball team)--Photographs
- University of Washington--Sports--Photographs
- University of Washington--Students--Photographs
- University of Washington. Department of Intercollegiate Athletics--Photographs
