Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Seattle Post Office Photographs and Other Material, 1889-1962
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Seattle Post Office
- Title
- Seattle Post Office Photographs and Other Material
- Dates
- 1889-1962 (inclusive)18891962
- Quantity
- 1.5 cubic feet, (4 boxes, including 231 photographs)
- Collection Number
- 1972.5319 (collection)
- Summary
- Photographs of employees, building construction and events, as well as albums and early records from Seattle and other post offices.
- Repository
-
Museum of History & Industry, Sophie Frye Bass Library
P.O. Box 80816
Seattle, WA
98108
Telephone: 2063241126 x102
library@mohai.org - Access Restrictions
-
The collection is open to the public by appointment.
- Languages
- English.
- Sponsor
- Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Historical NoteReturn to Top
The first United States Post Office in Seattle--and the first in King County--opened in 1853 in pioneer Arthur A. Denny's log cabin home on Front Street (now First Avenue) and Marion Street, with Denny named the first postmaster. Previously, all mail for Seattle and Alki was delivered once a week by canoe from Olympia. The first post office consisted, as Denny's daughter Louisa Denny Frye later recalled, of a desk with small cubbyholes where the 30 year old Denny sorted the first small batches of mail to come directly to Seattle.
The Seattle Post Office lacked a permanent address for its first fifty years, moving from one location to another. From 1890 to 1899, the Post Office occupied a building on Columbia Street between Second and Third Avenues, constructed after the fire of 1889. Later it was in the nearby Boston Block, and later, in the Arlington Hotel Building at First and University. The first permanent home of the Seattle Post Office was the Beaux-Arts inspired building constructed between 1903 and 1909 at Third Avenue and Union Street. Also known as the Federal Building, this ornate structure originally also housed the United States Federal Court and Department of Customs, though the Post Office soon outgrew its space and took over the entire building. This building, which had become too cramped and had also begun to deteriorate, was demolished in 1958 and replaced by the modern three-story facility still used today.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
Photographs comprise the bulk of the Seattle Post Office collection. Three groups of photographs portray postal employees: individual portraits from the late 19th century and group portraits of employees of various Seattle stations, taken in 1935 and 1952. Another series of 113 photographs documents the construction (1903-1909), from groundbreaking to completion, of the classical post office building that stood at Third Avenue and Union Street until its demolition in 1958. Other photographs depict a 1950 letter carriers convention, and the Terminal Annex on Jackson Street.
The collection also includes three albums: one volume of employee signatures, probably given as a retirement gift; an album of newspaper clippings documenting the early days of air mail service; and an album of photographs and clippings related to the Retired Letter Carriers Club and the associated Ladies Social Club for wives of retired letter carriers.
Post office papers includes early records from the Seattle and Olympia post offices, an account book from Wagner, Oregon, and post office ephemera.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Restrictions on Use
The Museum of History & Industry is the owner of the materials in the Sophie Frye Bass Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from MOHAI before any reproduction use. The museum does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners.
Alternative Forms Available
View selections from the collection in digital format by clicking on the camera icons in the inventory below.
Preferred Citation
Seattle Post Office photographs and other material, Museum of History & Industry, Seattle
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
Arranged in 3 series:
- Photographs
- Papers
- Albums
Location of Collection
2b.1.4-5Acquisition Information
Source: United States Post Office, Seattle (James J. Symbol, Postmaster) on February 5, 1972.
Separated Materials
These materials are part of a donation that also included a number of artifacts. These artifacts are cataloged and stored separately by MOHAI's Collections Department.
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.
Photographs, circa 1890s-1956Return to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Employees |
||
Box/Folder | ||
1/1 | 1-4: Employee portraits 4 photographs
Roberts & Kautz , Seattle (photographer)
Individual portraits of employees mounted on cardboard; identifications written on verso.
|
circa 1890s |
1/2-4 | 4-38: Employee portraits 34 photographs
Individual portraits of employees mounted on cardboard; identifications written on verso.
|
circa 1890s |
4/1-2 | 39-51: Employee groups by station
13 photographs 8" x 19.5"
Groups of employees of individual Seattle stations: Ballard, Columbia, Georgetown, Greenlake, Main
Station, Queen Anne, University, and Stations "B," "F" (Fremont), "I" (Interbay) and "W" (West Seattle). Also includes
2 group photographs of Postmaster George E. Starr and supervisors.
Identifications are written on verso of each photograph, though not all individuals are
identified.
|
1935 August-September |
4/3-6 | 52-72: Employee groups by station
21 photographs 8" x 19.5"
Groups of employees of individual Seattle stations: Ballard, Broadway, Columbia, Georgetown,
Greenwood, Jackson, Lake City, Magnolia, Main, Northgate, Terminal Station, Queen Anne, Richland Highlands, Riverton
Heights, University, Wallingford, West Seattle, and White Center. Also includes photographs of employees at the North
Garage, and 3 copies of a photograph of Postmaster George E. Starr and supervisors.
Identifications are written on verso of each photograph, though not all individuals are
identified.
|
1956 June -September |
1/5 | 73-77: Employee groups 5 photographs
Includes employees of the Motor Vehicle Unit outside the U.S. Post Office garage and a group of
employees who received the "safe-driving award" in 1940.
Identifications of individuals written on verso or on separate sheets of paper.
|
1933-1949 |
National Association of Letter Carriers Convention, Seattle
Photographs of the 37th biennial convention of the National Association of Letter Carriers, which took
place in Seattle.
|
1950 September | |
Box/Folder | ||
1/6 | 1950 September | |
1/6 | 79: Ferry Kalakala passing under Fremont
bridge
Lawrence Barrett , Seattle (photographer)
Copy negative on file
|
1950 September |
1/6 | 80-81: People arriving for Grand Ball |
1950 September |
1/6 | 82: Group seated at tables in hall |
1950 September |
1/6 | 83: Group of letter carriers |
1950 September |
1/7 | 84-92: National Association of Letter Carriers parade during
convention 9 photographs
|
1950 September |
Buildings |
||
Box/Folder | ||
1/8-19 | 93-205: Construction of the U. S. Courthouse, Custom House and Post Office building, Seattle, July 2, 1906 Construction of the U. S. Courthouse, Custom House and Post Office building, Seattle, February 9, 1907 113 photographs
This series of photographs documents the years-long construction of the ornate classical building on
the southeast corner of Third Avenue and Union Street in Seattle, which housed the Post Office and well as the United
State Federal Court and the Department of Customs. Offically named the U.S. Courthouse, Custom House and Post Office
building, it was also referred to as the Federal Building. Many of the photographs are mounted on linen backing, and
most are perforated with two holes along the left edge, suggesting they have been removed from an album.
The first images document the vacant corner prior to the beginning of construction, after the two-story Plummer Block was lifted and moved two blocks north to Pine Street, where it became the Hotel Federal. Approximately one or two photographs per month document all stages of the construction, which include the regrade of Third Avenue in 1907, unanticipated in the building planning and requiring the addition of wide steps to connect the building with the sidewalk four feet below. Beginning in January 1908, some of the photographs document work on the building's interior, including 1909 images of finished rooms. |
1903 December-1909 May |
1/20 | 206-207: Interior of U.S. Courthouse, Custom House and Post Office
building
Pierson & Co. (photographer)
|
1909 |
Terminal Annex |
||
Box/Folder | ||
1/21 | People working in the Terminal Annex building 3 photographs
These photographs are mounted on construction paper and are accompanied by typed captions indicating
that the photographs were used to document congestion in various parts of the building, with employees working in close
quarters with each other and with office equipment.
|
1949 February |
1/21 | 211-212: Exterior of Terminal Annex
Caption: "Terminal Annex, Seattle, Wash. Taken Oct. 31, 1955, by Frank Allyn, Training Officer, who
retained negative."
|
1955 October 31 |
Miscellaneous |
||
Box/Folder | ||
1/22 | 213: Crow sitting on mailbox
Written on verso: "Glossy print courtesy of PI [
Seattle Post-Intelligencer] (Beth McKinnon). Crow was stealing letters
from mail box. This photo caught him red handed."
|
circa 1953 |
PapersReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
History |
||
Box/Folder | ||
2/1 | "Brief History of the National Federation of Post Office Clerks" by
Fred McGee 1 page
|
undated |
Seattle Post Office |
||
Box/Folder | ||
2/2 | National Association of Letter Carriers, Seattle Branch souvenir
booklet 2 copies
Booklet containing photographs of Seattle letter carriers, listing names, home state and appointment
dates.
|
1901 |
2/3 | Calls for proposals for airplane service between Seattle and Vicotoria,
B.C.
Includes calls for proposals, proposal cover letters, correspondence and clippings
|
1923, 1928-1929 |
2/4 | Mail schedules 4 items
Schedule of "Arrival and Departure of Princial Mails" (1917); train mail and air mail schedules
(1930); and a map showing air mail transit hours between Seattle and other principal cities (1931).
|
1917, 1930, 1931 |
Olympia Post Office |
||
Box/Folder | ||
2/5 | Arrivals and departures registers
Records of arrivals and departures of mail by type of carrier: horse and cart, steamboat or
railroad.
|
1889-1893 |
2/6-7 | Employees
Includes letter carrier applications and letters of recommendation; appointment of Postmaster Val A.
Milroy; reports of Letter Carrier Service; and oaths and bonds of letter carriers and Postmaster Val Milroy.
|
1890-1893 |
2/8-9 | Financial records
Includes vouchers and reports on various types of delivery and sales; receipts for rent, utilities,
salaries and purchases; and correspondence. Includes correspondence from the Post Office Department Salary and
Allowance Division regarding salary, rent and other expenses; from the Office of the Auditor of the Treasury for the
Post Office Department regarding collection of money from former Postmaster J.G. Kennedy; from Postmaster Milroy
regarding funds for improvement of post office facilities, and other correspondence.
|
1889-1893 |
Wagner, Oregon Post Office |
||
Box/Folder | ||
2/10 | Account book of quarterly returns |
1894-1897 |
Ephemera |
||
Box/Folder | ||
2/11 | U.S. Postal Service booklet of general information for the
public
Cover stamped "Ellensburg, WA. 98926"
|
1904 |
2/12 | Material distributed by or available at post offices
Includes Registered Mail envelopes, a poster announcing the Selective Training and Service Act of
1940, a list of providers of produce, and a letter from the National Recovery Administration about the Code of Fair
Competition (1934).
|
1934; 1940 ; undated |
2/12 | Banquet programs |
1928; 1941 |
Clippings |
||
Box/Folder | ||
2/14 | "The G.P.O. Museum" by Pamela Steelcroft, published in the
Strand Magazine, London
Article clipped and mailed to Postmaster George Starr by Louis Nash, King County Auditor, with the
inscription "Something for you scrapbook"
|
1897 September |
2/14 | The
Bundy Recorder free speech edition.
The
Bundy Recorder was the "official organ of the Seattle P.O. Clerks Union."
|
1909 August |
Box/Folder | ||
2/15 | Miscellaneous
Includes a New Year's card from Seattle Post Office to the Universal Postal Union (1909); two letters
of recognition; and an announcement about excursions to Saratoga Lake for employees.
|
1893; 1909; undated |
AlbumsReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box | ||
3 | 229: Seattle Post Office employee signature album
Titled on cover "Post Office Employes [sic]," this album consists of pages each signed by a postal
employee, most indicating the employee's appointment date and position, and the current date. Signature dates range
from 1895-1914, with groups at 1895-1899, 1903-1906 and 1914.
The first page of the album is printed with a message to Postmaster Griffith Davies, indicating that this album was assembled in honor of his retirement. Inscription in album: "For your archive, This book belonged to my father, James W. Scott, who was one of the "original boys" --way back when. I'm hoping you will enjoy having it. Sincerely, Norma Scott Drimmel, May 2, 1949." |
1894-1914 |
3 | 230: Ladies of the Retired Letter Carriers Social Club album
The front of the album consists of photographs of members of the Ladies Social Club (who were wives of
retired letter carriers) and clippings about Club events, many by Club secretary Clara Newell. The album includes a
list of charter members at the Club's founding in 1945.
The back half of album consists of clippings about and photographs of members of Retired Letter Carriers Club of Seattle, as well as clippings about Seattle Post Office history. |
1945-1962 |
3 | 231: "History of Air Mail" clippings album
Album apparently assembled by Seattle Post Office. Title on cover: "History of Air Mail - Clippings -
Seattle Post Office"
|
1920-1940 |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Post offices--Washington (State)--Seattle
- Post office buildings--Washington (State)--Seattle--Photographs
- Postal service employees--Washington (State)--Seattle--Photographs
Personal Names
- Starr, George E.--Photographs
Corporate Names
- Seattle Post Office--Photographs
- Olympia Post Office
Geographical Names
- United States--Washington (State)--Seattle
Form or Genre Terms
- Albums
- Ephemera
- Photographic prints
- Scrapbooks