Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Newsfilm of Grays Harbor County, circa 1925-1933
Overview of the Collection
- Title
- Newsfilm of Grays Harbor County
- Dates
- circa 1925-1933 (inclusive)19251933
- Quantity
- 53 reels of nitrate film (7,000 feet) : silent, black and white, tinted ; 35mm
- Collection Number
- PH0925
- Summary
- Local newsreel footage from Grays Harbor County, Washington, circa 1925-1933
- Repository
-
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
-
The original films are not accessible due to preservation concerns. Arrangements can be made to view the film by contacting the Visual Materials Curator.
- Languages
- English
- Sponsor
- Funding for film preservation was provided by a grant awarded by the National Film Preservation Foundation / Funding for film preservation and encoding the finding aid was provided by a grant awarded by the Apex Foundation
Historical BackgroundReturn to Top
Grays Harbor County is located on the southwestern coast of Washington State and was named after a large estuarine bay that is the confluence of several rivers including the Chehalis, Hoquiam, Wishkah, and Humptulips. The bay was named after Captain Robert Gray, a Boston fur trader, who entered it on May 7, 1792. Captain Gray named the area Bullfinch Harbor, however, later cartographers called it Chehalis Bay and then, finally, Grays Harbor. Grays Harbor is home to several towns featured in the Newsfilm of Grays Harbor County including Aberdeen, Hoquiam, Cosmopolis, and Elma.
Originally, the region was populated by a number of Salish-speaking native groups, primarily representatives of the Quinault and Chehalis tribes. These communities commonly lived in permanent villages along major waterways and the coast, where they subsisted on salmon, whales, seals, and available inland game. One of the first encounters with whites occurred in 1775 with the arrival of Spanish explorers and traders near Grenville Point. The fledgling United States of America first made contact in 1792, when Boston fur trader Robert Gray brought the ship Columbia into the bay. Like the Spaniards, Gray and other American travelers moved on after a time due to the apparent unsuitability of the harbor for trading ships, leaving the Aberdeen region largely unsettled by whites until the 1860s. Only at this time did pioneers arrive in greater numbers in order to log, fish, and farm around the harbor hinterlands.
By 1900, the towns of Aberdeen and Hoquiam were home to more than 80 percent of the county’s inhabitants. The wood products industry was the main economic driver in the region, spawning logging operations, lumber mills, and shipyards. The dock facilities and harbor were improved in order to facilitate the exporting of the output of its mills and factories. In 1911 a Port District of Grays Harbor was established. The onset of the First World War created a demand for ships as well as wood, spurring significant expansion of the region's shipyards. In October 1918, the Grays Harbor Motorship Yard set the record for fastest ship construction when they launched the 4,000-ton wooden ship Aberdeen in only 23 and one half days. Nevertheless, lumber remained the foundation of the local economy; in 1924, the one-billionth board foot of timber was shipped from Aberdeen with much fanfare, temporarily earning the town the title of “Lumber Capital of the World.”
Grays Harbor County was booming through the 1920s, but a number of factors contributed to the decline in the wood products industry, from which it never recovered. The end of WWI hobbled local shipbuilding, and the onset of the Great Depression in 1929 sparked a collapse in the domestic and international construction industry. Lumber exports also declined. By mid-century, logging companies began to adopt policies that lowered output of the log supply to the Aberdeen mills. The effect of this shrinking supply chain, along with increased competition from Japan, British Columbia, and the Southern U.S., ensured that Aberdeen would never regain the heights of the pre-1930 period.
The Newsfilm of Grays Harbor County, taken from 1925-1933, documents a time when the community was enjoying the benefits of a strong and healthy economy.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The collection consists of 53 rolls of 35mm black & white and tinted nitrate film dating from 1925-1933. They were made by Anderson Photo Art and Commercial Photography, an Aberdeen-based production studio, as supplementary material to be added to national newsreels for local content. The films include several short features on such subjects as the wreck of the S.S. Halco on the North Jetty of Grays Harbor, the Annual Police Ball Parade, a celebratory picnic for the birthday of early pioneer Jean B. Stewart, the Aberdeen Black Cats baseball team winning the Timber League Pennant in 1925 with the help of local sports star Mel Ingram, and the completion of the Aberdeen-Willapa Highway in 1927. Additional footage also includes scenes of local parades, football and baseball games, city-wide barbeques and celebrations, U.S. Naval Reserve warships steaming out of Grays Harbor, and many other snippets of life in Grays Harbor County.
Other Descriptive InformationReturn to Top
The original 53 small reels of film in this collection were spliced together onto seven larger reels. This was done at the Library of Congress Motion Picture Conservation Center, Motion Picture Preservation Laboratory, where it was sent for examination, before the individual reels could be arranged by date or according to content. In order to make viewing the collection easier, the transferred films were imported into a computer editing system where they were arranged first by content, then chronologically, and compiled onto a single DVD (VC178). This collection guide describes the arrangement according to the items on VC178. The inventory notes the original reel of 35mm nitrate and the duplicating master from which each item was taken. The original reels retain the numbers given by the Library of Congress (i.e. GHOR211568-1-2, GHOR211568-1-3, etc.)
The first part of the collection was preserved in 2006 with a grant from the National Film Preservation Foundation and consisted of 35mm black and white negatives that appeared to be outtakes from longer pieces in the unpreserved portion of the collection. A second portion was preserved in 2010 with funding from a second NFPF grant. This segment consisted primarily of the collection’s remaining negative footage, along with approximately half of the positive materials. The third and final portion of the collection, consisting primarily of tinted footage, was preserved with funding from the Apex Foundation.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Alternative Forms Available
View selections from the collection in digital format
Restrictions on Use
Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication. Contact the Special Collections division of the University of Washington Libraries for details.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
The collection has been arranged according to the following categories:
- People and Community Events
- Parades
- Sports and Recreation
- Naval Activities
- Boats, Buildings, and Bridges
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
People and Community Events, 1925-1929Return to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
viewcopy | item | ||
VC178 | 1 |
Boys on tricycles
A group of young boys ride tricycles and scooters on a
residential sidewalk.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white ; 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (6 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 2 |
Construction of the Campfire Girls
Clubhouse, Roosevelt Park, Aberdeen, Washington
Title: Campfire Girls Clubhouse,
Roosevelt Park, Donation of Union Labor & Merchants of Aberdeen. A
group of laborers work inside the wooden frame of a large building. A line of
young women wearing Campfire Girl uniforms carry lumber and other building
materials onto the construction site. A number of men work on the building.
Roosevelt Park is a municipal facility now known as Sam Benn
Park.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211583-1-1CL, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M124. (1 minute, 27 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 3 |
Delivery of a bus
A group of men unload a bus from a boxcar. The bus then rolls
down a ramp, onto a city street, and drives away.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 10 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 4 |
Mrs. Jean B. Stewart celebrates her
fiftieth year in Aberdeen, Washington
Title: Mrs. Jean B. Stewart Celebrates
Fiftieth Year in Aberdeen. Mrs. Stewart stands with a group of
well-dressed women outside what appears to be a home, shakes their hands, then
leads the procession of women along a stone path.
Jean Brodie Stewart (Dec. 22, 1847- Feb. 6, 1934) was born in
Aberdeen, Scotland. After marrying James B. Stewart (1840-1906), the two
immigrated to America, arriving in the Grays Harbor area in September, 1875
where he founded the James Stewart Logging Co. Mrs. Stewart claimed that she
suggested the name of her adopted city in a letter to a local paper, since its
placement at the mouths of the Chehalis and Wishkah rivers mirrored Aberdeen's
location at the Dee and the Don. In her later years, Mrs. Stewart remained
active in Aberdeen civic life, serving as the Vice-President of the Pioneer
Association of Grays Harbor County. She is also the author of
A Little Book of Verse (1930).
Original
1 reel: GHOR211583-1-1CL, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M124. (52 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 5 |
Opening of the Finch Playfield,
Aberdeen, Washington
Adults and children participate in festivities at the opening of
the Finch Playfield in Aberdeen, Washington. Activities include children
playing on playground equipment, walking in a series of wading canals, holding
balloons, eating ice cream and lollipops. Adults and children watch a dance
performance and listen to speeches by Edward C. Finch and others.
In 1924, Aberdeen lumber magnate Edward C. Finch donated the
land and equipment for a playfield, worth $30,000, to the city. This facility
would subsequently be named Finch Playfield. Edward C. Finch was a Washington
State Senator, a millionaire and a philanthropist. Along with the Finch
playfield, he developed the Finch Building as well as Finch Farms south of the
Chehalis River. The man raising the flag with Finch is Mayor Charle M.
Cloud.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (2 minutes, 30 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 6 |
Public ceremony laying the cornerstone
of a building
Activities surrounding the laying of a cornerstone of a building
under construction. A sealed box is put into an opening in a column of the
building, speeches are made, and a group of men wearing medallions pose for the
camera outside of the building.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-6, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M126. (1 minute, 29 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 7 | Young man poses for camera
Young man smiles and poses for the camera. A trick of the camera
makes it appear that his head spins in an unnatural fashion.
The young man posing for the camera is possibly Stan Spiegle,
KXRO radio personality and photographer. (KXRO first went on the air in Grays
Harbor on May 28, 1928 and was started by Roy Olmsted, a former Seattle,
Washington police officer turned " King of the Puget
Sound Bootleggers" . Olmsted and his cronies used the station during
Prohibition to signal rumrunners when it was safe to transport their
goods.)
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (11 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 8 |
Community picnic
Activities at an outdoor cookout and picnic, including men
cutting meat and preparing a fire pit, stirring large pots of steaming liquid,
then serving food to a very large crowd of people. Several different groups of
picnickers are featured.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-5, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M125. (3 minutes, 12 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 9 |
Fire drills at schools and on the
streets of Aberdeen
A man runs down a residential street and pulls a fire alarm. A
series of scenes show children and teachers leaving several different schools
by multiple exits and lining up outside as if for a fire drill. These schools
include St. Mary's School and Aberdeen High School. In another scene, trucks
rush out of the fire station. On a city street, firemen spray water high into
the air and appear to be staging a demonstration of firefighting
techniques.
St. Mary's school started as St. Rose Academy in 1890 on G
street. The new St. Mary's building was built on H street in 1926 . The man
featured in the fire drills is William H. Tamblyn who served as Aberdeen's
second career fire chief from 1911-1925. He was born in Cardiff, Wales in 1877
and died in October, 1938.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-6, silent, black and white,
35mm.Duplicating master: M126. (4 minutes, 4 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 10 |
Fire engine and firefighters, Aberdeen,
Washington
Firemen and boys stand near a fire truck parked on a wharf,
possibly at the Chehalis River at Aberdeen, spraying water into the harbor. The
boys toss something, possibly wood, into the path of the spray. Two men in
uniform pose for the camera with the fire truck and firemen in the
background.
Features William H. Tamblyn, who served as Aberdeen's second
career fire chief from 1911-1925. He was born in Cardiff, Wales in 1877 and
died in October, 1938.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (46 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 11 |
Bond Burning, Aberdeen,
Washington
A gathering of school children and adults in a large field, for
a bond burning ceremony. Participants walk in a circle as newcomers join the
procession, then participants in the middle stand still. Soon everyone stops
and the middle of the circle is clear. George B. Miller stands on a crate in
the center of the circle and addresses the crowd. He removes a document, bonds
for the Miller Natatorium, from the breast pocket of his coat and hands it to a
girl, who then holds the document over a fire until it begins to burn. The
crowd disperses, running in one direction.
George Burdette Miller was a high school principal from
1910-1914, served as superintendent from 1914-1930, and helped organize
financing for the construction of the natatorium and gymnasium in Aberdeen.
Miller died in 1930. Miller Junior High School was named in his honor. It
opened at Fourth and I Streets in Aberdeen, Washington in 1924. It was the
first junior high school in the state of Washington
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-6 silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M126. (2 minutes, 8 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 12 |
Labor Day at Grays Harbor County
Fairgrounds, Elma, Washington
J. M. Phillips stands on a platform and addresses a crowd in the
stands of the Grays Harbor County Fairgrounds in Elma, Washington. Men walk in
and out of a barnlike building covered in signs: Merchant’s Exhibits, A.F. of L. Bldg., Judge Phillips
will Deliver Labor Day Address. There is a ferris wheel visible behind
the building. On a track inside the stadium, a marching band is followed by men
leading horses, bulls, and cows in front of the reviewing stand. In the
stadium, J. M. Phillips performs a wedding ceremony in front of the crowd. The
bride and groom sit in the bleachers, sign their marriage certificate and smile
at the camera. People seated in the stands look at the camera, smile, and watch
activities taking place on the field.
J. M. Phillips (1873-1959) was an attorney, mayor of Aberdeen,
and is believed to be the first Native American to serve as a judge in the
Washington state court system. Phillips was born in 1873 in North Carolina and
was primarily Cherokee, although he also had ancestry in other Native American
tribes. He attended the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania and played
football under coach " Pop" Warner and was a
teammate of Jim Thorpe. Phillips attended law school at Dickinson College of
Law and attended post-graduate law classes at Northwestern University. He
married Earnestine Wilbur, a descendant of the Menominee tribe of Wisconsin.
They moved to Washington state around 1905. Phillips worked as a hod carrier by
day and read law by night. In 1907, he began working as a lawyer, was made
police judge, and later was elected justice of the peace. He became mayor of
Aberdeen and served as a Superior Court Judge from 1929 to 1950. Phillips died
in 1959.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-2, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (4 minutes, 8 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 13 |
Title card reading
City Firemen and Labor Day at the Fair
(tinted)
Title card: City Firemen (tinted
pink). Title: Labor Day at the Fair, Anderson Photo, J.
M. Phillips Speaks (tinted yellow). J. M. Phillips stands on a platform
and addresses a crowd in the stands of what appears to be the Grays Harbor
County Fairgrounds in Elma, Washington.
James M. Phillips (1873-1959) was an attorney, Mayor of
Aberdeen, and is believed to be the first Native American to serve as a judge
in the Washington state court system.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211579-1-1, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M177. (28 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 14 |
Logging and forestry activities, Grays
Harbor County, Washington
A group of men and boys are gathered by train tracks in a rural,
wooded area. Two men prepare bundles of plant material, possibly saplings, that
they place into bags. A group of boys pose for the camera holding the bags of
saplings. Men and boys walk around a heavily lumbered area. Boys appear to be
planting a tree. The group leaves together, walking along the train tracks.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-5, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M125. (2 minutes, 4 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 15 |
Women working in a kitchen, Grays
Harbor County, Washington
A large group of women work together in a commercial kitchen,
putting what appears to be a dessert, perhaps strawberry shortcake, into cups.
They hand out the cups to people passing by.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-5, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M125. (46 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 16 |
Boys climbing on a log, near Aberdeen,
Washington
Group of men and boys in the woods, slowly walking on a fallen
log.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating Master: M127 (19 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 17 |
Captain Kidd's Pirates
Picnic
Title: Captain Kidd's Pirates
Picnic. A group of children pose for the camera, smiling and waving. A
large number of children run in a field, followed by the title:
Somebody said, "Ice
Cream." Children run towards the camera, across the field, seem to reach
their destination and then are seen eating ice cream cones. A young girl is
stationed behind a table handing out ice cream cones, while a young man stands
next to her dishing out ice cream for a group of little boys. A number of young
girls, dressed as pirates, pose for the camera. Title: Pirates fight. The children pretend to fight each other
with wooden swords, while jostling each other and laughing. Title:
Captain Kidd and Her Committee. A group of adults
and children pose for the camera. They wave and make filming gestures toward
the cameraman.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211564-1-1 and 211566-1-1, silent, black and white,
tinted, 35mm. Duplicating master: M122. (2 minutes, 49 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 18 |
Cattle herded through Elma,
Washington
A herd of cows stands in a corral then is herded down a street
by men on horseback. Sign on a building reads, " The
Chronicle, Printers for Elma" and a sign on an awning is for
" Meadowcrofts" . The cows are herded past a
storefront with " Meats" painted on the awning. A
man stands outside the storefront and a woman walks inside.
Meadowcrofts Meats was located on 165 N. 3rd. Street in Elma,
Washington
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master M64. (56 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 19 |
Opening of the Aberdeen-Willapa
Highway
Title: Opening Aberdeen-Willapa
Highway. Title: Caravan Lined Up For Trip Over the
Road. A line of cars, including one with a sign on the door
" State of Washington Highways C-113" , are
parked on a wet city street in Cosmopolis, Washington. A crowd of people,
including school children, are lined up on the side of the street, waving, some
carry umbrellas. Cars line up on the street, ready to make the trip. In another
scene, cars are parked on a rural road, one of which appears to be a news van.
People mill around, some seem to be carrying equipment. A line of cars drives
down the road to where the news crews are parked. People get out of their cars
and gather around news vans. Title:Samuel J. Humes Cuts
the Tape Opening the Road. A group of men in coats and hats stand around
talking, then walk over a barrier, smiling at the camera as they pass by.
Governor Roland H. Hartley (1864-1952) appointed Samuel J. Humes
as State Highway Engineer on May 1, 1927 to replace J. Webster Hoover, fired
the day before. Humes served for six years, leading the Highway Department
through the first years of the Depression. While his administration was marked
by bitter political infighting, substantial progress was made in highway
construction. The final 36-mile stretch of Pacific Highway between Kalama and
Toledo to complete State Road No. 1 (now SR 99) was paved in October 1923.
Olympic Loop Highway (U.S.101) opened August 26-27, 1931.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211564-1-1 and 211566-1-1, silent, black and white,
tinted, 35mm. Duplicating master: M122. (2 minutes, 49 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 20 |
Young woman Is given a tiara, Aberdeen,
Washington
A public ceremony in which a young girl is given a tiara.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-5, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M125. (53 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 21 |
Community gathering, breakfast, and
speeches, Grays Harbor County, Washington
A group of people, in a field, are standing inside tables that
are set up in the shape of a U. They serve a large crowd coffee and plates of
food. A group of men stand by a car, possibly a 1924 Ford Model T Coupe,
smoking cigars and talking. A very large group of people gather and listen to a
man delivering a speech on a platform.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 26 seconds)
|
circa 1928 |
VC178 | 22 |
Men and boys on logging road near
Aberdeen, Washington
Groups of men and boys, some wearing Boy Scout uniforms, walk
and jog down what appears to be a logging road, past a smoldering pile of wood.
They wave at the camera and take off their caps.Young boys jump up and down,
wave, and dance for the camera, more join them. A group of young men and boys
stand in a line, apparently posing for a picture. The group breaks up and they
walk past the camera and wave, carrying tools, shovels, and pickaxes.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white,
35mm.Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 15 seconds)
|
circa 1929 |
PARADES, 1925-1926Return to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
viewcopy | item | ||
VC178 | 23 |
Annual Police Ball Parade (tinted),
Aberdeen, Washington
Title: Annual Police
Ball Parade, Photographed by—Anderson Photo. Title:
platoon of Aberdeen Policeman [sic]. Parade, cars
are parked on both sides of the street. Very few spectators visible. Sign on
building: Benson's, Hotel Turner. Police unit
marching down street. Title: Chief Allen. Car with
star decoration on hood, drives in parade. Title: Seattle
Police and Band. Police unit marches down street. Men carry U.S. flag
and a flag for Seattle Police. Marching band in parade. Title:
Northern pacific Flote [sic]. Large flatbed truck
mounted with a train car. Sign on front train car: Northern Pacific. Banner on side: Visit Yellowstone National Park, Low Excursion Fares To All
Eastern Point. Painted on side: Dining Car
1675. People inside car, sitting at tables with white linen table
cloths. Title: City Council, Fire department, and Naval
Reserve Band. Cars driving in a line in the parade, following the
Yellowstone truck. Fire engine, followed by sailors holding an American flag,
followed by a marching band.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211576-1-1, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M177. (1 minute, 7 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 24 |
Annual Police Ball Parade, Aberdeen,
Washington
A parade on a city street. Signs on a store:
Benson's and Hotel
Turner. A police unit marches down the street, followed by a car with a
star decoration on its hood. Men carry a U.S. flag and a flag for the Seattle
Police. A marching band is followed by a large flatbed truck carrying a train
car. The sign on the front of the train car: Northern Pacific. Banner on side:
Visit Yellowstone National Park, Low Excursion Fares To
All Eastern Point. Painted on side: Dining Car
1675. People sit at tables with white linen table cloths inside the
train car. Cars drive in a line in the parade, following the Yellowstone truck.
A fire engine is followed by sailors holding an American flag, followed by a
marching band.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (56 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 25 |
Parade, Unknown Location
Uniformed men march down a street, followed by marching band,
past parked cars and a crowd watching parade.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-6, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M126. (21 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 26 |
Shrine Parade, Aberdeen,
Washington
Title: Shrine Parade. Title:
Vancouver and Tacoma Patrols. Men in uniform march
down city street, followed by a marching band. Title: Our
own patrol. Men march down the street.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211590-1-1, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M121. (1 minute, 34 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 27 |
Parade, Aberdeen,
Washington
Parade down a city street includes men in uniform holding
American flags and Elks flags, men driving a convertible car wave at the
crowds, marching bands, women in Shriner's hats, people wearing Spanish Bolero
costumes, a man wearing a dress carrying balloons. Two men hold banner:
Hoquiam Core BPOE 1082, followed by marching band.
The location changes to a public square where men in uniform march in formation
on a field, led by a drum major and accompanied by drums. Crowds watch. Bass
drum is marked by: B.P.O.E. [Number illegible. Possibly
1424.] Kelso, Wash.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-4, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (4 minutes)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 28 |
Parade, Hoquiam, Washington
Parade on city street, possibly 8th Street in Hoquiam,
Washington. Sign on storefront: Electric Store.
Cars decorated with American flags are followed by a truck with brass band
riding in back. A banner on the side of the truck reads, "We Are Blowing For Hoquiam." A man rides on the grill
of the car. A truck in the parade has a banner: Fans and
Players, [Illegible] Hoquiam Baseball, 1888 to 1894.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 13 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 29 |
Parade, possibly Hoquiam,
Washington
A parade in what might be downtown Hoquiam, Washington, that
includes marching bands, men in uniform, people wearing Shriner's uniforms, and
men and women marching, wearing street clothes, carrying a flag/banner:
F.O.E.Tenino . Sign on building: Safeway. Sign
over sidewalk: Garage. Sign on storefront:
Hardware.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-4, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 10 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
SPORTS and RECREATION, 1926-1933Return to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
viewcopy | item | ||
VC178 | 30 |
Open Timber League Baseball Game at
Electric Park, Aberdeen, Washington
Title: Aberdeen-Hoquiam, Open Timber
League at Electric Park (tinted green). Men sitting in a dugout, wearing
caps with the letter " A" and the Aberdeen Black
Cat logo on their shirts (tinted yellow). Title: “Play Ball!” Player at home plate swings,
hits the ball and runs to first base (tinted yellow). Player at home base
strikes out. Player at home base, Umpire calls the pitch a "ball " (tinted
pink/rose). Title: As The Birds On The Hill See The
Game (tinted yellow) View of Electric Park from a hill. Parked cars and
bleachers are visible. End of an inning. Title: 3500
Fans. People sitting in the bleachers and behind a rope on the grass
(tinted pink/rose). Young boys look at the camera. Views of Electric Park
bleachers, covered stadium from the outfield. Game in play. Fans in the stands.
Fans in the stands, young man in military/police uniform sits behind home
plate.
Electric Park was home of the Aberdeen Black Cats of the
Northwestern League. The opening game was between Aberdeen and the Tacoma
Tigers in 1908. The stadium seated about 3,500 and was located at Myrtle and
Oak Streets, on the border of Aberdeen and Hoquiam. Overflow crowds for the
games would sit in a roped off area in the outfield and some fans took in the
game from Kidder's Bluff overlooking left field.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211589-1-1, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M177. (1 minute, 21 seconds)
|
September, 1925 |
VC178 | 31 |
Mel Ingram and the Aberdeen Black Cats
Win the Timber League Pennant, Electric Park, Aberdeen, Washington
Title: Mel Ingram (tinted yellow).
A young man in an Aberdeen Black Cats uniform stands by the dugout filled with
baseball players, smiling and laughing. " It-Won’t-Be-" is written above the dugout. A
group of small boys and young men stand near Mel Ingram. People in the stands
look on. Title: Black Cats Winning Timber League
Pennant. A man and boy walk past the bleachers and urge the crowd to
stand up and cheer. Young boys sit on the ground by the bleacher fence. They
look at the camera. The stands are filled with spectators. The camera pans
across Electric Park to the baseball diamond. Title: Resting Between Games.
Electric Park was home of the Aberdeen Black Cats of the
Northwestern League. The opening game was between Aberdeen and the Tacoma
Tigers in 1908. The stadium seated about 3,500 and was located at Myrtle and
Oak Streets, on the border of Aberdeen and Hoquiam. Overflow crowds for the
games would sit in a roped off area in the outfield and some fans took in the
game from Kidder's Bluff overlooking left field.
According to an Ebbets Field Flannel blogpost dated June 22,
2009, " Aberdeen Black Cats 1918 Home" the
Aberdeen Black Cats took their logo, an arched cat known as
" Hoo-Hoo," from a good luck charm posted at
logging camps throughout the Pacific Northwest. The symbol was also used by
International Workers of the World labor movement and was known as the
" Ag Cat" (for agitation). Aberdeen baseball
began as a professional team and played as the Pippins and later the Black Cats
through 1918. Semi-professional timber leagues continued through the early
1940s. The Aberdeen Black Cats won the Timber League Pennant in a doubleheader
against the Tacoma Kays on Septermber 13, 1925. Mel Ingram played outfield and
hit above .300.
Mel Ingram was born on July 4, 1904 in Asheville, North
Carolina. He grew up in Aberdeen, Washington, and attended Gonzaga University
in Spokane and died October 28, 1979 in Medford, Oregon. His years at Gonzaga
(1925-28) spanned one of the school's best athletic eras. At the start, Bing
Crosby was among his baseball teammates. He won 15 of a possible 16 letters
while competing in football (running back), basketball (guard), baseball
(outfielder) and track (sprinter). During his college years, he appeared
regularly in Timber League baseball games, and played in three games as a pinch
runner for the 1929 Pittsburgh Pirates, scoring one run. Later, after joining
the Wallace High School faculty, he was an important player-coach for the
Wallace Miners and other teams of the Idaho-Washington League. He took two
years out (1934-35) to play for the House of David. He spent 15 years coaching
at Wallace, where his football, basketball and track teams all won league
championships. Ingram then moved to Roseburg, Oregon, spending three years
there, before going to Grants Pass, where his football teams won four state
championships. In 1969, he was named National High School Coaches Association
Coach of the Year and is a member of both the Inland Northwest and Gonzaga
University halls of fame. (Information provided by the Society for American
Baseball Research, SABR.org)
Original
1 reel: GHOR211581-1-1, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M177. (32 seconds)
|
September, 1925 |
VC178 | 32 |
Timber League Pennant Baseball
Game
Baseball game, players on the field, crowds in the stands.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M125. (1 minute, 4 seconds)
|
September, 1925 |
VC178 | 33 |
Lake Quinault
A lake, possibly Lake Quinault, with hills in the distance, seen
from a small beach. People playing by a waterfall, possibly Merriman Falls near
Lake Quinault.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 7 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 34 |
Buying Tickets and Football Game, Grays
Harbor County, Washington
People walk up to a ticket booth, go through a gate, and some
purchase tickets. Crowds stand on sidelines of a football field and some are
seated in bleachers that are covered by a shelter. A group of men stand on the
sidelines, some are in uniform, and one throws a football. Football players and
referees perform a a series of plays on the field.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-6, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M126. (2 minutes, 9 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 35 |
Football game, Emerson Field, Hoquiam,
Washington
A man stands on the sidelines of a football field, leading the
crowd in a cheer. Players run onto the field, they kick off and the game
begins. Three young boys sit on the field side of the bleachers, as the game
plays out on the field.
Emerson Field is located at Emerson Avenue and Adams Street in
Hoquiam
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (2 minutes, 39 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 36 |
Cheer leader and football game at
Emerson Field, Hoquiam, Washington
A group of young women are lead in a cheer. A long shot shows a
football game, cars parked in a field, and crowds watching the football game in
a stadium.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (35 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 37 |
Football game in a field
A man leads fans in a cheer. Football players run on a field.
Shadows of the spectators can be seen in the foreground, including a shadow of
the film cameraman. Children stand in a group, posing for the camera and are
led in a cheer by a young girl.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-5, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (1 minute, 9 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 38 |
Football game at Emerson Field,
Hoquiam, Washington
Crowds in the stands at a stadium, some sit in bleachers under a
shelter, while a yell leader directs the crowd in a cheer. A group of men stand
on the football field, including two in white uniforms who appear to be the
referees. Two players have the letter "W" on their sweaters [possibly for
Weatherwax High School, Aberdeen] and they stand with three other young men who
are dressed in street clothes. They pose for the camera, then one referee takes
the football from the other referee. Spectators stand on the sidelines in front
of a large crowd seated in the stands behind them. A large letter "A" is
mounted on a small building near the stands. It appears that an effigy of some
sort is hanging from the cross bar of the "A." The word
[Illegible]RDE[illegible] is written on the ground on the sidelines [possibly
Aberdeen]. The yell leader sits down with the group of spectators watching the
game from the sidelines. A "W" appears to be written on the field. The crowd
waves their hands and hats at the camera. A yell leader cheers on the sidelines
and directs the crowd in a cheer. [Illegible]LLO written on the ground on the
sidelines.
Emerson Field is located at Emerson Avenue and Adams Street in
Hoquiam.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-5, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (1 minute, 19 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 39 |
Log Rolling, Aberdeen,
Washington
Various shots of log rolling competitions. Includes participants
walking a ball that floats on the water and a man wearing a woman's dress while
rolling a ball in the water with his feet.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-2, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (2minutes, 7 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 40 |
Uphill motorcycle race
Participants ride motorcycles up a steep hill as a small crowd
watches.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 14 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 41 |
People buy tickets to a football game,
Emerson Field, Hoquiam, Washington
People walk towards a small building, some of them appear to be
buying tickets from a window cut out of the side. A man stands in front of the
building, handing out papers to the crowd. Groups of people cross a street and
a line of cars drive down the street while a policeman directs traffic. A group
of young women on a field jump and laugh, one runs toward the camera, laughing.
Other people walk behind them, heading towards a destination, presumably a
football game.
Possibly the Aberdeen/Hoquiam annual Thankgiving Day football
game. The cars on the street are on Emerson Avenue, turning on Adams Street.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M126. (1 minute, 11 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 42 |
Football game at Emerson Field,
Hoquiam, Washington
Football game, spectators in the stands, players on the field,
running toward the camera.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (1 minute, 11 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 43 |
Football game, near Aberdeen,
Washington
Spectators are seated in the stands and some are perched on wall
of building [possibly Hoquiam High School]. Football players and referees play
on the field. The crowd watches the football game and some young boys watch the
game seated in the branches of trees behind the bleachers, they wave at camera.
Four young women sit on the ground in front of the bleachers. They laugh and
smile at the camera. A series of football plays, then players and referees
leave the field along with the spectators.
The game probably takes place at Stewart Field in Aberdeen,
Washington. The field and the land surrounding it was the site of the Stewart
family's homestead, brickyard, and shipyard. The land and athletic field, used
as early as 1905, was donated to the Aberdeen School District in the 1920s. The
white building is the Miller Natatorium and Gymnasium.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-2, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (2 minutes)
|
circa 1928 |
VC178 | 44 |
Group on horseback in the
mountains
Small river, mountains in background, a group on horseback
travels downriver. A pond framed by mountains. A person climbs on large rocks
by the water.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M125. (1 minute, 10 seconds)
|
circa 1929 |
VC178 | 45 |
Swimming and waterskiing, near
Aberdeen, Washington
People in bathing suits and caps dive off a dock and swim in the
water. A motor boat pulling a water skier drives past the dock and falls. Two
young women stand by a fence on the side of the road, talking. A tug boat, a
crane on the water, and a log boom
Waterskiing probably took place on Hood Canal, at Union,
Washington. Tugboat is the Tugboat Rose, a dredge tender tugboat for the Port
of Grays Harbor when it operated the pipeline dredges, Dredge Washington and
Dredge Robert Gray.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-2, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 29 seconds)
|
circa 1933 |
NAVAL ACTIVITIES, 1925-1927Return to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
viewcopy | item | ||
VC178 | 46 |
Naval exercises
A sailor stands on top of a mast on a ship, waving semifore
flags. The film in this section is double exposed and shows rigging, a mast,
and sails, as well as, sailors in formation on the deck of a ship. A naval
officer and sailors work on board ship. Snowcapped mountains are seen in the
distance. Two men in naval uniforms stand in a rowboat being rowed by a crew of
sailors. One acts as a coxswain, urging the oarsmen to row.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (2 minutes, 15 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 47 |
U. S. Naval Reserve joint exercises,
Grays Harbor
Sailors engaging in artillery exercises, rowing races, and
calisthenics on board a naval vessel.
This appears to be part of annual U. S. Naval Reserve training
exercises.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (4 minutes, 51 seconds)
|
circa 1925 |
VC178 | 48 |
Navy leaving Grays Harbor,
Washington
Sailors on a boat leave port while a crowd on the dock waves
goodbye. The boat passes by mountain scenery and boats moored in an inlet. The
water gets choppy and a sailor is seen getting seasick. A procession of four
boats sail through a passage in a mountainous region, possibly Alaska. A sailor
sits in a chair on the deck, reading a newspaper.
The ships pictured appear to be units of the U.S. Naval Reserve
leaving Grays Harbor on an annual training cruise. The ships are Eagle class
patrol craft designed by the Ford Motor Company for long-range anti-submarine
duty in the Atlantic Ocean. Active during the 1920s, they were used primarily
as airplane tenders and off shore patrol boats. One of the three specific ships
present is the PE-38, a Reserve ship stationed in Portland, Oregon during the
1920s. As the port in the footage is very likely to be Grays Harbor, the PE-11
(based in Aberdeen) can also be assumed to be present. The two boats often
participated in joint annual training cruises to Juneau, Alaska, and the
Washington coast, along with PE-57 (based in Seattle, Washington) and PE-32
(based in Tacoma, Washington). The cruises were intended to teach and maintain
naval skills among the reservist crews, as well as maintain familiarity with
operation of the Eagle boats themselves on the open sea.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-4, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (3 minutes, 20 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 49 |
Naval exercises in Alaska
View of mountains, islands, and buoys, seen from the deck of a
ship. The boat pulls into the harbor of a vllage on the water, possibly Juneau,
Alaska. Sailors stand in formation on a pier and a group of officers are seated
in front of them. There are storefronts in the background with signs for:
Alaska Auto and Supply Co., Geo Forrest [?]. A man
wearing a suit and a wide brimmed hat speaks with uniformed offers in a
circular driveway under a portico. Several uniformed officers stand in front of
a storefront, speaking with a woman who laughs and jokes with the officers. A
sign [reflected in window backwards]: Drug Co.
There is a view of the harbor followed by views of snow-capped mountains seen
from the deck of the ship. A downtown scene of crowds walking in the same
direction along a street. A group of men wearing fez hats and women in uniforms
stand in a line, holding a flag. Sign on building in background:
Fisher's.
Activities are probably part of the U.S. Naval Reserve annual
training cruise.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-4, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (3 minutes, 23 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
BOATS, BUILDINGS and BRIDGES, 1925-1927Return to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
viewcopy | item | ||
VC178 | 50 |
Tugboat Harbor
Queen, submerged in the Hoquiam River
The tugboatHarbor Queen is
submerged in the Hoquiam River. There is a large crane near the boat that lifts
the boat slightly out of the water.
The tugboat Harbor Queen of the
Allman-Hubble Tug Boat Co. based in Seattle, Washington, sunk in the Hoquiam
River near the Chilman Shipyard Dock and rested in sixteen feet of water.
According to a notice in The Seattle Times, the
efforts of several men and two dredges were insufficient to raise the boat, as
of November 28, 1925.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-6, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M126. (58 seconds)
|
November, 1925 |
VC178 | 51 |
Wreck of the S.
S. Halco
Title: S.S. Halco Wrecked at North
Jetty. A ship is shown beached off the coast. Title:
Coast Guard shooting breeches buoy line aboard to save
crew. A man kneels on a beach, near equipment that subsequently
explodes. Second man runs to first man and they gather the equipment and look
out to the boat beached just off shore.
On November 30, 1925, the steam schooner Halco, Captain J.A. Nelson commanding, was blown off
course by a sudden storm while trying to cross the sand bar at the mouth of
Grays Harbor. Carried half a mile by strong winds, the boat grounded on the
North Jetty at the harbor entrance, damaging the rudder and leaving the boat
and its crew stranded. The crew jettisoned its cargo in an attempt to lighten
the ship and escape, but were unsuccessful. After several hours, the boat was
spotted, and the crew was evacuated by the Coast Guard via a buoy line of rope
leading to the beach nearby. Having suffered severe damage in the storm, the
S.S. Halco was abandoned. On December 14, the ship
was auctioned for salvage to the Western Machinery Company, whose workers
removed all heavy equipment it could.
The 970-ton S. S. Halco was built
in Fairhaven, CA, in 1917 and operated by the Hammond Lumber Company
transporting lumber up and down the West Coast. At the time of the accident,
its homeport was San Francisco, circa
Original
1 reel: GHOR211583-1-1, silent, black and white, tinted, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M123.(1 minute, 21 seconds)
|
1925 |
VC178 | 52 |
Washington State Temple of Justice
building, Olympia, Washington
Cars drive in front of the Temple of Justice building. The steps
of the Washington State Capitol Building in Olympia.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-4, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (44 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 53 | Storefront of Anderson Photo, Aberdeen,
Washington
Anderson Photo Commercial Art Photography storefront
The storefront for C. D. Anderson's photography studio was
located at 119 E. Wishkah St., Aberdeen, Washington. He later relocated to 104
W. Heron.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-1, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (8 seconds)
|
circa 1926 |
VC178 | 54 | Ship wrecked just off shore
Ship run aground off shore.
The ship is possibly the Tenpaisan
Maru, a Japanese frieghter, which ran aground north of Copalis Beach
during a storm on Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 1927. The 5,416-ton ship,
launched in 1911, was built at the J.L. Thompson shipyard. The Coast Guard
rescued the crew and no lives were lost, but the ship was a total loss.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (20 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 55 | Steam engine
Workers around a steam engine. Sign on engine:
Donovan Co-- Logging Co. Forest Fire
Department
This appears to be a train belonging to the Donovan-Corkery
Logging Company, which was in business from circa 1923-1934 and was owned by
William J. Donovan (1855-1938) who came to Aberdeen in 1893. Donovan-Corkery
was headquartered in Aberdeen, Washington and logging operations were located
in the Wishkah River Valley.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-3, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (5 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 56 |
Wooden bridge near Aberdeen,
Washington
Three people walk across a wooden bridge suspended over a
river.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-7, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M127. (43 seconds)
|
circa 1927 |
VC178 | 57 |
Simpson Avenue Drawbridge, Hoquiam,
Washington
A drawbridge opens, boats pass underneath, then closes
again.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-2, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (1 minute, 7 seconds)
|
circa 1928 |
VC178 | 58 | Stores, Hoodsport,
Washington
Stores in Hoodsport, Washington. A large sign on top of one of
the buildings: Shell. There are numerous signs on
these buildings for: Canal Table Supply Co. City Prices,
Groceries, Meat, Flour, Feed, Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Market, Fish, Meats,
Groceries, [illegible] soft drinks, ice cream. A sign on a second
building: Millo's [Illegible] Quality Market
[Illegible]. Sign on third building: Garage. Fouth building, sign: Texaco.
The Canal Table Supply Company was located in Hoodsport,
Washington. The building was built in 1930 by E. H. Harris and one half was
rented to Mr. and Mrs. Guhr, who started a grocery business named the Canal
Table Supply. The business changed hands several times over the years, becoming
a mercantile and a hardware store.
Original
1 reel: GHOR211568-1-2, silent, black and white, 35mm.
Duplicating master: M64. (23 seconds)
|
circa 1933 |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Moving Image Collections (University of Washington)
- Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)
Corporate Names
- Anderson Photography Studio (creator)
Geographical Names
- Aberdeen (Washington)
- Cosmopolis (Wash.)
- Elma (Wash.)
- Grays Harbor (Wash.)
- Grays Harbor County (Wash.)
- Hoquiam (Wash.)