Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Grant Haller photographs, 1963-2002
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Haller, Grant M., 1944-2017
- Title
- Grant Haller photographs
- Dates
- 1963-2002 (inclusive)19632002
- Quantity
- 108.04 cubic feet (120 boxes)
- Collection Number
- PH2019-002
- Summary
- Photographic prints, slides, and negatives of a local news photographer from Seattle
- 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
-
No restrictions on access.
- Languages
- English
- Sponsor
- Funded by a Friends of the Library Grant
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
Grant Haller was a photographer for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1974 to 2009. Born in 1944 just outside of London, U.K., his family moved to the Pacific Northwest when he was a child. He graduated from Queen Anne High School and then the University of Washington. He was a director and promoter of the National Press Photographers Association. Haller worked for the Everett Herald, The Seattle Times and The Seattle Post-Intelligencer (P.I.) where he worked for over 30 years. The Associated Press selected Haller's May 18, 1980 photograph of the explosion of Mount Saint Helen's from a small fixed-seat propeller plane as the Seattle Post-Intelligencer's Picture of the Millennium. Haller died in Edmonds, Washington on July 26, 2017 at the age of 72.
Sources: The Seattle Times obituary, Aug. 6, 2017; KIRO 7 News obituary, July 28, 2017
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
News photographs, including prints, negatives, and slides, by Grant Haller who was a news photographer for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer from the 1970s - 2000s. He covered national and local news in a wide range of topics as well as local and high school sports. Also includes clippings, programs, notes, correspondence, and other materials related to Haller's photographs.
Other Descriptive InformationReturn to Top
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Restrictions on Use
Creator's copyrights transferred to the University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
Arranged in 3 series.
- Series 1, By Year
- Series 2, By Topic or Format
- Series 3, Sports
Acquisition Information
Donor: Mary Haller (wife), November 13, 2018
Processing Note
Processing work was begun on this collection in 2019 by Abbey Maynard. Parts of the collection have not been processed. Boxes 13-16 were removed after items were shifted during processing.
Separated Materials
Material Described Separately:Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
Series 1: By YearReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box/Folder | ||
1/1-1/2 | University of Washington Oceanography (negatives,
prints, and contact sheets) |
1967 |
1/3 | William K. Bucket (print) |
March 1967 |
1/4 | Sick's Stadium (print) Sicks’ Stadium, also known as "Sick’s Stadium" and "Sick’s
Seattle Stadium", was a former baseball stadium of the Seattle Rainiers and
Seattle Pilots. Sicks’ Stadium was located at 2700 Rainier Avenue S, Seattle,
WA. The stadium was in operation from 1938-1976, and demolished in February of
1979. The stadium was named after Emil Sick, owner of the Seattle Rainiers and
Rainier Brewing Company. After Emil Sick died in 1964 and various members of
his family shared ownership, the name was changed to reflect that fact, from
the singular possessive form “Sick’s Stadium” to the plural possessive form
“Sicks’ Stadium”. In 1965, the city bought the stadium in anticipation that
part of the property was needed for a proposed freeway. Though Sick’s Stadium
was primarily a baseball venue, it occasionally held other events including
rock concerts. Elvis Presley preformed in the stadium on September 1, 1957—a
young Jimi Hendrix was said to be attending this concert. On July 26, 1970,
Hendrix performed at the stadium in the rain with Janis Joplin.
|
1968 |
1/5 | People on University of Washington campus
(prints) |
1968 |
1/6 | Turkeys (prints and contact sheets) |
1968? |
1/7 | Demonstration for Black construction workers
(prints) |
September 1969 |
1/8 | Three Dog Night, Ike and Tina Turner
(negatives) |
October 17, 1969 |
1/9-1/10 | University of Washington - General (negatives and
slides) |
between 1969 and 1987 |
1/11 | Ferry boats (slides and negatives) |
between 1969 and1990 |
1/12 | Buildings at University of Washington
(prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1969-? |
1/13 | Junkyard cars (slides and negatives) |
1969? |
1/14 | Candlelight vigil demonstration (print) |
March 1969? |
1/15 | Loew Hall demonstration at University of Washington
(prints) On March 13th 1969, four University of Washington students were
set to have a hearing on whether they should be suspended for forcing a United
Fruit Company representative off of campus of February 24th. The four students
were Ed Mormon, William Bernstein, Karen Daenzer, and Robbie Stern. Their
hearing as to take place in the Forestry Lounge in Anderson Hall on campus and
they encouraged students to come. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS),
planned a rally in front of the Husky Union Building (HUB) to support the four
students. Arthur Melville, a Roman Catholic priest and former missionary in
Guatemala would speak about United Fruit Company’s presence in Guatemala before
the protestors would march to Anderson Hall to watch the hearing. The Young
Republicans distributed leaflets criticizing SDS and exhorting students to show
the university administration that SDS was not welcome on campus. When SDS
protesters reached Anderson Hall, the room was already at full capacity. This
didn’t’ stop some of the protesters from forcing their way into the building,
chanting “people’s trial or no trial!” The hearing was shut down and suspended
until the following week and 11 students who had taken part in the protest and
disruption of the hearing were suspended.
|
March 13, 1969 |
1/16 | Anderson Hall demonstration at University of Washington
(prints) On March 13th 1969, four University of Washington students were
set to have a hearing on whether they should be suspended for forcing a United
Fruit Company representative off of campus of February 24th. The four students
were Ed Mormon, William Bernstein, Karen Daenzer, and Robbie Stern. Their
hearing as to take place in the Forestry Lounge in Anderson Hall on campus and
they encouraged students to come. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS),
planned a rally in front of the Husky Union Building (HUB) to support the four
students. Arthur Melville, a Roman Catholic priest and former missionary in
Guatemala would speak about United Fruit Company’s presence in Guatemala before
the protestors would march to Anderson Hall to watch the hearing. The Young
Republicans distributed leaflets criticizing SDS and exhorting students to show
the university administration that SDS was not welcome on campus. When SDS
protesters reached Anderson Hall, the room was already at full capacity. This
didn’t’ stop some of the protesters from forcing their way into the building,
chanting “people’s trial or no trial!” The hearing was shut down and suspended
until the following week and 11 students who had taken part in the protest and
disruption of the hearing were suspended.
Duplicates in box 63
|
March 13, 1969 |
1/17 | Unemployment (print) |
1970 |
1/18 | New Times Journal - Jeff Rosen (prints) New Times Journal was an alternative newspaper in Seattle,
WA.
Duplicates in Box 63
|
1970 |
1/19 | National Newspaper Boy Day (print) |
1970 |
1/20 | Boyd Grafmyre (prints) Willard Boyd Grafmyre (1940 – 2019) was a Seattle area concert
producer in the 1960s. Grafmyre graduated from Queen Anne High School in 1959,
and student at the Pasadena Playhouse in California. He was drafted shortly
after, and spent time serving in the Army. From the late 1960s to the early
1970s, Boyd played a role in establishing the rock music scene in Seattle, WA.
He worked to bring in nationally-touring acts, including The Doors, Jimi
Hendrix, Alice Cooper, Led Zeppelin, Chicago, Elton John, and more. Grafmyre
died on December 9, 2019 in Port Townsend, WA. Grafmyre organized the Seattle
Pop Festival, a music festival at Gold Creek Park in Woodinville, WA held from
July 25th to July 27th in 1969. Tickets for the event cost $6 for a day or $15
for all three days. An estimated 50,000 to 70,000 people attended the festival.
Seattle Pop was one of the first festivals to forgo hiring police or off-duty
officers as security and instead hired The Black Panthers to monitor the event.
Because attendance was larger than expected, extra food and water needed to be
brought into the venue. Nearby neighbors complained or traffic and the hippie
atmosphere, but Chick Dawsey, owner of Gold Creek, noted that spectators were
orderly with very few exceptions. 26 musicians performed at the festival—a mix
of national and local groups. Some highlights include: Bo Diddley, Guess Who,
Santana, Ike and Tina Turner Revue, Chuck Berry, Led Zeppelin, and The Doors.
|
1970 |
1/21 | Fashion (prints) |
1970 |
1/22-1/24 | Tektike II - U.S. Virgin Islands (slides, prints,
negatives, and contact sheets) Tektike II is an underwater laboratory funded by the Department
of the Interior and NASA as a psychological study of scientific teams working
in a closed environment.
|
1970 |
1/25 | Seattle Liberation Front - The Day After (TDA) Protest
(prints) In February 1970, members of the Chicago Seven were sentenced
to contempt charges stemming from riots at the 1968 Democratic Convention. Due
to his verbal protests, Black Panther Bobby Seale was given a trial separate
from the other defendants; continued verbal protests in court led to Judge
Julius Hoffman making the decision to physically bind and gag Seale in the
court for the duration of the trial. Seal alleged that his constitutional right
to counsel was denied, which propelled his continued protestations. After
several days, Hoffman declared a mistrial and sentenced Seale to four years in
prison for contempt of court. Demonstrations took place in numerous cities in
response to the Chicago Seven and Bobby Seale’s treatment. The Seattle
Liberation Front (SLF) called for protest in downtown Seattle. On February 17,
over 2,000 demonstrators carried on running battles with the police, breaking
windows in the U.S. Courthouse and downtown businesses. 75 people were
arrested; eight were indicted for conspiracy to cause damage to federal
property. The highly politicized trial of seven of these, who became known as
the Seattle Seven, resulted in a mistrial. While they served time for contempt
of court, the conviction was later thrown out. During the legal proceedings, it
became clear that the violence has been precipitated by FBI agents who had
infiltrated the SLF.
Duplicates in box 63
|
February 17, 1970 |
1/26 | University of Washington Student Strike (prints and
contact sheets) During March 1970, the Black Student Union (BSU) at the
University of Washington held several demonstrations in protest of the UW’s
affiliation with Brigham Young University (BYU), citing Mormon Church racist
practices. On March 11, 1970, between 1,000 and 2,000 protesters walked through
several buildings on the UW campus, disrupting classes and stacking furniture
to block doorways. Demonstrators also spoke using bullhorns to crowds gathering
outside the buildings. In response to multiple demonstrations, UW Executive
Vice President John Hogness requested a police presence on March 12 to prevent
further campus disruptions. On March 12, 1970, more than 200 Seattle and King
County police in riot control gear preemptively arrived at the UW, and were
reportedly stationed in seven buildings around campus. The BSU called off their
demonstration in the wake of a bomb threat and the presence of riot police, but
still held a scheduled rally in the Husky Union Building (HUB). Representatives
from the BSU also met with UW Executive Vice President John Hogness.
Duplicates in box 63
|
possibly March 1970 |
1/27 | University of Washington Student Strike
(prints) On April 30, 1970, President Richard Nixon announced a U.S.
incursion into Cambodia which set off anti-war protests across the United
States. During one such protest at Kent State University in Ohio, four students
that were part of a demonstration were shot and killed by Army National Guard
troops, further inflaming outrage across college campuses. On May 5, the
University of Washington joined the nationwide protests with significant
numbers; approximately 7,000 students gathered in front of the Husky Union
Building (HUB) to strike. During the strike, UW President Charles Odegaard
spoke to the assembled students using a megaphone to address their demands and
to read a telegram he sent to President Nixon. Unsatisfied with his remarks,
the students continued their march through the streets of the University
District, a large number continuing to march onto Interstate 5. The group was
confronted by Washington State Patrol officers in riot gear, and the group
moved off of the freeway, marching towards the Federal Courthouse in Seattle.
The next day, May 6, saw similar demonstration efforts. President Odegaard
addressed the assembled students once again, and announced a cancellation of
classes on the following Friday in remembrance of the four students killed at
Kent State. Between 6,000 and 10,000 demonstrators continued to march towards
Capitol Hill. Along the way, groups from Seattle University, Seattle Community
College, and some area high schools joined the march. The rest of the week saw
continued protests, some more violent and chaotic than others. On Friday, May
8, the mayor of Seattle closed the freeway for a march of around 10,000
protesters. The protests continued over the next few weeks, although the number
of participants continued to wane.
Duplicates in box 63
|
May 1970 |
1/28 | Stephanie Coontz, member of Seattle Liberation Front
(prints) |
1970 |
1/29 | The Brothers Four (prints) The Brothers Four is an American folk singing group founded n
1957 in Seattle, WA. They are known for their 1960 hit song “Greenfields”. The
group built a radio station (KSWB) in Seaside, Oregon in 1968 with Jerry
Dennon—which they sold to a radio group in Montana in 1972.
|
May 1970 |
1/30 | Sky River Rock Festival (prints) The Sky River Rock Festival took place on a former farm near
Washougal, Washington. The land was in the process of being purchased from
Edwin Tate by Washington Planned Community, associated with the Hydra
Collective Seattle Liberation Front. Although the land was purchased for the
purposes of hosting the rock festival, it was intended to become a community
where people could permanently reside. During the festival, attendees were
housed in tents and were able to purchase food and drugs from concessions on
the premises. Many attendees swam nude in the nearby Washougal River, to the
disapproval of nearby property owners. Police patrolled the borders of the
festival throughout its duration, occasionally making arrests for drug use or
issuing traffic citations. The number of people attending the festival
fluctuated throughout its course, peaking at 30,000 people, but hovered around
10,000 for the majority of the stretch between August 28 and September 8.
Before the festival officially ended, Clark County filed a temporary injunction
in an effort to halt the activities on the land. Plans to incorporate the land
as a town later failed, and the remaining 125 people living on the land were
evicted.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between August 1970 and September 1970 |
1/31 | Police Boats (slides) |
1970 |
1/32 | Fishing Blackmouth Salmon (slides) |
1970? |
1/33 | Jazz in the Park (prints) This event is possibly Seattle Jazz Spectacular at Seattle
Center on October 3-4, 1970.
|
1970? |
1/34 | Terry Dieckman (contact sheets) |
1970? |
1/35 | Sorority (prints) |
1970s? |
1/36 | Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
1970? |
1/37 | Pat O'Day (prints) Pat O’Day (born as Paul W. Berg) was a Pacific Northwest
broadcaster best known as the afternoon drive personality at Seattle’s KJR 950
in the 1960s. Starting in 1967, O’Day served as race announcer and commentator
during Seafair for various radio and TV stations, including mostly recently
KIRO TV, where he announced until 2013.
|
1970? |
1/38 | Diane O'Neil (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
1970? |
1/39 | Tacoma Dome (print) |
1970? |
1/40 | School Buses (slides) |
1970s |
1/41 | Women (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1970 and 1975 |
1/42-1/43 | Seattle - General (slides and negatives) Includes slide inventory
|
between 1970 and 1983 |
1/44 | Shootings (prints) |
1971 |
1/45-1/46 | Snoqualmie Pass Summit (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 63
|
1971 |
1/47 | Washington Athletic Club Building (print) |
1971 |
1/48 | United Airlines - Boeing Quick Change Airplanes (contact
sheets) The model of plane is a Boeing 727-100QC. “QC” stands for quick
change, where planes are convertible from passenger to cargo planes is about 30
minutes with roller-bearing floors for palletized galley and seating and/or
cargo.
|
1971 |
1/49 | Elvis Presley? (prints) |
1971 |
1/50-1/51 | Photographers taking photos at Seafair (contact sheets
and negatives) |
1971 |
1/52 | Hydroplanes at Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1971 |
1/53 | May Day demonstration (prints) The People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice sponsored a “No
Business as Usual” demonstration to protest war-related corporations. Beginning
at Fifth Avenue and Stewart Street, around 2,000 protesters marched around
downtown, stopping at several establishments, including: Seattle First National
Bank, the United States Courthouse, the IRS building, a Navy recruiting office,
and the Federal Reserve building. More than 300 police were also present and 19
people were arrested during the demonstration. After the main demonstration
concluded, around 400 continued to march into Capitol Hill. At the University
of Washington, the Student Mobilization Committee organized a separate rally in
memory of the Kent State Four, and to garner support for the downtown
demonstration.
|
1971 |
1/54 | King Screens March of Dimes (contact sheets) |
May 21, 1971 |
1/55-1/56 | Satsop River Fair (slides and prints) The Satsop River Fair and Tin Cup Races was the first legally
sanctioned music festival in Washington state. It took place from September 3
to September 6, 1971 in Grays Harbor County. At its peak, there were around
55,000 people in attendance, and the festival promoters estimated that around
140,000 distinct people had been on the festival grounds over the course of the
four days. The festival was plagued by security issues, musical acts that did
not attend, the use of Seconals (otherwise known as “reds”) and rain that had
created a wet and muddy site. In addition, during the third day of the
festival, a bus wreck injured 14 people, a shooting injured 2, and a
commandeered watermelon truck injured 3. Even though several scheduled acts did
not appear, music artists that performed at the festival included Delaney and
Bonnie, Wishbone Ash, Eric Burden, Jimmy Witherspoon, Charles Lloyd, Albert
Collins, Steve Miller, and the Youngbloods.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between September 3, 1971 and September 6, 1971 |
1/57 | Demonstration (prints) The march and rally were sponsored by the Northwest Peace Action
Coalition, and the People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice. One banner reads:
“End the war in Indochina now! PCPJ”. Participants began the demonstration at
the United States Courthouse downtown, marching down 4th Avenue, then up Pike
Street, then onto Broadway, where they finally arrived at Volunteer Park, where
the rally took place. Speakers reportedly scheduled to speak at the rally
included: John T. Williams (black labor leader from Los Angeles), Graciele
Cisneros (regional spokeswoman for the United Farm Workers Organizing
Committee), Joe Jordan (president of the Oakland Federation of Teachers), Gary
Johnson (Socialist Workers’ Party candidate for City Council), Rose Chernin
(Los Angeles representative of the Angela Davis Defense Committee), Del Rosario
(of Vietnam Veterans Against the War), Reverend David Colwell (of Plymouth
Congregational Church).
Duplicates in box 63
|
November 6, 1971 |
1/58 | Save Pike Place Market demonstration
(slides) |
1971? |
1/59 | Irving Clark (print) |
1971? |
1/60 | Seafair (slides) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
1972? |
1/61 | Martin Durkan (prints and contact sheets) Martin Durkan (1923-2005) served in the Washington House of
Representatives from 1957-1959 and in the Senate from 1959-1975. Durkan also
ran for and lost the election for Governor of Washington in 1972 and ran and
lost the election for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1977. After retiring
from the Senate, Durkan became one of state’s top lobbyists. He is the father
of Seattle’s 56th mayor, Jenny Durkan. Martin Durkan was born in Great Falls,
Montana on June 30, 1923. Durkan attended Gonzaga University and volunteered
for the United States Marine Corps a week after the Attack on Pearl Harbor. He
received training at the Naval V12 program at the University of Washington. He
fought with the Navy amphibious squad in the South Pacific Theater in World War
II. He was injured in the Battle of Saipan and spent 16 months recovering in
marine hospitals. Durkan graduated with a law degree from the University of
Washington in 1953, and entered private practice in Seattle. Durkan’s political
career began when he was elected the vice president of King County Young Men’s
Democratic Club in 1955. He then began appearing on television panel discussion
groups. In 1956, he was elected to the Washington House of Representatives, and
in 1958 he was elected to Washington’s State Senate, where he served until
1975.
|
1972 |
1/62 | George McGovern (prints) George McGovern (1922 – 2012) was a historian, author, and
politician. He was the Democratic Party nominee in the 1972 presidential
election. He served as a United States Senator in South Dakota from 1963-1981,
and was outspokenly opposed U.S involvement in the Vietnam War and was a vocal
supporter of issues related to hunger nationally and internationally. McGovern
grew up in Mitchell, South Dakota. He volunteered for the U.S. Army Air Forces
when the United States entered World War II. He was a B-24 Liberator pilot who
flew 35 missions over Germany-occupied Europe from a base in Italy. After the
war, he earned degrees from Dakota Wesleyan University and Northwestern
University, culminating in a PhD. He was a history professor before he was
elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1956 and was re-elected in
1958. After a failed bid for the U.S. Senate in 1960, he was successful in
1962. As a senator, McGovern was an example of modern American
liberalism. He staged a brief nomination run in 1968 as a stand-in for the
assassinated Robert F. Kennedy. The subsequent McGovern-Fraser Commission
fundamentally altered the presidential nominating process. The
McGovern-Hatfield Amendment sought to end the Vietnam War by legislative means
but was defeated both in 1970 and in 1971. McGovern’s platform for President in
1972 ideologically split the Democratic party, and Richard Nixon won the
election in one of the biggest landslides in U.S. electoral history. Though
re-elected to the U.S. Senate in 1968 and 1974, McGovern was defeated in his
bid for a fourth term in 1980. Throughout his career, McGovern was involved in
issues related to food, agriculture, nutrition and hunger. He was the first
director of the Food for Peace program in 1961, and oversaw the distribution of
U.S. surpluses to the needy abroad. McGovern helped create the United
Nations-run World Food Programme, and was the chairman of the Senate Select
Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs from 1968 – 1977. McGovern publicized
the problem of hunger within the United States with the “McGovern Report”,
which led to a new set of nutritional guidelines for Americans. McGovern later
served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Agencies for Food and
Agriculture from 1998 – 2001.
Photos of McGovern in 1972 are probably related to his 1972
presidential campaign.
|
1972 |
1/63 | Children's Creative Art Class at University of
Washington (prints) |
October 1972 |
1/64 | Auto - Austin-Healey Sprite (slides) |
October 1972? |
1/65 | Marijuana Confiscation (prints and contact
sheets) |
December 12, 1972 |
1/66 | Plane Hijack |
1972? |
1/67 | Smoking Fish (contact sheets) |
1972? |
1/68 | Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
1972? |
1/69-1/70 | Ferry boats (slides and negatives) |
between 1972 and 1986 |
1/71 | Turkey Farm (negatives) |
between 1972 and 1986 |
1/72 | Fireworks (slides) |
between 1972 and 1975 |
2/1 | Fourth of July - Winslow, WA (slides) |
July 4, 1972 |
2/2-2/3 | Marijuana store and plants (prints, negatives, and
contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
September 1972 |
2/4 | Haunted House - Everett Jaycee? (contact
sheets) Possibly event for Everett, WA chapter of United States Junior
Chamber (“Jaycees” or “JCs”)—a leadership training and civic organization for
people between the ages of 18-40.
|
October 10, 1972 |
2/5 | Black Student Union Demonstration at University of
Washington (prints and contact sheet) |
November 1972 |
2/6 | Boats - Stern Wheeler - Preston (negatives) |
December 1972 |
2/7 | Washington Stove Works (negatives) |
1972 |
2/8 | Albert Rosellini (prints) Albert Rosellini (1910-2011) was the democratic governor of
Washington from 1957-1965. He was the first Italian-American and Roman Catholic
governor elected west of the Mississippi River. Rosellini was born in Tacoma,
WA and worked his way through college and law school at the University of
Washington. He graduated in 1933. Before he was elected governor, he was
elected to the state senate as its youngest member at the age of 29. He
represented the 33rd district in south Seattle, home of many Italian
immigrants. He served there from 1939 – 1957, and rose to the rank of majority
leader before he was elected governor in 1956. During his 40-year political career, Rosellini was an activist
leader who worked to reform the state’s prisons and mental health facilities,
expand the state highway system, create the University of Washington’s medical
and dental schools, and build the second floating bridge across Lake
Washington. While he was governor, he established a state department of
commerce and championed the Seattle World’s Fair in 1962. After Rosellini was defeated in his bid for re-election in 1964
by Daniel J. Evans, Rosellini made a comeback bid in 1972 and captured the
Democratic nomination. Again, Rosellini was defeated by Evans. After he left
office in 1965, Rosellini returned to practicing law and became a political
consultant specializing in matters related to liquor and entertainment
industries. He also became a mentor for younger members of the Democratic
Party, including Washington governors Christine Gregoire and Gary Locke. In
2003, Rosellini was back in the news when he was reported have delivered
campaign contributions to Seattle City Council members on behalf of strip-club
owners, one of whom was a convicted racketeer. Rosellini was never charged in
this scandal which became known as “Strippergate”. Rosellini died of
complications related to pneumonia in Seattle on October 10, 2011. He was 101
years old, and at the time of his death his was the oldest governor to have
lived.
|
1972 |
2/9 | Snow (slides) |
1972 |
2/10 | Simpson Mill (prints and contact sheets) |
1972 |
2/11 | Smoke Stacks (slides and negatives) |
1972 |
2/12 | Trains (slides and negatives) |
1972 |
2/13 | Photographers (prints and slide) |
1972 |
2/14 | Go-Carts - Thrasher's Corner (slides) |
1972 |
2/15 | Story Pages (contact sheets) |
between 1972 and 1973 |
2/16 | Navy Survival (negatives) |
between 1972 and 1973 |
2/17 | Winthrop, WA (slides and negatives) |
between 1972 and1973 |
2/18 | Bumper Stickers (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1972 and1975 |
2/19 | North Cascade Highway (slides and negatives) |
between 1972 and 1978 |
2/20 | Sunsets (slides and negatives) |
between 1972 and1982? |
2/21 | Boats at Fisherman's Terminal, Seattle, WA (slides and
negatives) |
between 1972 and1983 |
2/22 | Design (slides and negatives) |
between 1972 and 1987 |
2/23 | Farmers (contact sheets) |
January 8, 1973 |
2/24 - 2/25 | Anti-Nixon and Anti-Vietnam War Demonstration (negatives
and contact sheets) In the midst of peace talks to end the Vietnam War, a group of
between 1,500 and 3,000 protesters gathered on the day of Nixon’s second-term
inauguration to march and rally. Demonstrators gathered at the United States
Courthouse in downtown Seattle, marching down Madison Street, north onto Fourth
Avenue. Toward the end of the demonstration, a smaller group of around 150
demonstrators broke away from the main contingent, marching to a nearby Armed
Forces recruiting office at Second Avenue and Union Street. In the street, they
burned an effigy of President Nixon that bore a sign reading, “U.S.
Imperialism.”
|
January 1973 |
2/26 | Water (prints and negatives) |
May 25, 1973 |
2/27 | Egg Farmers (slides and negatives) |
June 1973 |
2/28-2/30 | Hydroplanes at Seafair (slides, prints, negatives, and
contact sheets) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
August 1973 |
2/31 | Pacific Northwest Four Wheel Drive Association Meeting
in Oregon (slides) PNW4WDA is a non-profit organization comprised of member clubs
and individuals united in the betterment of vehicle oriented outdoor recreation
while preserving the environment. The PNW4WDA is divided into 8 regions
covering Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.
|
August 1973 |
2/32 | Police (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 18, 1973 |
2/33 | Sun Valley Resort, ID (prints) |
October 31, 1973 |
2/34 | Thom Gunn (prints) Thomson William “Thom” Gunn (1929-2004) was an English poet who
wrote about gay-related topics including “The Man with Night Sweats” (1992).
Gunn also wrote about drug use, sex, and his bohemian lifestyle. Gunn was born
in Gravesend, Kent, England in 1929. He attended University College School in
Hampstead, London, then spent two years doing national services and six months
in Paris. Later, he studied English literature at Trinity College, graduating
in 1953. “Fighting Terms”, his first collection of verse, was published in
1954. As a young man, he wrote poetry associated with The Movement and later,
with the work of Ted Hughes. In 1954, Gunn emigrated to the United States to
teach writing at Stanford and to remain close to his partner, Mike Kitay, whom
he met in college. Gunn and Kitay lived together until Gunn’s death in 2004.
Gunn taught at the University of California at Berkeley from 1958 – 1966 and
again from 1973 – 2000.
|
1973 |
2/35 | Avalanche (contact sheets) |
1973 |
2/36-2/37 | Mountains (slides and negatives) |
1973 |
2/38 | John Erichlman (slides) John Daniel Ehrlichman (1925-1999) was counsel and Assistant to
the President for Domestic Affairs under President Richard Nixon. He was
convicted of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and perjury for his role in
the Watergate scandal, and served a year and a half in prison. Ehrlichman was
born in Tacoma, WA in 1925. His family moved to Southern California is 1931,
and John graduated from Santa Monica High School in 1942, and attended UCLA for
a year. He enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1943. Ehrlichman used the G.I. Bill to
return to UCLA and graduated in 1948 with a B.A. in political science. He
graduated from Stanford Law School in 1951. After a short time back in southern
California, Ehrlichman joined a Seattle law firm and practiced as a land-use
lawyer, with his specialty in urban land use and zoning. Ehrlichman supported
improving civic infrastructure and cleaning up Lake Washington, and he remained
a practicing lawyer until 1969. Ehrlichman worked for Nixon throughout his career, first when he
worked on his 1960 presidential campaign and again with his 1962 California
gubernatorial election, and once more for Nixon’s 1968 presidential campaign,
too. After Nixon’s victory, he became the White House Counsel for about a year,
before becoming Chief Domestic Advisor for Nixon—at which point he became a
member of Nixon’s inner circle. John Ehrlichman created “The Plumbers”, the
group at the center of the Watergate scandal. After the start of the Watergate
investigations in 1973, he lobbied for an intentional delay in the confirmation
of L. Patrick Gray as Director of the FBI. During the Watergate trials, he was convicted of conspiracy,
obstruction of justice, perjury, and other charges on January 1, 1975—along
with John N. Mitchell and H.R. Haldeman. In 1977, all of their sentences were
commuted to one to four years, shorter than their initial sentencing of two to
eight years. Ehrlichman served 18 months. Because of his felony conviction, he
was disbarred. Nixon denied both Ehrlichman and Haldeman pardons. After his
release from prison, he worked at a quality control firm, then as a writer,
artist, and commentator. He wrote several novels. He also worked with novelist
Tom Clancy to write, produce, and co-host a three-hour Watergate documentary
called “John Ehrlichman: In the Eye of the Storm”. The documentary was
completed but never broadcasted. Ehrlichman died of complications for diabetes
in Atlanta in 1999.
|
1973 |
2/39 | Plane crashes (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1973 |
2/40 | Contest entries (prints) |
1973 |
2/41 | Story Pages (negatives) |
1973 |
2/42 | Everett, WA - Howarth Park (prints) |
1973 |
2/43 | Lake Wenatchee (slides) |
1973 |
2/44 | Hydroplanes and sail-limited boats
(negatives) |
Summer 1973? |
2/45 | Demonstration by vigilantes (prints) |
1973? |
2/46 | Hydroplanes (negatives) |
1973? |
2/47 | Moths (prints and contact sheets) |
1973? |
2/48 | Ice (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1973? |
2/49 | Tom Mansfield (print) Possibly Seattle, Washington attorney.
|
1973? |
2/50 | Whidbey Island - Oak Harbor Beach Park (prints and
contact sheets) |
1973? |
2/51 | Discovery Park - Seattle, WA (print) Duplicates in box 63
|
1973? |
2/52-2/53 | Commercial Fishing (negatives and prints) |
between 1973 and 1976 |
2/54 | Lake Washington (slides and negatives) |
between 1973 and 1977 |
2/55 | Fishing (prints, contact sheets, slide) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1973 and 1977 |
2/56 | View of the moon (slides and negatives) |
between 1973 and 1977 |
2/57 | Traffic (slides, prints, contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1973 and 1977? |
2/58 | Lightning (prints and slide) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1973 and 1980? |
2/59 | Boating (prints) |
1973, 1981 |
2/60 | Kingdome (slides and negatives) the Kingdome was a multi-purpose dome stadium owned by King
County in the SoDo (South of Downtown) neighborhood of Seattle. The Kingdome
was best known as the home of the Seattle Seahawks, Seattle Mariners, the
Seattle SuperSonics, and the Seattle Sounders. Construction began in 1972, and
the venue was opened on March 27, 1976, and was in operation until January 9,
2000. On March 26 2000, the building was imploded. The dome was closed for a
variety of reasons – including questionable profitability for the shared venue
among sports teams and the stadium’s roof beginning to deteriorate.
|
between 1973 and 1983 |
2/61 | Gilnetter fishing boats (slides) |
1973, between 1982 and 1985 |
2/62 | Gold Panning (slides and contact sheets) |
between 1973 and 1985 |
2/63-2/65 | View of the Moon (prints, slides, and
negatives) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1973 and 1987 |
2/66 | Women (slides and negatives) |
between 1973 and1988 |
2/67 | Gary Sweet - Kelso Hero (print, negatives, contact
sheets) |
January 1, 1974 |
2/68 | Airplane Crash - Pompano Beach, FL (contact
sheet) A twin-engine plane loaded with an estimated $1 million dollars’
worth of marijuana crashed and burned at an apartment construction site in
heavy rain. All three occupants were killed in the crash.
|
January 15, 1974 |
2/69 | John Wayne atop Armored Tank (prints) Images of John Wayne in Harvard Square in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Wayne was challenged by the Harvard Lampoon to debate anti-war
students who worked for the Harvard newspaper and called him the “biggest fraud
in history”. During Wayne’s visit, Native American protestors demonstrated at
the rally in opposition to Wayne’s portrayal of the closing of the western
frontier in his films, and the protestors also voiced support of the Native
American movement’s leaders that were on trial for the seizure of Wounded Knee,
SD. Wayne and students from the Harvard Lampoon debated on stage at the Harvard
Square Theater.
|
January 15, 1974 |
2/70 | Ray Collins (print) Ray Collins worked as a cartoonist for the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer.
|
January 21, 1974 |
2/71 | Experimental BD-5 airplane (prints and contact
sheets) BD-5 Airplanes are homebuilt single-seat jets created by
aircraft designer Jim Bede in the last 1960s. The jets were primarily made in
kit form, where consumers would build their BD-5 jets at home.
|
April 1974 |
2/72 | Opening Day for boating (contact sheets) |
May 4, 1974 |
2/73 | Anti- ITT (International Telephone and Telegraph)
Demonstration (prints) During the annual meeting for the International Telephone and
Telegraph Company (ITT), a crowd gathered outside the Washington Plaza Hotel to
protest the company’s collaboration with the CIA in destabilizing the political
leadership in Chile. Some coverage of the event reports around 150 people in
attendance; other coverage reports between 500-600 people. At different points
during the demonstration, small groups performed short, dramatic performances
of ITT executives in which abused workers rose up against the executives and
stomped them. At one point, demonstrators attempted to enter the hotel lobby,
and were stopped by tactical police.
Duplicates in box 63
|
May 8, 1974 |
2/74 | University of Washington "4-God" demonstration
(print) |
May 15, 1974 |
2/75 | Fire at Magnolia Apartments (print) Duplicates in box 63
|
May 17, 1974 |
3/1 | Fire at Polson Building (contact sheets) Suspected arson fire alleged to be set by Chicago area pull-tab
manufacturers who were fighting the Polson Building owner, Benjamin Mayers (of
Ace Novelty), for controlling the Seattle-area pull-tab gambling market.
|
June 14, 1974 |
3/2 | Puppetry Class at Everett Community College (contact
sheets) |
June 19, 1974 |
3/3 | Backpacking with Children (prints and contact
sheets) |
June 26, 1974 |
3/4 | Seattle Police Department - CMU Center
(prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
June 26, 1974 |
3/5 | Helicopter crash (prints) |
June 1974 |
3/6 - 3/7 | Fire at Ace Novelty (prints and slides) Possibly same the fire as the Polson Building Fire on June 14,
1974 in folder 3/1. The fire at the Polson Building was a suspected arson fire
alleged to be set by Chicago area pull-tab manufacturers who were fighting the
Polson Building owner, Benjamin Mayers (of Ace Novelty), for controlling the
Seattle-area pull-tab gambling market.
|
June 1974 |
3/8 | Fire at Pier 91 (slides) |
June 1974 |
3/9 | Ruth Walsh (prints) Ruth Walsh (later Ruth McIntyre) was a news anchor for KOMO and
KVI.
|
July 7, 1974 |
3/10 | Hot Air Balloons (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
July 9, 1974 |
3/11 | Anti-Nixon signs (print, negatives, and contact
sheet) |
July 9, 1974 |
3/12 | Judges (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
July 15, 1974 |
3/13 | Lamp Builder (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
July 17, 1974 |
3/14 | Fire near Kingdome (contact sheets) |
July 25, 1974 |
3/15 | Local Tennis Stars (prints) |
July-August 1974 |
3/16 | Railroad Explosion in Wenatchee, WA (contact
sheets) A Burlington Northern tank-car exploded in Appleyard Terminal in
South Wenatchee, killing two people and injuring 66. The exploding tank-car
contained chemicals that demolished buildings, railroad cars, and started large
grass fires in South and East Wenatchee.
|
August 6, 1974 |
3/17 | Hansen Police Chief (print) |
August 9, 1974 |
3/18 | Sue Dabling and Connie Dabling (prints and contact
sheets) Possibly Seattle SuperSonics cheerleaders
Duplicates in box 63
|
August 15, 1974 |
3/19 | Jon Gary Ullin (prints) John Gary Ullin was a mountaineer who died in an avalanche on
the first American expedition to the Pamir Mountains in Tajikistan and
Kyrgyzstan. Ullin was a flight officer from Seattle, WA.
Duplicates in box 63
|
August 29, 1974 |
3/20 | Farming (slides and negatives) |
August 1974 |
3/21 | Plant (print) |
September 1974 |
3/22 | Ingegerd Hellstrom and Karl Hellstrom
(prints) Ingegerd and Karl Hellstrom were both University of Washington
Medicine Pathology faculty members. Ingegerd and Karl are married and emigrated
to the United States in 1966 from Sweden. They researched and published
together about cancer immunology, and made many discoveries in the field. The
couple helped start the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
Duplicates in box 63
|
October 9, 1974 |
3/23 | Bobby Wooten (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 22, 1974 |
3/24 | Dagmyer (contact sheets) |
October 27, 1974 |
3/25 | Veteran's Hospital (contact sheets) |
October 29, 1974 |
3/26 | Port of Seattle (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 29, 1974 |
3/27 | Belly Dancing (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 1974 |
3/28 | George Harrison North American Tour (prints) |
November 4, 1974 |
3/29 | Seattle Post-Intelligencer (prints and contact
sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
November 5, 1974 |
3/30 | John Owen (print) |
November 9, 1974 |
3/31 | Playground Equipment (print) |
November 9, 1974 |
3/32 | Wigs (prints) |
November 11, 1974 |
3/33 | Election Night (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
November 12, 1974 |
3/34 | Motorcycle Trans Am (contact sheets) |
November 17, 1974 |
3/35 | Helicopter Crash (slides and print) Duplicates in box 63
|
November 1974 |
3/36 | Anti-Nuclear demonstration by Crabshell Alliance
(prints) A group of Crabshell Alliance protesters gathered in Kirkland,
WA to perform a dramatic protest of Chem Nuclear Systems Inc., a nuclear waste
disposal company. The protest involved a group of people in costume, including
a person dressed in a crab costume; demonstrators sang a song featuring lyrics
about the effects of nuclear waste on marine life. The performance culminated
with a march to the company’s office. While Kirkland police blocked the
entrance to the offices, company president Bruce Johnson invited three
demonstrators to speak with him in his office.
Duplicates in box 63
|
November 1974 |
3/37-3/38 | Spawning Fish in the Cedar River (prints, negatives, and
contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
December 1, 1974 |
3/39 | Hansen, WA Fire Chief (prints) |
December 22, 1974 |
3/40 | Horse and Sleigh (prints) |
December 1974? |
3/41 | Printer woman (contact sheet) |
1974? |
3/42 | Avalanche and Willi Unsoeld (prints) Unsoeld (1926-1979) was an American mountaineer who was a member
of the first American expedition to the summit of Mount Everest in 1963. He was
a U.S. Forest Service Smokejumper, Peace Corps director in Nepal, speaker for
Outward Bound, faculty member at Oregon State University and The Evergreen
State College, and a mountaineering guide. He died in an avalanche during a
winter climb of Mount Rainier on March 4, 1979.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1974 |
3/43 | Doug Benoci (print and negatives) |
1974 |
3/44 | National Enquirer Stories (prints) |
1974 |
3/45 | Ocelot (print) |
1974 |
3/46 | Gas Shortage (prints) |
1974 |
3/47 | Couples (slides and negatives) Couple in photo with the horse was possibly taken in Bellingham,
WA.
|
1974 |
3/48 | Imogen Cunningham (prints) Imogen Cunningham (1883 – 1976) was a photographer known for
botanical photographs, nudes, and industrial landscapes. She graduated from
University of Washington in 1907, and then began working for Edward Curtis in
his Seattle studio. Cunningham worked for Curtis on his “North American Indian”
project. She was a member of the photographer’s movement, Group f/64, known for
its dedication to the sharp-focus rendition of simple subjects.Cunningham was born in Portland, Oregon in 1883. She grew up in
Seattle, and bought her first camera at age 18 in 1901, and entered the
University of Washington in 1903. With the help of her chemistry professor,
Horace Byers, she began to study the chemistry behind photography while paying
tuition by photographing plants for the botany department. In 1907, she began
working with Edward S. Curtis in his Seattle studio. Cunningham learned the
technique of platinum printing while working for Curtis. In 1909, Cunningham
was awarded a Graduate Fellowship from Pi Beta Phi, which she used to work at
the Technische Hochschule in Dresden, Germany where she helped the photographic
chemistry department find cheaper solutions for platinum printing. When she returned to Seattle, Cunningham opened a studio and
later won acclaim for portraiture and pictorial work. She became a much
sought-after photographer in the 1910s. In 1920, she moved with her husband Roi
Partridge and their children to san Francisco, CA. During this period of time,
she focused mostly on botanical photography. In 1933, she founded the
California Horticultural Society. After her work in botanicals, Cunningham’s
work shifted focus to the human form and she worked for Vanity Fair,
photographing stars without makeup. She was a part of Group f/64, a collection
of like-minded photographers including Ansel Adams, Edward Weston, and Willard
Van Dyke. They promoted a pure or straight photography. In the 1940s,
Cunningham began practicing street photography in her spare time. In her later
career, Cunningham became a mentor for younger female photographers. Cunningham
continued to take photos until shortly before her death at age 93 in San
Francisco.
|
1974 |
3/49 | Shark (prints) |
1974 |
3/50 | Air Boats (prints and contact sheets) |
1974 |
3/51-3/52 | Fishing in the Pacific Ocean at the beach (prints,
slides, and negatives) |
1974 |
3/53 | Fishing for Halibut (print) |
1974 |
3/54 | Native American Fishing (prints) |
1974 |
3/55 | Gilnet fishing (print) |
1974 |
3/56 | Pennies (prints) |
1974 |
3/57 | Fishing Boat Buyers (slides) |
1974 |
3/58 | Vancouver, B.C., Canada (slides and prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1974 |
3/59 | Rainbow over Seattle (slides and negatives) |
1974 |
3/60 | Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
1974 |
3/61 | Schuffleman (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1974 |
3/62 | David T. Smith Conviction (prints) David T. Smith was a Seattle Police Department officer who was
convicted for shooting a civilian.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1974 |
3/63 | Sun (slides) |
1974 |
3/64 | Winter Survival (prints and contact sheets) |
1974 |
3/65 | Wilderness (prints) |
1974 |
3/66 | Ralph Williams (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1974 |
3/67 | Contests- SDX (prints) Possibly Sigma Delta Chi’s photography contests. Sigma Delta Chi
is also known as SPJ, Society of Professional Journalists.
|
1974 |
3/68 | Favorites (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1974 |
3/69 | Grant's Top 40 Photographs for 1974 (prints) |
1974 |
3/70 | Dan Couthorn (prints) Possibly Seattle area photographer.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1974? |
3/71 | Harry Belafonte (print) Harry Belafonte (1927 -- ) is an Jamaican-American singer,
songwriter, activist, and actor. His 1956 album “Calypso” was the first LP by a
single artist to sell a million copies. He music played an important role in
popularizing Trinidadian Caribbean musical style with an international audience
in the 1950s. Belafonte performed and recorded many other genres including
blues, folk, gospel, show tunes, and American standards. Belafonte was an early
supporter of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s and was a
confidant of Martin Luther King Jr. Throughout his life, he was an advocate for
political and humanitarian causes such as the Anti-Apartheid Movement, UNICEF,
and USA for Africa. He acts as an American Civil Liberties Union celebrity
ambassador for juvenile justice issues. Belafonte has three Grammy Awards
including a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, an Emmy Award, and a Tony Award.
|
1974? |
3/72 | Fire Hydrants (contact sheets) |
1974? |
3/73 | Wayne Kosbau (print) Possibly Seattle area videographer.
|
1974? |
3/74-3/75 | Hydroplanes (negatives, prints, and contact
sheets) Images include Dave Heinsburger and Bernie Little. Bill Murray
is driving a boat named Pay n Pak.
|
between August 1970 and 1974? |
3/76 | Kite Flying and Hang Gliding (prints and contact
sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/77 | Motorcycles (prints) |
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/78 | Favorites (prints with negatives) |
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/79 | Missing Girls (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/80 | High Contrast (prints) |
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/81 | Mt. Rainier (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/82 | Feature Photos (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1975 |
3/83 | Don Covey and Ned Skinner (prints) David. E. “Ned” Skinner II (1920 – 1988) was a shipping heir and
philanthropist who was one of the first owners of the Space Needle and Seattle
Seahawks. He was born in Seattle and attended Lakeside School. His grandfather
was David E. Skinner, who owned Skinner and Eddy shipyard, the Pacific
Steamship Co., and the Port Blakely Mill. Ned Skinner graduated from Dartmouth
College in 1942 and served aboard a destroyer during World War II. He married
Kayla Lagasa in 1942. After the death of his father, G.W. Skinner in 1953, Ned
took over the Alaska Steamship Company. When it went into decline and
ultimately closed in 1971, Ned branched into real estate with the Skinner
Corporation owning the Skinner Building, 5th Avenue Theater, Pepsi Bottling,
and NC Machinery. The company was listed as the 10th largest privately owned
company in 1988. In 1972 Skinner and Herman Sarkowsky were the two original
investors in the Seattle Seahawks.Skinner was an active philanthropist in Seattle and supported
the Seattle Opera, the Pacific Northwest Ballet, the Seattle Repository
Theater, Pacific Science Center, and Seattle Art Museum through his
philanthropy. He founded the Skinner Foundation in 1956 and donated 5 percent
of the Skinner Corporation’s profits to the foundation. Donald “Don” J. Covey (1928 – 2018) was a businessman from
Seattle. He spent 39 years of his career in property development management
with Unico Properties—beginning with the company as their president in 1975.
Covey graduated from Franklin High School and the University of Washington.
While in college, the Korean War began. Covey’s college years were interrupted
when he served as a staff sergeant with the First Marine Division and
participated in the Chosin Reservoir campaign in North Korea during the winter
of 1950. While at Unico, he played a large role in the development of One and
Two Union Square, two large office buildings in Downtown Seattle. He was a
member of many Seattle organizations while working at Unico, including Greater
Seattle Chamber of Commerce and the Downtown Seattle Association. Covey died in
2018 after complications due to Parkinson’s. He was 90 years old. In 1978, the Fifth Avenue Theater shut its doors. Unico pushed
to restore and modify the historic theater because of a strong public opinion
to keep the theater. Unico lead a collation of 42 other businesses to create
the nonprofit 5th Avenue Theater Association and underwriting for a $2.6
million loan for its physical restoration. Unico also provided construction
management at no charge. Covey and Skinner’s connection to each other may be both of
their connections to the 5th Avenue Theater—Covey as a leader of Unico’s
restoration project, and Skinner’s role as an owner of the 5th Avenue Theater.
|
between 1974 and 1975? |
3/84 | Bears (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1976 |
3/85 | Backpacking with Children at Barkley Lake (slides and
negatives) |
between 1974 and 1976 |
3/86 | Dogs in Car (prints) |
between 1974 and 1976 |
3/87 | P-Patch near NE 80th Street, Seattle WA (prints and
slides) P-Patch is now called Picardo Farm P-Patch Community Garden.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1976 |
3/88 | Pike Street Market (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1978 |
3/89 | Favorites (slides) |
between 1974 and1982 |
3/90 | Ducks and Geese (slides and prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1985 |
3/91 | Bicycles (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1986 |
3/92-3/94 | Caterpillars (negatives, slides, prints, and contact
sheets) |
between 1974 and 1987 |
3/95 | Elephants (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and1990 |
3/96 | Women (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and 1982 |
3/97-3/98 | Avalanches (prints, negatives, and slides) Oversize photo in box 114
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and1981 |
4/1 | Seattle Center (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and1981 |
4/2 | Flowers (slides, negatives, and print) |
between 1974 and 1982 |
4/3 | Fishing Boats Purse Seiners (slides and
negatives) |
between 1974 and 1982 |
4/4 | Wheat (prints, slide, and contact sheets) |
between 1974 and 1983 |
4/5 | Pike Street Market Street Fair (prints and
negatives) The People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice sponsored a “No
Business as Usual” demonstration to protest war-related corporations. Beginning
at Fifth Avenue and Stewart Street, around 2,000 protesters marched around
downtown, stopping at several establishments, including: Seattle First National
Bank, the United States Courthouse, the IRS building, a Navy recruiting office,
and the Federal Reserve building. More than 300 police were also present and 19
people were arrested during the demonstration. After the main demonstration
concluded, around 400 continued to march into Capitol Hill. At the University
of Washington, the Student Mobilization Committee organized a separate rally in
memory of the Kent State Four, and to garner support for the downtown
demonstration.
|
between 1974 and1986 |
4/6 | Steelhead Trout fishing (slides and
negatives) |
between 1974 and 1987 |
4/7 | Seattle ( prints, slides, and negatives) This folder includes images of the following in addition to
other images, too.Photo taken during a scene being filmed for NBC’s TV series
Emergency! (1972-1977). The made-for TV movie was called “Most Deadly Passage,”
and featured the LA paramedics visiting the Medic-1 unit in Seattle. In the
movie, a skydiver jumps off the Space Needle. Because the city would not allow
a real person to jump from the top of the Space Needle, a dummy was outfitted
with a parachute, and was pushed off for the purposes of filming.Rainier Tower, completed in 1977, is located at 1301 5th Avenue
in downtown Seattle. During its construction, some Seattleites expressed
uncertainty about the building’s integrity due to the narrow shape of its base.
The tower was designed by architect Minoru Yamasaki, born in Seattle in 1912.
He received a degree in Architecture from the University of Washington. He is
known for designing several well-known buildings all over the world, including
the Pacific Science Center in Seattle, the World Trade Center in New York City,
the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles, and many others.By 1979, the Morris Piha Company from Bellingham had put in a
bid to demolish the Aqua Vista Apartments. The building, located in Queen Anne,
would have been demolished to make way for the construction of an office
building. At the time of this photograph, the hearing to determine whether or
not this demolition would go forward had not yet occurred. (January 28,
1979).In 1978, Historic Seattle acquired a row of four Victorian style
houses on 23rd Avenue for the purposes of restoration. The houses were to be
sold upon completion of restoration efforts. (May 14 1978).
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and1987 |
4/8 | Photographers at Work (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1974 and1989 |
4/9 | Bean Bag Gun (prints) |
January 2, 1975 |
4/10 | Airplane Crash on Mt. McDonald (slides, prints, and
contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
January 7, 1975 |
4/11 | Seattle Post-Intelligencer Man of the Year Banquet
(prints) Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s Man of the Year award was created
by columnist and editor Royal Brougham in early 1936 to honor sports stars.
Around ten nominees were selected each year, and a winner was celebrated at the
year’s banquet. The award was renamed “Sports Star of the Year” beginning in
1977. However, men and women were both on the ballots before the name change.
In 1975, University of Washington Men’s Basketball Coach Marv Harshman won the
award for coaching a gold-medal-winning U.S. team at the Pan American Games in
Mexico City.
Duplicates in box 63
|
January 9, 1975 |
4/12 | Favorites (print) |
January 17, 1975 |
4/13 | Doctor at Monroe Prison (prints) |
January 22, 1975 |
4/14 | Mountains - K-2 Team Practicing on Mt. Rainier
(slides) |
January 1975 |
4/15 | Evergreen Bridge (prints) |
February 10, 1975 |
4/16 | Old House (prints and slides) |
February 1975 |
4/17 | Nordstrom 12th Annual Fashion Luncheon
(prints) |
March 2, 1975 |
4/18 | Boone Kirkman and Gloria Ballestrasse (slides and
prints) Heavyweight boxer Daniel Victor “Boone” Kirkman (1945-) grew up
in Renton, and at age 14 began commuting to Seattle’s Cherry Street gym to
train in boxing. Kirkman slowly built a reputation at local events, and had his
first professional fight in 1966. He retired in 1978 with a record of 36 wins
(with 25 knockouts) and 6 losses.
|
March 26, 1975 |
4/19 | Children Adopted from Vietnam Arrive at Seattle Tacoma
International Airport (prints) Children Adopted from Vietnam Arrive at SeaTac airport April 2-6
1975 -- More than 400 young children were airlifted out of Vietnam on a Pan Am
flight to Seattle. The Boeing 747 that left Saigon on April 5, 1975 dropped off
366 children at the McChord Air Force Base, now called Joint Base
Lewis-McChord. Color-coded arm bands were attached to each child as well as
adopted parents’ name, final destinations, and case numbers. The flight was
over 30 hours and had several drop offs. Volunteers were on the flight to care
for the children, including Vietnamese women who worked at the Adventist
hospital in Saigon, Nurses Lisa Pauley and Joyce Wertz Harrington. The
healthiest children were put in coach, sicker children in first class, and the
most ill were in the VIP lounge area. This flight and similar ones are
collectively known as “Operation Babylift”.
Duplicates in box 63
|
April 2-6, 1975 |
4/20 | Demonstration - Teacher's March - Olympia, WA (slides,
negatives, and contact sheets) |
April 15-22, 1975 |
4/21 | Fishing - Opening Day (prints) |
April 25, 1975 |
4/22 | Barrigan (prints) |
April 28, 1975 |
4/23 | Larry Gossett - Community Activist (prints) In 1975, the Port of Seattle proposed the development of a new
transportation terminal and hotel complex at Union Station in the International
District. Residents from the neighborhood protested this project, citing a
disregard of the well-being of those living in the area. Around 70 people
gathered to protest the plan, which had not yet been funded or approved, but
was in the process of working its way through several approval processes. Among
those protesting was Larry Gossett, a community activist well-known for civil
disobedience and organizing the Seattle Alliance of Black Student Unions.
Gossett is also often credited as a founding member of the Seattle chapter of
the Black Panther Party and the co-founder of the University of Washington
chapter of the Black Student Union.
Larry Gossett ( 1945 -- ) was born in Seattle to two
sharecroppers who had emigrated from Nigton, Texas to the Central District in
Seattle. He graduated from Franklin High School in 1963 and graduated from
University of Washington. In 1966 and 1967, he was a VISTA volunteer in Harlem.
His time in Harlem played a role in politicizing and radicalizing him. When he
returned to Seattle, Gossett helped found the Black Student Union on University
of Washington’s campus as well as nearly a dozen high school and middle school
Black Student Unions throughout Seattle. He was instrumental in bringing about
the UW’s Educational Opportunity Program minority recruitment program, and
played a role in protests against the discrimination of Black track athletes
from Oregon State University. Gossett graduated in 1970, receiving the
university’s first ever African-American studies degree. Gossett was also a former member of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee and worked as a community organizer in Seattle for many
years. He was involved in the occupation of a former Seattle public school that
would become El Centro de la Raza, a social service agency in Beacon Hill,
Seattle centered on uplifting the Latinx community. After working on Charles
Royer’s successful mayoral campaign in 1977, he briefly joined the Royer
administration. However, he felt that the work in the mayor’s office took him
too far away from his other work as an activist. From April 1979 until December
1993, he was the executive director of Seattle’s Central Area Motivation
Program (CAMP). He eventually worked on Jesse Jackson’s presidential campaigns.
He was a member of King County Council from 1993 until 2020. Gossett’s office
in the King County Courthouse was in the same location that his prison cell was
in 1968 when he was arrested for unlawful assembly during a sit-in at Franklin
High School on March 29th.
Duplicates in box 63
|
April 29, 1975 |
4/24 | Demonstration - Victory in Vietnam (prints) Following the surrender of Saigon, and thus the end of the
Vietnam War, approximately 300-500 students gathered at the University of
Washington to demonstrate. After the main demonstration, a small contingent of
the students marched around campus with a banner. Some students in opposition
to the demonstration snatched the banner and attempted to run away with it.
|
April 30, 1975 |
4/25 | Demonstration - B-1 Bomber (prints) |
May 5, 1975 |
4/26 | Mock Airplane Crash (prints) |
May 22, 1975 |
4/27 | Missing Woman (prints) |
May 27, 1975 |
4/28 | Western Washington State Hospital - Therapy for Sex
Offenders (print) |
May 28, 1975 |
4/29 | Snoqualmie, WA (slides) |
May 1975 |
4/30 | Boats - Opening Day (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
May 1975? |
4/31 | Salty Sea Days (prints) Salty Sea Days was an annual summer festival in Everett, WA that
occurred from 1970 – 2004.
|
June 7, 1975 |
4/32 | Sailboats being Repaired (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
June 8, 1975 |
4/33 | Walt Evans (print) Possibly Seattle area journalist.
|
June 11, 1975 |
4/34 | UA Local 32 Seattle Plumbers and Pipefitters (contact
sheets) Chartered in 1890, UA Local 32 includes Plumping, Pipefitting,
HVAC/R Mechanics, and Metal Trades workers in the Seattle area.
|
June 17, 1975 |
4/35 | Fourth of July - Green Lake, Seattle, WA (contact
sheets) |
July 4, 1975 |
4/36 | Bill Sieverling (print) Bill Sieverling (1934-2004) was former city editor of the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer. He began his journalism career in 1961 at The
Colombian in Vancouver, WA. He joined the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in 1963
and left the newspaper in 1977. He became a driving force behind “Target
Seattle”, a series of teach-ins on the growing threat of nuclear war and what
it would mean for Seattle and Western Washington. Sieverling was later the
director of the YMCA’S International Office for Asia, and he co-founded Earth
Service Corps, which encouraged high school students to take responsibility for
the health of the environment.
|
July 22, 1975 |
4/37 | Bang Bang Race (prints) The Bang Bang Race was an inner tube race across Lake Union
where waitresses from Seattle restaurants would compete against each other.
|
July 28, 1975 |
4/38 | Airplane BD-5 (slides) Homebuilt single-seat jets created by aircraft designer Jim Bede
in the late 1960s. The jets were primarily made in kit form, where consumers
would build their BD-5 jets at home.
|
July 1975 |
4/39 | Sunbathing (prints) |
August 9, 1975 |
4/40 | Water Witch (print) Duplicates in box 63
|
August 16, 1975 |
4/41 | House Fire (print) |
August 20, 1975 |
4/42 | Flying Saucer (print) The image is of a man holding a model flying saucer.
Duplicates in box 63
|
August 21, 1975 |
4/43 | Paul Kraabel and Marina Kraabel (print) Paul Kraabel (1933-2016) was a member of the Washington House of
Representatives from 1971-1975. In 1975, he was appointed to Seattle City
Council, which he served on until 1991. He returned briefly to serve as an
interim councilmember from August to November 1996. While on City Council, he
worked on the Downtown Plan and worked to protect the International District
and Pioneer Square from development that would damage unique neighborhoods and
business districts. He was also an advocate for transit and for low income
housing extensions. Marina is possibly his first wife.
|
August 24, 1975 |
4/44 | Ray McMackin (prints) Ray McMackin was a KING-TV personality.
|
August 27, 1975 |
4/45 | Log Cutting (slides) |
September 1975 |
4/46 | President Gerald Ford - Visit to Seattle (slides,
negative, print) While visiting Seattle, President Ford attended a luncheon for
Washington State Republicans, visited the Boeing Flight Center Hangar, and
toured the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
|
September 4, 1975 |
4/47 | Ted Kennedy (prints and contact sheets) Edward “Ted” Moore Kennedy (1932 – 2009) was an American
politician who served as a U.S. Senator from Massachusetts from 1962 until his
death in 2009. He was a member of the Democratic party and the Kennedy
political family. His brother, John F. Kennedy was President of the United
States from 1960 until 1963. Kennedy played a major role in passing many laws,
mostly focused on economic and social justice. He was also known for working
with Republicans to find compromises. There was much talk about Ted Kennedy as
a potential contender for a 1976 U.S. Presidential election nomination from the
Democratic party. Though he announced he would not run in September 1974 saying
his decision was “firm, final, and unconditional” he was still a very popular
and well-known politician around the country at the time of his visit to
Seattle in September 1975.
|
September 6, 1975 |
4/48 | Washington State Patrol - Woman Trooper
(prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
September 9, 1975 |
4/49 | Home Fishing Hatchery (prints) |
September 9, 1975 |
4/50 | Circus (prints) |
September 9, 1975 |
4/51 | Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) - Seattle Division
(prints) The first official FBI office in Seattle opened around 1914. In
August 1974, the division moved to the new federal building at 915 Second
Avenue. As of 2020, they are now located at 1110 3rd Avenue.
Duplicates in box 63
|
October 1, 1975 |
4/52 | Mops (prints) |
October 3, 1975 |
4/53 | Mushroom Picking (slides and prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 8, 1975 |
4/54 | Lobsters (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 11, 1975 |
4/55 | Ryan - Seattle University President (prints) Revered Edmund Ryan, S.J. was President of Seattle University in
1975.
|
October 17, 1975 |
4/56 | Marijuana Smuggling (prints) |
October 23, 1975 |
4/57 | House on 7th Avenue NW, Seattle, WA (prints) |
October 26, 1975 |
4/58 | Danny Kaye (prints) Danny Kaye, or David Daniel Kaminsky (1911 – 1987) was an actor,
singer, dancer, comedian, musician, and philanthropist. He starred in 17
movies, including “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” (1947) and “White
Christmas”. Danny was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1911 to Ukrainian Jewish
immigrants. Danny held a succession of jobs in New York, most ending in Danny
being fired. His first big break came in 1933 when he joined a vaudeville dance
act called “The Three Terpsichoreans”. This is where he adopted the stage name
Danny Kaye for the first time. His first film debuted in 1935, a comedy short
called “Moon Over Manhattan”. His feature film debut was in the 1944
technicolor comedy “Up in Arms”. He hosted the Danny Kaye show from 1963 to
1967, which won four Emmy awards and a Peabody award. His last film was in
1963, “The Man from the Diners’ Club”. He worked as a television host, singer,
dancer, and investor afterwards. He owned a company, Kaye-Smith Enterprises,
with business partner Lester Smith. Smith-Kaye owned a chain of radio stations
mostly in the Pacific Northwest. Kaye and Smith led an investment group that
was awarded the Seattle Mariners Franchise. They owned the Mariners until 1981.
In 1985, Kaye sold his share of Kaye-Smith to the Smith family. He died of
heart failure in 1987.
Duplicates in box 63
|
October 31, 1975 |
4/59 | Women at Auto Show (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
November 8, 1975 |
4/60 | Magic Mushrooms (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
November 8, 1975 |
4/61 | War Reenactment (print) |
November 23, 1975 |
4/62 | The American Freedom Train in Seattle, WA
(prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
November 1975 |
4/63 | Window Clings (print) |
December 1, 1975 |
4/64 | Victor Rosellini and WIlliam E. Raggenbass
(print) Rosellini (1915-2003) was a Seattle restaurateur and president
of the National Restaurant Association and the Restaurant Association of
Seattle. He owned Rosellini’s 610 and Rosellini’s Four-10.
|
December 5, 1975 |
4/65 | Bus Accident (prints) |
December 27, 1975 |
4/66 | Drugs (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
4/67 | Eagle (prints) |
1975 |
4/68 | Pigs (slides) |
1975 |
4/69 | Franklin Falls, King County, WA (slides) |
1975 |
4/70 | Boat Rentals (slides and negatives) |
1975 |
4/71 | Brock Adams (prints) Brockman (Brock) Adams was born January 13, 1927 in Atlanta,
Georgia, and grew up in Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington. Adams served
in the United States Navy from 1944 until 1946 and graduated from the
University of Washington in 1949 with a degree in economics. He received his
law degree from Harvard University in 1952. Adams went into private practice in Seattle, where he also
taught law at the American Banking Institute. As a result of Adams’s
involvement in John F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign, he was appointed U.S.
Attorney for the Western District of Washington in 1961 until 1964, when he
campaigned for a seat in the House of Representatives. Adams, a Democrat,
represented the greater Seattle area and was re-elected six times. During Adams’s career in the House of Representatives, he served
on several committees, including Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Revenue and
Financial Affairs, Banking and Currency, and Agriculture. Adams became chairman
of the House Budget Committee in 1974. His expertise regarding transportation
issues led to his appointment as Secretary of Transportation by President Jimmy
Carter in 1977. Adams resigned his house seat and worked in Carter’s cabinet
until his resignation in 1979, returning to Seattle to enter private law
practice. In his Senate career, Adams championed women’s issues as well as
those of senior citizens. He took a conservationist stance on many
environmental issues, focusing particularly on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.
Adams also opposed Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush, Sr., in many
aspects of foreign policy, especially regarding United States involvement in
the Persian Gulf War. In 1985 Adams ran for the U.S. Senate against incumbent
Republican Slade Gorton, winning Gorton’s seat in an upset victory. Shortly
after Adams launched his re-election campaign in 1992, the Seattle Times
published a front-page story in which eight anonymous women accused the senator
of sexual misconduct. Adams denied the allegations but withdrew from the
re-election race and retired from public life at the conclusion of his Senate
term.
|
1975 |
4/72 | Bruce Lee (negatives) Bruce Lee, also known as Lee Jun-fan, (1940 – 1973) was a Hong
Kong-American actor, director, martial artist, martial arts instructor and
philosopher. He was the founder of Jeet Kune Do, a hybrid martial arts
philosophy that paved the way for mixed martial arts (MMA). Lee remains one of
the most well-known martial artists of all time, and was a major pop culture
icon of the 20th century. He is credited with helping change the ways Asians
were represented in American films.Lee was born in San Francisco, California in 1940. His family
returned to Hong Kong when Lee was 3 months old, and raised with his family in
Kowloon. His father Lee Hoi-chuen was a famous Cantonese opera star, and as a
result Bruce appeared in several films as a child. By the time he was 18, he
had appeared in twenty films. After getting involved in street fights, his
parents decided he needed to be trained in martial arts. He studied Wing Chun
under the teacher Yip Man. Lee continued street fighting in Hong Kong, and his
parents feared he would get involved in organized crime through his
participation in street fights. In April 1959, he was sent to live with his
sister Agnes Lee in San Francisco, and several months later he moved to
Seattle. While in Seattle, he began teaching martial arts. He also worked at
the restaurant Ruby Chow, where he was a live-in waiter. He opened his first
martial arts school In Seattle—the Lee Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute. Lee enrolled
at the University of Washington in March 1961. He majored in drama, but dropped
out in early 1964 to moved to Oakland with a Chinese martial artist James Yimm.
He began to build an even stronger reputation as a talented martial artist
through teaching, competitions, and high-profile fights with other martial
artists. Bruce Lee’s film career began to pick up speed again in the
1960s, when he was cast to play the role of Kato in the 1966 TV series The
Green Hornet. Though the show only lasted one season, it introduced the adult
Bruce Lee and Asian-style martial arts to an American audience. In the early
1970s, Bruce Lee had starring roles in American films like The Big Boss (1971)
and Fist of Fury (1972). Six days before the release of his film Enter the
Dragon, Bruce Lee died of cerebral edema on July 20, 1973. Lee complained of a
headache while in Hong Kong, and took the painkiller Equasgesic which contains
both aspirin and the tranquilizer meprobamate. After his death, several
unfinished films with Lee were released.
This folder contains photos of Bruce Lee’s gravesite in Seattle
at Lake View Cemetery.
|
1975 |
4/73 | Billboard Magazine (photos) |
1975 |
4/74 | Fish Hatchery in Issaquah, WA (prints, contact sheets
and negative) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
4/75 | Frisbees (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
4/76 | Fire (prints and contact sheets) |
1975 |
4/77 | Fisheye Lens (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
4/78 | Fishing Boat Box Design (prints) |
1975 |
4/79 | Corn - Skagit Valley, near Carnation, WA
(slides) |
1975 |
4/80 | Corn Harvest, near Mt. Vernon, WA (contact sheets and
prints) |
1975 |
4/81 | Native Americans (print and contact sheet) |
1975 |
4/82 | Mercer Island Bridge (prints and contact
sheet( Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
4/83 | Mill Creek, WA (print) |
1975 |
5/1 | Motorcycles (prints and contact sheets) |
1975 |
5/2 | Northwest Trek, near Tacoma, WA (slides, negatives, and
print) Northwest Trek near Tacoma WA 1975 – Northwest Trek Wildlife
Park is located Eatonville, WA. The park was opened in 1975, and features a
tram tour that take visitors through the free-range area of the park. The
723-acre park contains about 38 species of animals. In 1971, founders David and
Connie Heyyler donated their vacation property near Eatonville to Metro Park
Tacoma to be set aside as a wildlife preserve. The park opened in 1975.
Facilities added over the years include the snowy owl exhibit (1982), great
horned owl exhibit (1985), Cat Country exhibit (1987), barn owl exhibit (1988),
the Cheney Discovery Center for children (1989), wolf exhibit (1992), grizzly
bear and black bear exhibit (1993), picnic pavilion (1995), and coyote/red fox
exhibit (2003).
|
1975 |
5/3 | Patches on Jeans (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
5/4 | Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
1975 |
5/5 | Fishing - Trawlers (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
5/6 | Contest Photos (prints) |
1975 |
5/7 | Pigeons (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
5/8 | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
(prints) Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center was established in 1972
and their building opened in 1975. The center is also known as “Fred Hutch” and
is located in Seattle, WA. The center grew out of the Pacific Northwest
Research Foundation, founded in 1956 by Dr. William B. Hutchinson. The
Foundation was dedicated to the study of heart surgery, cancer, and diseases of
the endocrine system. Hutchinson’s younger brother Fred was a major league
pitcher and manager who died of lung cancer at age 45 in 1964. The next year,
Dr. Hutchinson established the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center as a
division of the Pacific Northwest Research Foundation. In 1972, with the help
of Senator Magnuson, PNRF received federal funding under the National Cancer
Act of 1971 to create in Seattle one of the 15 new NCI-designated Cancer
Centers aimed at conducting basic research. Fred Hutch became independent in
1972 and the center was named an NCI-designated center by 1976.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
5/9 | Wesley Uhlman, Mayor of Seattle (prints) Wesley C. Uhlman (1935 - ) was the 47th mayor of Seattle from
1969-1978. Uhlman was born in Cashmere, Washington and attended Aberdeen High
School, Seattle Pacific College (now known as Seattle Pacific University) and
the University of Washington. In 1958, Uhlman became the youngest member of the
Washington State House of Representatives. He was 23 and was a law student at
the time of election. He held the position for four terms before running for
and winning a seat in the Washington State Senate. In 1969, Uhlman won the
election for Seattle’s mayor. He was 34 at the time, and became Seattle’s
youngest mayor. While he was mayor, the historic Pioneer Square district was
preserved and services for senior citizens were expanded. Uhlman ran for
governor of Washington in 1976 but was defeated in the Democratic primary by
Dixy Ray.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1975 |
5/10 | Summer Fun (slides and print) |
1975 |
5/11 | Boats - Hydroplanes at Seafair (prints and
slides) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
|
1975 |
5/12 | High School Fashion (prints) |
August 15, 1975? |
5/13 | Bagman (contact sheets) |
1975? |
5/14 | Aquarium Construction (prints and contact
sheets) Possibly images from the construction of the Seattle Aquarium,
which opened in 1977 on Pier 59 on the Elliott Bay waterfront in Seattle, WA.
|
1975? |
5/15 | Seattle Fur Exchange (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975? |
5/16 | Women Firefighters (prints) |
1975? |
5/17 | Women's Rights - NOW (print) Duplicates in box 63
|
1975? |
5/18 | Sue Yee (prints) |
1975? |
5/19 | Boats - Dental Student (print) |
1975? |
5/20 | Cowboy (print and contact sheet) |
1975? |
5/21 | Elisabeth Kubler-Ross (prints) Kubler-Ross (1926-2004) was a Swiss-American psychiatrist and
pioneer in near-death studies. Her theory, the five stages of grief, is also
known as the Kubler-Ross model. Her internationally best-selling book, On Death
and Dying was published in 1969. She was a 2007 inductee in to the National
Women’s Hall of Fame. In addition to her work, writing, and teaching regarding
grief, Kubler-Ross also focused on topics including out-of-body experiences,
near-death experiences, hospices, and experiences of terminally-ill people.
|
1975? |
5/22 | Monorail (slides) |
1975? |
5/23 | Robert E. Lee Hardwick (prints) Bob Hardwick was a Seattle radio personality on KVI-AM and
KING-AM.
|
between 1975 and 1976 |
5/24 | Airplanes (prints and contact sheets) |
between 1975 and 1976 |
5/25 | Clowns (slides, prints, and negatives) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1976 |
5/26 | Boats - Hydrofoils (prints and slides) |
between 1975 and 1977 |
5/27 | Search and Rescue (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1977 |
5/28 | Daniel J. Evans (prints, contact sheets, and
negatives) Daniel Jackson Evans (1925 -- ) was the 16th governor of
Washington from 1965-1977 and was a United States Senator representing
Washington State from 1983 to 1989. Evans was seriously considered the
Republican vice presidential nomination in both 1968 and 1976. Evans was born in Seattle, WA in 1925. He grew up in the
Laurelhurst neighborhood and attended Roosevelt High School. After high school,
he served in the United States Navy from 1943 – 1946. Evans graduated from the
University of Washington with degrees in civil engineering in 1948 and in 1949.
He then worked as a structural engineer for the United States Navy and helped
draw up the plans for the Alaskan Way Viaduct. Evans served in the Washington State House of Representatives
from 1956 to 1965 before being elected governor. Though he was a republican, he
became known for his administration’s liberal policies on environmental
protection—including founding the country’s first state-level Department of
Ecology, which became Nixon’s blueprint for the federal EPA and strong support
of the state’s higher education system, including founding Washington’s system
of community colleges and he fought unsuccessfully for a state income tax. From 1977 to 1983, Evans served at the second president of The
Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA. In 1983, Washington Governor John
Spellman appointed Evans to the United States Senate to fill the seat left
vacant by the death of Henry Jackson. Evans later won a special election later
that year against Mike Lowry and filled the remainder of Jackson’s unexpired
term. Evans retired from politics after the 1988 elections. After leaving the
Senate 1989, Evans founded his own consulting firm, Daniel J. Evans and
Associates. Governor Mike Lowry appointed him to the Board of Regents of the
University of Washington in 1993, he then served as the board’s president from
1996 to 1997. In 1999, the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs was renamed
in his honor.
|
between 1975 and 1978 |
5/29 | Boating - Opening Day (prints) |
between 1975 and 1978? |
5/30 | Jesse Jackson (prints) Reverend Jesse Jackson (1941 -- ) is a hugely prolific civil
rights, political, and religious activist known for a lifetime of activities,
including his participation in the Selma to Montgomery marches in 1965,
involvement in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and his
affiliation with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Jackson is also known for founding
Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity) in 1971 and the National
Rainbow Coalition in 1974. The two organizations merged in 1996, forming the
Rainbow PUSH Coalition. The organization focuses on numerous issues, including
education and public policy. Jackson also ran democratic presidential campaigns
in 1984 and 1988.
This folder includes images of the following appearances from
Jesse Jackson in Seattle, in addition to other images, too.Jesse Jackson, then the director of Chicago-based Operation
PUSH, was in Seattle to speak at UPS’ Sixth Annual Black Arts Festival on April
18, 1976. On January 22, 1979, at the Seattle Center Arena, Reverend Jesse
Jackson spoke to public school students from Seattle, Yakima, Pasco, Puyallup,
and Tacoma in a rally focused on encouraging students to excel in education and
achievement. Jackson was invited to speak by state Superintendent Dr. Frank
Brouillet. He was there to promote Project EXCEL.
Duplicates in box 63
|
1975-1979 |
5/31 | K2 Mountain Expedition (prints and contact
sheets) Possibly from the third ascent of K2 in 1978, summited by an
American team led by James Whittaker.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1979 |
5/32 | Harley Hoppe (prints) former King County assessor and founder of Harley Hoppe law
firm.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1979 |
5/33 | Woodland Park Zoo (prints and negative) Duplicates in box 63, Sea Lion duplicates have captions stapled
on back
|
between 1975 and 1979 |
5/34 | Dixy Ray, Washington Governor (prints and contact
sheets) Dixy Ray (1914-1994) was a scientist and politician. She served
at the 17th governor of Washington from 1977-1981. Ray’s career began as a
scientist. After receiving her doctorate in biology at Stanford University, she
was an instructor in the zoology department at the University of Washington.
She was promoted to assistant professor in 1947, and in 1952 she received a
Guggenheim grant. She was made an associate professor in 1957, and served as
chief scientist abroad the schooner SS Te Vega during the International Indian
Ocean Expedition. She also hosted a television program on marine biology called
“Animals of the Seashore” on KCTS-TV, Seattle’s PBS affiliate. After her
growing popularity on KCTS-TV, the Pacific Science Center extended an
invitation to her to take over the nearly bankrupt science museum. Under her
guidance, the Pacific Science Center was converted from a traditional
exhibit-oriented museum to an interactive learning center, and lead the center
back into financial solvency. Before her term as governor, Ray was appointed by President
Nixon to chair the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). While serving on the
commission, she lived out of her 28-foot motor home with her two dogs which she
parked on a lot in rural Virginia. Despite criticism and scrutiny from the
media and fellow AEC members, Ray became the commission chair until the AEC was
abolished in 1975. She briefly worked as the Assistant Secretary of State for
Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs in 1975,
appointed by Gerald Ford.Ray was Washington’s first female governor, and it was also her
first race for public office. Ray’s victory was surprising, given that all
major newspaper and predictions from pundits that the state was not ready for
an unmarried woman to govern. She was in office during the 1980 eruption of
Mount St. Helens. Though Ray ran as a democrat, she had conservative views on
energy and the environment, including supporting atomic energy and allowing
supertankers to dock in Puget Sound. Ray also faced conflict with the Republic
establishment after she fired 124 appointees of her predecessor Daniel J.
Evans. Ray also faced heavy scrutiny from the press, sometimes for her
appearance and the way she dressed. She lost the democratic primaries to her
rival Jim McDermott in 1980.
This folder includes images of the following events featuring
Dixy Ray in addition to other images, too.State Representative John L. O’Brien, Congressman Lloyd Meeds,
State Senator Alan Bluechel, and Governor Dixy Lee Ray gathered at St. Edwards
Seminary to present a check to Archbishop Raymond G. Hunthausen representing
the Archdiocese of Seattle. The $1.75 million check consisted of federal funds
needed to finalize the purchase of the St. Edwards Seminary and accompanying
316 acres of land along Lake Washington. The land was purchased for the
purposes of establishing a state park. The event was attended by a few dozen
people, including a group of cub scouts, to witness the check passing. The park
is now called St. Edward State Park. (October 11, 1977)Student radio and TV station KNHC interviewed Governor Dixy Lee
Ray at Nathan Hale High School as part of a journalism class. After the taping
had concluded, professional reporters approached Ray for questions, which she
firmly rebuked, citing their rude behavior. (May 8, 1980)Governor Dixy Lee Ray attended a photo contest at the Space
Needle. (May 9, 1980)On March 15, 1979, Governor Dixy Lee Ray attended a Teamster’s
labor management luncheon at the Catholic Seamen’s Club. During the event,
which included a bit of good-natured political ribbing, Ray was presented with
a “SuperGuv” costume that included a breastplate and a cape.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1980 |
5/35 | Rain (prints) |
between 1975 and 1980 |
5/36 | Warren Magnuson (prints) Warren Magnuson (1905-1989) was adopted by a Swedish family in
Moorehead, Minnesota. He moved to Seattle to attend the University of
Washington. He began practicing law soon after he graduated from the University
of Washington Law School in 1929. Magnuson, a Democrat, began his political
career in the Washington State House of Representatives during the 1933
legislative session. In 1934 he was elected King County Prosecuting Attorney,
an office he held until his election the U.S. House of Representatives from the
First District in 1936. During his tenure in the House, Congressman Magnuson
served on the Naval Affairs Committee and the Alaska International Highway
Commission. A naval reservist before World War II, Magnuson spent several
months on active duty in 1942. In 1944 Magnuson was a successful candidate for
the U.S. Senate. He assumed his Senate seat early when his predecessor, Homer
T. Bone, resigned shortly before the end of his term. Magnuson was best known throughout his long Congressional career
for his championship of consumer and health legislation. Appointed to the
Commerce Committee in 1945, he became chair in 1955 after the Democrats took
control of the Senate. Consumer protection legislation was an important part of
the Commerce Committee’s agenda throughout Magnuson’s 23 years as chairman.
Magnuson co-authored a 1968 book, The Dark Side of the Market Place, which
attempted to raise public awareness of the need for consumer safeguards.Magnuson was also an advocate of government support for
scientific research in the years following World War II. In 1945 he introduced
a bill which was signed into law in 1950, creating the National Science
Foundation. As a freshman Congressman Magnuson sponsored legislation in the
House which created the country’s first tax-supported research center, the
National Cancer Institute. The bill marked the beginning of a career-long
dedication to governmental support of biomedical research and education, which
he continued through his 1948 sponsorship of a bill to create the National
Institutes of Health, and expanded in the 91st Congress, when he assumed the
chairmanship of the Appropriations subcommittee responsible for funding health,
labor, and education programs. Other issues that concerned Magnuson throughout his career
include civil rights, particularly through his authorship of the public
accommodations section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act; environmental protection,
including ports and waterways safety and supertanker regulation; and
improvement of public power and irrigation systems in the Northwest.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1980 |
5/37 | Seagulls (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1981 |
5/38 | Boats - Ferries (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1981 |
5/39 | Sailboat (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1982 |
5/40 | People Waiting (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1982 |
5/41 | Henry Jackson (slides, negatives, prints, and contact
sheets) Henry Martin Jackson (1912-1983) was a U.S. Representative and
U.S. Senator from 1941-1983. Jackson was born in Everett, Washington, the son
of Norwegian immigrants. He briefly attended Stanford University before
graduating from the University of Washington with his bachelor of law degree in
1935. After passing the bar exam, he entered private practice in Everett.
Jackson won his first elected office at the age of 26, when he was chosen
Snohomish County Prosecuting Attorney in 1938. In 1940, he ran for the Second
District congressional seat which was vacated when Representative Monrad
Wallgren ran for the U.S. Senate. Jackson served 12 years as a congressman, concentrating
primarily on issues of interest to the Pacific Northwest. He won a seat on the
Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, and public power development was one
of his legislative priorities. Jackson became interested in the potential
military and civilian uses of atomic energy, and was appointed to the Joint
Atomic Energy Committee in 1949. In 1952, Jackson defeated the Republican
incumbent Harry P. Cain to win a seat in the U.S. Senate. Jackson was assigned
to the Government Operations Committee’s Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations (PSI)—a position that quickly put him at the center of the
un-American activities controversies and in the national spotlight. He won
recognition for his questioning during the televised Army-McCarthy hearings in
the spring of 1954. Jackson was a member of the PSI for the rest of his Senate
tenure and chaired the subcommittee from 1973-1978. Jackson was known for his advocacy for a strong national
defense, and he cast a critical eye on arms limitations agreements with the
Soviet Union. His support became a key factor in the adoption of any agreement.
He was an early advocate for U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia. He continued
his support for the conflict in Vietnam during Johnson and Nixon’s
administration—creating conflict with the Democratic Party and public opinion.
He was a supporter of Israel and championed human rights causes including
supporting the dissident Soviet Jewish population. He frequently intervened on
behalf of individuals trying to emigrate to the U.S. Jackson was also
instrumental in helping move the U.S. towards recognition of the People’s
Republic of China. He became a specialist on China, and played a significant
behind-the-scenes role in influencing U.S. leaders and policy toward China.Jackson was a firm believer that an active federal government
could improve the lives of ordinary citizens. He supported the GI Bill,
Medicare, and Medicaid. Jackson and his colleague Warren G. Magnuson were able
to use their committee positions and accumulated seniority to direct federal
money and programs to Washington State. He was a member and later Chairman
(1963-1980) of the Interior and Insular Affairs Committee. He played a key role
in many other land use policies, including authoring the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969, the cornerstone of American environmental law. Jackson died
suddenly of a heart attack on September 1, 1983. At the time of his death he
held the record for longest service in Congress.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1982 |
5/42 | Seattle Traffic (slides and negatives) Photos include: Stewart Street, Rain on I-5 and NE 45th St,
Waterfront, Evergreen Bridge, Mercer Island Bridge
|
between 1975 and 1983 |
5/43- 5/44 | Kingdome( prints, slides, negatives, and contact
sheets) the Kingdome was a multi-purpose dome stadium owned by King
County in the SoDo (South of Downtown) neighborhood of Seattle. The Kingdome
was best known as the home of the Seattle Seahawks, Seattle Mariners, the
Seattle SuperSonics, and the Seattle Sounders. Construction began in 1972, and
the venue was opened on March 27, 1976, and was in operation until January 9,
2000. On March 26 2000, the building was imploded. The dome was closed for a
variety of reasons – including questionable profitability for the shared venue
among sports teams and the stadium’s roof beginning to deteriorate.
Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1983 |
5/45 | Waterfalls (slides, negatives, contact
sheets) |
between 1975 and 1985 |
5/46 | Logging (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1986 |
5/47 | Clouds (slides and negatives) |
between 1975 and 1986 |
5/48 | Hunting (prints and slides) Duck hunting in Skagit Valley, WA 1975.
|
between 1975 and 1987 |
5/49 | Snoqualmie Falls (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1987 |
5/50 | Power Boats (slides, prints, and negatives) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1987 |
5/51 | Balloons (prints and negatives) Duplicates in box 63
|
between 1975 and 1988 |
5/52 | Woodland Park Zoo - Cougar (slides and
prints) |
between 1975 and 1990 |
5/53 | Skiing Preacher (slides) |
February 1976 |
5/54 | Demonstration - Captive Whales at Pier 56
(prints) The whales are possibly the “Budd Inlet Six”, the last legal
whale capture in the United States. The west end of Pier 56 was Ted Griffin’s
Seattle Marine Aquarium in March of 1976.
Duplicates in box 63
|
March 8, 1976 |
5/55 | St. Patrick's Day Parade - Seattle, WA (prints and
slides) |
March 14, 1976 |
5/56 | Lou Guzzo (prints) Lou Guzzo (1919-2013) was a journalist, author, and television
commentator in Seattle. He was the arts and theater critic for twenty years at
the Seattle Times, and then served as the managing editor of the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer. Guzzo was an ally of Washington state governor Dixy Lee
Ray. He worked with her at the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, co-authored books
with her, and helped in her successful bid for the governor in 1976. Guzzo
regularly appeared on KIRO-TV and KIRO (AM) radio, where he was an editorial
consultant. After his retirement at KIRO, Guzzo maintained a website where he
continued to write a daily commentary on current events. He was a resident of
Newcastle, WA. Guzzo died in 2013 at the age of 94.
|
March 15, 1976 |
5/57 | Clay Huntington (prints) Clay Huntington (1922-2011) was the youngest sportswriter and
sportscaster in the history of Tacoma, WA. He started while attending Lincoln
High School, and worked from the Tacoma Times and KMO radio. He was one of the
founders of the Tacoma Athletic Commission, and a former Pierce County
Commissioner. Huntington founded the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame
and owned radio station KLAY.
|
March 22, 1976 |
5/58 | Skateboards (prints) |
March 30, 1976 |
5/59 | Sailboats at Sunset (slides) |
March 1976 |
5/60 | Backpacking Class for Women (slides, print, and
negative) |
April 1976 |
5/61 | House Fire (prints) |
May 13, 1976 |
5/62 | Royalty in Seattle (prints) |
May 21, 1976 |
5/63 | Steve Johnson (prints) |
June 8, 1976 |
5/64 | Fireworks (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
July 4, 1976 |
5/65 | Henry Kissinger, Visit to Seattle (prints) |
July 22, 1976 |
5/66 | Ants (slides) |
July 1976 |
5/67 | Boats - Launching (slides prints, contact
sheets) |
July 1976 |
5/68 | Pat O'Brien (print) Duplicates in box 63
|
August 23, 1976 |
5/69 | Sonny Sixkiller (print) Alex L. “Sonny” Sixkiller (1951 -- ) is an American football
player and sports commentator. Sixkiller played quarterback for the University
of Washington football from 1969-1972. Sixkiller was a cast member in the 1974
film The Longest Yard. Sixkiller was born in Tahlequah, Oklahoma and a member
of the Cherokee Nation. His family moved to Ashland, Oregon when he was a year
old, where his father worked in a lumber mill. He graduated from Ashland High
School. After high school, he attended the University of Washington and became
starting quarterback for the Huskies during his sophomore year in 1970. In
1973. He went unselected in the 1973 NFL draft. He signed to the Philadelphia
Bell of the World Football League in September 1974, and played with The
Hawaiians in 1975. Sixkiller and several other players quit the troubled team
late in the season after the players were asked to take a 20% pay cut; the
entire league collapsed a week later. He is an executive for sports marketing
firm IMG College.
|
September 4, 1976 |
5/70 | Fishing - Blaine Freer (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
September 5, 1976 |
5/71 | Shelli Morrison, KZAM (print) Morrison was an FM DJ and Promotion Director on KZAM.
|
October 13, 1976 |
5/72 | Gary Collins (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 23, 1976 |
5/73 | Fort Dent Park Tukwila, WA (prints) |
October 25, 1976 |
5/74 | Underwater Submarines (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
October 27, 1976 |
5/75 | Birds (print) |
November 7, 1976 |
5/76 | Robb Weller (print) |
November 24, 1976 |
5/77 | Traffic Signal Control Box (print) |
December 3, 1976 |
5/78 | Christmas Shopping (prints) |
December 23, 1976 |
5/79 | Mountains - Glacier Peak (print) Duplicates in box 63
|
December 31, 1976 |
5/80 | Glass Blowing - Pilchuck (contact sheets) Pilchuck Glass School was founded in 1971 by glass artist Dale
Chihuly and patrons Anne Gould Hauberg and John H. Hauberg. The school is
located in Stanwood, WA.
|
1976 |
5/81 | Backpacking (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 63
|
1976 |
5/82 | Sherron Walker (prints) Probably Sherron Walker Boyea, who attended Seattle Pacific
University. Walker was a long jumper who competed in the 1976 Olympics, placing
14th in the long jump.
|
1976 |
5/83 | Favorite (prints) Duplicates in box 63
|
1976 |
6/1 | Contest photos (prints) |
1976 |
6/2 | Sandi Schonberg (slides and negatives) |
1976 |
6/3 | Seattle, WA - Fog (slides) |
1976 |
6/4 | Frost (prints) Some photos possibly feature Seattle-area men's high school
cross-country meet.
Duplicates in box 64
|
1976 |
6/5 | Traffic - Spokane Street, Seattle, WA
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1976 |
6/6 | Parachutes (prints and slides) |
1976 |
6/7 | Birds (prints) |
1976 |
6/8 | KZAM radio, Seattle, WA (prints) KZAM was a Seattle-area radio station (92.5 FM) that featured
long sets of songs often thematically or musically related. The progressive
radio station was also known for featuring three female DJs in its initial
lineup—Leilani McCoy, Shelley Morrison, and Marion Seymour. The station was
active from 1975-1979, when the station’s owners sold KZAM to Sandusky
Newspapers.
Duplicates in box 64
|
1976 |
6/9 | Ed Kohnstamn (slides and negatives) |
1976? |
6/10 | Walt Wright (print) Probably investigative reporter of the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer.
|
1976? |
6/11 | Seattle-Tacoma International Airport
(prints) |
1976? |
6/12 | Auto-Racing - Off-Road (contact sheets) |
1976? |
6/13 | Press Confab. Snohomish County Sheriff (prints and
contact sheets) |
1976? |
6/14 | Fashion - Irish (prints) |
1976? |
6/15 | Hiking - Goodall (prints) |
1976? |
6/16 | Ice on Plants (slides) |
1976? |
6/17 | Hunting - Ducks (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
1976? |
6/18 | Hobby Boats on Lake Washington and Elliott Bay
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1976-1977 |
6/19 | Houseboats (prints) |
between 1976 and 1977 |
6/20 | David Checkley, Kite Maker (prints) David Checkley was chairperson of the Seattle Kite Association,
kite maker, and First Vice President of American Kitefliers Association.
Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1976 and 1978 |
6/21 | Disco and Shelly's Leg (prints and slides) Shelly’s Leg was the first publicly gay disco and bar in Seattle
when it opened on November 13, 1973, in a converted hotel in Pioneer Square at
the intersection of South Main Street and Alaskan Way. Co-owner Shelly Bauman
(1947-2010) funded the wildly popular party spot with settlement money from an
accident at the Bastille Day Parade in 1970 which caused the loss of both her
leg and her dancing career. The bar flourished until a 1975 fire and consequent
financial disputes among the three owners led to the club’s seizure by the
Internal Revenue Service in 1979.All the slides and photographs dated March 22, 1976 are at
Shelly's Leg.
|
between 1976 and 1978 |
6/22 | Sailing - Lake Washington (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1976 and 1979 |
6/23 | Press Confab. (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1976 and 1979 |
6/24-25 | Women (prints, negatives, and contact
sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1976 and 1980 |
6/26 | Neon (slides and negatives) Includes images of Elephant Car Wash and Seattle
Post-Intelligencer Globe.
|
between 1976 and 1981 |
6/27 | Seals (slides and prints) |
between 1976 and 1982 |
6/28 | Orca Whales (slides) |
between 1976 and 1982 |
6/29 | Seattle, WA - Waterfront (slides and
negatives) |
between 1976 and 1983 |
6/30 | Tulips (slides and negatives) |
between 1976 and 1983 |
6/31 | Dandelions (slides, negatives, and print) |
between 1976 and 1983 |
6/32 | Seattle, WA - Discovery Park (slides) |
between 1976 and 1984 |
6/33 | Fog (slides, print, and negative) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1976 and 1988 |
6/34 | Spiders (prints, slides, and negatives) |
between 1976 and 1988 |
6/35 | Ferns (slides) |
between 1976 and 1989 |
6/36 | Harry Wappler (prints) Wappler was the weather forecaster for KIRO-TV from 1969 until
his retirement in 2002. During his tenure at KIRO, he took a three-year job as
a forecaster at WNBC-TV in New York, and then returned to work at KIRO. Wappler
studied speech at Northwestern University and earned a graduate degree at Yale
University Divinity School. He was also an ordained Episcopal priest and had
officiated the weddings of a few KIRO staffers. Wappler died in April 21, 2010
from a stroke in Bellevue, Washington, he was 73 years old.
|
between 1976 and 1978? |
6/37 | Methow Valley, WA (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1976 and 1980? |
6/38 | Jumper on Power Tower (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
January 4, 1977 |
6/39 | Blaine Johnson (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
January 5, 1977 |
6/40 | Greg Heberlein (print) Journalist Greg Heberlein spent 32 years at the Seattle Times.
In 12 years in the Sports Department, he was the only reporter to cover every
game in the Seattle SuperSonics’ championship season. He then spent 20 years in
the Business Department, where an award was established to honor the
Northwest’s top business columnist. He won the award in each of the first three
years it was offered.
|
January 5, 1977 |
6/41 | Seattle Post Intelligencer Man of the Year (prints and
contact sheets) Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s Man of the Year award was created
by columnist and editor Royal Brougham in early 1936 to honor sports stars.
Around ten nominees were selected each year, and a winner was celebrated at the
year’s banquet. The award was renamed “Sports Star of the Year” beginning in
1977. However, men and women were both on the ballots before the name change.
In 1977, University of Washington quarterback Warren Moon won the award after
leading the team to win over Michigan in the Rose Bowl.
|
January 10, 1977 |
6/42 | Ice Skating - Pacific Coast Championship
(prints) |
January 15, 1977 |
6/43 | Boat Show at Kingdome (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
January 21, 1977 |
6/44 | Seattle Police (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 11, 1977 |
6/45 | Fire at Pier 91 (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 23, 1977 |
6/46 | Bob Schwatlman (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 26, 1977 |
6/47 | George Myers (prints) Possibly Georg N. Meyers, ex-Seattle Times sports editor and
sports columnist.
|
February 26, 1977 |
6/48 | Elaine Perkins, King- TV Sportscaster
(prints) |
March 1, 1977 |
6/49 | Coast Guard (print) |
March 16, 1977 |
6/50 | NASA Portable Earth Terminal (PET) (prints) |
March 31, 1977 |
6/51 | Kirkland Park (prints) |
April 14, 1977 |
6/52 | Fishing - Opening Day (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
April 17, 1977 |
6/53 | Boats - Opening Day (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
May 7, 1977 |
6/54 | Trout Fishing Opening Day (slides) |
May 8, 1977 |
6/55 | Luther Child Center (contact sheet) |
June 1, 1977 |
6/56 | Crab Hauling (prints) |
June 10, 1977 |
6/57 | Richard S. Page (prints) In 1974 Page was appointed to run the transit system of the
Seattle transit system. In June 1977, he was nominated and confirmed to head
the Urban Mass Transit Administration.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 13, 1977 |
6/58 | Citizen's Coalition for a Constitutional Convention
(prints) |
June 14, 1977 |
6/59 | Kite, possibly inside Kingdome (print) |
June 29, 1977 |
6/60-6/61 | Backpacking on Kingdome (negatives, slides, and
print) |
June 1977 |
6/62 | Alaska Pipeline (slides) The Trans-Alaska Pipeline Systems (TAPS) is an 800-mile-long oil
transportation system spanning Alaska, including the trans-Alaska crude-oil
pipeline, 11 pump stations, and several hundred miles of feeder pipelines,
beginning at Prudhoe Bay and ending at the Valdez Marine Terminal. It is one of
the world’s largest pipeline systems, and was built between 1975 and 1977 after
the 1973 oil crisis caused a sharp rise in oil prices in the United States. The
first barrel was successfully traveled through the pipeline in the summer of
1977, and full-scale production began at the end of the year. The pipeline is
owned by Alyeska Pipeline Service Company. Opposition for the pipeline was
expressed by Alaska Native groups and conservationists. Alaska Natives were
upset that the pipeline would cross the land traditionally claimed by a variety
of native groups, but no economic benefits would accrue to them directly.
Conservationists were angry at what they saw as an incursion into America’s
last wilderness. Both opposition movements launched legal campaigns to halt the
pipeline, and they were able to delay construction until 1973.
|
June 1977 |
6/63 | Freeway Park, Seattle, WA (slides) |
June 1977 |
6/64 | Alaska Pipeline (prints, negative, and contact
sheets) The Trans-Alaska Pipeline Systems (TAPS) is an 800-mile-long oil
transportation system spanning Alaska, including the trans-Alaska crude-oil
pipeline, 11 pump stations, and several hundred miles of feeder pipelines,
beginning at Prudhoe Bay and ending at the Valdez Marine Terminal. It is one of
the world’s largest pipeline systems, and was built between 1975 and 1977 after
the 1973 oil crisis caused a sharp rise in oil prices in the United States. The
first barrel was successfully traveled through the pipeline in the summer of
1977, and full-scale production began at the end of the year. The pipeline is
owned by Alyeska Pipeline Service Company. Opposition for the pipeline was
expressed by Alaska Native groups and conservationists. Alaska Natives were
upset that the pipeline would cross the land traditionally claimed by a variety
of native groups, but no economic benefits would accrue to them directly.
Conservationists were angry at what they saw as an incursion into America’s
last wilderness. Both opposition movements launched legal campaigns to halt the
pipeline, and they were able to delay construction until 1973.
|
between June 1977 and July 1977 |
6/65 | Waterfront Park, Seattle, WA (slides) |
between June 1977 and July 1977 |
6/66 | Sam Angeloff (prints and contact sheets) Sam Angeloff worked as a reporter for the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer and Life Magazine.
|
between June 1977 and October 1977 |
6/67 | Boating - Snoqualmie River (print) |
July 2, 1977 |
6/68 | Tolt Park, King County, WA (prints) |
July 2, 1977 |
6/69 | Richard Combs Jr., U.S. Embassy, Moscow
(prints) Richard E. Combs Jr. was an American diplomat who worked for the
U.S. Foreign Service. Her served as Minister-Counselor and acting head at the
United States Embassy in Moscow, USSR during the Cold War in the 1970s and
1980s.
|
July 5, 1977 |
6/70 | Fire - Tug Boat (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
July 8, 1977 |
6/71 | Boats (prints) |
July 9, 1977 |
6/72 | Seattle Parking Enforcement (print) |
July 9, 1977 |
6/73 | Seattle Aerial View (prints) |
July 12, 1977 |
6/74 | Patches (prints) |
July 15, 1977 |
6/75 | Tolt-MacDonald Park - Carnation, WA (prints) |
July 2, 1977 |
6/76 | Mrs. Schulman (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
July 15, 1977 |
6/77 | Airplanes - Lynnwood Rotary Air Show (slides and
prints) Possibly Lynwood Rotary Club’s annual Air Fair event.
Duplicates in box 64
|
between July 15, 1977 and July 16, 1977 |
6/78 | Firth Avenue Lid Project - Seattle, WA
(prints) A lid is a bridge-type structure that spans over the gap of a
sunken freeway or transportation corridor. Lids can create new land that can be
used for a wide variety of public and private uses. In Seattle, Interstate 5
utilizes lids to create additional private and public space—including Freeway
Park and the Washington State Convention Center. This folder may refer to the
freeway lid at Fifth Avenue, possibly the location of Freeway Park or the
Freeway Park Garage.
|
July 25, 1977 |
6/79 | Alaskan Way Viaduct (prints) Alaskan Way Viaduct was an elevated freeway in Seattle, WA that
carried a section of State Route 99. The Double-decked freeway ran north-south
along the city’s waterfront for 2.2 miles, east of Alaskan Way and Elliot Bay,
and traveled between the West Seattle Freeway in SoDo and the Battery Street
Tunnel in Belltown. The Viaduct existed from April 4, 1953 until its demolition
began on January 11, 2019. Demolition of the viaduct was finished in late 2019.
The Alaskan Way Viaduct was closed and demolished because after the 2001
Nisqually Earthquake it suffered minor damage, and later inspections found it
was vulnerable to total collapse in the event of another major earthquake. The
viaduct was replaced with the State Route 99 Tunnel, an underground highway
tunnel bored beneath Seattle that opened February 4, 2019.
Duplicates in box 64
|
July 27, 1977 |
6/80 | Hot Dog Camp (prints) |
July 28, 1977 |
6/81 | Mark O'Connor - Guitarist and Fiddler
(prints) O’Connor (1961 - ) is an American violinist and composer. He
has released 45 albums, mostly of original music. O’Connor toured with French
jazz violinist Stéphane Grappelli when he was a teenager. He developed a string
instrument technique for teachers and students called The O’Connor method,
which places emphasis on music and playing techniques from North America in
addition to focusing on rhythmic development, ear training, and improvisation.
Duplicates in box 64
|
August 2, 1977 |
6/82 | Cherry Farms - Vashon Island, WA (prints and contact
sheets) |
August 3, 1977 |
6/83 | Children at Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
Duplicates in box 64
|
August 4, 1977 |
7/1 | YMCA Youth Class (prints) |
August 8, 1977 |
7/2 | Mt. Rainier Ice Caves and general scenes
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
August 9, 1977 |
7/3 | Bang Bang Race (prints) The Bang Bang Race was an inner tube race across Lake Union
where waitresses from Seattle restaurants would compete against each other.
|
August 10, 1977 |
7/4 | Train Derailment (prints) |
August 10, 1977 |
7/5 | Luv Run Double Decker Bus in Seattle, WA
(prints) |
August 11, 1977 |
7/6 | Boats (print) |
August 17, 1977 |
7/7 | Fashion (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
August 27, 1977 |
7/8 | Sex Workers (prints) |
August 27, 1977 |
7/9 | McManus (prints) |
August 29, 1977 |
7/10 | Kitchen (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
August 31, 1977 |
7/11 | Farming (slides) |
August 1977 |
7/12 | Ocean Shores, WA (slides and prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
September 10, 1977 |
7/13 | Ronald McDonald (prints) |
September 17, 1977 |
7/14 | Brad Zucroff (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
September 19, 1977 |
7/15 | Roberta Maestas (print) Roberto Maestas (1938-2010) was a social activist and community
leader in Seattle, Washington from the 1960s to 1990s. Maestas was a member of
the Gang of Four—a radical minority rights activism group who founded Minority
Executive Directors’ Coalition. In the early 1970s, he helped begin an ESL
program at South Seattle College. In 1972, the funding to the program was
abruptly cut off which lead to a number of other activists to occupy an
abandoned school building in Beacon Hill, which eventually became El Centro de
la Raza – an educational, cultural and social service agency founded by
Maestas.
Duplicates in box 64
|
September 20, 1977 |
7/16 | Oil Rig in Elliott Bay (prints and slides) Offshore oil rigs in-transit from Alaska traveled through
Elliott Bay on multiple occasions in 1977. These images may be of an oil rig
in-transit to or from Alaska.
Duplicates in box 64
|
September 20, 1977 |
7/17 | Bridge Operator (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
September 21, 1977 |
7/18 | Initiative 335 - Obscene Material Sales Ban
(prints) The Washington Prohibit Stores that Sell Obscene Material
Initiative, also known as Initiative 335, was on the November 8, 1977 ballot in
Washington. The measure was approved, which expanded the number of criminal
offense defined as “moral nuisances”, including the displaying and selling of
obscene material, including pornography. The measure passed with nearly 55%
voting yes, and 45% voting no.
Duplicates in box 64
|
September 26, 1977 |
7/19 | John Hempleman (prints) |
September 26, 1977 |
7/20 | Eleanor Smeal - President of National Organization for
Women (NOW) (print) Smeal (1939 - ) served as the president of the National
Organization for Women (NOW) for three terms (1977-1987) in addition to her
work as an activist, grassroots organizer, lobbyist, and political analyst. Her
first term as NOW’s president began in 1977.
|
October 15, 1977 |
7/21 | Telephone Wires (prints) |
October 26, 1977 |
7/22 | Robots (prints) |
October 1977 |
7/23 | Punk - Shirley Jeanne Gossman (prints and
slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 31, 1977 |
7/24 | Boats - Russian Fishing Vessels (prints) |
November 1, 1977 |
7/25 | Uri Geller - Mind Miraculous Symposium
(prints) Uri Geller (1946 - ) is an Israeli-British illusionist,
magician, television personality, and self-proclaimed psychic. His performances
include spoon-bending, describing hidden drawings, and making watches stop or
run faster. Geller claims his feats are the result of paranormal powers given
to him by extraterrestrials. “Mind Miraculous Symposium” is possibly an event
hosted by Uri Geller or one that Geller participated in near or in the Seattle
area.
|
November 5, 1977 |
7/26 | Ray Ramsey, KOMO Weatherman (print) Ramsey was KOMO’s weatherman from 1965-1985. Ramsey passed at
the age of 87 on May 22, 2011. He was a resident of Mercer Island, WA for 47
years.
Duplicates in box 64
|
November 8, 1977 |
7/27 | Crabshell Alliance (prints) The Crabshell Alliance was a grassroots antinuclear group in
Washington that arose after the first large Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant
protest in New Hampshire in 1977. There were local groups in Bellingham,
Seattle, Olympia, Grey’s Harbor, Pullman, Centralia, and the University of
Washington. The group staged a protest at the Satsop reactors near Elma,
Washington in July 1977—which was attended by nearly 700 people. They also
protested the military’s Trident nuclear missile project in Bangor, WA.
|
November 14, 1977 |
7/28 | Up With People (print) |
November 1977 |
7/29 | Fashion - 101 Club Fashion Show and Luncheon
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 8, 1977 |
7/30 | Lloyd Meeds (prints and slides) Edwin Lloyd Meeds (1927-2005) was a member of the U.S. House of
Representatives from 1965 to 1979. He represented the second district of
Washington as a Democrat. During his time in Congress, he championed major
environmental legislation, including the establishment of North Cascades
National Park and the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, and also became active in Native
American issues, most notably the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971.
Before his time in Congress, Meeds worked as a prosecuting
attorney in Spokane County and then in Snohomish County from 1958-1960. In the
fall of 1959 he gained public attention as a deputy prosecutor in Snohomish
County when he led a raid on a prostitution ring. Two sheriff’s deputies were
found in the house. In the early 1960s, Meeds became more politically active.
He served as president on the Snohomish County Young Democrats from 1960 to
1962, and was a board member of the Snohomish County Democratic Central
Committee from 1961-1963. In his early years in Congress, he helped implement some of
President Johnson’s Great Society programs—including the War on Poverty, Head
Start, and other anti-poverty programs. Meeds served on the House Labor and
Education Committee and sponsored educational reform legislation, including the
Vocational Educational Amendment of 1968, the National School Lunch Act, and
the Child Nutrition Act of 1970. He was also named chairman of the House
Subcommittee on Indian Affairs in early 1973. Meed’s support of Native Fishing
Rights and support of Alaska Natives combined with his support of the Alpine
Lakes Wilderness legislation lost him some support from voters, and his 1976
re-election was an incredibly tight race. He won the election with a tight
re-count vote, leading by only 542 votes. In his final term, he served as a
member of the House Committee on Interior and Insular affairs. After his last
term ended, Meeds remained in Washington to practice law and lobby. He was
active in organizations that promoted clearly and stronger ethical standards
for lobbyists, and wrote the first code of ethics for lobbyists for the Ethics
Committee of the American League of Lobbyists. In the 1990s, he participated in
the debate over campaign finance reform—arguing that the widespread use of
unregulated contributions posed a bigger threat of corruption that the former
practice of allowing large individual donations directly to candidates. In the
final years of his life, Meeds battled lung cancer. He died in his home in
Church Creek, Maryland on August 17, 2005.
Duplicates in box 64
|
December 9, 1977 |
7/31 | Christmas Tree (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 14, 1977 |
7/32 | Michael Foster (prints) Michael G. Foster (1937-2003) was a Seattle investment banker
and founding trustee of the Foster Foundation. Foster graduated Roosevelt High
School in Seattle and attended the University of Washington. After graduate he
worked at Dominick & Dominick—a bond firm in New York. He was President and
CEO of the regional brokerage firm Foster & Marshall Inc., which was sold
to American Express in 1982. After Foster & Marshall was sold, Michael and
his parents Albert and Evelyn Foster established The Foster Foundation—which
gives to education, arts, and health and human services causes. One of their
first major gifts was a $3 million gift in 1990 to help build a new business
library for the UW Business School that carries the name of Albert O. and
Evelyn W. Foster. He later formed the investment banking firm Foster, Paulsell
& Baker Inc. The University of Washington’s Business School was renamed the
Michael G. Foster School of Business on September 20, 2007.
|
December 21, 1977 |
7/33 | Treasurer of Seattle, WA (prints) The Treasurer of Seattle from 1974-1979 was John W. Kelly. The
Treasurer’s Office of Seattle was active from 1869 until 1992, when it was
abolished by a citizen vote on a City Charter amendment.
|
December 21, 1977 |
7/34 | Flood - Skagit River, Stanwood, WA (slides) |
December 1977 |
7/35 | Boats - Hydroplanes (print) |
1977 |
7/36 | Fishing - Gilnet (contact sheets and prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1977 |
7/37 | Logging - Clear Cutting (slides and
negative) |
1977 |
7/38 | Children at Downtown Seattle YMCA (contact
sheets) |
1977 |
7/39 | Commercial Boats (prints and contact
sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
1977 |
7/40 | Northwest - Seattle Post-Intelligencer Old Wives' Tale
Feature Story (slides) |
1977 |
7/41 | Rats (prints) |
1977 |
7/42 | Dixy Ray (slides) Dixy Ray (1914-1994) was a scientist and politician. She served
at the 17th governor of Washington from 1977-1981. Ray’s career began as a
scientist. After receiving her doctorate in biology at Stanford University, she
was an instructor in the zoology department at the University of Washington.
She was promoted to assistant professor in 1947, and in 1952 she received a
Guggenheim grant. She was made an associate professor in 1957, and served as
chief scientist abroad the schooner SS Te Vega during the International Indian
Ocean Expedition. She also hosted a television program on marine biology called
“Animals of the Seashore” on KCTS-TV, Seattle’s PBS affiliate. After her
growing popularity on KCTS-TV, the Pacific Science Center extended an
invitation to her to take over the nearly bankrupt science museum. Under her
guidance, the Pacific Science Center was converted from a traditional
exhibit-oriented museum to an interactive learning center, and led the center
back into financial solvency. Before her term as governor, Ray was appointed by President
Nixon to chair the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). While serving on the
commission, she lived out of her 28-foot motor home with her two dogs which she
parked on a lot in rural Virginia. Despite criticism and scrutiny from the
media and fellow AEC members, Ray became the commission chair until the AEC was
abolished in 1975. She briefly worked as the Assistant Secretary of State for
Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs in 1975,
appointed by Gerald Ford.Ray was Washington’s first female governor, and it was also her
first race for public office. Ray’s victory was surprising, given that all
major newspaper and predictions from pundits that the state was not ready for
an unmarried woman to govern. She was in office during the 1980 eruption of
Mount St. Helens. Though Ray ran as a democrat, she had conservative views on
energy and the environment, including supporting atomic energy and allowing
supertankers to dock in Puget Sound. Ray faced conflict with the Republic
establishment after she fired 124 appointees of her predecessor Daniel J.
Evans. Ray also faced heavy scrutiny from the press, sometimes for her
appearance and the way she dressed. She lost the democratic primaries to her
rival Jim McDermott in 1980.
|
1977 |
7/43 | Billboards (slides) |
1977 |
7/44 | Favorite photos (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1977 |
7/45 | Billboard (prints) |
1977 |
7/46 | Water Shortage (print) |
1977? |
7/47 | Seattle Pacific University Campus Ministry, Homelessness
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1977? |
7/48 | Seattle Nightlife (prints and contact sheet) |
1977? |
7/49 | Salt (prints and contact sheets) |
1977? |
7/50 | Jefferson Awards (print) The Jefferson Awards for Public Service was created in 1972 by
the American Institute for Public Service. The Jefferson Awards are given both
at national and local levels. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer was possibly a
media partner who named local Jefferson Award honorees.
Duplicates in box 64
|
1977? |
7/51 | Police Officers impersonating Sex Workers
(prints) |
1977? |
7/52 | Richard Kirsten (slide) Richard Kirsten (1920 -2013) was an artist, author, printmaker,
and Buddhist priest born in Chicago, Illinois. He worked in the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer’s Editorial Art Department for over 30 years. Kirsten attended the Art Institute of Chicago and graduated in
1939. Upon graduation, Kirsten hitchhiked to Seattle, Washington on his way to
Alaska. He then joined the U.S. Navy in 1942, where he spent his entire service
at the Naval Training Station in Great Lakes, Illinois teaching and
illustrating art for the Navy. After his discharge from the Navy, Richard and
his wife Elaine moved back to Seattle with their infant son. Kirsten worked at
Seattle City Light, Webster-Brinkley Co., Boeing, and the Catholic Northwest
Progress Newspaper until he started working at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
in 1950 in the Editorial Art Department. Kirsten worked in the department for
the next 30 years, eventually heading the department. During his life, Kirsten took many trips to Japan to learn about
Japanese printmaking. In 1967 he was ordained a Zen Buddhist priest and given
the name Daiensai Kuden Bonseki Dojin. Shortly after his ordination he became
one of the first Westerners to be licensed to professionally administer the
I-Ching to clients in Japan. In 1972, Richard’s son Rick opened the Kirsten
Gallery in Seattle—where Kirsten spent much of his spare time when not in
Japan. Kirsten wrote two books, "Smile 365 Happy Meditations" and "Love 365
Happy Meditations".
|
1977? |
7/53 | Plumbers Union (print) Duplicates in box 64
|
1977? |
7/54 | Fish with Cigarette (prints) |
1977? |
7/55 | Goldmeyer Hot Springs, Cascade Crest Trail, WA
(prints) |
1977? |
7/56 | Seattle City Fair (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
1977? |
7/57 | Woman laying in leaves (prints) Woman called "Nancy" by Grant Haller in accompanying
material.
|
1977? |
7/58 | Winter (prints and slides) |
1977? |
7/59 | Coliseum Expansion (prints and contact
sheets) |
1977? |
7/60 | Mt. Rainier Ice Caves (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1978 |
7/61 | Bill Knight (prints) Possibly Seattle Post-Intelligencer journalist. Knight began
working at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer in the sports department in 1961 and
was honored as the National Boating Writer of the year in 1977. In 1984, he was
promoted to the sports editor.
|
between 1977 and 1978 |
7/62 | Women (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1978 |
7/63 | Boats - Polar Star (prints) |
between 1977 and 1978 |
7/64 | President Jimmy Carter (slides, prints, and contact
sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1980 |
7/65 | Demonstration - Trident Protests (prints and contact
sheets) In the fall of 1977, activists from Pacific Life Community
bought land adjacent to Bangor, Washington’s Navy Trident missile program. The
activists established the Ground Zero Center for Nonviolence as a base for
protest activities against the facility. The height of Trident protests took
place between 1977 and 1979, but slowed down in the fall of 1979 due to many of
the most committed activists being in jail for acts of civil disobedience. The Navy’s Trident program consisted of a new fleet of
nuclear-powered submarines equipped with Trident nuclear missiles. The Trident
missile differed from its predecessors because of its increased accuracy and
each of the 24 missiles carried in the submarine had 17 separate independently
targetable nuclear warheads. Anti-nuclear protestors called these systems
“first-strike” weapons, concerned that the military had designed them for
offensive rather than defensive attacks, though the Navy argued that the
Trident was a defensive weapon essential to national security. Bangor Ammunition Depot on Hood Canal, Washington was selected
by the Navy as a support facility for the new Trident submarines on February
16, 1973. Critics were concerned about the environmental impact of the project,
and worried that new development from new employees and their families would
congest the area and negatively affect quality of life in the region.
Supporters cited the importance of a relationship with the Navy to support the
local economy and the need for the Trident project to support national
security. Supporters also characterized opponents as predominantly wealthy
Seattleites who owned vacation homes in Kitsap County and wanted to keep the
County in a state of rural development.Several environmental and anti-Trident groups were founded
before and during the Trident project at Bangor, including Hood Canal
Environmental Council (HCEC) and Concerned about Trident (CAT). Regional groups
took an interest in opposing Trident for its use of nuclear weapons, included
Action Committees against Trident Submarines (ACATS), led by retired Methodist
minister Robert B. Shaw and Pacific Life Community (PLC)—made up of radical
Christian, Quaker, and feminist roots as well as links to the Catholic Worker
Movement. Other groups included Crabshell Alliance, the War Resisters League,
The Bangor Summer Task Force and Live without Trident. Around 1977,
anti-nuclear activism intensified after the end of the Vietnam War. Mainstream
religious groups became increasingly involved in the project based on moral
grounds, and The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Seattle, Raymond Hunthausen,
became a major figure of the regional nuclear disarmament movement.
Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1980 |
7/66 | Erskine Wood - Photographer (prints and contact
sheets) |
between 1977 and 1980? |
7/67 | Mt. Rainier (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1981 |
7/68 | Burke Gilman Trail - Seattle, WA (slides and
prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1981 |
7/69 | Container Ships (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1982 |
7/70 | Floods - Snohomish River (prints and contact
sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1982 |
7/71 | Select photos (slides) Possibly photos selected for printing in Seattle
Post-Intelligencer.
|
between 1977 and 1982 |
7/72 | Hot Air Balloons (slides, negatives, and
print) |
between 1977 and 1982 |
7/73 | Seattle-- sunrise (slides and negatives) |
between 1977 and 1982 |
7/74 | Billboards (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1984 |
7/75 | Seattle Aquarium (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1985 |
7/76 | Eastern Washington (prints and negatives) |
between 1977 and 1985 |
7/77 | Kite Flying (prints and negatives) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1986 |
7/78 | Tree Line (prints, slides, and negatives) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1977 and 1988 |
7/79 | Rosanne Royer (prints) Rosanne Gostovich Royer graduated with a degree in Russian from
the University of Washington. She was the daughter of Serbo-Croatian
immigrants, and married journalist, politician, activist, and 48th Mayor of
Seattle Charles T. Royer in 1968. The couple divorced in 1994. When Charles ran
for Mayor in 1978, Rosanne played a critical role in his populist campaign by
tapping into her connections with the ethnic-white communities in Seattle.
Duplicates in box 64
|
January 9, 1978 |
7/80 | Medic 1 resuscitation in the Federal Building (slides
and prints) King County’s Medic One System began in the early 1970s in
Seattle. Before Medic One, there were no paramedics in King County. Dr. Michael
Copass and Dr. Leonard Cobb and the Seattle Fire Chief Gordon Vickrey had the
idea that firefighters could be taught some of the same skills that doctors
used to save people who were seriously injured or ill, and could apply these
skills in a person’s home or in the street where their accident occurred. In
1970, the Seattle Fire Department, in cooperation with Harborview Medical
Center and the University of Washington, trained the first class of
firefighters as paramedics. In 1977, the first paramedics came to work in King
County. The system now covers all of King County, Washington. The system
emphasizes the community’s role in recognizing when a fellow citizen needs
medical care, calling 911 to activate the Medic One System, and helping the
citizen until Medic One arrives. Medic One includes enhanced 911 dispatch
centers, citizen CPR until Medic One arrives, basic life support medical
services, and advanced life support medical services.
The images show a resuscitation Medic One responded to that
happened in the Federal Building in downtown Seattle. On-site CPR was possibly
provided before Medic One arrived on the scene.
Duplicates in box 64
|
January 13, 1978 |
7/81 | Seattle Skyline- sunset (slides and
negatives) |
between 1977 and 1989 |
7/82 | Boat Show (prints) Probably the annual Seattle Boat Show event at the Kingdome.
|
January 20, 1978 |
7/83 | Boats - Fishing - Indian Gilnetter (slides) |
January 1978 |
7/84 | Stella Stevens (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 14, 1978 |
7/85 | Fat Tuesday (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between February 17, 1978 and February 21, 1978 |
7/86 | Harold Throm (prints) Throm (1912? – 2002) was born in Pullman, WA. He worked in
fisheries for most of his life, coming out of retirement twice—at ages 65 and
74. Throm joined the New England Fish Company in 1956 when he moved to Astoria,
Oregon to become a plant manager. In 1961, Throm became manager at the
company’s Pederson Point cannery in Bristol Bay, Alaska. He worked there until
1972, continuing as a marine insurance claims adjuster until retiring for the
first time in 1976. He then accepted a part-time offer to continue marine
insurance work for Louis Kemp Fisheries, surveying damage to fishing boats and
barges traveling from Seattle to Alaska. He retired again in 1986.
|
February 22, 1978 |
7/87 | Nurses (prints) |
February 22, 1978 |
7/88 | Helen McArdle (prints) |
February 23, 1978 |
7/89 | Fire Fighters (prints) |
February 27, 1978 |
7/90 | Lawyer (prints) |
March 3, 1978 |
7/91 | Wayne Larkin (prints) Wayne Larkin was a Seattle City Councilman, Seattle firefighter,
and Seattle police officer (1927 – 2009). Larkin was born in Tacoma, Washington
in 1927. From 1944 to 1946 he served in the U.S. Coast Guard. In 1947, Larkin
joined the Seattle Fire Department serving at Station 17, Ladder 9. In March
1952, Larkin joined the Seattle Police Department serving in patrol and as a
detective in auto theft, intelligence, narcotics, and vice. Larkin served two terms on Seattle City Council beginning in
1969. While on the Seattle City Council, he served as chair of the
Intergovernmental Relations, Utilities, and Public Safety committees. While on
the city council, Larkin used his experiences as a firefighter to work with
Seattle Fire Chief Gordon Vickrey to develop the first 911 Medic One system in
the country. Wayne sponsored and secured passage of Harborview Hospital’s bond
issue for Seattle’s Burn Center and also spear-headed the passage of
legislation creating the Policy Department’s K-9 unit. He advocated for
including the Vietnam and Korean War Memorial on the walls of the old Public
Safety Building in Seattle. Additionally, Larkin’s committee chairs helped him
secure passage for a program to exempt economically disadvantaged users of the
city’s utilities, forge consensus on water issues in King County, and he played
a leading role in creating the Metro Transit System. Larkin passed away at
Swedish Hospital on September 3, 2009.
|
March 16, 1978 |
7/92 | Golden Gardens Park (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
March 18, 1978 |
7/93 | Woman wearing graphic tee (print) |
March 22, 1978 |
7/94 | Aluminum Plant near Ferndale, WA (prints) |
March 28, 1978 |
7/95 | University of Washington - Quad (prints) |
March 30, 1978 |
7/96 | Airplanes - ASRA at Boeing Flight Test Center
(prints) |
March 31, 1978 |
7/97 | Mount Si (slides) |
March 1978 |
7/98 | Plants (prints) |
March 1978 |
7/99 | Senate Bill 1437 - Frank Wilkinson (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
April 10, 1978 |
7/100 | Ivar Hagland (prints) Ivar Haglund (1905 – 1985) was a Seattle restauranteur and folk
singer best known for founding Ivar’s seafood restaurant chain based in
Seattle, WA. Ivar’s also owns the Seattle-based burger restaurant chain Kidd
Valley Hamburgers. During his life, Haglund was known as “King of the
Waterfront”. Haglund was born to Scandinavian parents on March 21, 1905. His
father, Johan Ivar Haglund was Swedish and his mother Daisy Hanson Haglund was
Norwegian. His mother’s parents had bought Alki Point from Seattle pioneer Doc
Maynard in 1868. Daisy Haglund died in 1908, and Ivar was subsequently raised
by his father and Daisy’s older sister Lorena Smith and brother Edmund. He
graduated from the University of Washington in 1928 with a degree as a
stockbroker. In 1938, Haglund established Seattle’s first aquarium at Pier
54, along with a fish-and-chips stand. This stand was the precursor of
Haglund’s first restaurant, “Acres of Clams”, which opened in 1946. By 1965,
Haglund began shooting fireworks over Elliott Bay every Independence Day. He
also became a radio personality and a champion of regional folk music. Ivar
bought Seattle’s Smith Tower in 1976. In 1983, he was elected port commissioner
after filing as a prank. Haglund died of a heart attack just over a year later.
Though he was married twice, he had no children. He left his estate principally
to the University Washington School of Business in support of the University
Restaurant Program.
|
April 13, 1978 |
7/101 | Boats - Helena Star (prints) The Helena Star was a freighter that was seized by the United
States Coast Guard in 1978 with 37 tons of marijuana on board. At the time, it
was the biggest maritime marijuana bust in West Coast History valued at $74
million. A Coast Guard cutter intercepted the Helena Star about 130 miles
southwest of Cape Flattery on April 17, 1978 and found bales of marijuana
inside the boat. Federal investigators at the time said the plan was to use
Michael Lund’s 61-foot facing sloop, the “Joli”, to bring the load ashore at
his home on Sequim Bay. Several people were arrested in connection with drug
trafficking activities on the Helen Star- -including the boat’s captain Roman
Ferrer Rubies and first mate Pedro Zuniga Vera. Michael Lund, a former
world-champion skier, was arrested by U.S. marshals in 2001 in connection to
his role in the trafficking. The 167-foot Helena Star sank in January 2013. Its
remains were broken up and sold for scrap as part of Washington State’s
Derelict Vessel Program.
Duplicates in box 64
|
April 19, 1978 |
8/1 | Jugglers - Jugglathon (prints) |
April 22, 1978 |
8/2 | Taxi Parade for deceased driver (prints) |
April 25, 1978 |
8/3 | Canoe - Easy Rider (prints) |
April 27, 1978 |
8/4 | Minister in Central District, Seattle WA
(print) |
May 11, 1978 |
8/5 | Air Force Dissenter (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
May 12, 1978 |
8/6 | Jim Hussey (print) |
May 16, 1978? |
8/7 | S.S. Ropers (contact sheets) |
May 19, 1978 |
8/8 | Fishing - Bass (print) |
May 24, 1978 |
8/9 | Motorized Bar Stool (prints) |
May 25, 1978 |
8/10 | Fire Station (slides) |
May 30, 1978 |
8/11 | Juanita Park, WA (prints) |
May 31, 1978 |
8/12 | Flowers - Pansies (slides) |
May 1978 |
8/13 | Robert Thompson (print) |
June 4, 1978 |
8/14 | Lloyd Cooney (print) Lloyd Cooney (1923 – 2013) was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa to
Vera Marie Williams and Cecil Everett Cooney. He graduated from Thomas
Jefferson High School and served as a Tech 5 specialist with the 517 Airborne
Signal Co. of the 17th and 82nd Airborne Divisions in World War II. He received
three major battle stars including the Battle of the Bulge. He earned his B.S.
degree in Political Science at the University of Utah. He married Betty Louise
Packard in 1946. Cooney was a VP/General Manager of KSL-TV in Salt Lake City, UT
before coming to Seattle as President/General Manager of KIRO, Inc.—which
includes KIRO-TV, KIRO News radio and KSEA-FM—from 1963 to 1982. Cooney left
KIRO to run for the U.S. Senate seat of Warren Magnuson in 1982 and the seat of
Henry Jackson in 1983. After his lost both campaigns, he worked as a business
consultant.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 4, 1978 |
8/15 | Jane Mondale (prints) Possibly Joan Mondale, wife of Vice President Walter Mondale.
Joan was a lifelong practitioner, patron, and advocate of the arts. She was an
accomplished potter and worked in galleries before she moved to Washington,
D.C. as a Senator’s wife in 1964, and led guided tours at the National Gallery
of Art. In 1972 she wrote a book called Politics in Art that examines how
political commentary is reflected in art. She served as chairperson of the
Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities as Second Lady.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 8, 1978 |
8/16 | King County Council Hearing (prints) |
June 13, 1978 |
8/17 | Katherine Graham (prints) Katharine Graham was chairwoman of the board and CEO of the
Washington Post. The Washington Post owned The Daily Herald—a newspaper based
in Everett, WA—from 1978 until 2013. Graham visited Everett, WA where The Daily
Herald plant was located several times, beginning in March 1978. By 1979,
Graham’s son Donald Graham was the publisher of the Post, and he began making
frequent trips to Everett. However, Katharine still visited Everett up until as
recently as 1995. During her visits, she preferred to stay in Everett or
Snohomish County rather than staying in Seattle hotels. Katharine Graham (1917 – 2001) was an American publisher. She
led her family’s newspaper, The Washington Post from 1963 – 1991. Graham
presided over the paper as it reported the Watergate scandal, which eventually
led to the resignation of President Nixon. She was the first twentieth century
female publisher of a major American newspaper. Her memoir, Personal History,
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1998. She held the formal title of the publisher from
1969 to 1979, and was chairwoman of the board from 1973 to 1991. She was the
first female fortune 500 CEO in 1972, as CEO of The Washington Post.
|
June 14, 1978 |
8/18 | Tut Strut (prints) The Seattle Art Museum (SAM) hosted a benefit gala called “Tut
Strut” on July 14, 1978—one day before the opening of the traveling Treasures
of Tutankhamun exhibit—featuring 55 artifacts from the tomb of the Egyptian
pharaoh. The exhibit was on display from July 15, 1978 to November 15, 1978.
Over the course of the display, nearly 1.3 million visitors viewed the exhibit,
and SAM grossed nearly $7 million for sale of tickets, audio guides, and
merchandise. Membership of SAM quadrupled while the exhibit was in Seattle.
Images in this folder are mostly of attendees in ancient
Egyptians costumes. Many names of the attendees can be found on the verso of
each photograph.
The party was mostly attended by Seattle’s elite, including
Roseanne and Charles Royer. Attendants were allowed a sneak peek of the exhibit
before it opens. The gala featured ice sculptures shaped like pyramids, and
encouraged guests to dress as ancient Egyptians.
Duplicates in box 64
|
July 14, 1978 |
8/19 | Beach Boys Concert- crowd (prints) The Beach Boys played in Seattle on July 16, 1978. Their concert
was at Memorial Stadium, and was supported by The Kinks, Randy Hansen, and Jr.
Cadillac.
Duplicates in box 64
|
July 16, 1978 |
8/20 | Jim Halverson (print) Possibly Jim Halverson of Bellingham, WA. James M. Halverson
passed away at the age of 71 on September 7, 2010. He was a longtime resident
of Auburn/Federal Way, and was a Certified Public Accountant (CPA).
|
July 18, 1978 |
8/21 | Boats - U.S. Coastguard Eagle (slides and
prints) |
July 31, 1978 |
8/22 | Demonstration - Initiative 13 (prints) This demonstration was regarding Initiative 13, a ballot measure
that would have repealed city ordinances protecting gay and lesbian people. The
initiative would have also dissolved the City of Seattle’s Office of Women’s
Rights. The Initiative was sponsored by Save Our Moral Ethics (SOME) and by
Seattle police officers Dennis Falk and David Estes. Opposition was led by the
Citizens to Retain Fair Employment (CRFE) chaired by Charles Brydon and
directed by Jill Shropp. Other groups opposed the measure as well. The
Initiative was rejected by nearly 2 to 1 on November 7, 1978. Seattle was one of the first large American cities to enact
specific civil rights protections prohibiting discrimination based on sexual
orientation, since employment rights of sexual minorities were affirmed in
1972, and Seattle broadened its housing laws in 1975. Seattle City Council
Members Jeanette Williams (1914 – 2008) was the chief advocate for both
reforms, which generated little controversy at the time of their adoption. Legal tolerance of sexual minorities came under increasing
criticism from local conservative and fundamental leaders as, in 1977 and 1978,
former pop singer and orange juice spokesperson Anita Bryant championed repeals
of similar protections in Dade County, Florida, St. Paul-Minneapolis and
elsewhere. Local Initiative 13 sponsors and supporters included avowed
Christian fundamentalists and leaders of the right-wing John Birch Society.
|
August 3, 1978 |
8/23 | Seafair (prints) Seafair is an annual summer festival in Seattle, WA. The
celebration includes small neighborhood events and parades, hydroplane races,
the Torchlight Parade in downtown Seattle, and a Blue Angels flight
demonstration. The first Seafair took place in 1950. One of the main
attractions of the first 10-day Seafair festival was the Green Lake Aqua
Theater, which was constructed in a rush during the summer of 1950. Aqua
Theater stage shows were a Seafair attraction for nearly two decades and the
venue was host to a diverse range of 20th century performances including Bob
Hope in 1962, Led Zeppelin opening for Three Dog Night in 1969, and The
Grateful Dead played the Aqua Theater less than a week after Woodstock in 1969.
The theater was eventually demolished in 1979. Hydroplane boat races have always been an integral component of
Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now called “Miss Seafair”). The
event also has a variety of other mainstays including Seafair Pirates, Seafair
Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more. Hydroplane boat races have always been
an integral component of Seafair, as well as crowning a Seafair Queen (now
called “Miss Seafair”). The event also has a variety of other mainstays
including Seafair Pirates, Seafair Clowns, The Milk Carton Derby, and more.
Duplicates in box 64
|
August 1978 |
8/24 | Teacher's Strike (prints) The 1978 Teacher’s Strike was a multi-district strike including
Seattle, Everett, and University Place teachers. The strike consisted of a
teacher’s walkout. The strike lasted 3 weeks—from September 5 to September 27.
Teachers on strike were asking for an increase in wages and benefits. The
Seattle school board obtained a preliminary injunction that pressured the
teachers to return to work—despite none of their demands being met. The same
year, there were also teacher union disputes in Central Kitsap, Ellenburg, and
Centralia.
Duplicates in box 64
|
between September 5, 1978 and September 6, 1978 |
8/25 | Fashion - Menswear Association Fashion Show
(prints) |
September 10, 1978 |
8/26 | Teacher's Strike - Everett, WA (prints) The 1978 Teacher’s Strike was a multi-district strike including
Seattle, Everett, and University Place teachers. The strike consisted of a
teacher’s walkout. The strike lasted 3 weeks—from September 5 to September 27.
Teachers on strike were asking for an increase in wages and benefits. The
Seattle school board obtained a preliminary injunction that pressured the
teachers to return to work—despite none of their demands being met. The same
year, there were also teacher union disputes in Central Kitsap, Ellenburg, and
Centralia.
Duplicates in box 64
|
September 14, 1978 |
8/27 | Spider and web (print) |
September 21, 1976 |
8/28 | Shootout in Pierce County, WA (prints) Possibly in reference to the shootout that occurred in Pierce
County, Washington on October 6, 1978. A shootout occurred in connection to a
bank robbery. Pierce County Sheriff Ken Moran was shot and killed at the
shootout. A woman in a nearby home went outside to see what was going on,
unaware that she was witnessing a shootout. She started approaching Moran while
he tried to warn her to go back inside. While Moran was attempting to protect
the woman, he was shot and killed instantly. Eight suspects were arrested and
charged with robbery and first degree murder.
Duplicates in box 64
|
October 6, 1978 |
8/29 | Women and leaves (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 10, 1978 |
8/30 | Mountain people - Ski Patrol (prints) |
October 14, 1978 |
8/31 | Asbestos Poisoning - Leonard Herrman and Edna Herrman
(prints) |
October 16, 1978 |
8/32 | Boats - Tall Ship Sagres (prints) |
October 16, 1978 |
8/33 | Columbus Statue in Waterfront Park, Seattle, WA
(prints) |
October 16, 1978 |
8/34 | Kenneth Callahan (prints, negatives, and
slides) Kenneth Callahan (1905 – 1986) was an American painter and
muralist who served as a catalyst for Northwest artists in the mid-20th century
through his own painting, his work as assistant director and curator at the
Seattle Art Museum (SAM), and his writing about contemporary art. Callahan was
a somewhat controversial figure because of the conflicts of interest in his
positions as curator, artist, and citric. Callahan was born in Spokane,
Washington and was largely a self-taught artist. He briefly enrolled at the
University of Washington in 1924, but did not complete a degree. His work was
included in the first Whitney Biennial exhibition at the Whitney Museum in New
York City in 1933. The same year, he began his twenty-year tenure at SAM. For
the next twenty years, he also wrote a weekly arts column for The Seattle
Times. Callahan continued painting into the 1970s and 1980s, though he
had much lower output. However, Callahan did continue working in the arts in
varying capacities. In 1972, he designed costumes and sets for Seattle
Repertory Theatre’s production of Macbeth. In 1973, the Henry Art Gallery
presented Universal Voyages, the most comprehensive retrospective on his work.
In 1976, he painted a series of horses for an on-site restaurant at Longacres
racetrack. He was known as one of the Northwest Mystics—along with Guy
Anderson, Morris Graves, and Mark Tobey—who all shared a muted palette and
strong interest in Asian aesthetics, though Callahan did not consider himself
to be a mystic painter because he was uninterested in symbolism and he saw his
work as firmly rooted in nature and art history. His works are included in
collections all over the United States—including the Seattle Art Museum and the
Tacoma Art Museum.
|
October 26, 1978 |
8/35 | Jack Cunningham (prints) John Edward “Jack” Cunningham III (1931 - ) was a Republican
Congressman in the U.S. House of Representatives. He won a special election in
May 1977 when Brock Adams resigned to become Secretary of Transportation. He
lost his re-election to Mike Lowry in 1978. Before his term in the U.S. House
of Representatives, he served as a member of the Washington House of
Representatives from 1973 until 1975, and a member of the Washington Senate
from 1975 to 1977.
|
November 1, 1978 |
8/36 | Mike Lowery (prints) Michael Edward Lowry (1939 – 2017) was a Democratic politician
who served as the 20th governor of Washington from 1993 to 1997. His political
career ended abruptly following a sexual misconduct allegation made by his
deputy press secretary, Susanne Albright. Lowry served as a United States
representative from Washington’s 7th congressional district from 1979 –
1989.Lowry was born and raised in St. John, Washington and graduated
from Washington State University in 1962. He had a brief career as lobbyist for
Group Health Cooperative before being elected to the King County Council in
1975. He also twice ran unsuccessfully for the United States Senate. While
governor, his principal policy initiative was a statewide system of health
insurance with premiums based on ability to pay. However, he did not run for
reelection after Albright accused him of making inappropriate remarks and
fondling her. Before his death in 2017, Lowry was active in building
affordable housing for Washington’s migrant farm workers. He died on May 1st,
2017 at the age of 78 from complications of a stroke.
|
November 1, 1978 |
8/37 | Election Day (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 7, 1978 |
8/38 | Jacob Lawrence (prints) Jacob Lawrence (1917-2000) was an American painter known for his
portrayal of the Black American experience, using blacks and browns juxtaposed
with vivid colors. Lawrence referred to his style as “dynamic cubism,” though
by his own account the primary influence was not so much French art as the
shapes and colors of Harlem. Lawrence also taught, and spent 16 years as a
professor at the University of Washington. He is known for his modernist
illustrations of everyday life as well as epic narratives of African-American
history and historical figures. When he was 23 years old, he gained national
recognition for his 60-panel Migration Series painted on cardboard—depicting
the Great Migration of Black people from the rural South to the urban
North.After many years in New York, Lawrence and his wife and fellow
artist Gwendolyn Knight moved to the Pacific Northwest in 1970 where he had
been invited to teach art as a professor at the University of Washington.
Duplicates in box 64
|
November 13, 1978 |
8/39 | Fashion - Pike Street Market (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 22, 1978 |
8/40 | Seattle Fire Department - Pat King (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 23, 1978 |
8/41 | Barbara Brinkley (print) Barbara Bye Goesling (1936 – 2017) was born in Fort Worth, Texas
on February 19, 1936. Her family moved to Seattle when she was eight years old,
and she attended the Helen Bush School and Roosevelt High School in Seattle.
After a year at Stanford University, she graduated from the University of
Washington in 1958 where she joined the Pi Beta Phi sorority. She worked for
The Seattle Times during the 1962 World’s Fair, and later for Japan Airlines
when they opened a regional office in Seattle. In 1964, two members of the Seattle Symphony Board asked if she
would start a young support group for the Symphony, which eventually became the
Junior Women’s Symphony Association. Shortly after founding this group, she was
asked to serve on the boards of both the Seattle Opera Association and the
Pacific Northwest Ballet. In 2009, she became a Lifetime Director of the
Seattle Symphony Orchestra. She married WIlliam W. Brinkley in 1966, and they raised two
children together. She was a devoted advocate of the importance of
public/private partnerships in the arts, working on the board and commissions
of funding organizations such as the King County Arts Commission and the PONCHO
(Patrons of Northwest Civil, Cultural, and Charitable Organizations) Board of
Trustees.
Duplicates in box 64
|
November 27, 1978 |
8/42 | Children's Orthopedic Hospital (prints) |
December 11, 1978 |
8/43 | Junior League Holiday Luncheon and Frederick and Nelson
Fashion Show (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 12, 1978 |
8/44 | Bird in water (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 14, 1978 |
8/45 | The 101 Club Fashion Show and Luncheon
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 14, 1978 |
8/46 | Tacoma Fifteen Trial (prints) On December 8, 1978, a federal grand jury indicted 15 men in
Pierce County, Washington including Sheriff George V. Janovich (1928-2005) for
engaging in widespread racketeering conspiracy. The gang, known as “The
Enterprise” and known during their trial and post-indictment as “The Tacoma
Fifteen”, was led by Tacoma mobster John Joseph Carbone (1919-1998). The group
was charged with using assault, arson, extortion, bribery, and attempted murder
in an effort to control Pierce County’s topless-dancing tavern business. The
Enterprise engaged in insurance fraud, protection, prostitution, and illegal
gambling. The federal investigation was prompted by a cluster of arson at
taverns and home in Pierce County between 1972 and 1977, and resulted in 13
months of investigation and undercover work by FBI and BAFT (Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, and Firearms) agents. Because of extensive pretrial publicity, the
trial was held in San Francisco, California and began on March 19, 1979. The
trial lasted three months and called over 150 witnesses, included hundreds of
exhibits, and 77 tape recordings between defendants and undercover agents. The
case went to the jury on June 12, 1979 and on June 19, 1979, the jury returned
their verdicts, finding seven of the eight defendants guilty of racketeering
and a variety of other offenses. Not all members of the Tacoma Fifteen were
present at this trial because several pled guilty before a trial or government
witnesses.The Tacoma Fifteen includes: George V. Janovich, John J.
Carbone, his son Joseph M. Carbone, Ronald J. Williams, Frank J. Mazzuca,
LaMonte A. Zemek, Anthony J. Mladnich, Richard F. Caliguri, Robert M.
Valentine, Jackie M. Bentley, Michael D. Johnson, Leroy G. Husk, David W.
Levage, Harry E. Wilcox, and William L. Petit. They all served sentences
ranging from two years to 25 years. Levage was found not guilty at trial, but
was already serving 20 years in a state prison for arson and the charges
against Lusk were dismissed.
|
December 14, 1978 |
8/47 | Lynnwood Mall (prints) |
December 1978? |
8/48 | Fishing - Opening Day (contact sheets) |
1978 |
8/49 | Seattle Center - Fun Forest (slides and
negatives) Originally built for the 1962 World’s Fair, the 74-acre Seattle
Center is an arts, educational, tourism and entertainment center in Seattle. A
favorite spot at Seattle Center for many kids was the Fun Forest, an amusement
park complete with roller coasters and carnival-style games. The Fun Forest
closed in 2011 and since 2012 the site has been occupied by Chihuly Garden and
Glass, a long-term exhibition.
|
1978 |
8/50 | Esther Nethercutt (prints) |
1978 |
8/51 | Winter (slides and negatives) |
1978 |
8/52 | Fishing - Trout Opening Day (slides) |
1978 |
8/53 | Fashion (prints and negatives) |
1978 |
8/54 | Contest (prints) |
1978 |
8/55 | Favorite photos (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978 |
8/56 | Randy Greenfield (print) |
1978 |
8/57 | Guru (slides) |
1978? |
8/58 | Boats - Acadian Commander (negatives) |
1978? |
9/59 | Police Boat (print) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/60 | Washington Plaza, Trader Vic's (prints) Trader Vic’s was a Polynesian-themed chain restaurant founded in
1934 by Victor Bergeron Jr. (1902 – 1984) in California. The first franchised
Trader Vic’s opened in Seattle in 1940, and the chain expanded quickly during
the Tiki culture boom of the 1950s and 1960s. The Seattle branch moved to the
Washington Plaza Hotel (now the Seattle Westin) in 1969. The restaurant
permanently closed in June 1991.
|
1978? |
8/61 | Bernie Sigler (print) |
1978? |
8/62 | Pioneer Square Walking Tour (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/63 | Emmett Watson (prints) Emmett Watson (1918 -2001) was an American newspaper columnist
from Seattle, Washington whose columns ran in a variety of Seattle newspapers
over the span of more than 50 years. Initially a sportswriter, he is primarily
known for authoring a social commentary column for the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer from 1956 until 1982, when he moved to The Seattle Times and
continued there as a columnist until shortly before his death in 2001.Watson grew up in Seattle during the 1920s and 1930s. He was an
advocate through his column, as well as through a fictional organization called
“Lesser Seattle”, for limiting the growth and urban renewal that dramatically
altered the city’s landscape during the second half of the twentieth century.
Lesser Seattle was a parody of Greater Seattle Inc., which advocated for
several of Seattle’s civic improvement and development projects that Watson
considered ill-advised because of the influx of outsiders from California and
elsewhere that he thought would ruin the city. His column at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer was called “This,
Our City” in addition to other names throughout the years includes “This, Our
Town”. Watson was an early champion of civil rights, social reform, and the
anti-war movement, and would frequently write about these topics in his column.
In the early 1980s, Watson left the P-I after perceived unfair treatment by a
new editor, and an eventual reduction of his column’s frequency. By October 30,
1983, Watson’s column began appearing in The Seattle Times instead of the P-I.
At the Seattle Times, he continued to skewer the rich and powerful in his
columns, always fighting against the kind of development and modernization he
felt was destroying the city he knew and loved. During The Newspaper Guild’s
November 2000 strike against the Seattle Times, Watson, then in his eighties,
made regular daily appearances on the picket line. He also wrote for the
Seattle Union Record, the strike paper for the Pacific Northwest Newspaper
Guild. On February 18, 1979, Emmett Watson and his friend Sam Bryant
open the city’s first oyster bar. Watson sold his share of the Oyster Bar to
Bryant in 1987. Emmett Watson’s Oyster Bar in located in Seattle’s Pike Place
Market and is currently owned by Sam Bryant’s son, Thurman. In March 2001,
Watson underwent surgery for an abdominal aneurysm at Virginia Mason Medical
Center in Seattle and died of complications from the surgery on May 11, 2001 at
the age of 82.
|
1978? |
8/64 | Waterfront Streetcar (prints) The Waterfront Streetcar, or George Benson Waterfront Streetcar
Line, was a heritage streetcar line run by King County Metro in Seattle,
Washington. It raveled for 1.6 miles along Alaskan Way on the city’s waterfront
facing Elliott Bay, under the Alaskan Way Viaduct. The Waterfront Streetcar
used a fleet of five W2 trams from Melbourne, Australia, which arrived in
Seattle in 1978. The streetcar was in operation from May 29, 1982 until
November 18, 2005. The service was officially suspended when the maintenance
barn and Broad Street station were demolished to make room for the Seattle Art
Museum’s Olympic Sculpture Park.
|
1978? |
8/65 | Boats - Gilnetter Buyback (slides) |
1978? |
8/66 | Water Reservoir cleaning (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/67 | Swans (print) |
1978? |
8/68 | Dog (print) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/69 | House (prints and negatives) |
1978? |
8/70 | Initiative 61 (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/71 | Initiative 24 (prints) Initiative 24 was a ballot measure in the November 1980 election
in Seattle, Washington. The initiative reads, “Shall the City regulate
residential rent increases through a new board and restrict certain evictions,
condominium sales, and housing demolitions?” The initiative was defeated by
voters in the general election by 80,587 votes to 163,140 votes.
|
1978? |
8/72 | People (print) |
1978? |
8/73 | King Screens Magic House (prints) |
1978? |
8/74 | Brenda Jones (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/75 | Alan Knight (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/76 | Lake Katchees (print) |
1978? |
8/77 | Milissa Lamson (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/78 | Lady Liberty Duck (negatives) |
1978? |
8/79 | Street Musicians (slides) |
1978? |
8/80 | Fountain (negatives) |
1978? |
8/81 | Fishing - woman and child (slides) |
1978? |
8/82 | Wilderness Society (print) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/83 | Woodland Park Zoo (slides) |
1978? |
8/84 | Olympic Hotel (prints) |
1978? |
8/85 | Milfoil (print) |
1978? |
8/86 | Hunting Dogs (contact sheets) |
1978? |
8/87 | Taiwanese People celebrating Lunar New Year
(prints) |
1978? |
8/88 | Ned Skinner and Don Covey (prints) Ned Skinner is possibly David. E. “Ned” Skinner II (1920 –
1988). Skinner was a shipping heir and philanthropist who was one of the first
owners of the Space Needle and Seattle Seahawks. He was born in Seattle and
attended Lakeside School. His grandfather was David E. Skinner, who owned
Skinner and Eddy shipyard, the Pacific Steamship Co., and the Port Blakely
Mill. Ned Skinner graduated from Dartmouth College in 1942 and served aboard a
destroyer during World War II. He married Kayla Lagasa in 1942. After the death
of his father, G.W. Skinner in 1953, Ned took over the Alaska Steamship
Company. When it went into decline and ultimately closed in 1971, Ned branched
into real estate with the Skinner Corporation owning the Skinner Building, 5th
Avenue Theater, Pepsi Bottling, and NC Machinery. The company was listed as the
10th largest privately owned company in 1988. In 1972 Skinner and Herman
Sarkowsky were the two original investors in the Seattle Seahawks.Skinner was an active philanthropist in Seattle and supported
the Seattle Opera, the Pacific Northwest Ballet, the Seattle Repository
Theater, Pacific Science Center, and Seattle Art Museum through his
philanthropy. He founded the Skinner Foundation in 1956 and donated 5 percent
of the Skinner Corporation’s profits to the foundation. Donald “Don” J. Covey (1928 – 2018) was a businessman from
Seattle. He spent 39 years of his career in property development management
with UNICO Properties—beginning with the company as their president in 1975.
Covey graduated from Franklin High School and the University of Washington.
While in college, the Korean War began. Covey’s college years were interrupted
when he served as a staff sergeant with the First Marine Division and
participated in the Chosin Reservoir campaign in North Korea during the winter
of 1950. While at UNICO, he played a large role in the development of One and
Two Union Square, two large office buildings in Downtown Seattle. He was a
member of many Seattle organizations while working at UNICO, including Greater
Seattle Chamber of Commerce and the Downtown Seattle Association. Covey died in
2018 after complications due to Parkinson’s. He was 90 years old. In 1978, the Fifth Avenue Theater shut its doors. UNICO pushed
to restore and modify the historic theater because of a strong public opinion
to keep the theater. UNICO lead a collation of 42 other businesses to create
the nonprofit 5th Avenue Theater Association and underwriting for a $2.6
million loan for its physical restoration. UNICO also provided construction
management at no charge. Covey and Skinner’s connection to each other may be their
involvement in the reopening of the 5th Avenue Theater—Covey as a leader of
UNICO’s restoration project, and Skinner’s role as an owner of the 5th Avenue
Theater.
|
1978? |
8/89 | Laribee State Park, WA (contact sheets and
negatives) |
1978? |
8/90 | Bellevue Art Show (negatives) |
1978? |
8/91 | Bear Creek Recording Studio, Woodinville, WA
(slides) Bear Creek Recording Studio is a residential recording studio
located in Woodinville, Washington situated in a barn on a 10-acre farm. Known
for its rural farmhouse location, a number of artists have recorded at the
studio including Brandi Carlile, Soundgarden, James Brown, Modest Mouse, Eric
Clapton, and Lionel Richie. The studio was established in 1977 by Joe and Manny
Hadlock. Originally a 19th century dairy barn, the 1750 square foot structure
was transformed into a recording studio by Joe Hadlock and architect Doug
Thompson.
|
1978? |
8/92 | University of Washington - professor
(negatives) |
1978? |
8/93 | Kids at the Beach (contact sheets) |
1978? |
8/94 | Ray Kirlin possibly holding camera once owned by Edward
Curtis (print) |
1978? |
8/95 | Flag Pole Painter (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1978? |
8/96 | Color (prints) |
1978? |
8/97 | University of Washington Campus (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1979 |
8/98 | Sunbathing (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1979 |
8/99 | AP Contest (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1979 |
8/100 | Locks (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1981 |
8/101 | Neil Diamond (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1981 |
8/102 | Smith Tower (prints and slides) |
between 1978 and 1982 |
8/103 | Boats - Crab Fishing (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1982 |
8/104 | Clouds (prints and slide) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1983 |
8/105 | Washington - North Cascades Highway (prints and
slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1985 |
8/106 | Metro (prints and negatives) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1986 |
8/107 | Boats - Coastguard (slides and negatives) |
between 1978 and 1987 |
8/108 | Golden Gardens Park - Seattle, WA (slides and
negatives) |
between 1978 and 1988 |
8/109 | Daffodils (slides, negatives, and prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1978 and 1989 |
8/110 | Pike Street Market (slides and negatives) |
between 1978 and 1988 |
8/111 | Boats (slides and negatives) |
between 1978 and 1989 |
8/112 | Goodyear Blimp (slides, prints, and contact
sheets) |
between 1978 and 1990 |
8/113 | prints |
January 2, 1979 |
8/114 | Washington State Legislature (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
January 8, 1979 |
8/115 | Murder - 2 Co-Eds in Bellingham (prints) On January 12, 1979, Bellingham Police detectives arrested
Kenneth A. Bianchi as the prime suspect in the strangulation murders of two
Western Washington University students, Karen L. Mandic and Diane A. Wilder. He
confessed to the crimes and then began providing information about the serial
killing of at least 10 women in Los Angeles, California, by the infamous
“Hillside Strangler”. To save himself from the death penalty, Bianchi agreed to
plead guilty to the two murders in Bellingham and to five murders in Los
Angeles, and testify against Angelo Buono, his accomplice in the California
slayings. He received eight life sentences and was incarcerated at the
Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla.
|
January 13, 1979 |
8/116 | Bob Kap - Professor of Chinese History, University of
Washington (prints) |
January 14, 1979 |
8/117 | Stampede Pass Weather Station (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
January 15, 1979 |
8/118 | Airplane Crash into Elliott Bay (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
January 17, 1979 |
8/119 | Jehovah's Witnesses (prints) |
January 24, 1979 |
8/120 | Bellevue Off-Campus School -- teenage parents
(prints) |
January 24, 1979 |
8/121 | Mt. Rainier Plane Crash (slides and
negatives) |
January 30, 1979 |
8/122 | Mt. Rainier Plane Crash (prints) |
January 30, 1979 |
8/123 | Stampede Pass, WA (slides) |
January 1979 |
8/124 | Snow Chains on Car (slides) |
February 3, 1979 |
8/125 | Demonstration- Native Americans Against Marina in
Commencement Bay, Tacoma, WA (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 7, 1979 |
8/126 | Seattle Post-Intelligencer Printing Problems
(print) |
February 12, 1979 |
8/127 | Damaged Planes at Paine Field after windstorm (prints
and negatives) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 13, 1979 |
8/128 | Steve Martin Look A Like Contest (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 13, 1979 |
9/1 | Susan King - Chair of U.S. Consumer's Product Commission
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
February 16, 1979 |
9/2 | Avalanche - Victor Bradley (print) Possibly Victor Bradley of the Cascade Rescue Company. Bradley
invented the first aluminum rickshaw style toboggan in 1962, now called the
“Cascade Toboggan”.
Duplicates in box 64
|
February 20, 1979 |
9/3 | Boats - The Helena Star (prints and slides) The Helena Star was a freighter that was seized by the United
States Coast Guard in 1978 with 37 tons of marijuana on board. At the time, it
was the biggest maritime marijuana bust in West Coast History valued at $74
million. A Coast Guard cutter intercepted the Helena Star about 130 miles
southwest of Cape Flattery on April 17, 1978 and found bales of marijuana
inside the boat. Federal investigators at the time said the plan was to use
Michael Lund’s 61-foot facing sloop, the “Joli”, to bring the load ashore at
his home on Sequim Bay. Several people were arrested in connection with drug
trafficking activities on the Helen Star- -including the boat’s captain Roman
Ferrer Rubies and first mate Pedro Zuniga Vera. Michael Lund, a former
world-champion skier, was arrested by U.S. marshals in 2001 in connection to
his role in the trafficking. The 167-foot Helena Star sank in January 2013. Its
remains were broken up and sold for scrap as part of Washington State’s
Derelict Vessel Program.
Duplicates in box 64
|
February 21, 1979 |
9/4-9/5 | Solar Eclipse Goldendale, WA (prints, negatives, and
slide) The solar eclipse on February 26, 1979 reached totality in
Portland, OR, Mt. Rainier, WA, Goldendale, WA, and Yakima, WA. Photojournalist
Grant Haller captured images of the event in Goldendale, WA in rural Klickitat
County. The location includes a Stone Henge replica and hilltop observatory,
including people in “new age” clothing, outdoor gear, and using paper eclipse
glasses. The Seattle Times reported that disciples of neo-pagan religions said
they were led there by a vision, and the neo-pagans called it their largest
gathering in North American history. Motels were sold out within 50 miles of
Goldendale. Meanwhile in Seattle, the eclipse was only partial. The sky was
cloudy, and only a slightly darker sky was any indication of the event. The
Pacific Science Center chartered a Boeing 727 to fly 94 passengers to a visible
view of the eclipse. Passengers were allowed 25 seconds of time at the window
before vacating for others.
Duplicates in box 64
|
February 26, 1979 |
9/6 | Demonstration (prints) |
February 1979 |
9/7 | Chiropractor (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
March 2, 1979 |
9/8 | Fashion (prints) |
March 5, 1979 |
9/9 | David Checkley, "Kite Man" (prints) David Checkley was chairperson of the Seattle Kite Association,
kite maker, and First Vice President of American Kitefliers Association.
|
March 7, 1979 |
9/10 | Chocolate Store (prints) |
March 13, 1979 |
9/11 | Sunset (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
March 14, 1979 |
9/12 | Richard S. Page (prints) In 1974 Page was appointed to run the transit system of the
Seattle transit system. In June 1977, he was nominated and confirmed to head
the Urban Mass Transit Administration.
Duplicates in box 64
|
March 14, 1979 |
9/13 | Roller Skating at Green Lake (slides) |
March 24, 1979 |
9/14 | Cars - New Research Vehicle (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
March 26, 1979 |
9/15 | Valerie Harper (prints) Valerie Harper (1939 - 2019) was an actress, dancer, singer, and
writer. Harper worked at the Seattle Repertory Company in Seattle, WA in the
1974-1975 season. She was a special guest of the company, with Anthony Zerbe,
and acted in two one act shows, Lunchtime and Halloween both written by Leonard
Melfi. Harper is known for her role as Rhoda Morgenstern on the Mary Tyler
Moore Show (1970 – 1977) and its spin-off Rhoda (1974 – 1978). Harper was born in Suffern, New York on August 22, 1939. She
grew up all over the country, as her family moved around to accommodate her
father’s job at a salesman. She trained as a ballerina and got her start as a
performer on Broadway, working as a dancer and a chorus girl. She also worked
at Chicago’s Second City Theater. After the final season of Rhoda, Harper
appeared in a number of television movies and stared in a third sitcom, Valerie
beginning in 1986. The series didn’t achieve success of her previous shows, and
Harper was removed from her role after the second season, though the show
continued for additional seasons under other names. She sued Lorimar Television
for wrongful firing, and the jury agreed, awarding her $1.4 million in
compensationHarper was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2009. The cancer spread
to her brain in 2013, and her prognosis was poor. However, she lived for nearly
10 years after her initial diagnosis. She died in 2019, survived by her husband
Tony Cacciotti and their daughter Cristina.
|
March 30, 1979 |
9/16 | Brandt Morgan (prints) Brandt Morgan is a writer and an editor, including books from
the Tom Brown’s series of survival guides.
|
April 2, 1979 |
9/17 | Boeing 767 mock-up (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
April 4, 1979 |
9/18 | Llamas (prints and contact sheets) |
April 10, 1979 |
9/19 | Dr. Elizabeth Harkins (prints) |
April 11, 1979 |
9/20 | Income Tax - people filling out forms
(prints) |
April 12, 1979 |
9/21 | Shoot Out (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
April 18, 1979 |
9/22 | Boats - Cement Canoe (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
April 25, 1979 |
9/23 | Fire - Pier 52 (prints) Both Pier 50 and Pier 52 are used as operating ferry terminals
for Washington State Ferries and the King County Water Taxi. Pier 52 goes to
Bainbridge Island and Bremerton in Kitsap County, WA. Pier 52 was historically
known as Colman Dock, originally built by Scottish engineer James Colman in
1882. It burned down with most of the city in the Great Seattle Fire of 1889,
but it was quickly rebuilt.
|
May 3, 1979 |
9/24 | Off-roading (contact sheets and prints) |
May 7, 1979? |
9/25-9/26 | Woodland Park Zoo - Celebes Crested Macaques (prints and
slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
May 10, 1979 |
9/27 | Cascara Bark Gatherers (slides and prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
May 11, 1979 |
9/28 | Demonstration - Native American Fishing Rights
(prints) Beginning with treaties in 1854 and 1855, Native American tribes
of Washington ceded their land to the United States but had reserved the right
to fish as they had always done, including fishing at traditional locations
that were off the designated reservations. Over time, the state of Washington
had infringed on the treaty rights of the tribes despite losing a series of
court cases on the issue. In 1974 United States District Judge George Boldt
ruled that American Indian tribes in the State of Washington had the right to
harvest salmon and other fish in accordance with the treaties. The decision
caused an immediate negative reaction from some citizens of Washington and
evoked strong emotions. Non-Indian commercial fishermen ignored the ruling and
the state was reluctant (or at times refused) to enforce the law, prompting
Judge Boldt to order the United States Coast Guard and federal law enforcement
agencies to enforce his rulings. This demonstration was likely connected to the
efforts of Native Americans to maintain their fishing rights promised in
treaties.
|
May 12, 1979 |
9/29 | John Connally (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
May 15, 1979 |
9/30 | Demonstration - Anti-Nuclear (prints) In 1979, the American public was concerned about the release of
radioactive gas from the Three Mile Island accident on March 28, 1979. The
Three Mile Island accident was a partial meltdown of a reactor at Three Mile
Island Nuclear Generating Station in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania near
Harrisburg, and a subsequent radiation leak that occurred on March 29, 1979.
There were many demonstrations across the country in the following months, as a
result of growing public concern for the side effects of nuclear power.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 2, 1979 |
9/31 | Elmer Dixon, Civil Rights Activist (prints) Elmer Dixon was born in Chicago and moved to Seattle at age 7
when his father took a job at Boeing. Dixon grew up in Seattle’s Central
District, attending Garfield High School. While at Garfield High, Dixon helped
organized the school’s Black Student Union in 1968. The same year, with his
older brother Aaron Dixon, he co-founded the Seattle Chapter of the Black
Panther Party. He served the Chapter as its Field Marshall as well as the
Breakfast Program Coordinator. When the Seattle Chapter closed its office and
some of its core members moved to Oakland in 1972, Elmer, under parole and
unable to move to Oakland, stayed in Seattle and reorganized the Chapter. He
worked to sustain the Party’s breakfast program and health clinic, maintaining
the Panther organization until 1976 and some programs into the 1980s. After the
cessation of the Party, Elmer Dixon worked as a diversity consultant.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 5, 1979 |
9/32 | Demonstration - Truck Drivers protesting gas shortage on
I-5 (prints) This protest is possibly in connection to the 1979 energy
crisis.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 7, 1979 |
9/33 | Judge Soderland (prints) Stanley C. Soderland (1917—2001) was a judge of the King County
Superior Court, who clerked for Justice William O. Douglas of the U.S. Supreme
Court. Soderland was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and grew up on a farm
near Snohomish, Washington. He graduated from the University of Washington in
1936 and received his LL.B. degree from the University of Washington Law School
in 1939, graduating first of his class. He served as the first full term clerk
for Justice William O. Douglas from 1939 – 1940. Soderland practiced personal
injury law in Seattle from 1943 to 1964. In 1964, he was appointed a judge in King County Superior Court
and served until his retirement in 1979. In 1971, he oversaw the grand jury led
by prosecutors Chris Bayley and Evan Schwab investigating police payoffs, and
helped lead an investigation into poor conditions at the King County Jail,
which resulted in a report recommending reforms. Drawing on his years as a
trial lawyer, he published pattern jury instructions for use in civil cases in
1971. In 1976, the Washington State Trial Lawyers Association voted him “judge
of the year”. He was married twice, and had one daughter, Diana Crittendon, and
four sons, Stephen, Douglas, David, and Carl. The family resided in the
Laurelhurst neighborhood of Seattle and had a second home on Shaw Island in the
San Juan Islands in Washington.
|
June 13, 1979 |
9/34 | Demonstration - Third Annual Seattle Lesbian and Gay
Pride March (prints) Nearly 2,0000 gay demonstrators and their supporters marched
through downtown Seattle on June 30, 1979 as a reminder that they still face
discrimination. This was the third annual Northwest Lesbian/Gay Pride March
that was the finale of a week of festivities. The demonstrators marched from
Freeway Park to Occidental Park with little counter-demonstrators present. Dean
Leighton, baton twirler, led the group of mostly young demonstrators through
the march’s route. Demonstrators chanted various phrases including “gay rights
now” and “gay, straight, black, white – same struggle, same fight”.
Duplicates in box 64
|
June 30, 1979 |
9/35 | Flowers (slides) |
June 1979 |
9/36 | Demonstration - Truck Drivers Against 55 Miles Per Hour
Speed Limit (slides) |
June 1979 |
9/37 | Freeway Park, Seattle, WA (prints) |
July 5, 1979 |
9/38 | Bogta Skorek (prints) |
July 5, 1979 |
9/39 | Wooden Boat Show (prints) |
July 7, 1979 |
9/40 | Metal Detector (contact sheets and slides) |
July 13, 1979? |
9/41 | San Diego Chicken (KGB Chicken) (print) |
July 15, 1979 |
9/42 | Morganna Roberts rushing the field, Kansas City Royals
(prints) Morganna Roberts (1947 - ), also known as “Morganna”, “the
Kissing Bandit” and “Morganna the Wild One” is an entertainer who is known for
rushing the field on many occasions during Major League Baseball Games to kiss
players, including Nolan Ryan, Peter Rose, Johnny Bench, George Brett (two
times), Steve Garvey, Len Barker, and Cal Ripkin, Jr. She’s been described as
“baseball’s unofficial mascot” and the “grand dame of baseball”. She has also
rushed the court during National Basketball Association games, where she once
kissed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
These images are from the 1979 Major League Baseball All-Star
Game at the Kingdome in Seattle. Morganna kissed George Brett, the
third-baseman from the Kansas City Royals.
|
July 17, 1979 |
9/43 | Gene Aven (print) |
July 18, 1979 |
9/44 | Lynnwood Rotary Air Show (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
July 21, 1979 |
9/45 | Forest Fire - Omak, WA (prints) Omak, WA is in north central Washington. Omak acts as the
gateway to the Okanogan National Forest, where this forest fire possibly
occurred.
Duplicates in box 64
|
July 26, 1979 |
9/46 | King County Jail (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
July 27, 1979 |
9/47 | Peter Duchin, conductor (prints) Peter Oelrichs Duchin (1937 -- ) is an American pianist and band
leader. Duchin was born in New York City, the son of pianist and band leader
Eddy Duchin. His mother was Marjorie Oelrichs, a Newport, Rhode Island and New
York City socialite who died unexpectedly when Peter was five days old. Peter’s
father was Jewish, and his mother was removed from the New York Social Register
for marrying him. Duchin was educated at Eaglebrook School and the Hotchkiss
School in New England. He studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, France before
returning home to graduate from Yale University. Duchin formed his first professional band, which played at the
St. Regis Hotel in New York City, in 1962 thanks in part to his family name and
the networking it had made possible. By 2009, Duchin’s band had played an
estimated 6,000 performances.
These photos are probably from a performance of Peter Duchin and
his band in Seattle, WA.
Duplicates in box 64
|
July 27, 1979 |
9/48 | Demonstration - gay people protesting police violence
(contact sheets) |
July 1979 |
9/49 | Woodland Park Zoo - Snakes (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
August 4, 1979 |
9/50 | Florence, Oregon (slides) |
August 1979 |
9/51 | Oregon (slides) |
August 1979 |
9/52 | Ringling Brothers Circus (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
September 17, 1979 |
9/53 | Sailboats (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
September 20, 1979 |
9/54 | Demonstration - Anti Ferdinand Marcus
(prints) Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos Sr. (1917 – 1989) was a
Filipino politician who was the tenth President of the Philippines from 1965 –
1986. A leading member of the New Society Movement, he ruled as a dictator
under martial law from 1972 until 1981. His rule was infamous for its
corruption, extravagance, and brutality. During martial law, the U.S.
government provided $2.5 billion in bilateral military and economic aid to the
Marcos regime. In a 1979 U.S. Senate report, it was stated that U.S. officials
were aware, as early as 1973, that Philippines government agents were in the
United States to harass Filipino dissidents. In June 1981, two anti-Marco labor
activists were assassinated outside a union hall in Seattle. This 1979 anti-Marcos demonstration was possibly connected to
martial law in the Philippines, or U.S. funding of the Marcos regime.
|
September 21, 1979 |
9/55 | Dalai Lama at Seattle University Convocation (slides,
prints, and negatives) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 4, 1979 |
9/56 | Sun (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 7, 1979 |
9/57 | Phil and Steve Meyer (prints) Possibly Steve Paul Myer (1954 - ), a former professional
American football player who played four NFL seasons from 1976 – 1979 for the
Seattle Seahawks as quarterback.
Duplicates in box 64
|
October 9, 1979 |
9/58 | Rimrock Lake, WA (prints and contact sheets) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 11, 1979 |
9/59 | Tom Wolfe (prints) Tom Wolfe (1930 – 2018) was an American author and journalist
widely known for his association with New Journalism, a style of news writing
and journalism developed in the 1960s and 1970s that incorporated literary
techniques. Wolfe began his career as a regional newspaper reporter in the
1950s. His best-selling book “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test” brought his work
to national attention in 1968. Wolfe’s book “The Right Stuff” was released in 1979, Wolfe was
possibly touring and promoting his newest book while in Seattle, WA in October
1979.
Duplicates in box 64
|
October 22, 1979 |
9/60 | Hotel Lewiston (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 23, 1979 |
9/61 | Anne Bergman (prints) Possibly Ann Bergman, publisher and editor of "Seattle’s Child",
a guide to kid-friendly activities in Seattle.
Duplicates in box 64
|
October 25, 1979 |
9/62 | Fashion (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 30, 1979 |
9/63 | Heidi- Gloria (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 30, 1979 |
9/64 | Witches (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
October 31, 1979 |
9/65 | Rimrock Lake, WA (slides) |
October 1979 |
9/66 | Lori Engles (print) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 1, 1979 |
9/67 | The L.A. Four (band) (prints) The L.A. Four was a jazz quartet that performed in Los Angeles,
California from 1974 – 1982. Its members were guitarist Laurindo Almeida,
saxophonist and flutist Bud Shank, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer Shelly Manne,
replaced by Jeff Hamilton in 1977.
Duplicates in box 64
|
November 6, 1979 |
9/68 | Demonstration - Abortion, Pro-Choice
(prints) Washington State has a strong history of public support for
abortion rights. Abortion was made legal in Washington in 1970. A referendum on
legalizing early pregnancy abortions was on the 1970 election ballot. When
Washington made abortion legal through the referendum, it was the first state
in the country to do so. The landmark supreme court case, Roe v. Wade that
ruled states could not regulate abortion in the first trimester, was not issued
until 1973.
Duplicates in box 64
|
November 12, 1979 |
9/69 | Bathtub Races (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 13, 1979 |
9/70 | Free U.S. Hostages in Iran banner during Seattle
SuperSonics Game (print) |
November 14, 1979 |
9/71 | Betty Harrigan (print) |
November 16, 1979? |
9/72 | Trudy Bailey - Clown (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 20, 1979 |
9/73 | Preschool (prints) |
November 20, 1979 |
9/74 | Demonstration - Protesting U.S. Policy in Iran,
University of Washington (prints) Protesting U.S. Policy in Iran at UW Nov 28 1979 – This protest
is possibly in connection to the Iran Hostage Crisis, which began on November
4, 1979. 52 American diplomats and citizens were held hostage for 444 days from
November 4, 1979 until January 20, 1981, after a group of Iranian college
students belonging to the Muslim Student Followers of the Imam’s Line, who
supported the Iranian Revolution, took over the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. The
hostage crisis is at least partially responsible for the severed diplomatic
ties between Iran and the United States that has been in effect since April
1980. Revolutionary students feared the power of the United
States—particularly the CIA—to overthrow a new Iranian government. Before the
Revolution, the U.S. was Iran’s foremost economic and military partner. This
facilitated the modernization of Iran’s infrastructure and industry, with as
many as 30,000 American expatriates residing in the country in a technical,
consulting, or teaching capacity. Some argue that the transformation was too
rapid, which could have fueled unrest and discontent in Iran.
Includes photograph of UW graduate James Hettler
counterprotesting
Duplicates in box 64
|
November 28, 1979 |
9/75 | Ronald Reagan visit to Seattle (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
November 30, 1979 |
9/76 | Winter Frost (prints) |
November 1979 |
9/77 | Submarine Rescue (prints and contact sheets) |
December 1, 1979 |
9/78 | Solar Water Heater (negatives and contact
sheets) |
December 4, 1979 |
9/79 | Fashion (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 5, 1979 |
9/80 | Korean Consul General, Yoon Kul Chang
(prints) |
December 7, 1979 |
9/81 | House knocked down (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 14, 1979 |
9/82 | Jerry Brown (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 15, 1979 |
9/83 | Flood - Port Angeles area (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between December 17, 1979 and9/8 December 18, 1979 |
9/84 | Snoqualmie Valley Flood (prints) |
December 18, 1979 |
9/85 | Pacific Science Center - Science Week
(prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
December 27, 1979 |
9/86 | M. Burke Walker (prints) M. Burke Walker is a director who worked at theaters and
theatrical companies in Seattle including A Contemporary Theater (ACT), The
Empty Space Theatre, Seattle Shakespeare Company, and Seattle Repertory Theatre
from 1973 until roughly 2009, with a few directing credits outside of Seattle
throughout the time period. Walker directed “The Sea Horse” in August 1978 and
“Artichoke” in 1980, both with ACT.
|
December 31, 1979 |
9/87 | University of Washington Band (prints) |
1979 |
9/88 | Olympic Mountains (prints) |
1979 |
9/89 | Ivar Haglund (slides) Haglund (1905 – 1985) was a Seattle restauranteur and folk
singer best known for founding Ivar’s seafood restaurant chain based in
Seattle, WA. Ivar’s also owns the Seattle-based burger restaurant chain Kidd
Valley Hamburgers. During his life, Haglund was known as “King of the
Waterfront”. Haglund was born to Scandinavian parents on March 21, 1905. His
father, Johan Ivar Haglund was Swedish and his mother Daisy Hanson Haglund was
Norwegian. His mother’s parents had bought Alki Point from Seattle pioneer Doc
Maynard in 1868. Daisy Haglund died in 1908, and Ivar was subsequently raised
by his father and Daisy’s older sister Lorena Smith and brother Edmund. He
graduated from the University of Washington in 1928 with a degree as a
stockbroker. In 1938, Haglund established Seattle’s first aquarium at Pier
54, along with a fish-and-chips stand. This stand was the precursor of
Haglund’s first restaurant, “Acres of Clams”, which opened in 1946. By 1965,
Haglund began shooting fireworks over Elliott Bay every Independence Day. He
also became a radio personality and a champion of regional folk music. Ivar
bought Seattle’s Smith Tower in 1976. In 1983, he was elected port commissioner
after filing as a prank. Haglund died of a heart attack just over a year later.
Though he was married twice, he had no children. He left his estate principally
to the University Washington School of Business in support of the University
Restaurant Program.
|
1979 |
9/90 | Wire Stakes (slides) |
1979 |
9/91 | Favorite photos (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1979 |
9/92 | Bob Walsh (prints and slides) Bob Walsh (1940 – 2017) was a Puget Sound region entrepreneur,
business consultant, and sports executive. Walsh was born in Winthrop,
Massachusetts in 1940. He worked as a radio and television producer at WMAC in
the Boston area. He then moved to KABC in Los Angeles. While working at KABC,
he hired basketball player Bill Russell as a drive-time host. When Russell
resigned his position at KABC in 1973 to become head coach and general manager
of the Seattle SuperSonics, he hired Walsh as his assistant general manager.
During his tenure with the Sonics, Walsh negotiated to bring the 1974 NBA
All-Star Game to Seattle. Walsh left the SuperSonics in 1977, and became a
sports agent for clients including Jim Zorn and Steve Largent of the Seattle
Seahawks. Walsh also brought the 1984 NCAA Final Four basketball
tournament to the Kingdome in Seattle. Largely through the promotion efforts of
Walsh and his company, Bob Walsh and Associates, the phrase “March Madness” was
coined. Walsh also helped promote Seattle’s rebrand from “Queen City” to
“Emerald City” in the late 1980s by reaching out contacts in the NFL and at
Sports Illustrated and convinced them to refer to Seattle as “Emerald City” on
broadcasts and in print. Walsh’s company also promoted the 1990 Goodwill Games.
He was inducted into the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame in 2013.
Duplicates in box 64
|
1979? |
9/93 | Playground Equipment (print) |
1979? |
9/94 | Photography- classic photographs (slides) |
1979? |
9/95 | Harvey J. Feldman (prints) Harvey J. Feldman (1931 – 2009) was an American diplomat best
known for planning the 1972 Nixon visit to China. Feldman served in Hong Kong
for eight years, Taiwan for six years, and Japan for four years. He continued
involvement in relations with China when he became the Director of the Office
of Republic of China Affairs in September 1977. In that capacity, he and Lee
Marks drafted the Taiwan Relations Act, which was passed into law in 1979. On
August 2, 1979, he was appointed to the position of U.S. ambassador to Papua
New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, which he held until May 25, 1981. He later
served as an alternative U.S. representative to the United Nations. He retired
in 1986. After his retirement, Feldman continued his involvement with China
affairs. He became a fellow in China Policy of The Heritage Foundation, a
conservative think tank. He was also a board member of the Jewish Institute for
National Security Affairs. He died on February 24, 2009 from complications from
aortic dissection.
|
1979? |
9/96 | Convention and Visitors Bureau (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
1979? |
9/97 | Baby Born at Home (slides) |
1979? |
9/98 | Hot U Spark Plugs Poster (print) |
1979? |
9/99 | Tom and Dixie Porter (prints) |
1979? |
9/100 | Furniture (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
1979? |
9/101 | Margo Smith (contact sheets) |
1979? |
9/102 | Janic Paynter (prints) |
1979? |
9/103 | Megan Cole (contact sheets) Megan Cole, also known professionally as Megan Elizabeth Cole,
was an actress who performed in various theater and companies in Seattle,
including A Contemporary Theatre (ACT), Intiman Theatre, and several other
theaters outside of Seattle—mainly in California. She was active from 1974
until 2010.
|
1979? |
9/104 | possibly Shirley Hodser (prints) |
1979? |
9/105 | Jail (contact sheets) |
1979? |
9/106 | Ruth Kennedy (prints) |
1979? |
9/107 | Worldwide Marriage Encounters, marriage retreats
(prints) Worldwide Marriage Encounters is a faith-based marriage
enrichment for couples.
|
1979? |
9/108 | Winter Snow (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1979 and 1980 |
9/109 | Dragon boat (slides) |
between 1979 and 1980? |
9/110 | Sheep (slides and prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1979 and 1981 |
9/111 | Port Townsend, WA (prints and negatives) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1979 and 1982 |
9/112 | Seattle Buildings (slides) |
between 1979 and 1982 |
9/113 | West Seattle Bridge (prints) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1979 and 1982 |
9/114 | Greenlake, Seattle, WA (prints and slides) Duplicates in box 64
|
between 1979 and 1983 |
9/115 | Keechelus Lake, WA (slides) |
between 1979 and 1983 |
9/116 | slide show (slides) |
between 1979 and 1985? |
Box | ||
10 | Negatives, Prints, and Slides Non-sports photographs taken between January and November 1980.
Includes photographs of the Tacoma Smelter, Heart (band), The Who (band), Dance
of the Eagles performance, paper plane contest, Communist demonstration,
Seattle Aquarium, Seafair pirates, boats, model airplanes, and many others.
|
1980 |
11 | Negatives, Prints, and Slides Non-sports photographs taken between October and December 1980,
as well as 1980 more broadly. Includes Haller's favorite photographs,
photographs of Warren Magnuson, a tea ceremony, street musicians, commercial
airplanes, fishing, boats, and many others.
|
1980-1991 |
12 | Negatives, Prints, and Slides Non-sports photographs taken principally in the 1980s. Includes
photographs of fire boats, strawberries, University of Washington Herb Garden,
an Anti-Draft demonstration, a Log Show, Canadian Sikhs protest, portfolio
firsts, and many others.
|
approximately 1970-1989 |
17 | 1980 Slides and prints
|
1980 |
18 | 1980-1981 Negatives, some prints and slides
|
1980-1981 |
19 | 1980-1981 Prints and slides
|
1980-1987 |
20 | 1981 Negatives, slides, some prints
|
1981 |
21 | 1981-1982 Prints, slides, and negatives. Negatives organized
chronologically by month.
|
1981-1982 |
22 | 1982 Negatives, organized chronologically by month, and some slides.
Includes sports, organized by subject.
|
1982 |
23 | 1982 Slides with few negatives and prints. Organized by subject.
|
1982-1989 |
24 | 1982 Slides, some negatives and prints. Organized by subject.
|
1982-1985 |
25 | 1982-1983 Slides, negatives, and some prints. Organized by subject, and
some negatives organized chronologically.
|
1982-1983 |
26 | 1983 Slides, negatives, and few prints
|
1983 |
27 | 1983 Slides with few prints, organized by subject.
|
1983-1986 |
28 | 1983-1984 Negatives and slides, organized chronologically.
|
1983-1984 |
29 | 1984 Slides, some negatives, and few prints. Organized by subject
matter.
|
1983-1988 |
30 | 1984-1985 Slides and negatives.
|
1984-1985 |
31 | 1985 Slides and few negatives, organized by subject.
|
1985 |
32 | 1985-1986 Slides and some negatives.
|
1985-1986 |
33 | 1986 Negatives and slides, organized chronologically by month, some
by subject.
|
1986 |
34 | 1986 Slides, few prints and negatives, organized by subject.
|
1976-1986 |
35 | 1986 Slides and a few prints, organized by subject.
|
1986-1987 |
36 | 1986-1987 Slides and negatives.
|
1986-1987 |
37 | 1987 Slides with some prints, organized by month.
|
1987-1989 |
38 | 1987 Slides
|
1983-1987 |
39 | 1987-1988 Slides, prints, and few negatives.
|
1980-1987 |
40 | 1988 Negatives and slides, labeled by month. Some folders labeled
with sports. Includes favorite prints organized by year and magazine
prints.
|
1972-1988 |
41 | 1988 Slides, organized by subject.
|
1988 |
42 | Miscellaneous: 1972-1992, 2003, 1990 Prints, negatives, and slides. Magazine prints, slides from
binders, and information from the newspaper strike in 200-2001. Includes
negatives and slides from 1990, including Goodwill games.
|
1986-2003 |
43 | 1989 Mostly negatives, some slides
|
1989 |
44 | 1989-1990 Negatives and slides.
|
1989-1990 |
45 | 1990 Negatives and slides.
|
1990 |
46 | 1990 Negatives and slides, some prints, includes sports.
|
1990 |
47 | 1991 Mostly 35MM film, some slides. Mostly labeled by month.
|
1991 |
48 | 1991-1992 Negatives and slides
|
1991-1992 |
49 | 1992 Negatives, some slides, and few prints.
|
1992 |
50 | 1992-1993 Mostly negatives, some slides and prints.
|
1992-1993 |
51 | 1993-1994 Mostly negatives, some slides. Includes photo album from Hawaii
trip to photograph Bill Gate's wedding.
|
1993-1994 |
52 | 1994 Negatives
|
1994 |
53 | 1994-1995 Negatives
|
1994-1995 |
54 | 1995-1996 Mostly negatives
|
1995-1996 |
55 | 1996-1997 Mostly negatives, a few prints, mostly sports
|
1996-1997 |
56 | 1997 Negatives, some prints. Sports, favorites, and the rest
organized by month.
|
1997 |
57 | 1998-1999 Negatives and some prints, mostly sports.
|
1998-1999 |
58 | 1999-2000 Negatives, organized by month and/or by sport.
|
1999-2000 |
59 | 2000-2001 Negatives
|
2000-2001 |
60 | 2001-2002 Negatives
|
2001-2002 |
Series 2: By Topic or FormatReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box | ||
61 | 2002, Miscellaneous negatives and slides in binders, and
undated misc. (and news licensed images?) Negatives and slides
|
1993-2002 |
62 | Miscellaneous: 1990s slides and prints and mostly
undated slides, negatives, and prints Mostly slides, some prints and negatives
|
1976-1990s |
63 | Duplicates from boxes 1 through 5 Slides, prints, and negatives of duplicate images, mostly from
1969-1976
|
Between 1967 and 1990 |
64 | Duplicates from boxes 6 through 9 Slides, prints, and negatives of duplicate images, mostly from
1976-1983
|
Between 1976 and 1986 |
65 | Papers Clippings, magazines, programs, notes, and mailings related to
the photographs taken by Haller
|
1977-1992 |
116 | Papers Clippings, programs, notes, and press releases related to the
photographs taken by Haller. Includes clippings of Haller's favorite prints,
and materials related to basketball and other high school sports.
|
1974-1988 |
117 | Papers and Photographs Clippings, programs, notes, correspondence, photographic prints
of auto-racing, magazines, memos, promotional materials,
|
1963-1976 |
66 | Portfolios, other prints, and contact sheets Mostly prints
|
1965-1971 |
67 | Ski Patrol Slides and a few prints.
|
1972-1989 |
68 | Sports profiles Slides
|
1979-1982 |
69 | Miscellaneous negatives and prints Mostly negatives and prints, includes a few PI files
|
1981-1992 |
70 | Post-Intelligencer files and photo listings Few slides and negatives, mostly documents.
|
1972-1992 |
71 | Photo listings and miscellaneous Documents, slides, negatives, and some prints
|
1982-1992 |
72 | Miscellaneous Mostly negatives, some slides and prints.
|
undated |
73 | Negatives Negatives
|
1970s |
74 | Negatives Negatives
|
1970s |
75 | Negatives Negatives
|
1960s-1970s |
76 | Negatives Negatives
|
1960s |
77 | Negatives 71180-71225 Negatives
|
undated |
78 | Negatives Negatives
|
undated |
79 | Negatives Negatives
|
undated |
80 | Selects Negatives
|
1982-1983 |
81 | Selects Negatives
|
1984-1987 |
82 | Selects Negatives
|
1987-1988 |
83 | Selects Negatives
|
1988-1990 |
84 | Selects Negatives
|
1990-1991 |
85 | Selects Negatives
|
1991-1992 |
86 | Selects Negatives
|
1972 |
87 | Selects Negatives
|
1972-1974 |
88 | Selects Negatives
|
1974-1975 |
89 | Selects Negatives
|
1975-1976 |
90 | Selects Negatives
|
1976-1979 |
91 | Selects Negatives
|
1979 |
92 | Selects Negatives
|
1980 |
93 | Selects Negatives
|
1980-1981 |
94 | Miscellaneous slides Slides
|
undated |
95 | Prints and negatives Mostly prints, some negatives
|
1972-1976 |
96 | Negatives Negatives
|
1976-1978 |
97 | Negatives Negatives
|
1975-1979 |
98 | Miscellaneous prints Prints, including prints from presentation portfolio
|
undated, 2000s |
99 | Miscellaneous slides and negatives Slides and negatives.
|
undated |
100 | Makah files Mostly negatives, some documents
|
1988-1998 |
101 | Makah files, PI printed photographs, and early
prints Mostly negatives, some documents from the Makah files
(1998-1999), Haller's photographs printed in the PI (1991, 1995), early prints
and negatives (schoolwork?) (1960s), and some PI transparencies (?)
|
1960s-1999 |
102 | Mounted prints Mounted prints correspond to items in other boxes, includes
inventory.
|
undated |
103 | Mounted prints Mounted prints. Items correspond to inventory in box 102.
|
undated |
104 | Prints Prints corresponding to items in other boxes, includes
inventory.
|
undated |
105 | Mounted prints Mounted prints corresponding to items in other boxes, includes
inventory.
|
undated |
106 | Mounted prints Mounted prints correspond to items in other boxes. For inventory
see box 105.
|
undated |
107 | Print and art A print (see inventory in box 104) and art/sketches from other
boxes.
|
undated |
108 | Mounted prints Prints correspond to items in other boxes.
|
undated |
109 | Mounted prints Prints correspond to items from other boxes. Includes silhouette
prints.
|
undated |
110 | Prints Prints, mostly mounted, correspond to items in other boxes
|
undated |
111 | Mounted prints Mounted prints correspond to items in other boxes
|
undated |
112 | Mounted prints Mounted prints correspond to items in other boxes.
|
undated |
113 | Prints Prints, mostly mounted, correspond to items in other boxes.
Includes prints of Mount St. Helens.
|
undated |
114 | Prints Prints correspond to items in other boxes. Includes
inventory.
|
undated |
115 | Prints Prints, mostly mounted, corresponding to items in other boxes.
Inventory included in box 114.
|
undated |
Series 3: SportsReturn to Top
Prints, slides, negatives, and contact prints of sporting events. Includes photographs of University of Washington teams, SuperSonics, Mariners, Los Angeles Lakers, and others.
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
Box/Folder | ||
S1 | Sports |
1969-1974 |
S2 | Sports |
1974-1976 |
S3 | Sports |
1976-1978 |
S4 | Sports |
1978 |
S5 | Sports |
1980-1988 |
S6 | Sports |
1966-1986? |
S7 | Sports |
1978-1982 |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Photojournalists--Washington (State)--Seattle
- Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)