Miscellaneous oral histories collection, 1956-1997
Table of Contents
- Overview of the Collection
- Content Description
- Use of the Collection
- Administrative Information
-
Detailed Description of the Collection
- 2019.3.76.1: Oral history interview with Eugene Thurlow, circa 1940s
- 2019.3.76.2: Oral history interview with Dr. Edward C. Kilbourne, circa 1956
- 2019.3.76.3: Oral history interview with Joshua Green, circa 1958
- 2019.3.76.4: Oral history interview with Joshua Green, 1967 April
- 2019.3.76.5: Oral history interview with Amy Tuller Cooke, 1983 November 12
- 2019.3.76.6: Oral history interview with Helen Tremper Lane, 1983 December 9
- 2019.3.76.7: Oral history interview with Dave Beck, 1984 March 24 - May 31
- 2019.3.76.8: Oral history interview with Rodie Burrows, 1984 July 13
- 2019.3.76.9: Oral history interview with Joanna Eckstein, circa 1984
- 2019.3.76.10: Oral history interview with Jerry Solar, 1986 November 29
- 2019.3.76.11: Oral history interview with Ponce Torres, 1988 June 17
- 2019.3.76.12: Oral history interview with Guendolen Carkeek Plestcheeff, 1991 May
- 2019.3.76.13: Oral history interview with Henry MacLeod, 1993 July 16
- 2019.3.76.14: Oral history interview with John R. Steveley, 1997 September 7
- 2019.3.76.15: Oral history interview with Norman C. Blanchard, undated
- 1982.141.1: Oral history interview with Mrs. Harold Hartman (Emma Schmitz), 1982 August 20
- 1989.59.1: Oral history interview with Tom Scribner, undated
- 1989.77.1.: Recordings of visits with Mabel Wooster, 1969 June 15 and August 9
- Names and Subjects
Overview of the Collection
- Title
- Miscellaneous oral histories collection
- Dates
- 1956-1997 (inclusive)19561997
- Quantity
-
6 sound tape reels
16 sound cassettes
1 videocassette - Collection Number
- 2019.3.76
- Summary
- Miscellaneous individual oral history interviews conducted by or donated to MOHAI
- Repository
-
Museum of History & Industry, Sophie Frye Bass Library
P.O. Box 80816
Seattle, WA
98108
Telephone: 2063241126 x102
library@mohai.org - Access Restrictions
-
Access to the interviews is restricted due to lack of playback equipment and copyright restrictions. Please contact the repository for further information.
- Languages
- English.
- Sponsor
- Funding to inventory, assess preservation concerns, and rehouse the collection was provided through a 2018 grant awarded by 4Culture.
Content Description
These miscellaneous oral history interviews were conducted by, donated to, or found in the collection of MOHAI.
Use of the Collection
Restrictions on Use
The Museum of History & Industry is the owner of the materials in the Sophie Frye Bass Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from MOHAI before any reproduction use. The museum does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners.
Preferred Citation
Miscellaneous oral histories collection, Museum of History & Industry, Seattle
Administrative Information
Return to TopDetailed Description of the Collection
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Description: 2019.3.76.1: Oral history interview with Eugene Thurlow1 sound tape reel
Interview with Eugene Thurlow (1859-1957), a shipbuilder and the founder of the Enterprise Brass Foundry. He was a member of Seattle's Pioneer Society.
Dates: circa 1940s -
Description: 2019.3.76.2: Oral history interview with Dr. Edward C. Kilbourne1 sound tape reel
Interview with Dr. Edward Corliss (E.C.) Kilbourne (1856-1959), a dentist and the developer of Seattle's Fremont neighborhood. He was also a leading promoter of electric utilities; he built an electric trolley from Seattle to Lake Union to bring potential homeowners up to Fremont. After the Great Fire of 1889, he received the city's franchise to restore electrical power and became the majority owner of the future Union Electric Company I n1892.
Dates: circa 1956 -
Description: 2019.3.76.3: Oral history interview with Joshua Green1 sound tape reel
Interview with Joshua Green on the Seattle Golf Club. Joshua Green was a sternwheeler captain, businessman, and banker. He started as a seaman and later became the dominant figure of the Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet. He sold his interests and became a banker. He was one of the city of Seattle's last fluent speakers of Chinook Jargon, the pidgin trade language of the Pacific Northwest.
Dates: circa 1958 -
Description: 2019.3.76.4: Oral history interview with Joshua Green1 sound tape reel
Interview with Joshua Green on "What's the Story" on KING TV.
Dates: 1967 April -
Description: 2019.3.76.5: Oral history interview with Amy Tuller Cooke1 sound cassette (analog)
Interview with Amy Tullar Cooke, who was born in 1882 and moved to Seattle with her parents five weeks after the Great Fire. She lived in Ballard and graduated from Broadway High School in 1903.
Dates: 1983 November 12 -
Description: 2019.3.76.6: Oral history interview with Helen Tremper Lane1 sound cassette (analog)
Interview with Helen Tremper Lane, who was born in 1884 and moved to Seattle just prior to the Great Fire. She attended the University of Washington and later the Conservatory of Music in Stuttgart, Germany. She married J. Richard Lane in 1908; they had three daughters: Nancy, Helen, and Josephine. Mr. Lane passed away in 1921. In the early 1930s, she became involved with the Children's Orthopedic Hospital, now known as Seattle Children's Hospital. She joined the board in 1936 and later became an honorary board member in 1970.
Dates: 1983 December 9 -
Description: 2019.3.76.7: Oral history interview with Dave Beck2 sound cassettes (analog)
Interview with Dave Beck (1894-1993), a labor leader and president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters from 1952 to 1957.
Dates: 1984 March 24 - May 31 -
Description: 2019.3.76.8: Oral history interview with Rodie Burrows1 sound cassette (analog)Dates: 1984 July 13
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Description: 2019.3.76.9: Oral history interview with Joanna Eckstein3 sound cassettes (analog)
Interview with Joanna Eckstein (1903-1983), a prominent arts patron. She was the daughter of Seattle civic leader and longtime school board member Nathan Eckstein, for whom Eckstein Middle School is named, and Mina Schwabacher Eckstein, whose family owned the Schwabacher Brothers & Company wholesale grocery store.
Dates: circa 1984 -
Description: 2019.3.76.10: Oral history interview with Jerry Solar1 sound cassette (analog)Dates: 1986 November 29
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Description: 2019.3.76.11: Oral history interview with Ponce Torres1 sound cassette (analog)Dates: 1988 June 17
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Description: 2019.3.76.12: Oral history interview with Guendolen Carkeek Plestcheeff1 videocassette (VHS)
Interview with Guendolen Carkeek Plestcheeff (1892-1994), known as "Seattle's Grand, Grand Lady" and "the most elegant woman in Seattle". She was born to one of the area's early pioneer families for whom Carkeek Park is named. She served as president of the Seattle Historical Society (now MOHAI), which had been founded by her mother in 1911, from 1938 to 1965. She also was a founding member of the Decorative Arts Council of the Seattle Art Museum, endowed the nonprofit Plestcheeff Institute for the Decorative Arts in 1987, and helped raise the funds used to establish the Museum of History & Industry.
Dates: 1991 May -
Description: 2019.3.76.13: Oral history interview with Henry MacLeod1 sound cassette (analog)
Interview with Henry MacLeod, who was Managing Editor of the Seattle Times at the time of this interview. He spent 43 years at the publication.
Dates: 1993 July 16 -
Description: 2019.3.76.14: Oral history interview with John R. Steveley1 sound cassette (analog)Dates: 1997 September 7
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Description: 2019.3.76.15: Oral history interview with Norman C. Blanchard1 sound cassette (analog)
Interview with Norman C. Blanchard, a third-generation mariner and boat builder. His father founded the Blanchard Boat Company in 1905. Following his father’s death in 1954, Norman became the president of Blanchard Boat Company. In the 1970s, he was appointed to the National Boating Safety Council and served as president of the Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society.
Dates: undated -
Description: 1982.141.1: Oral history interview with Mrs. Harold Hartman (Emma Schmitz)1 sound cassette (analog)
Interview with Mrs. Harold Hartzman (Emma Schmitz) about her life in West Seattle, 1900-1910.
Gift of Al Cunningham, received in August 1982
Dates: 1982 August 20 -
Description: 1989.59.1: Oral history interview with Tom Scribner2 sound tape reels
Interview with Thomas Jefferson (Tom) Scribner, a timber industry worker and a union organizer. He joined the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in 1914 and was a part of the Lumber Workers Industrial Union's (LWIU's) fight for an eight-hour work day. He was a member of the American Communist Party during the 1930s and founded two newspapers, Lumberjack News and Redwood Ripsaw. He later self-published the book, Lumberjack, which compiled his writings, along with pieces by Eugene Debs and other IWW members.
Gift of Kathrine Beck, received in 1989.
Dates: undated -
Description: 1989.77.1.: Recordings of visits with Mabel Wooster2 sound cassettes (analog)
Evangeline Gray was Mabel Wooster's mother. Mabel Gray Wooster was married to Melvin Wooster, assessor. .1: 120 minute cassette tape, visits with Mabel Wooster, June 15, 1969 and June 21, 1969 .2: 60 minute cassette tape, visit with Mabel Wooster, August 9, 1969.
Gift of Gerald Geisert, received in 1989.
Dates: 1969 June 15 and August 9
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Arts--Washington (State)--Seattle
- Boat & ship industry--Washington (State)--Seattle
- Civic leaders--Washington (State)--Seattle
- Labor unions--Washington (State)--Seattle
Geographical Names
- Seattle (Wash.)
Form or Genre Terms
- Sound recordings
- Video recording
