State College of Washington Department of Architectural Engineering Lantern Slides, 1927-1941
Table of Contents
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- State College of Washington. Department of Architectural Engineering
- Title
- State College of Washington Department of Architectural Engineering Lantern Slides
- Dates
- 1927-1941 (inclusive)19271941
- Quantity
- 0.5 Linear feet of shelf space, (1 Box)
- Collection Number
- PC 25 (collection)
- Summary
- Instructional lantern slides depicting missions in the northwest, housing in the Seattle area, and State College of Washington campus plans and selected buildings in Pullman, Washington.
- Repository
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Washington State University Libraries' Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections (MASC)
Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections
Terrell Library Suite 12
Pullman, WA
99164-5610
Telephone: 509-335-6691
mascref@wsu.edu - Access Restrictions
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This collection is open and available for research use.
- Languages
- English
Biographical Note
Stanley Albert Smith was born in Brookville, Kansas November 25, 1889. He attended Kansas State College where he earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1913, and immediately became an instructor at the college from 1913 to 1920. Smith held professor positions at several universities, including North Dakota Agricultural College (later NDSU), 1920-1923, and the State College of Washington (WSC, later Washington State University), 1923-1955.
While at WSC, Smith was the Head of the Department of Architectural Engineering and the second University Architect, from 1923-1947. While University Architect, he completed fourteen major buildings and fraternity houses. These included: Commons Hall, Duncan Dunn Hall, Bohler Gymnasium, Troy Hall, Hollingbery Field House, Honors Hall, Washington Building, Smith Gymnasium, the Mechanical Engineering Laboratory, the Central Steam Plant, Waller Hall, Wilmer-Davis Hall, Pine Manor, and L. J. Smith Hall (Smith Agricultural Engineering Building)." In 1947, the increased load of building work at WSC, Smith resigned as University Architect and concentrated on his position as Head of the Department of Architectural Engineering.
Additionally, Smith took on projects for private homes and commercial buildings in and around the town of Pullman. Many of these projects, both on and off campus, were undertaken by Smith’s private practices: Smith & Rounds in the 1920s during which Fred G. Rounds, an assistant professor of architecture at WSC, worked as Smith’s partner, and Smith & Weller in the 1930s during which Harry C. Weller, also architectural engineering faculty at WSC, worked as Smith’s partner. Occasionally during the 1930s, Smith and Rounds continued to collaborate on projects, including the addition to Pullman High School in the 1930s. This project was undertaken in part through a Public Works Administration [PWA] grant. The addition to the high school was carried out from 1933-1934, less than a year after the passage of the National Industrial Recovery Act which created the PWA.
Following his position at WSC, Smith became the architectural advisor to the Ataturk University Development Committee in Erzurum, Turkey, which in turn advised the Turkish Ministry of Education in the planning of the new university. This development was a joint Turkish-American effort to strengthen education and research in Turkey at the university level at Ankara University and Ataturk University. In 1954 the University of Nebraska was asked to assist with this effort under the university's Agency for International Development (A.I.D.) contract.
Content Description
The collection consists of glass lantern slides depicting photographs plans/drawings of historical buildings of the Pacific Northwest. Glass lantern slides are 3¼"x4" positive glass transparencies, generally intended for projection onto a screen. The slides were apparently intended for instructional use for architecture students. It is unclear how many are reproductions of others' images, and how many are "original" images. The series are comprised of, in order, Pullman materials, a series of mission slides, some materials on commercial buildings and a fort, a series of Seattle-based housing slides (ca. 1940-1941), and finally a few images related to a Buckminster Fuller Dymaxion House.
Based on notes and identifying call numbers written on the slides, we suspect these were once held as instructional materials in the departmental Architecture Library in WSU's Carpenter Hall. A significant number of them are drawn from the work of Stanley A. Smith, WSC's University Architect from 1923 to 1947, but we can't be certain if all of these come from him. Smith is known to have taken photographs and drawings of missions in the region, so many of those, at least, are potentially unique to this collection. Though he apparently never published from them, in December of 1935 Smith did present on campus (complete with illustrated slides) on the history of the Cataldo Mission.
Use of the Collection
Restrictions on Use
Copyright restrictions apply.
Preferred Citation
[Item description]
State College of Washington Department of Architectural Engineering Lantern Slides, 1927-1941 (PC 25)
Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries, Pullman, WA.
Administrative Information
Arrangement
With some slight tweaking, materials are arranged in an order which matches the call numbers hand-written on the slides. This results in a loose subject-based order of several series and subseries.
Acquisition Information
The glass lantern slides in this collection were received at Washington State University Libraries' Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections (MASC) at some point in time prior to 2001. They were initially retained without an accession number, and were finally processed in July 2017 by University Archivist Mark O'English. In March of 2018, six slides from Stanley Smith came to MASC via the former architecture chair Dave Scott (UPC 18-02) and were added to the collection.
Processing Note
Sometime after receipt, the glass slides were housed individually in paper sleeves, which were annotated with information (often incorrect) copied from the slides. This is the second MASC collection identified as PC 25 – the earlier PC 25, "Additional Glass Negatives, ca. 1901-1920" was incorporated into PC 23 in 2017.
Related Materials
Stanley A. Smith Papers, 1954-1963 (Cage 138)
Stanley A. Smith Papers, circa 1900-1946 (Cage 875)
Stanley A. Smith Papers, 1924-1943 (Cage 888)
A. E. Drucker House Architectural Drawings, 1927-1928 (Cage 958)
Stanley A. Smith Oral History Interview, 1960 October (Cage 2072)
State College of Washington University Architect Records, 1923-1956 (Archives 239)
Detailed Description of the Collection
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Series 1: Pullman, WA
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Stanley Smith home, construction, circa 1927-1928. (408 NE Michigan; post-1976 address is 610 NE Michigan)
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Description: Clearing siteContainer: Slide 1
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Description: ExcavationContainer: Slide 2
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Description: Basement wallsContainer: Slide 3
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Description: Framing 1st floorContainer: Slide 4
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Description: Finished houseContainer: Slide 5
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Description: Finished houseContainer: Slide 6
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Description: Floorplan - 1st floorContainer: Slide 7
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Description: Floorplan - 2nd floorContainer: Slide 8
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Description: Alpha Delta Pi (725 NE Linden)Container: Slide 9
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Description: Pi Beta Phi (825 NE Linden)Container: Slide 10
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Description: Catholic Church (440 NE Ash St)Container: Slide 11
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Series 2: Missions
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St. Joseph's Mission, Slickpoo, ID.
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Description: AltarContainer: Slide 12
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Description: Sunday HouseContainer: Slide 13
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Description: Window detailContainer: Slide 14
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Description: Front entranceContainer: Slide 15
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Description: Sunday Houses?Container: Slide 16
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St. Mary's Mission, Stevensville, MT. Father Ravalli, architect, under Father DeSmet. Built 1841, closed 1850.
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Description: Front left viewContainer: Slide 17
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Description: Front viewContainer: Slide 18
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St. Michael's Mission, Spokane, WA. Built 1866-1878. (19-20 and 22-23 appear to be different churches. It is unclear which church image 21 belongs to.)
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Description: Front right view.Container: Slide 19
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Description: Detail over door. Carfagno carvings.Container: Slide 20
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Description: Internal. Carfagno carvings.Container: Slide 21
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Description: Front right view. Carfagno carvings.Container: Slide 22
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Description: Architectural drawings, Stanley Smith & Harry Weller. "St. Michael's Mission at Peone Prairie, Wash."Container: Slide 23
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Sacred Heart Mission, St. Joe River, 1842. Fathers Point & DeSmet.
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Description: External viewContainer: Slide 24
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Sacred Heart Mission, Cataldo, ID. Ravalli, architect. Built 1846.
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Description: Detail - external wall and windowContainer: Slide 25
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Description: Drawing by Stevens ExpeditionContainer: Slide 26
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Description: Side and back viewContainer: Slide 27
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Description: Sacristy detailContainer: Slide 28
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Description: Front viewContainer: Slide 29
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Description: InteriorContainer: Slide 30
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Description: Architectural drawings, Stanley Smith & Harry Weller. "Old Indian Mission."Container: Slide 31
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Sacred Heart Mission, Tensed, ID. Built 1878.
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Description: Front view, through trees.Container: Slide 32
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Whitman Mission Site, Waiilatpu, WA
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Description: Distant viewContainer: Slide 33
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Series 3: Businesses & Forts
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Cashup Davis store, Cashup, WA. [Note: this is the store, built at Cottonwood Springs / Cashup in the late 1870s, not the Steptoe Butte hotel]
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Description: Floor plans, Stanley Smith & Harry Weller. "James S. 'Cashup' Davis's Store, Cashup, Wash."Container: Slide 34
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Description: Front and left viewContainer: Slide 35
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Description: Side viewContainer: Slide 36
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Description: Fort Lapwai - detail of beam intersectionsContainer: Slide 37
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Granary, Hudson Bay Post, Nisqually, WA
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Description: End viewContainer: Slide 38
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Description: Front viewContainer: Slide 39
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Series 4: Housing
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Westpark Housing, Bremerton, WA. Built 1940.
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Description: HomesContainer: Slide 40
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Description: HomesContainer: Slide 41
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Description: Typical floor plan, Edmond Meany Hotel, Seattle, WAContainer: Slide 42
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Sand Point Homes, Seattle, WA
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Description: HomesContainer: Slide 43
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Description: Composite plans of typical single-floor unitsContainer: Slide 44
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Description: The plot plan capitalizes a sloping terrainContainer: Slide 45
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Description: HomesContainer: Slide 46
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Yesler Terrace Housing, Seattle, WA. Built 1939-1941.
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Description: Plot planContainer: Slide 47
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Description: Aerial neighborhood photographContainer: Slide 48
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Description: Side view, housing unitContainer: Slide 49
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Dymaxion House, R. Buckminster Fuller design.
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Description: Front viewContainer: Slide 50
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Description: Interior viewContainer: Slide 51
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Description: Interior viewContainer: Slide 52
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Series 5: Washington State College development
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Description: Campus aerial photo, 1921Container: Slide 53
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Description: Campus aerial photo, circa 1932Container: Slide 54
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Description: Campus plan, circa 1923Container: Slide 55
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Description: Campus plan, circa 1927Container: Slide 56
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Description: Campus plan, circa 1944Container: Slide 57
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Description: Campus plan, circa 1947Container: Slide 58
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Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Architecture -- Northwest, Pacific -- History
Personal Names
- Smith, Stanley Albert, 1889- -- Records and correspondence
Corporate Names
- State College of Washington. Department of Architectural Engineering -- Records and correspondence
Other Creators
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Personal Names
- Smith, Stanley Albert, 1889- (creator)
