Amalgamated Transit Union, Local 587 photograph collection, 1916-2010
Table of Contents
Overview of the Collection
- Collector
- Amalgamated Transit Union. Local 587 (Seattle, Wash.)
- Title
- Amalgamated Transit Union, Local 587 photograph collection
- Dates
- 1916-2010 (inclusive)19162010
- Quantity
- Photographic prints, negatives and graphics (9 boxes) ; sizes vary
- Collection Number
- PH1095
- Summary
- Photographs of the activities of the Seattle Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587 between years 1916 and 2010.
- Repository
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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
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The collection is open to the public.
- Additional Reference Guides
- Languages
- English
- Sponsor
- Processing Funded by the Amalgamated Transit Workers Union, Local 587
Biographical Note
Founded in 1892, Amalgamated Transit Union, Local 587 is the largest ATU local on the West Coast. The local had 4000 active and 300 retired members in King, Clallam and Jefferson counties as of 2011. The main membership is comprised primarily of transit operators, but the union also includes 800 members working in over 80 craft occupations.
ATU Local 587 represents employees of:
King County Metro King County, Washington First Transit King County, Washington Solid Ground King County, Washington Jefferson Transit Authority Jefferson County, Washington Clallam Transit System Clallam County, Washington
ATU 587 has, as of 2012, about 4,000 active and 300 retired members spread throughout King, Jefferson, and Clallam counties, and is the largest West Coast ATU chapter. Also as of 2012, ATU International was the largest transit workers' union in North America, including over 190,000 members in the US and Canada.
On April 8, 1912, the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employees of America, Local 587 was formed by the Rainier Valley Electric Railway Workers. The name was eventually shortened to the Amalgamated Transit Union. The international union itself had been established in 1892, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor and the Knights of Labor. The history of Local 587 is intertwined with that of its major bargaining counterparts: the Seattle Electric Company/Puget Sound Traction, Light, and Power/ Puget Power, Seattle Transit, and Metro Transit/King County Metro Transit. Public transit in Seattle has undergone many changes, peaks, and troughs, each of which greatly affected ATU 587.
The first horse-drawn street railway was built in Seattle in1884, but horse-drawn cars proved troublesome on the city’s many hills. Horses were soon replaced by the first cable cars, introduced in 1887, and several independent streetcar lines were established. With the economic depression of 1893, many of these lines suffered and were bought but Boston-based Stone & Weber, who managed them under the names the Seattle Electric Company, Puget Sound Traction, Light, and Power, or Puget Power. By 1900, Stone and Webster had acquired twenty-two street railway lines and the main power company.
ATU 587’s first major action came in July 1917. Relations were already tense, as Puget Power had cut wages to compensate for operating losses, but things came to a head when two transit employees were fired for joining ATU 587. The remaining 1,500 employees walked out in response. When Puget Sound Traction, Light, and Power brought in strikebreakers, the striking workers rioted and overturned two streetcars in Pioneer Square. This strike shut down operations in the city and forced shipyards to close, so, as it occurred during WWI, the federal government pressured both sides for arbitration. As a result, ATU 587 did not win a wage increase, but the company was prohibited from firing workers solely for joining the union.
In 1918, Puget Power was losing money, in part due to competition from motorized jitney taxes and the private auto. $400,000 behind in taxes to the city, Puget Power asked the city to lease some of its lines. In response, Seattle Mayor Ole Hanson purchased the entire streetcar system from Puget Power (for much more than it was technically worth). Voters approved the plan, paying $15 million (renegotiated to $10 million) and the city assumed control in 1919, renaming the system the Seattle Municipal Railway. After a few years, the city also began to struggle to pay for this system, especially with fares set at the low price of a nickel. To remedy the problem in 1939, Seattle Mayor Arthur Langlie borrowed $10.2 million from New Deal agency the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to pay off Puget Power and purchase 235 trolley buses and 102 motor coaches. By 1941, the last streetcar ran in Seattle (until the 1980s, when streetcars were revived by the waterfront, and later in South Lake Union.
During WWII, ridership rose to 57 million as the government rationed gasoline, while ATU 587 made wartime concessions. A new group of younger leadership took over the ATU 587 in 1945 and committed themselves to strengthening the union and increasing assertiveness. The ATU 587 made major gains in the postwar period, obtaining paid vacation and the first operator wages over $2 per hour.
In the 1950s, though, ridership decreased as Seattleites spread to the suburbs. Tensions grew as Seattle Transit lost money but ATU 587 remained assertive, until union members went on strike in 1956. The city of Seattle eventually won an injunction that declared public employee strikes illegal. Suburban sprawl continued, while voters did not approve sources of funding for transit proposed by the Forward Thrust program. By 1973, it became evident that even the survival of the system was in question, as Seattle Transit faced impending bankruptcy. The Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle (Metro), established in 1958 to deal with waste treatment in the greater Seattle area, received voter authorization to take over the transit system in King County by 1973. With this shift, ATU Local 1384, associated with privately owned Metropolitan Transit Corporation, merged into ATU 587.
Metro Transit tried to decrease costs, to the frustration of ATU 587; at the time, Seattle transit employees made about 15-20% less than employees in other West Coast cities and lacked a cost-of-living adjustment in the face of rapid inflation. Yet Metro was hiring rapidly, and was hesitant to also give employees, new and old, these benefits. ATU 587 went on strike for 15 days in 1974, asking for higher wages and benefits, but Metro was not compliant. A federal mediator was brought in, and parties eventually settled on sick leave, an eight-hour day, and a 34% wage increase for drivers and mechanics, plus cost-of-living increases, though other Metro Transit employees did not gain quite so much. In 1977, Metro instituted part-time drive positions to provide sufficient service during peak times without losing massive amounts of money in off-peak hours. Some ATU 587 members protested this policy with some strategic sickouts, as part-time drivers violated the guarantee of an eight-hour day. However, the union’s eventual position when negotiating the installation of part-time drivers was to try to make the position undesirable, with few benefits, in the hopes that having part-time employees would be untenable and Metro would eliminate the position. This tactic proved shortsighted in many ways, as there were many part-time drivers, so ATU 587 spent much of the following decades trying to improve the working conditions of part-timers. Other issues arose regarding seniority between part-time and full-timer drivers, to be negotiated in the coming decades.
Metro made some changes to operations in Seattle in the 1970s-1990s. It instituted the Ride Free downtown area, implemented services for the handicapped like wheelchair lifts and Paratransit Services, and proposed a 1.3 mile bus tunnel in 1987, completed in 1990. However, Metro ceased to exist in 1994, as it was found unconstitutional, and was replaced by the King County Metro.
ATU 587 has shown concern for worker rights and workplace conditions over the years, particularly in the 1980s-2000s, the period most strongly covered by this collection. In 1980, ATU 587 codified past practice and work rules by writing up extensive contracts, which grew to hundreds of pages and gave the union a stronger legal basis for grievances and other requests. ATU 587 began to represent Clallam Transit Services and Jefferson Transit Authority in the early 1980s, and Paratransit Services in the 1990s. The ATU also was politically active in the 1980s, supporting Greg Nickels for King County Council. In 1989, the Department of Transportation, a federal organization that subsidized much of Metro Transit, began to require random drug testing. This policy led the ATU 587 to a court battle, which it eventually lost. Metro Transit and ATU 587 suffered a tragedy in 1998 when Metro operator Mark McLaughlin was attacked by a gunman while driving a bus across the Aurora Bridge. The bus crashed and fell off the bridge, killing McLaughlin, the shooter, and a passenger. In 2003, the ATU 587 supported a move to bring surveillance cameras onto buses, arguing that cameras would help prevent assaults on drivers. ATU 587 concerns in the last few decades have included issues such as these about workplace conditions.
Throughout much of the 1990s and 2000s, ATU 587 also struggled for higher wages and better benefits as funding for transit remained unstable. Contract negotiations in 1989-1990 proved difficult, as ATU 587 members walked out for several hours and outside negotiators were brought in. ATU 587 won a modest wage increase and benefits. In 1999, State Initiative 695, sponsored by Tim Eyman, proposed to require voter approval for tax increase while lowering vehicle license tab fees from 2.2% of a vehicle’s value to $30. Despite the efforts of the ATU and other groups on the No on I-695 campaign, the initiative passed. Several groups, including ATU 587, took the issue to court, arguing that it did not follow the Washington constitution, which restricts initiatives to one subject. The court threw out I-695, but politicians installed a similar cut on license tabs. In 2000, Eyman proposed another initiative, I-745, which would have designated 90% of state and local transportation for roads, with only 10% left for other forms of transportation. ATU 587 campaigned passionately against the measure, and it was rejected. In 2002, citizens rejected Referendum 51, which would have provided a large amount of funding to improve state transportation, while approving a $30 limit on car tabs. Overall, ATU 587 and King County Metro alike have spent much of the past few decades struggling to find stable transit funding.
Content Description
This collection contains photos and visual materials that chronicle the activities of Local 587 of the Amalgamated Transit Union. The collection provides information about the ATU 587 working conditions and internal culture. Of particular interest are photos from the first series, that date from 1916 to 1971 and are generally of the union's leadership, members, and workplaces. Most of the photographs from 1916 to 1971 were donated by August (Augie) Antonino, a longtime leader in the union and subject of many of the photos. Another highlight are the rolls of film and photo album pages on the ATU 587 No on I-695 campaign and the ATU 587 No on I-745 campaign.
Other Descriptive Information
Forms part of the Labor Archives of Washington
Use of the Collection
Alternative Forms Available
View selections from the collection in digital format
Restrictions on Use
Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication. Contact Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries for details.
Administrative Information
Arrangement
Materials generally are arranged into series based on the topic and content of the image. Individual items in a subdivision are arranged chronologically.
Acquisition Information
Donor: President/Business Agent Paul J. Bachtel, January 06, 2012
Separated Materials
Documents are in collection 5680-001.
Photographs by Ken Slusher were moved to the Ken Slusher photograph and videotape collection PH2015-008 in June 2018.
Bibliography
Bibliography
Amalgamated Transit Union. ATU 100 Years, 1892-1992: A History of the Amalgamated Transit Union.Washington, D.C.: A.T.U., 1992.
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587. The 587 Handbook: A Guide to Our Union.Handbook, Seattle, 1986.
Aurelius, John P. and Michael W. Voris. The Trolley-Coach Program in Seattle.Seattle: No Publisher, 1978.
Bachtel, Paul J. “County should approve vehicle fee to preserve Metro Transit service.” Seattle Times,July 22, 2011. Accessed Feb. 17, 2012. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2015700676_guest23bachtel.html.
Crowley, Walter. Routes: An Interpretive History of Public Transportation in Metropolitan Seattle.Seattle: Metro Transit, 1993.
Crowley, Walt. “Seattle City Council approves franchise for new Westlake streetcar line on October 14, 1890.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified Oct. 9, 2008. Accessed Feb. 17, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=7303.
Crowley, Walt. “Seattle Transportation: From Trolleys to Monorails, A Timeline.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified Jan. 5, 2007. Accessed Feb. 20, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&File_Id=4005.
Garber, Andrew. “I-745 foes, backers warn of consequences.” Seattle Times,Sept. 22, 2000. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com slug=metro04m.
Garber, Andrew and Roberto Sanchez. “Voters drive off plan to limit transit funding.” Seattle Times,Nov. 8, 2000. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20001108&slug=4052078.
Lane, Bob. “Metro Drivers Back On Job Today -- Union Makes Its Point About Negotiations.” Seattle Times,Dec. 4, 1990. Accessed Feb. 17, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19901204&slug=1107645.
Lane, Bob. “Metro, Union Try New Method to Settle Bitter Contract Dispute." Seattle Times,Oct. 7, 1991. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19911007&slug=1309511.
Lewis, Peter. “Concerns raised over surveillance on Metro buses.” Seattle Times,Aug. 4, 2003. Accessed Feb. 17, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20030804&/archive/?date=20000922&slug=4043824.
Lindblom, Mike. “Picket protests pay cuts for Metro Access van drivers.” Seattle Times,July 29, 2008. Accessed Feb. 17, 2012. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2008079599_webbuscontract29m.html.
Malm, Richard F. Transit Planning in Metropolitan Seattle: A Historical Perspective.Seattle: National Government Publication, 1986.
McRoberts, Patrick. “Metro bus plunges off Seattle's Aurora Bridge after driver is shot on November 27, 1998.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified Dec. 3, 1998. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=734.
McRoberts, Patrick. “King County voters on Forward Thrust bonds approve stadium and aquarium and nix transit on February 13, 1968.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified May 11, 2007. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&File_Id=2168.
Oldham, Kit. “Metro: Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified June 18, 2006. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=7813.
Searcey, Dionne and Brier Dudley. “Transit Workers Sue To Overturn I-695 -- Union Might Also Try To Block New Law.” Seattle Times,Nov. 18, 1999. Accessed Feb. 20, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19991118&slug=2996064.
Seattle Times Staff. “Union Favors Suit, But . . .” Seattle Times,Nov. 19, 1999. Accessed Feb. 17, 2012. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19991119&slug=2996228.
“Washington $30 License Tab Initiative, Initiative 695 (1999).” Ballotpedia.Last modified July 3, 2011. Accessed Mar. 6, 2012. http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Washington_$30_License_Tab_Initiative,_Initiative_695_%281999%29.
Wilma, David. “City Council accepts $10.2 million loan to rehabilitate bankrupt Seattle Municipal Railway on June 19, 1939.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified Jan. 1, 1999. Accessed Feb. 20, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=2229.
Wilma, David. “Seattle takes over ownership and operation of the streetcar system on April 1, 1919.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified July 11, 2000. Accessed Feb. 20, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=2535.
Wilma, David. “Trackless trolleys and buses replace streetcars in Seattle Transit System on April 13, 1941.” HistoryLink.org.Last modified Mar. 28, 2002. Accessed Feb. 15, 2012. http://www.historylink.org/_content/printer_friendly/pf_output.cfm?file_id=2536..
Related Materials
The Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587 website was regularly captured by the Internet Archive Wayback Machine from 2014-2015. The snapshots can be viewed here: https://wayback.archive-it.org/3988/20160401000000*/http://www.atu587.com/
Detailed Description of the Collection
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ATU Activities, 1950s-2000s?
Consists of 4"x6" photo prints, usually with the corresponding 35MM film. These photos are almost all of the ATU 587 activities, ranging from special events, protests, social events and parties, conferences, or meetings, to daily workplace and member photos.
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Events, 1950s-2000s?
Specific events, subdivided into protests and rallies, social events, conventions and conferences, and smaller meetings.
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Protests and Rallies, 1950s-2000s?
Protests and rallies, further subdivided by types of protests, with sets on protests against I-695 and I-745, other protests staged by ATU 587, and rallies put on by other organizations.
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ATU 587 "No on I-695" campaign, 1999
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-695 rallyDates: Sept. 21, 1999Container: Box/Folder 1/1, Item 1
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-695 campaignDates: 1999Container: Box/Folder 1/2-3, Item 2-3
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ATU 587 No on I-745 campaign, 2002-2001
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-745 campaignDates: Nov. 29, 2001-Dec. 5, 2001Container: Box/Folder 1/4, Item 4
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-745 campaign 2000Dates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 1/5-10, Item 5-10
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-745 yard signs with Poy Chinn, Jennie Gil, Pat NaumannDates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 1/11, Item 11
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-745 CampaignDates: 2000-2001Container: Box/Folder 1/12-1/15, Item 12-15
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Description: ATU 587 No on I-745 Campaign and man and woman portraitDates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 1/16, Item 16
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Description: ATU 587 campaigns and Seattle transit
Set of 23 photos including: ATU 587 No on I-745 campaign; ATU 58 No on I-695 campaign; Seattle transit and commuters.
Dates: 1999-2000?Container: Box/Folder 1/17, Item 17
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Other ATU 587 Protests, 1985-2000s?
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Description: Newscaster at ATU protest over contractDates: 1985?Container: Box 1, Item 18
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Description: "Joe Isuzu" sign about 1987 contract negotiation
Sign for inside bus, created by Don MacAdam.
Dates: February 11, 1988Container: Box/Folder 1/18, Item 19 -
Description: Olympia rally, lobbyDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 1/19, Item 20
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Description: Lobby Day, OlympiaDates: 1997Container: Box/Folder 1/20, Item 21
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Description: ATU 587 picket over contractDates: April 1, 1999Container: Box/Folder 1/21, Item 22
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Description: ATU 587 picket over contract and wagesDates: May 19, 1999Container: Box/Folder 1/22, Item 23
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Description: ATU 587 activities and members
Set of 12 photos including: ATU 587 Rally for Safety; full time pick; Carey Watson and Dave Dellplain; Hazel Hawkins; Todd Shipyard (?); ATU 587 picnic.
Dates: 1980s?Container: Box/Folder 1/23, Item 24 -
Description: Union activities
Set of 3 photos including: Bus Fare Box; Greyhound Rally; ATU members with children.
Dates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 1/24, Item 25 -
Description: ATU 587 activities and leadership
Set of 21 photos including protests; ATU 587 leadership; picnic.
Dates: 1998?Container: Box/Folder 1/25, Item 26 -
Description: Rally and meeting
Print, negatives and contact sheet including rally at Husky Stadium; meeting; people making signs.
Dates: 1990s-2000sContainer: Box/Folder 1/26, Item 27 -
Description: ATU 587 No on I-200Dates: 1999?Container: Box 1, Item 28
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Protests Not Organized by ATU 587, 1990s-2000s?
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Description: Solidarity Day Parade, Washington D.C.Dates: Sept. 1991Container: Box/Folder 1/27, Item 29
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Description: Solidarity Day march and rallyDates: Aug, 31, No Year, 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 1/28, Item 30
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Description: Lockheed StrikeDates: 1987-1993?Container: Box/Folder 1/28, Item 31
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Description: 1991 Rallies
4 photos: Solidarity Day; Rebuild America Rally in Connecticut, with Jesse Jackson; Service Employees Union Rally; Iron Workers Convention.
Dates: 1991Container: Box 1, Item 32-35 -
Description: Imperial Food Products/DPE (Department for Professional Employees?): man and boys looking at a buildingDates: 1991Container: Box 1, Item 36-39
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Description: Demonstration by members of Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 14761 against Book Publishing Co.Dates: Sept. 1992Container: Box/Folder 1/30, Item 40
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Description: American Federation of Government Employees rallyDates: Feb. 1995Container: Box 1, Item 41-44
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Description: Bridgestone/Firestone protestsDates: July 1995Container: Box 1, Item 45-48
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Description: Garfield Martin Luther King Jr. rallyDates: 2004Container: Box 1, Item 49
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Description: Airline Attendants picketingDates: 2000s?Container: Box/Folder 1/31, Item 50
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Description: Martin Luther King Jr. Day rallyDates: 2004Container: Box/Folder 1/32, Item 51
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ATU 587 Social Events, 1919-2000s?
Picnics, parades and festivals, Halloween parties, winter holiday (Christmas) parties, awards ceremonies, retirement parties, and memorial services.
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Picnics, 1919-2002?
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Description: ATU 587 PicnicDates: Aug 2, 1986Container: Box 1, Item 52-53
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Description: ATU 587 picnicDates: July 25, 1987Container: Box 1, Item 54-55
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' picnic and ATU 587 officeDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 1/33, Item 56
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Dates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 8/1, Item 57-60
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Description: ATU 587 picnicDates: Aug. 1992Container: Box/Folder 1/34-35, Item 61-62
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Description: ATU 587 picnic, Lincoln ParkDates: July 24, 1993Container: Box/Folder 1/36-38, Item 63-65
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Description: ATU 587 picnic, Lincoln ParkDates: early 1990sContainer: Box/Folder 1/39, Item 66
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Description: ATU 587 picnicDates: 1996Container: Box/Folder 1/40-42, Item 67-69
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Description: ATU 587 picnicDates: 1998Container: Box/Folder 1/43, Item 70
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Description: ATU 587 picnicDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 2/1-4, Item 71-74
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' picnicDates: 1992Container: Box/Folder 2/5-6, Item 75-76
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' picnicDates: June 2, 1994Container: Box/Folder 2/7, Item 77
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' picnicDates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 2/8, Item 78
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' picnicDates: Aug. 2002?Container: Box/Folder 2/9, Item 79
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Description: Clallam Transit System picnicDates: Aug. 15, 1993Container: Box/Folder 2/10, Item 80
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Parades and Festivals, 1980s-1990s?
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Dates: July 1987Container: Box 2, Item 81-85
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Description: ATU 587 Diamond Jubilee paradeDates: 1987Container: Box/Folder 2/11-12, Item 86-87
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Description: Buses decorated for Black Community Festival parade, for News ReviewDates: 1996Container: Box/Folder 2/13, Item 88
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Description: African American group, with children, posing in front of bus filled with balloonsDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 2/14, Item 89
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Description: Milton Merkel and George Barna at " Metroadeo" , "Pierce Transit Winner 1983-1985"Dates: June 21, 1986Container: Box/Folder 2/15, Item 90
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Description: Salmon DaysDates: 1994Container: Box/Folder 2/16, Item 91
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Description: Seafair, with ATU hydroplane "Rapid Transit"Dates: 1980s?Container: Box/Folder 2/17-20, Item 92-95
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Halloween Parties, 1987-1990s
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Description: "Blueline" layout for ATU 587 Halloween party posterDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 9/1, Item 96
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Description: Halloween partiesDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box 2, Item 97-98
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Description: ATU 587 Halloween partyDates: 1987Container: Box/Folder 2/21, Item 99
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Description: Halloween partyDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 2/22, Item 100
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Description: ATU 587 Halloween party in the bus tunnelDates: 1993Container: Box/Folder 2/23, Item 101
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Description: ATU 587 Halloween party in the bus tunnelDates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 2/24, Item 102
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Winter Holiday Parties, 1950s-2000s
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Dates: 1950s?Container: Box/Folder 8/2, Item 103
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' dinnerDates: Dec. 1992Container: Box/Folder 2/25, Item 104
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' Christmas partyDates: 1997Container: Box/Folder 2/26, Item 105
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' Christmas partyDates: 1999Container: Box/Folder 2/27, Item 106
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' Christmas partyDates: 1999-2000?Container: Box/Folder 2/28-29, Item 107-108
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Description: ATU 587 retirees' Christmas partiesDates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 2/30, Item 109
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Awards, 1941-2000s?
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Description: Honor Roll: Women's International Auxiliary to the Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America, Local 5871 posterDates: 1941Container: Box folder:oversize 9/2, Item 110
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Description: Banquet, possibly for Operators of the YearDates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 2/31, Item 111
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Description: Al Ramey Operator of the Year partyDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 2/32, Item 112
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Description: Al Gisselberg Operator of the Year partyDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 2/33, Item 113
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Description: Maintenance Employee of the Year barbecueDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 2/34, Item 114
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Description: National Order of Bigtime Ultra Luminary Leaders (NOBULL) banquetDates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 3/1, Item 115
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Description: BanquetDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 3/2, Item 116
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Description: Clallam Transit System award and banquetDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 3/3, Item 117
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Description: ATU 587 events and office
Set of 15 photos: Don Kyllo Operator of the Year Party; two men with noose; office.
Dates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 3/4, Item 118 -
Description: Metro Operator of the Year posters4 posters
4 posters with the portrait and name of every winner of the Operator of the Year award, an honor given by Metro or King County Transit.
Dates: 2002; 2005-2007Container: Box/Folder 9/3, Item 119-122
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Retirement Parties, 1990s-2000s?
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Description: Al Ramey Birthday/retirement party
In 2013 and 2014, Al Ramey received several press write-ups about his 50+ years of safe driving.
Dates: 1996-2000?Container: Box/Folder 3/5, Item 123 -
Description: Richard Yount retirement partyDates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 3/6, Item 124
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Description: Ben Patawaran retirement partyDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 3/7, Item 125
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Description: Dale Bartz retirement partyDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 3/8-12, Item 126-130
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Memorial Services, 1993-1999
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Description: Dave Dellplain memorial serviceDates: 1993Container: Box/Folder 3/13-14, Item 131-132
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Description: Trip to Olympia for tribute to Mark McLaughlinDates: March 26, 1999Container: Box/Folder 3/15, Item 133
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Description: ATU 587 events
Set of 9 photos: retirees' Christmas party, Dec. 8, 2000; Mark McLaughlin memorial, Nov. 25, 2000; man with Energizer Bunny doll, Dec. 8, 2000. Photos include Jim Ethridge, Jennie Gil, Esther Fields, Lance Norton, Ross Karrell, Chuck Carlton, Jim Wade, Nilton Merkel, Dick Benson, and Pat Larson.
Dates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 3/16, Item 134 -
Description: Posters for member funerals
24 posters formerly labeled "Member Funerals." Seem to be designated for a memorial service or for the newsletter. Most are collages of photos dedicated to one person.
Dates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 9/4, Item 135
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Other social events
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Description: House exterior and people going to Seahawks gameDates: 1998?Container: Box/Folder 3/17, Item 136
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Description: ATU 587 events and parties
Set of 63 photos with negatives and contact sheet including: Retirees picnic, 2002; protest over wages, 1999; South Base holiday party, 1999; Wayne Daubenspeck Operator of the Year party, 1998; retirement party, 2000; Clallam Transit System awards, 2000; members talking; members in an office.
Dates: 1998-2002Container: Box/Folder 3/18, Item 137 -
Description: ATU 587 events
Set of 32 photos including: ATU 587 retirees' dinner, 1999; speakers, 1999-2000; meeting.
Dates: 1999-2000Container: Box/Folder 3/19, Item 138 -
Description: ATU 587 events, members, and a travel photo
Set of 5 photos including: Picnic; three men; group photo - Latino Event?.
Dates: 2000s?Container: Box/Folder 3/20, Item 139 -
Dates: 1990s?Container: Box/Folder 8/3, Item 140
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Conventions and Conferences, 1980s-2000s?
Photographs of larger conventions, with subsets on the ATU International Convention, ATU regional conferences like the Northwest Joint Conference, the ATU Latino Caucus, the ATU Black Caucus, other conventions, and the travel photos from these conferences.
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ATU International Convention, 1990s-2000s?
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Description: ATU International 100th Anniversary ConventionDates: 1992Container: Box/Folder 3/21, Item 141
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Description: ATU International ConventionDates: 1998Container: Box/Folder 3/22-25, Item 142-145
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Description: ATU International ConventionDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 3/26-29, Item 146-149
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ATU Regional Conferences, 1987- 2000s?
Photos from various regional conferences of ATU Locals. The Northwest Joint Conference, sometimes called the Northwest Conference or Northwest Joint Conference Board and abbreviated NWJC, NWC, NJCB or NwJCB, is a formal organization of ATU Locals in the northwest of North America. The Western Conference is a more informal organization of ATU Locals in western North America.
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Description: Combined Western Conference
Includes MacCoy and wife, John Grendahl and Sam Gamble, Dan Linville.
Dates: Apr. 11-13, 1986Container: Box 3, Item 150-155 -
Description: Western Conference, Seattle, WADates: June 1989Container: Box/Folder 3/30, Item 156
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Description: Northwest Joint Conference, Edmonton, AlbertaDates: 1991Container: Box/Folder 3/31-32, Item 157-158
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Description: Northwest Joint Conference, Calgary, AlbertaDates: July 1993Container: Box/Folder 3/33, Item 159
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Description: Northwest Joint Conference BoardDates: Jan. 1994Container: Box/Folder 3/34, Item 160
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Description: Northwest Joint Conference BoardDates: June 1995Container: Box/Folder 3/35, Item 161
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Description: Northwest Conference, Oakland, CADates: 1997-1999?Container: Box/Folder 4/1, Item 162
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Description: Northwest Joint ConferenceDates: 1999Container: Box/Folder 4/2-4, Item 163-165
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Description: Mel Schopeut (sp?) at Northwest ConferenceDates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 4/5, Item 166
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Description: Northwest Conference, Las VegasDates: 2000Container: Box/Folder 4/6-11, Item 167-172
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Description: Northwest ConferenceDates: 2002Container: Box/Folder 4/12-14, Item 173-175
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Description: ATU Western ConferenceDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 4/15, Item 176
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Description: Western States ConferenceDates: 1980s-1990s?Container: Box/Folder 4/16, Item 177
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ATU Latino Caucus, 1990s-2000s?
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Description: ATU Latino CaucusDates: 1990s-2000s?Container: Box/Folder 4/17-19, Item 178-180
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